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Reproclaiming the Everlasting Gospel

If we died with him, we shall live with him;

if we endure, we shall reign with him.

If we deny him, he will deny us.

If we are faithless, he keeps faith,

   for he cannot deny himself (2 Tim. 2:11-13).

These simple, beautiful lines are preceded by the Apostle's guarantee: "Here are words you may trust." It seems likely that he's informing us that the words are inspired, and therefore trustworthy. In addition, the breadth and depth of understanding, expressed in so few words, is indicative of inspired authorship. So few words to speak of such a lengthy process, for the dying mentioned in the first line is slow and difficult, and, as a result, widely avoided. Nevertheless, the long inward process is laid out for us in Scriptures' apocalyptic passages; there we're given words to understand what to expect: where we are going and Who will come to us in the end.

Each synoptic gospel contains an apocalyptic chapter; I prefer the one in the book of Mark because the language is concise, intense, and powerful. Chapter 13 begins with Jesus providing his disciples with an image and prediction of a destroyed temple. The disciples had been impressed with the buildings of their religion and said so, but Jesus tells them that "all will be thrown down"(2). Though he speaks of the culture's dwelling space for the Spirit of God, he refers to the inward dwelling place of our human spirits: our religious, philosophical, psychological, and cultural concepts in which we posit our understanding of self and world. These, Jesus says, will be thrown down.

Many of the chapter's subsequent verses (7-20) describe destruction, turmoil, and distress: war, earthquakes, famine, betrayals, upheavals, family disruption, and fleeing one's home and land. The significance of this imagery is two-fold: in one form or another, life's distresses will be the lot of all; and secondly, this is not chosen but visited upon us, and endured. Personal trials are unique yet come universally to us all. It is as if Jesus, using poetic images, is giving a overview of life's calamities, specific calamities that when conjointly listed imply the universality of loss and affliction. The line spoken by the Magi in Eliot's poem summarizes it well: "A hard time we had of it" ("Journey of the Magi").

This onslaught over time will, in truth, undermine confidence in all existential concepts, even those concepts of "God," "love," and "light." All will be thrown down so that there's not one stone left upon another to sustain one's constructed image of life and self; this is one's own personal inward suffering "such as never has been until now since the beginning of the world which God created"(20). Jesus tells us how we're to handle it: we're to endure to the end(13). To endure is to hold to the deep, wordless human insistence that truth must be honored, though it shakes to the ground every manmade notion of earth and heaven and leaves one feeling lost, without bearings. Such endurance during the temptation to despair is the material of Quaker journal writings and the experience of all true Christians.   

Knowing the frustration and despair of the inward process, the Cross within, Jesus warns us upfront to not be deceived and misled by those who come saying that they are the light of Christ:

Jesus began:"Take care that no one misleads you. Many will come claiming my name, and saying, 'I am he'; and many will be misled by them"(5-6). 

By making grand claims for themselves, such persons will mislead and foment a symbiotic relationship with any whose endurance has flagged and are ready to forfeit. Manipulation by flattery is a primary tactic of such, which appeals to the ego of the willing victim by suggesting he's already knowledgeable about God, in Paul's words "saying that [his] resurrection has already taken place"(2 Tim. 2:18). Secondly, any check on this corrupt teaching will be denigrated as unworthy, thereby eliminating any standard for exposing his false gospel. The willing victim offers his tribute of loyalty and support in return, for he thinks himself released from his responsibility to endure, as Jesus has called him to do. This form of idolatry upsets people's faith, and so Jesus prominently places his warning against it at the start of his discourse.

The Son of man comes inwardly to those who endure until to the end, [for] the same shall be saved(13). Salvation is known by the inward coming of the Lord, "Then they will see the Son of man coming in the clouds with great power and glory"(26); his coming is known by the complete otherness of his person, for he is a person, neither solely a principle nor an essence. The coming of the Son of man is that which no person can effect by his own desire or aspiration or sacrifice; the coming of the Lord is out of our hands entirely, Jesus teaches. We do not know how to turn to the Son of man because we have no idea what he is inwardly, what to expect; his coming will not resemble in the slightest our human concepts of "light and love" or even our concepts of God. We know neither the substance nor the timing of this inward event: "But about that day or that hour no one knows, not even the angels in heaven, not even the Son; only the Father"(32). It is entirely other, for our deliverance is the prerogative of our Creator, not of our creaturely aspiration.

We can reject this ancient wisdom but do so at our peril: "Heaven and earth shall pass away: but my words shall not pass away"(31). A faithless turn to idolatry only destroys one's chances of salvation; it in no way impacts the soteriological structure by which we are called to abide: endurance in the truth until the end.

"If we are faithless, he keeps faith, for he cannot deny himself"(2 Tim. 2:13).

 

 

 

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Comment by Ellis Hein on 11thMo. 4, 2015 at 13:40

Thanks, Pat, for this clear and insightful presentation. I was just reading in Vol. 4 of the Works of Fox where he cited a number of references dealing with idolatry. Among those references were Ezekiel 14 and Habakkuk 2. The Ezekiel passage deals with having idols in our heart and putting our stumbling block right in from of our face. Then when we appear before the Lord to ask anything, the first thing He is going to do is to deal with the idols in our heart. Outward conformity does not count. The Habakkuk passage points out how anyone who trusts in idols has placed his trust in his own handiwork, looking to himself to teach himself wisdom. This passage ends with the injunction, "The Lord is in his holy temple. Let the whole earth keep quiet before Him." Why? because He is the God who speaks, He is the God who reveals Himself. He is the God who is the breath of life. He is the God who gives instruction and wisdom to those who seek and wait for it. All this seemed to dovetail into what you have written above.

Thanks

Comment by Patricia Dallmann on 11thMo. 5, 2015 at 12:17

Thanks for your comment, Ellis. Will you let me know which pages in volume four of the Works Fox refers to idolatry? My essay aimed at bringing close to home the requirement and right order of moving toward salvation, how a faithfulness to that deep, wordless insistence on truth was the disicpline. If that's dismissed, something else replaces it, and that's idolatry.

Jesus refines the discipline from what it was with the earlier prophets, who gave outward guidance: the ten commandments. Even Micah's instruction about the Lord's requirements of us is to name virtues, which are less explicit than the earlier commandments: "do justice, love mercy, and walk humbly with your God." But Jesus's guidance goes to the heart of the matter: endure in truth until the end. Over time, the discipline moved from concrete, specific, explicit rules to inward consciousness of personal responsibility. 

Comment by Ellis Hein on 11thMo. 5, 2015 at 12:53

This was from a lengthy article, entitled: A HAMMER To break down all Invented Images, Image-makers, and Image-worshippers. Showing how contrary they are both to the Law and Gospel... It starts on page 365 of Vol. 4.  The Ezekiel 14 passage is on page 380 and the Habakkuk passage on page 383.

Comment by Ellis Hein on 11thMo. 6, 2015 at 13:44

I have had a few days to consider your previous comment. There is a lot there in what you have written. Is it that we humans are lazy and prefer to have explicit rules to live by? Perhaps there is a sense of security in the idea that I am following the advice of the expert, anything that goes wrong is his fault, not mine. Maybe that works for very young children, but part of growing up is to come to an understanding of what generated those rules-to-live-by that were imposed on us as children. Becky used to encourage her cello students to step out into the unknown of music making where the rules were not the important thing. The criteria of success was based on the performance. Did it produce real music? In life, the criteria of success is righteousness and living in the breath of life, that inner unity with God's vision of what we are supposed to be. This may produce some outward manifestations that appear similar to those who live by the outward rules, but just as a mechanical rendition of a piece of music will sound different than the performance of one who has the music in his heart and if flows out from there, so the life of the righteous and alive will "sing" differently than the life of the rule bound. 

Comment by Patricia Dallmann on 11thMo. 7, 2015 at 12:20

That's a good analogy that you've made, Ellis: "mechanical rendition of a piece of music" is to "the performance of one who has music in his heart" as is "explicit rules to live by" is to "living in the breath of life, that inner unity with God's vision of what we are supposed to be." The discipline is required beforehand though, whether it is to learn to play music or whether it is to come into the kingdom of God. It could be discipline like Paul says the Gentiles might have (Rom. 2:14) or it could be the steady discipline over the centuries provided by the law, but there must be some passage way from the Fallen nature of the first birth to the new creation in Christ. This progress is identified by Fox early in his Journal ("I saw death reigned over them form Adam to Moses..." Nickalls, 31). All the steps that the tradition gives us through the law, prophets, and John can be encompassed by the one overriding guideline that Jesus gives in these apocalyptic discourses, of which Mark 13 is one: that is, that we must be faithful to the truth -- that is the one essential responsibility. 

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