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Genesis

Building the City of God in a Fallen World

Christ Church on June 10, 2018

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Introduction

In a world gone mad, Christians can become unwitting assistants to the insanity, and therefore, it is incredibly important for Christians to keep the building blocks of civilization straight in their own heads. How are cities built? They are built on the principle of personal responsibility.

Summary of the Text (Genesis 4)

After Adam and Eve sinned, and God spared their lives, Eve bore children to Adam, the first two apparently being Cain and Abel (Gen. 4:1-2). God was pleased with Abel’s worship and displeased with Cain’s, and this made Cain very angry (Gen. 4:3-5, cf. Heb. 11:4). God warned Cain that disobedience and a bad attitude meant more evil was crouching at his door, and he needed to rule wisely, but Cain ignored the warning and murdered his brother (Gen. 4:6-8). When the Lord confronted Cain, he shifted the blame like his parents before him, raising a philosophical question about the nature of responsibility, but the Lord was not distracted and reiterated the curses for Abel’s blood (Gen. 4:9-12). When Cain realized that his actions left him vulnerable to the vengeance of others, he pleaded for mercy and God sent him away with a mark of protection and he started building a family and a city (Gen. 4:13-18). We see the downstream results in his family when Lamech takes two wives and soon admits to murder as well (Gen. 4:19, 23-24), and yet, God also grants his family a measure of cultural dominion over cattle, music, and technology (Gen. 4:20-22). Meanwhile, Eve bore another son to Adam, named Seth, and in those days, men began to call on the name of the Lord (Gen. 4:25-26).

Building Culture in the Ruins

This may seem like a very unlikely passage to discuss Christian culture building. Ultimately, the whole earth was filling with evil, leading to the flood (Gen. 6:5). But there are at least two curious things in this text: First, why did God spare Cain (and later, Lamech)? And why did God bless his family with a measure of cultural success? We know that sometimes God blesses the wicked with success in order to give that wealth to the righteous (e.g. Prov. 13:22), but we do not want to be backed into a corner where we are saying that it’s just inscrutable luck. So, despite the growing disobedience of the human race as a whole, it seems likely that the way God dealt with Cain’s sin was related to his ability to build cities and discover true treasure and glory in the earth. Where did that ability come from? Common grace and the image of God are certainly part of the picture, but the text curiously frames the agricultural, musical, and artistic and technological advances of Cain’s family with the stories of Cain and Lamech (Gen. 4:19-23).

While we may (rightly) note the familial resemblance between Cain and Lamech’s sin, we should not miss the fact that five generations later, Cain’s descendants are still citing God’s dealings with Cain (Gen. 4:24). In fact, Hebrews says, we have come “to Jesus the mediator of the new covenant, and to the blood of sprinkling, that speaketh better things than that of Abel” (Heb. 12:24). In other words, the murder of Abel was a type of Christ’s sacrifice, and it’s in that context that men are dwelling in tents, raising cattle, making music, and working with metal. The point is that in the midst of the anarchy of sin, God administered a measure of justice, insisting that Cain take responsibility for the bloodshed of his brother, and as he did so, the city of Nod was built, and five generations later, Lamech is also taking responsibility for his sinful actions and his family is cultivating cattle, music, and technology.

Conservative Victim Cultures?

If you have been around here long at all, you have heard and read any number of warnings about the current “sacred victim culture” we live in. This is a false gospel if there ever was one (cf. Gal. 1). It offers justification and holiness to any and all who will claim the status of victim. This is a form of self-justification, since a victim must claim relative innocence, and this is also a form of crowd sourcing your justification – justification by popular vote. But perhaps most importantly, this is a refusal to accept responsibility. There are certain frontal assaults in this war that we must not budge on: insisting on justice for the accused, two and three witnesses, due process, etc. But we must also be aware of certain flanking attempts, where Christians are offered certain victim cards (e.g. religious persecution and discrimination, liberal fascism, the Federal regulations, unjust taxation, Hollywood, porn, etc.), but we must see every offer of victimhood as an offer to join the anarchy, assistants to the insanity.

We must refuse and reject every offer of victimhood, not because real injustice cannot be perpetrated against us, but because we are never totally innocent and we have a better offer. And this is because we have a better victim. Jesus is the better victim because He was completely innocent and willing, and therefore, His sacrifice was an act of taking responsibility in order to present us to God with all glory (Eph. 5:25-26, 1 Pet. 2:24-25). And because Jesus took responsibility for us, we are completely justified by faith. Our sins are washed clean, and the obedience of Jesus is imputed to us (Rom. 4:22-25). This is why Paul says that even when we are victimized, we are more than conquerors through Him who loved us (Rom. 8:36-37).

Personal Responsibility & Culture Building

Satan plied Eve’s moral clarity in order to deceive her: Did God really say? Here, Cain has taken it a step further, asking whether God should really even be asking him about his brother (Gen. 4:9). Moral ambiguity is frequently closely aligned with evading responsibility. People have a bad habit of trying to justify sin with ambiguity and confusion. This can be done by straight- forward evasion and relativism, but this can also be done by claiming that everything is everyone’s responsibility, which means no one is responsible for anyone because you are not infinite, omniscient, omnipotent – in short, you are not God. Be assured that the attempt to do this will always result in various attempts at playing god. But this will ultimately result in apathy and paralysis. Why should anyone do anything? What are you working for? Who are you working for? What are you responsible for?

This is why Christians, in submission to God’s word, have historically insisted that faithfulness means being responsible and sovereign over the sphere(s) that God has assigned to you (and not others). The principle of “sphere sovereignty” comes from God assigning responsibility to particular people in particular relationships: civil magistrate, parent, husband, master, teacher, etc. And God’s law always applies to every sphere: a man may not murder his brother and tell the civil magistrate to stay in his own lane. I suspect that God gave Cain such a light sentence (as well as Lamech) both to display His great mercy (as He had with Adam and Eve) and to lean hard against sphere anarchy. In God’s ordering of things, personal responsibility is the basic building block of culture. Men are tempted to try to trick power out of evasion of responsibility, by blaming others, by claiming to be victims, but that is a black hole of chaos and anarchy.

But the answer to the chaos is the gospel: Jesus has taken personal responsibility for us – for our sin and for our good works – His blood speaks better things than that of Abel, so that one by one, as we call on the name of the Lord, living stones are being built up into the city of God, as we take up the good works that He has prepared beforehand for us to walk in them.

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Seed

Christ Church on October 1, 2017

https://www.christkirk.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/2061.mp3

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Weeds and Grains
Genesis 2:4 marks the beginning of a new section in the book of Genesis. However, to many it doesn’t just look like a new section, but it actually looks like a section that contradicts the previous section. Gen. 2:7 appears to put the creation of Adam as after the creation of plants, contradicting Gen. 1, where plants are created on the third day and man is created on the sixth day.
However, a closer read of the text shows that 2:5 is actually referring to a much more specific kind of plant. 1:11-12 refers to “grass” and “herbs yielding seed” (grain). But 2:5 refers to “plant of the field.” The Hebrew for “plant” here is not a super common noun, but one that usually refers to the wild shrubs found out in the desert (Job 21:15). This would mean that 2:4-7 is telling us that Adam was created at a moment in time before there were weeds in the ground and before grain had begun to sprout.

Before the Curse
So why is there a need to specify this particular moment? We have to look at the curse in order to understand this. Look at 3:17-19. When the ground is cursed, the result is that man will now have to work to eat from it. In chapter 2, the author of Genesis focuses on the trees that God provides to Adam for food (2:9, 16 and 3:2). But after his sin, Adam is told that now he will toil to get his food from the ground (3:17). He will have to fight weeds and he will have to sweat (v. 18).

Dust to Dust
Adam having to till the ground for grain was a consequence of his fall (3:23). After the fall, our work for food requires that we work in the dirt. You will eat from the ground (3:18), eating grain (3:18), and eating bread (3:19). God cursed the ground and made us farmers.
Why farming? Adam was made from dust (2:7). And because Adam sinned, he was going to die and return to dust (3:19 and 23).

You Are Seed
But when a farmer cuts open the earth to put the seed in, he doesn’t do so in grim defeat. He actually does so with great hope. He looks to a harvest. And Scripture carries over this hope to us. Yes, we are all going into the ground, because we are all mortal. But we go into the ground as seed (1 Cor. 15:35-37, 48-49). Grain is provides food, just like a fruit tree. But the grain must die first. It must go into the ground to die, before returning in glory. And that is what man, after the fall is. We are creatures that must die first, but will live eternally.

The Seed
But the hope in Genesis 3 is even stronger than that. We always are quick to point out that when God gave the curse, he also gave the promise of the coming Messiah to deliver us from the curse. But how was that Messiah described? The Messiah was the coming seed of the woman (3:15). In fact, all of Scripture points to this one true seed, the seed whose death and resurrection makes possible our eternal life.

No Going Back
Notice that God did not solve Adam’s sin by giving him means by which he could undo the damage that he had done. Death has not been removed, but rather conquered. Our tendency, when we see the consequences of our sin, is want to find a way back to before our sin, to undo it. But that is never an option. The cross was not a time machine. Instead, God took Adam’s sin and all its consequences and turned it into another path for walking into God’s glory.

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And We Shall Have Dominion

Ben Zornes on July 23, 2017

https://www.christkirk.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/2040.mp3

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Our Divine Commission to Rule over all Living Things

The Text: 28 And God blessed them. And God said to them, “Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and subdue it, and have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over every living thing that moves on the earth.” 29 And God said, “Behold, I have given you every plant yielding seed that is on the face of all the earth, and every tree with seed in its fruit. You shall have them for food. 30 And to every beast of the earth and to every bird of the heavens and to everything that creeps on the earth, everything that has the breath of life, I have given every green plant for food.” And it was so. 31 And God saw everything that he had made, and behold, it was very good. And there was evening and there was morning, the sixth day. Genesis 1:28-31.

Biblical Reasons to Rule the Living Creation

  • It is a command. (Genesis 1:28-31; Psalm 8:6-8) – The Dominion Mandate
  • God values it highly – God created the various kinds of plants and animals… and He said it was very good (Genesis 1:31). Plants and animals do not have to justify their existence by having some use for man to exploit.   
  • He made life to feed us – Plants to eat (Genesis 1:29). Animals given after the flood (Genesis 9:3). Both used for sacrifices (Leviticus).
  • God wants us to maintain the created diversity. Genesis 7:2-3
  • God wants us to take good care to animals under our charge. A righteous man cares for the needs of his animal, but the kindest acts of the wicked are cruel (Prov. 12:10). Know well the condition of your flocks, and give attention to your herds, for riches do not last forever; and does a crown endure to all generations? (Prov. 27:23) (Psalm 23)
  • Nature declares the glory of God and proclaims his invisible attributes (Psalm 19, 104; Romans 1:20)
  • Knowing about plants and animals was considered part of Solomon’s wisdom. (I Kings 4:33-34)
  • Living things (not just man) bring praise to the Lord (Psalm 148)

Understanding dominion: An analogy from Ephesians 5 shows that dominion is not exploitive or oppressive. Godly headship never is.

  • Christ and the Church – under Christ’s headship the church is to thrive, be fruitful, and become more lovely
  • Husband and wife – under her husband’s righteous headship a wife is to thrive, be fruitful, and become more lovely
  • We have been given dominion over the Creation. If we exercise godly dominion under the Lordship of Christ the living creation will thrive, be fruitful, and will become more lovely.  Knowledge and appreciation of our fellow creatures is essential for good husbandry.

Disastrous Acts of Judgment in the Bible:  For thus says the Lord God: How much more when I send upon Jerusalem my four disastrous acts of judgment, sword, famine, wild beasts, and pestilence, to cut off from it man and beast! (Ezekiel 14:21) Three of the four are environmental problems.

What is the cause of environmental problems? Sin (direct or indirect causality)

Hosea 4:1-3 – Hear the word of the Lord, O children of Israel,
for the Lord has a controversy with the inhabitants of the land.
There is
no faithfulness or steadfast love,
and 
no knowledge of God in the land;
2 there is swearing, lying, murder, stealing, and committing adultery;
they
break all bounds, and bloodshed follows bloodshed.
3 Therefore the land mourns,
and
all who dwell in it languish,
and also the
beasts of the field
and the
birds of the heavens,
and even the
fish of the sea are taken away.

See also Jeremiah 12:4

What is the solution to environmental problems? The Gospel

How so? Because of the Fall we have been alienated from God, from our fellow man, and from nature. Nature also has internal conflicts (all creation groans). Francis Schaeffer refers to these as divisions. When we are reconciled to God by justification that lays the groundwork to begin healing these other divisions.

How shall we then live?

  • Live and proclaim the gospel with a conscious desire to heal all the dislocations caused by the fall. God to man; man to man; and man to nature, and nature to nature. Prov. 16:7; Isaiah 11:6-9
  • Cultivate a love and appreciation of God’s living world…in yourself and in your children (children have an innate love of nature). Through hunting, fishing, hiking, camping, gardening, zoos, botanical gardens, arboretums, and parks.
  • Have a heart of gratitude to God who made living things to meet our practical needs (food, clothing, and shelter). Thank him that they also fulfil our aesthetic and emotional longings.
  • Principles for professionals that directly exercise dominion over plants or animals (zoo keepers, farmers, ranchers, foresters, soil scientists, horticulturists, vets, breeders, animal rehab, park rangers, landscape architects, wildlife managers, ecologists, developers, etc. etc.)
    • Exercise good husbandry for the animals in your charge (Prov. 12:10; Prov. 27:23).
    • Think biblically regarding the management of nature. Don’t be narrow-minded and disregard the diversity, balance, and interdependency of nature.
    • Be humble and eager to learn of better practices from others (non-Christians and Christians alike). Look for ways to enhance your real estate. Don’t just think in terms of mitigating the negatives.
    • Don’t look down your nose or be judgmental at others who are at different levels of knowledge, wisdom, and practice. Be an example of better practice.
  • Developers: You have a greater capacity to do great good as well as great damage. In addition to abiding by environmental laws to avoid possible punishment (Romans 13) love God and your neighbor in how you develop. Don’t chafe under the environmental regulations, set a higher standard. We should be reformational and think generational in all things. Think how to achieve a win-win not zero-sum game.  Think, innovate, and work toward a garden city. A human city or town that emulates Hobbiton and Rivendell. Keep in mind that wilderness has its place (Psalm 104:18). It is not useless.
  • Don’t just think sustainability. We (along with the sea creatures and fish) were told to be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth. Mankind at present has an MO that diminishes creation; we are not enhancing the created order. Sustainability is indeed a step in the right direction but we can’t stop there. In the parable of the talents which servant got chewed out?

The earth is the Lord’s and the fullness thereof (Psalm 24:1). Since God has put us in charge, as far as it depends on us, let’s enhance its intrinsic beauty and diversity in the sphere of influence God have given us, motivated by our love of God, His creation, and our neighbor.

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Seed

Ben Zornes on May 7, 2017

https://www.christkirk.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/2018B-1.mp3

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

Weeds and Grains
Genesis 2:4 marks the beginning of a new section in the book of Genesis. However, to many it doesn’t just look like a new section, but it actually looks like a section that contradicts the previous section. Gen. 2:7 appears to put the creation of Adam as after the creation of plants, contradicting Gen. 1, where plants are created on the third day and man is created on the sixth day.
However, a closer read of the text shows that 2:5 is actually referring to a much more specific kind of plant. 1:11-12 refers to “grass” and “herbs yielding seed” (grain). But 2:5 refers to “plant of the field.” The Hebrew for “plant” here is not a super common noun, but one that usually refers to the wild shrubs found out in the desert (Job 21:15). This would mean that 2:4-7 is telling us that Adam was created at a moment in time before there were weeds in the ground and before grain had begun to sprout.

Before the Curse
So why is there a need to specify this particular moment? We have to look at the curse in order to understand this. Look at 3:17-19. When the ground is cursed, the result is that man will now have to work to eat from it. In chapter 2, the author of Genesis focuses on the trees that God provides to Adam for food (2:9, 16 and 3:2). But after his sin, Adam is told that now he will toil to get his food from the ground (3:17). He will have to fight weeds and he will have to sweat (v. 18).

Dust to Dust
Adam having to till the ground for grain was a consequence of his fall (3:23). After the fall, our work for food requires that we work in the dirt. You will eat from the ground (3:18), eating grain (3:18), and eating bread (3:19). God cursed the ground and made us farmers.
Why farming? Adam was made from dust (2:7). And because Adam sinned, he was going to die and return to dust (3:19 and 23).

You are Seed
But when a farmer cuts open the earth to put the seed in, he doesn’t do so in grim defeat. He actually does so with great hope. He looks to a harvest. And Scripture carries over this hope to us. Yes, we are all going into the ground, because we are all mortal. But we go into the ground as seed (1 Cor. 15:35-37, 48-49). Grain is provides food, just like a fruit tree. But the grain must die first. It must go into the ground to die, before returning in glory. And that is what man, after the fall is. We are creatures that must die first, but will live eternally.

The Seed
But the hope in Genesis 3 is even stronger than that. We always are quick to point out that when God gave the curse, he also gave the promise of the coming Messiah to deliver us from the curse. But how was that Messiah described? The Messiah was the coming seed of the woman (3:15). In fact, all of Scripture points to this one true seed, the seed whose death and resurrection makes possible our eternal life.

No Going Back
Notice that God did not solve Adam’s sin by giving him means by which he could undo the damage that he had done. Death has not been removed, but rather conquered. Our tendency, when we see the consequences of our sin, is want to find a way back to before our sin, to undo it. But that is never an option. The cross was not a time machine. Instead, God took Adam’s sin and all its consequences and turned it into another path for walking into God’s glory.

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GraceAgenda 2016 Sessions

Ben Zornes on April 8, 2016

CanonPress kindly produced these talks free of charge! So, to return the favor, all you gotta do to access all GraceAgenda 2016 talks is subscribe to the CanonPress mailing list!

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Dr. John Sanford : New Saint Andrews Disputatio


Dr. Tim Edwards : Genesis in the Psalms


Nate Wilson : Fantastical Realism


Gordon Wilson : Seven Evolution Busters


Dr. John Sanford : All Creation Groans


Pastor Douglas Wilson : Darwin As Wrecking Ball


Round Table Discussion

[/emaillocker] CLICK HERE TO LEARN MORE ABOUT GRACE AGENDA 2017 – REFORMATION 500

 

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