Monday, September 21, 2015

How does sin affect the human mind?

•A brief answer to a friend of this blog.

In May of this year, widely-respected New York Times columnist, David Brooks (a cultural Jew), told Christianity Today, “We need to start talking about sin and righteousness.” In his study of American culture, he noted, “in the late 1940s . . . There were tons of best-selling books, and some movies, arguing that the notion of human sinfulness was outdated, and that we should embrace the idea that we’re really wonderful.” [1]

Along those lines, a friend of this blog has engaged in a quest to gain a better knowledge of sin and how it affects our thinking.  She is theologically astute and framed her question to me in technical terms. She asked, “How does ‘deprivation’ (original sin) affect the ‘sensus divinitatis’ (people’s awareness of God)?” Here is my answer and the answer will end up broadening the question. [2]

• How does sin affect the human mind?


“Deprivation” refers to the change in nature that Adam and Eve experienced when they, our first parents, sinned against God. This “deprivation” involves (1) loss of original holiness and justice and (2) a corruption of nature whereby they became slaves of sin. However, they retained their created-ness in the image of God. They were still thinking, feeling, perceiving, moral, esthetic beings. And to their posterity they passed on both created-ness (characterized by human nobleness) and corruption (characterized by human cruelty).

Romans 1:19-20 teaches that, from God’s creation, humans know God and understand his existence and eternal power – they have “sensus divinitatis,” an awareness of the Deity. The question arises, how does this corruption of nature by sin affect the human mind in its awareness of God? Scripture gives a brief answer without the nuances that a theological or philosophical discussion would have.

Romans 1:21 “For although they [humans] knew God, they did not honor him as God or give thanks to him, but they became futile in their thinking, and their foolish hearts were darkened.” This verse summarizes several key teachings. (1) The choice to dishonor God and not give him thanks (i.e. to love self or created things more than or rather than God) is the root cause of foolish thinking, knowing, and believing. Worship drives worldview and one’s basic life creed. (2) Sin causes futility in thinking: you really think you know the truth about reality and especially about Cosmic Reality. But actually you became stymied and come to false conclusions, not because you are human (made in the image of God) but because you are sinful (the descendent of Adam and Eve). And (3) moral darkness clouds the thinking so that a person thinks, feels, and does things that dishonor God. You think your thoughts and engage in your reasonings. But you rebel against God as supreme ruler and judge and instead make yourself as the measure of all things. As a result, your thoughts become subtly distorted.

Titus 1:15-16 “To the pure, all things are pure, but to the defiled and unbelieving, nothing is pure; but both their minds and their consciences are defiled. They profess to know God, but they deny him by their works. They are detestable, disobedient, unfit for any good work.” (4) Moral darkness can not only cloud the mind, but when wickedness becomes a pattern of life, the human mind can produce things are just plain detestable and unfit for other people to hear or read. Your pompousness produces impurity of thought.

Elsewhere, the Bible further describes the condition of our minds under sin [3]. Corrupted by sin, the human mind can be:

confused (Deuteronomy 28:20)
anxious, closed (Job 17:3–4)
evil, restless (Ecclesiastes 2:21–23)
rash, deluded (Leviticus 5:4; Isaiah 32:4 NIV)
troubled (2 Kings 6:11)
depraved (1 Timothy 6:5)
sinful (Romans 8:7 NIV)
dull (2 Corinthians 3:14 NIV)
blinded (2 Corinthians 4:4)
corrupt (2 Timothy 3:8)


• How may I overcome the effect of sin on the human mind?

How can we escape the powerful darkening effect of sin on the human mind? In John 12:46 Jesus Christ proclaimed, “I have come into the world as light, so that whoever believes in me may not remain in darkness.” It is important to see that when Christ spoke of “darkness,” he was including the ideas of falseness and moral evil. Earlier in the discourse between Christ and a deeply religious man, it says:

The light [Jesus Christ, the only Son of God] has come into the world, and people loved the darkness rather than the light because their works were evil. For everyone who does wicked things hates the light and does not come to the light, lest his works should be exposed. But whoever does what is true comes to the light, so that it may be clearly seen that his works have been carried out in God. (John 3:19-21, emphasis added)

When you come to Christ – the Light of the world – you come to one who is the embodiment of truth and righteousness. You are not driven to come to Christ out of ignorance and you are not seeking to find education or spiritual enlightenment. Rather you are a thinking person concerned about the darkening effects of sin on your life – on mind, emotions, will, conscience, relationships – and you seek a proper object of love as well as seeking truth, right living, healed relationships, and a renewed mind. You are a human being with an awareness of God (unless it has been repressed), descended from the first human parents, and have the corruption of nature passed on from them.


The invitation from Christ has two parts: come to the light and continue in the light.

• Come to the Light for a renewed mind

There is one source to investigate and come to Christ: the eye-witness era documents of the New Testament from the first century AD. In the second century after Christ, many alternatives arose such as the gnostic library discovered in 1945 at Nag Hammadi, Egypt, or the apocryphal gospels and epistles, of the second through fourth centuries. In our day skeptics and others bombard us with books to discredit Jesus Christ and the New Testament documents of his apostles and their associates. Yes, the marketplace of idea is filled with the thoughts of contrarians. But consider the spiritual journey of Michael F. Bird. He writes:

I grew up in a secular home in suburban Australia, where religion was categorically rejected—it was seen as a crutch, and people of faith were derided as morally deviant hypocrites. . . . As a teenager, I wrote poetry mocking belief in God. My mother threw enough profanity at religious door knockers to make even a sailor blush.

Many years later, however, I read the New Testament for myself. The Jesus I encountered was far different from the deluded radical, even mythical character described to me. This Jesus—the Jesus of history—was real. He touched upon things that cut close to my heart, especially as I pondered the meaning of human existence. I was struck by the early church's testimony to Jesus: In Christ's death God has vanquished evil, and by his resurrection he has brought life and hope to all.

When I crossed from unbelief to belief, all the pieces suddenly began to fit together. I had always felt a strange unease about my disbelief. I had an acute suspicion that there might be something more, something transcendent, but I also knew that I was told not to think that. I “knew” that ethics were nothing more than aesthetics, a mere word game for things I liked and disliked. I felt conflicted when my heart ached over the injustice and cruelty in the world.

Faith grew from seeds of doubt, and I came upon a whole new world that, for the first time, actually made sense to me. To this day, I do not find faith stifling or constricting. Rather, faith has been liberating and transformative for me. It has opened a constellation of meaning, beauty, hope, and life that I had been indoctrinated to deny. And so began a lifelong quest to know, study, and teach about the one whom Christians called Lord. [4]

The first step is to come to the documents that faithfully witness to Christ – the New Testament. You may read these, hear these read, or hear them taught. The New Testament writer John speaks for his colleagues: “Now Jesus did many other signs in the presence of the disciples, which are not written in this book; but these are written so that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name” (John 20:30-31). But it is not enough to read and study the documents. You must personally believe in Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior. Otherwise, all your reading and study is in vain. And, in your reading and study, it is vital to remember that the New Testament is incomplete without the Old Testament. You need the whole Bible.

Come, read, hear, believe in Jesus Christ, follow him, and join the community of the faithful. Hopefully, in that vein, you will be able to find a church or a Bible study committed to the faith taught by Christ and his apostles and embodied in the Nicene Creed of AD 325 – the statement of beliefs that summarize the message of the New Testament. This creed takes the confession of faith passed on in apostolic churches and then uses technical language to contrast the faith from error. Christ commanded his disciples to baptize in the name (one name = one nature and being) of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit” (Matthew 28:19). If the group doesn’t profess one God in three co-equal, co-eternal persons, they follow some other ideology, not the New Testament.


• Continue in the Light to renew your mind

How do people renew their mind through Christ from the darkening effects of sin? To Jewish leaders in Jerusalem, Jesus Christ said:

37 And the Father who sent me has himself borne witness about me. His voice you have never heard, his form you have never seen, 38 and you do not have his word abiding in you, for you do not believe the one whom he has sent. 39 You search the Scriptures because you think that in them you have eternal life; and it is they that bear witness about me, 40 yet you refuse to come to me that you may have life. (John 5:37-40)

Just as the New Testament Scriptures are the word of Jesus Christ, the Son of God, through his apostles and their associates, so the Old Testament Scriptures (verse 39) are the word of God the Father (verse 38). And the way of eternal life and renewal of your whole being – including your mind – is by studying the Scriptures. They are a history centered on Jesus Christ. This history teaches doctrine, a worldview, and a lifestyle. And it offers plenty of examples of what to do and not to do.

In his second letter to Timothy, the apostle Paul, imprisoned in Rome and on trial for his life, makes a request, “When you come, bring the cloak that I left with Carpus at Troas, also the books, and above all the parchments” (2 Tim 4:13). He wanted a winter coat (a tent-like garment stretching from shoulders to feet), papyrus rolls (“books”) and expensive documents written on animal skins (“parchments”). Being a Scripture scholar and a preacher, the books could easily be early gospel records as well as scholarly writings. The parchments undoubtedly included Old Testament scriptures. Thus, even at the end of his life facing a possible death sentence, Paul wanted – most of all – the word of Jesus and the word of God. [5]

How do you make use of books and parchments? A very bright, thoughtful woman tells her story [6]:

I don’t know when I first became a skeptic. It must have been around age 4, when my mother found me arguing with another child at a birthday party: “But how do you know what the Bible says is true?” By age 11, my atheism was so widely known in my middle school that a Christian boy threatened to come to my house and “shoot all the atheists.” My Christian friends in high school avoided talking to me about religion because they anticipated that I would tear down their poorly constructed arguments. And I did.

Attending Harvard to study government, during her freshman year she encountered a fellow student, Joseph, who was a Christian. He defended with reason and sensibleness Christianity’s answers to the most fundamental philosophical questions as well as to the veracity of the Bible and ethical conundrums. For instance, what about the Euthyphro dilemma: Is something good because God declared it so, or does God merely identify the good? She continues:

And he did something else: He prodded me on how inconsistent I was as an atheist who nonetheless believed in right and wrong as objective, universal categories. Defenseless, I decided to take a seminar on meta-ethics. After all, atheists had been developing ethical systems for 200-some years. In what I now see as providential, my atheist professor assigned a paper by C. S. Lewis that resolved the Euthyphro dilemma, declaring, “God is not merely good, but goodness; goodness is not merely divine, but God.” Joseph also pushed me on the origins of the universe.

She came to accept the idea of a First Cause. What shame could there be in being a Deist like Founding Father Thomas Jefferson? Later she was given a copy of J. Budziszewski’s book Ask Me Anything. She encountered the Christian teaching that “love is a commitment of the will to the true good of the other person.” This theme—of love as sacrifice for true good—changed her thinking. The Cross no longer seemed to be a grotesque symbol of divine sadism, but a remarkable act of love. And now Christianity began to look less strangely mythical and more cosmically beautiful. She notes:

At the same time, I had begun to read through the Bible and was confronted by my sin. I was painfully arrogant and prone to fits of rage. I was unforgiving and unwaveringly selfish. I passed sexual boundaries that I’d promised I wouldn’t. The fact that I had failed to adhere to my own ethical standards filled me with deep regret. Yet I could do nothing to right these wrongs. The Cross no longer looked merely like a symbol of love, but like the answer to an incurable need. When I read the Crucifixion scene in the Book of John for the first time, I wept.

But, of course, the Cross as the beauty of Christ’s love and as the answer to human sinfulness – these do not make it true. So she plunged into alternative views: the Qur’an and the books of leading skeptics. And she read contemporary Christian answers to the objections. But nothing compared, she said, to the rich tradition of Christian intellect: Augustine, Anselm, Aquinas, Descartes, Kant, Pascal, and Lewis. When she finally read the masters, the only reasonable course of action was to believe in the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.

But then a problem arose. Her head full of convincing evidence for the Scriptures started to make her feel distant from the story that had brought her to tears a month prior. When reading through the Passion narrative on retreat on Cape Cod in the spring, she remained utterly unmoved. So she went out to pray and took a long walk through the woods. Reflection on Scripture caused her to realize that the will is the driver of the intellect. Who or what you worship is the root cause of thinking, knowing, and believing. In her own words:

If I wanted to continue forward in this investigation, I couldn’t let it be just an intellectual journey. Jesus said, “If you hold to my teaching, you are really my disciples. Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free” (John 8:31-32). I could know the truth only if I pursued obedience first.

She committed her life to Christ by being baptized on Easter Sunday, 2009.

At age 66, when comedian and actor W.C. Fields was dying in a hospital, one of his friends came to see him and found him reading the Bible. The friend was shocked because Fields was anything but a religious man. He said, “W.C., what are you doing?” Fields replied, “I’m looking for a loophole.”

Friend, are willing to give the Scriptures an honest reading and hearing?


[1] Jeff Haanen, “Interview of David Brooks,” posted May 13, 2015 and printed as Jeff Haanen, “Greatness and Grace,” Christianity Today June 2015, Vol. 59, No. 5, Pg 60. http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2015/june/david-brooks-we-need-to-start-talking-about-sin-and-righteo.html

[2] For an excellent theological-philosophical discussion, please read the article Stephen K. Moroney, “How Sin Affects Scholarship: A New Model,” Christian Scholar’s Review, XXVIII, pg 432-451, Spring 1999. http://www.asa3.org/ASA/topics/ethics/CSRSpring-1999Moroney.html

[3] Rick Warren, “The Battle for Your Mind (2 Corinthians 10:3-5)” address at the Desiring God 2010 National Conference, October 1, 2010. http://www.desiringgod.org/messages/the-battle-for-your-mind

[4] Michael F. Bird, “How God Became Jesus—and How I Came to Faith in Him,” Christianity Today (web only), April 15, 2014.
http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2014/april-web-only/how-god-became-jesus-and-how-i-came-to-faith-in-him.html

[5] William Barclay, Timothy and Titus (Edinburgh: Saint Andrew Press, 2nd edition, 1960), commentary on 2 Timothy 4:13, online version http://www.studylight.org/commentaries/dsb/view.cgi?bk=54&ch=4

[6] Jordan Monge, “The Atheist’s Dilemma,” Christianity Today, March 2013, Vol. 57, No. 2, Pg 88. http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2013/march/atheists-dilemma.html

Pics:
(1) Kelsey Bishop, “Attitude Adjustment,” a charcoal on public display at the Gallery, Lakeland Community College, Kirtland, Ohio from January 25 to February 22, 2015.
(2) Scene at Fowler’s Mill Golf Course, Chesterland, Ohio on 9/16/2015 taken by the author.

Sunday, September 6, 2015

What does the cross mean?

•And why did this man have those injuries?

A man and his wife hosted a Japanese student in their home in Cambridge, England. One weekend the student toured the art galleries of Paris. Upon her return, in the course of a meal, she suddenly asked – drawing a cross on the table – “What does this mean? And why did the man have those injuries?”[1]

Great art can depict events and people in a way that excites our emotions, captures our imagination, and stirs our minds. But only words can tell us why. The Gospel of Mark, the shortest of the four gospels, written especially for the busy Romans of old, vividly portrays in staccato-like scenes the story of Jesus and his cross. But Mark brings in enough detail to tell us both the “what” and the “why” – what does the cross of Jesus mean? And why did this man have those injuries?

• The Who

The “why” begins with the “who.” Who is this man Jesus? Mark immediately takes us to the Jordan River, which runs south through the land of Israel. There in the Judean desert a man named John, dressed like the prophet Elijah (eight centuries earlier), proclaims in fiery tones, “Repent (change your ways) and be dipped in water as a sign of your turning from your sins.”  John announces that he has come to prepare the way before the coming of the Lord, the God of Israel. 

Then a strange thing happens. Another preacher named Jesus comes to be dipped in the water of the river. John at first refuses because this Jesus is that coming King, and John is merely his servant. But John finally allows Jesus to be dipped in the waters of the Jordan River. When Jesus comes out of the water, a sound thunders from the sky, “This is my beloved Son. Listen to Him!” And then a being comes down on Jesus gracefully like a dove. John knows that this is the Holy Spirit of God taking a visible shape. “I saw the Holy Spirit descend,” he says.

John knew that Jesus was a human being, a fellow Jew like himself. Now he (and we) know one other important fact: Jesus is the Son of God. There is one God, according to the “Hear, O Israel” (Deut 6:4) recited by Jews for centuries. But in the fullness of God there is the Father who spoke from on high at the Jordan, the Son standing in the river who has taken on human flesh, and the Holy Spirit who descended according to the prophecy of Isaiah (Isa 61:1).

People inside and outside the land of Israel now hear this Jesus teach and see him heal the sick and even raise the dead, Mark tells us. And the disciples of Jesus hear him and see him for many months up close and personal. For instance, at Jesus’ house in Capernaum (in Galilee, north of Judea), many came to the door for healing. One time four men brought a paralyzed man lying on a mat. When they saw they couldn’t get inside the house because of the crush of people, they came up with an idea.

The four men went up to the roof of this first century Palestinian home, removed part of the roof and lowered the man down in front of Jesus. Jesus told the man, “Son, your sins are forgiven.” Some Scripture scholars in the house quickly but quietly said, “Why does this man speak like that? He is blaspheming! Who can forgive sins but God alone?” So Jesus proved his divine authority to forgive sins by saying to the man, “I say to you, rise, pick up your bed, and go home.” Immediately the paralyzed man stood, picked up his makeshift bed and walked out in front of everyone. The Son of God is God just as much as the Father is God.

After all these experiences, Jesus asked his close disciples a simple but perplexing question: “Who do people say I am?”  “A prophet…,” they blurt out. “And who do you say I am?” he probes. They answer, “You are the Christ (the Messiah, the promised prophet, priest, and king).”[2] Jesus explains, “You did not learn this from yourselves, but my Father taught you this fact.” They (and we) learn one more thing about who Jesus is: he is God's promised prophet (speaking the words of God), priest (offering the sacrifice for the sins of the people), and king (worldwide ruler) - the Messiah.

At the climax of Mark’s story, Jesus is brutally beaten with a whip (scourged) by Roman soldiers and then killed in a slow, excruciating way on a Roman cross [3]. When Jesus dies, a hardened Roman army officer pensively concludes, “Truly this (man) was God’s Son.” Mark ends where he begins: Jesus is a man (human enough to die) and is also the divine Son of the living God. 

• The Why

But why did this Jesus have to die such a horrible death? Again, Mark’s cameos pierce the mind like arrows. On the way to Jerusalem with his disciples, Jesus tells them, “[I,] the Son of Man, came not to be served but to serve and to give his life as a ransom for the many.” The term “son of man” would remind the disciples of the Hebrew Scriptures. “Son of man” is a synonym for “man” (for instance, Psalm 8:4). “Son of Man” is also the term for the universal ruler at the end time foretold by the Book of Daniel (Dan 7:13-14). “Ransom” is a sacrifice whose death buys a person back from captivity (spiritually, from captivity as a slave of sin). In the Dead Sea Scrolls “the many” are the community of believers. So what Jesus was saying is this: “I can into the world as a lowly servant to offer my life as a sacrifice for the sins of the believing community.”

Then on the Roman cross, when Jesus dies, a most unusual event happens, Mark reports. The curtain in the temple of Jerusalem is torn in two. The curtain separated sinful people from the presence of the perfect, pure, and holy God. With the death of Jesus this separation is now gone. What must we do? We must accept the death of Jesus as the ransom for our sins. We must trust in God in all his fullness – Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. We must become a part of the believing community. And, as Jesus had earlier told his disciples in the Gospel of Mark, we must “deny ourselves” (give up all selfishness), “take up our cross daily” (putting to death our sinful thoughts, emotions, and deeds), “and follow Jesus” as our new Lord and Master.

• Not so fast – I have my doubts

So did Ivan.[4] He was born in Iraq of a culturally Christian mother from Armenia and a liberal Arab Muslim father. When his dad had to flee Iraq during Saddam Hussein's rule, his dad sent Ivan (a teenager) to study on his own in Czechoslovakia. There Ivan lived for eight years and embraced materialistic philosophy, atheism and communion. He looked back at himself:

To me, religion was basically a waste of time. I had no respect for religion because I thought it was all made up of fantasies and myths: that people twisted things to suit their agendas and they created systems of belief to manipulate weak and disillusioned people.

One day he lost his temper with the woman he loved at the time, and she up and left him. He just couldn’t face the loss, and it showed him the weakness of his inner strength and of his materialistic philosophy of life. Suddenly he realized, “I am to be pitied like those people I pitied before.” So he started reading the Bible from its first book Genesis, later went to church, and still later joined a Bible study course that took participants through the Gospel of Mark. Sitting in the course on Mark, he had honest skepticism:

Me being from the Middle East, we always have a suspicious mind, we always think there’s something not true in what people say. So I tried to ask all the questions to find out if the leaders on my table would tell me the truth or if they would try to manipulate me or try to twist things or soften things up so I would think, “Actually it’s not so bad.” I discovered that no, they were just plainly explaining what the Bible was saying.

Through the Gospel of Mark, he started to realize who Jesus Christ really was, what he taught, and what he did – what I have called “the who” and “the why.” Ivan said of Jesus Christ:

I thought: “This is the person I always wanted to be like in my life. I never thought there was anyone who can be like this!” I was totally blown away by his integrity, and the things he did and the things he said. It was when I went on the day away, which is part of the course, that I just came to the conclusion that I could not keep denying the truth about Christ and who he is. And I just said: “That’s it—I don’t know what this is going to do to me, but I trust you and I’m ready to follow you whatever and wherever you take me.” And that was it.

What’s happening now with Ivan? In his words:

Life now has no meaning without Jesus Christ. It’s like a journey I am on with him—with the one person who we were created for. I can go walking all my life knowing that in the highs and the lows, in the sorrows and the joys, he is standing there with me, never leaving me or abandoning me. Not just that: this relationship doesn’t end with my death—actually it carries on forever. And that’s what I can look forward to—that’s what life is all about—not just now but also forever. I will enjoy that loving relationship with Jesus Christ forever.


[1] Christopher D. Hancock, “The Christological Problem,” in Donald Armstrong (ed.), Who Do You Say That I Am? (Grand Rapids, Mich.: William B. Eerdmans, 1999), p 10.

[2] “Christ” in Greek is the same word as “Messiah” in Hebrew and means “Anointed One,” a person designated for a public leadership function by having olive oil poured on his head.  In the Hebrew Scriptures prophets (ex: 1 Kings 19:16), priests (ex: Ex 28:41), and kings (ex: 1 Sam 10:1) were anointed with oil. “Anointed One” most typically refers to kings, both Israelite (Ps 2:2 with vs 6) and foreign (Isa 45:1).

[3] For historical background, see “Crucifixion in the Roman Period,” in David W. Chapman, Ancient Jewish and Christian Perceptions of Crucifixion (Tubingen, Germany: Mohr Siebeck, 2008), pp 69-96; and Martin Hengel, Crucifixion in the Ancient World and the Folly of the Message of the Cross (trans. John Bowden), Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1977 (entire book = pages 1-90). In Chapter 1, Hengel says: “For example Josephus, who as Jewish adviser to Titus during the siege of Jerusalem was witness to quite enough object lessons of this kind, describes crucifixion tersely and precisely as ‘the most wretched of deaths’ (θανάτων τὸν ἲκτιστον). In this context he reports that a threat by the Roman besiegers to crucify a Jewish prisoner caused the garrison of Machaerus to surrender in exchange for safe conduct.”

[4] “Ivan’s Story,” Christianity Explored. http://www.christianityexplored.org/real-life-stories/ivan. Accessed 9/4/2015.

[Pics used are photos by the author.]