Brother Chris,
I recently read the Logos and had a problem
with one of the sections. Page 320 begins
the sections entitled Face to Face with
the Enemy. Some of the wording I had a problem
with was:
“The suggestions were evil suggestions
out of a carnal mind, and this could not
possibly have been generated from the mind
of Christ, for he is the only son of Adam
to have been completely free from carnal
thinking”
“Even to consider displeasing God is a
symptom of unbelief, ignorance and imperfect
love. The suggestion of the tempter was
sin. The rumination of the evil thought
was sin. It was the thinking of the carnal
mind which is enmity against God, something
possessed in greater or lesser degree by
all of Adam’s offspring, except the Lord
Jesus Christ who was always pure in mind
and body. It is this quality that made him
to be the perfect sacrifice for God and
man. (p. 324).
I would appreciate some thoughts on these
quotes and on the topic in general if you
have time.
Love in the Hope,
J
Reply:-
Dear Bro J,
Greetings in The Way,
I share your concern, and discussed the
Logos position with its editor a few years
ago, in response to similar articles published
in Logos by another writer.
The basic proposition is this:
• Proverbs 24:9 states “The thought of
foolishness is sin …” and so as the Master
was “without sin”, he could not have had
those thoughts.The concept is that Jesus
could not have conceived a thought to
transgress without an external tempter.Hence
it is argued that the temptations in the
wilderness could find an origin only in
external influences.An article by Bro
Thomas called “Tempter and Tempted” is
cited as ‘evidence’ for the position,
but itself does not state this.
• The reasoning extends to Hebrews 4:15,
where we read that Christ “was in all
points tempted like as we are, yet without
sin”.Here, it is reasoned that the words
relate to the “lust of the flesh, lust
of the eyes and the pride of life” (1
Jno. 2:16) formula, and is not concerned
with where the temptations originated
from.
• Again, the master’s prayer in Gethsemane
is said to be not a prayer for the cross
to be avoided, but rather that the experience
would be over quickly.This was first proposed
by Bro HP Mansfield some years ago.
My response, which Bro Graeham did not
address is as follows:
Re: Proverbs 29:4, The word “thought” as
in “the thought of foolishness” in the Hebrew
implies not a passing inclination quickly
dismissed, but an active consideration,
or a desire that is dwelt upon.So it is
teaching that to knowingly harbour foolish
thoughts in the mind is sin.Jesus himself
tells us this: “whosoever looketh on a woman
to lust after her hath committed adultery
with her already in his heart” (Mat 4:28).Here,
it is not a passing thought of how pretty
a woman is, but it is harbouring that thought,
“to lust after her”.
Re: Hebrews 4:15, it can be countered that
if the source of Messiah’s temptations differed
from ours, it cannot be accurately stated
that they were “in all points” like ours
- only in some points.Additionally (and
crucially, Bro Mansfield refused to comment
on this) Galatians 5:17 states: “the flesh
lusteth against the spirit, and the spirit
against the flesh: and these things are
contrary the one to the other: so that ye
cannot do the things that ye would.”If it
be allowed that Messiah experienced “the
lust of the flesh”, as in Jno 2:16, it must
also be accepted that he also experienced
how these two contrary principles war against
each other in the hearts of those who would
seek to do the Father’s Will (See also Romans
7).
Re: Messiah’s Prayer at Gethsemane, this
is proof positive that Messiah did possess
an independent “will” to that of his Father:Mark
14:36 reads:
“He said, Abba, Father, all things are
possible unto thee; take away this cup
from me: nevertheless not what I will,
but what thou wilt”
Firstly, the words are specific: He was
praying for the cup of suffering to be “taken
away”, not to pass quickly.If words mean
anything, this suggestion cannot be allowed.Also,
this passage is specific in stating that
Messiah had a “will” contrary to the Father,
that he prayed might not be done.
I wrote an appendix to my booklet on the
Atonement that you might like to look at,
to deal with this teaching.You can download
it here:*
http://www.christadelphian.uk.com/booklets/atonementbooklet.pdf
Also, a very helpful article by Bro Robert
Roberts is here:*
http://www.christadelphian.uk.com/articles/christsin.html
In short, the reasoning expressed in Logos
actually diminishes the Sacrifice of Christ,
in that it diminishes the enemy that Christ
had to overcome to being external only -
whereas our enemy is greater, being both
external and internal.It also means that
if this is true, then Christ provides us
with no example of how we can overcome the
resident principle of sin in our members
(Rom. 7), for he did not even experience
it, let alone overcome it.And by making
his experience of temptation different to
ours, then that undermines the points made
in Hebrews 4, which states it is precisely
because of the sameness of his temptations
to ours that he is able to be a merciful
High Priest.
Finally, we ought to mention James 1:14:
“Every man is tempted when he is drawn
away of his own lust, and enticed.Then,
when lust hath conceived, it bringeth
forth sin: and sin, when it is finished,
bringeth forth death”
(See Deut 30:17 for the OT background for
this). How does this apply to the Master?Sin,
notice, becomes such by allowing lust to
conceive, not by experiencing the initial
desire.Messiah, like as his brethren, experienced
the “lust of the flesh” but did not allow
it to either draw him away, or conceive.
In short, the sacrifice of Christ was efficacious
for all sin, whether it’s origin be external,
or internal, because Messiah overcame all
sin, and brought the ultimate source of
all sin (AKA the Diabolos/sin in the flesh),
to death in his voluntarily yielding himself
up to the Father upon the cross.
As a final remark, the phrase “was always
pure in mind and body” is also objectionable
as it teaches the doctrine of “Clean Flesh”
- i.e. that the Master’s flesh was clean,
and not under the defilement of “the law
of sin and death” such as ours. However,
as the editor of Logos openly repudiates
“Clean Flesh”, we can perhaps assume this
phrase to be an oversight.
Your brother with love in Messiah,
Chris Maddocks
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