Book Sale

Monday, 13 January 2025

Disgust at the Bible

 




Some passages of the Bible provoke pure disgust. A good example of this is Judges 19. This chapter goes from bad, to worse, to revolting. If you meditate on what is happening, it actually makes you angry. The passage includes homosexuality, rape, murder, mutilation and complete disregard for the victims of the rape and murder. And one of the men who empowered the crime is a Leviticus priest, it’s a sordid affair.

Some critics of the Bible use passages like this to attack the Scriptures. But they are simply misreading it or misunderstanding it.

A chapter such as this is in the Bible precisely to provoke disgust in the reader. It is to highlight just how wicked God’s own people become if they depart from the word of God.

I saw a post the other day where some progressive Christian was trying to use scant archaeological evidence to argue for women in ministry today, because we have evidence of it in some of the early Church. The evidence was spurious, however, even if we grant it to be true, it doesn’t argue what that person thought. It simply demonstrates how quickly God’s people can go apostate if they abandon his commands. The same can be said for early worship of icons, and so many other practices in the early Church. God’s people can go apostate quickly.

In Judges it takes just a generation for Israel to go from righteously following God to worshipping idols and committing abominations. And this cycle goes on and on until Israel becomes as evil as Sodom. If you don’t believe me, just read Judges 19. It is perhaps the most disgust inducing chapter in the Scriptures.

But this shows us how depraved we can become and how quickly it can happen if we reject the God we know. How quickly did our society go from saying all religions and ways of life are equal, to neutering kids through surgery and chemicals, and celebrating it as liberty? Fast enough to give many people whiplash. So fast even many unbelievers are now disgusted that our culture went there.

But without God as the centre of a society, no abomination is off the table. Such is the state of mankind apart from God, our father, and his Son, Jesus Christ our Saviour.

Hence why Peter warned:

“20 For if, after they have escaped the defilements of the world through the knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, they are again entangled in them and overcome, the last state has become worse for them than the first. 21 For it would have been better for them never to have known the way of righteousness than after knowing it to turn back from the holy commandment delivered to them. 22 What the true proverb says has happened to them: “The dog returns to its own vomit, and the sow, after washing herself, returns to wallow in the mire” (2 Peter 2:20-22).

 

Sunday, 12 January 2025

Trump Shares Criticism of Netanyahu

 


Well, this is a development

"US President-elect Donald Trump has shared a video of an interview with Jeffrey Sachs in which the American economist calls Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “a deep, dark son of a b***h.”

Trump posted the clip on his Truth Social platform on Tuesday without comment. In the two-minute video, Sachs accuses former US President Barack Obama of arming jihadists in Syria in a bid to overthrow Bashar Assad’s government. Sachs also condemns former President George Bush’s 2003 invasion of Iraq, and accuses Netanyahu of goading Bush into launching the two-decade war and pushing for US intervention in Syria and Iran.

“He’s still trying to get us to fight Iran this day, this week,” Sachs says at the end of the clip. “He’s a deep, dark, son of a b***h… because he’s gotten us into endless wars.”

Trump was a close ally of Netanyahu during his term in the White House, and described himself as “history’s most pro-Israel US president.” He imposed sanctions on Iran at Netanyahu’s request, moved the US embassy in Israel to West Jerusalem, and brokered the Abraham Accords, which saw Israel normalize relations with Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, Morocco, and Sudan.

However, the two seemingly fell out after Netanyahu congratulated President Joe Biden while Trump was still attempting to challenge Biden’s electoral victory in the courts in late 2020." 

Now let's see what Trump actually does. It is not unheard of to hear US presidents criticise Israel's leadership and policies, and then continue to empower them anyway. So let's see if Trump really does intend to get the US out of the Middle East. Praise God if he does. 

Saturday, 28 December 2024

Most Moral Army In The World?

 




You have probably heard this claim made at some point, “Israel has the most moral military in the world.” Especially last year (2023) in the aftermath of October 7th when Israeli war planes started bombing civilian targets in Gaza. It was common to hear at the time many defenders of Israel’s strategy come out and say, again and again, no country goes out of its way more to be moral than the Israeli Defense force. It was like some kind of whiplash inducing gas-lighting campaign. Firstly, as an Australian, knowing that we have a military with a stellar reputation around the world, though not perfect, I don’t know how anyone could make such a statement. Secondly, this is just observably and demonstrably not true.

As the Jerusalem Post itself notes,

“Reality Check: The most moral army in the world. Really?

After 70 years of independence, we should be mature enough to honestly examine ourselves.

The IDF, said Defense Minister Avigdor Liberman recently, is the most moral army in the world, a statement which had most Israelis nodding their head in automatic agreement. But how do we know? Is there a league table for military morality, with a point gained for every enemy civilian left unharmed during a battle, two deducted for every civilian maimed or killed and five points taken off for any use of illegal weapons? Who keeps the score?

And if there really was such a system of assessing military morality, how do we honestly think the IDF would rank?

Over the past three weekends, more than 30 unarmed Palestinians have been shot dead by IDF snipers for demonstrating on the Palestinian side of the border between Israel and Gaza, including Yasser Murtaja, who was clearly wearing a flak jacket identifying him as a journalist when shot. Another 300 or more Palestinians have been wounded by live fire in these demonstrations.

These were not peaceful demonstrations on the Palestinian side, and were clearly designed to spark conflict with the IDF, but why is “the most moral army in the world” automatically resorting to the use of live ammunition against unarmed demonstrators to quell such protests? It’s not as if the IDF does not have water cannons, tear-gas grenades, rubber bullets and other non-lethal weaponry at its disposal.”[1]

No, this was not written last year, or even this year, while this particular conflagration of the 100 or so year war in Gaza has been ongoing. It was written back in 2018 and seeks to be an honest reflection on the many immoral things that the Israeli army has done. 

But as the author notes, how would you rank this anyway? How can you determine which army is the best and which is the worst? The United States military has been revealed to have engaged in countless war crimes, especially in the Middle East, so have many other militaries. Though it would not be fair to say all have done this equally. However, choosing who is the worst amongst the lot would take a lot of evaluation and data sheet work. So, my aim is not to argue that the Israeli Defense Force is the worst military in the world, just that it is certainly not a moral exemplar. The idea that it is the most moral army in the world is clearly just messaging for the gullible, and the severely uninformed.

Is this the action of a moral force?

“Or take the example of Elor Azaria, convicted of manslaughter – not murder – for shooting dead an incapacitated Palestinian terrorist. For this crime, he was initially sentenced by a military court to 18 months in prison, which then was later commuted to 14 months by none other than IDF Chief of Staff Gadi Eisenkot. Exactly what moral lesson is being taught here? That killing a defenseless prisoner only merits a relatively short period of time behind bars?”[2]

Of course, in the Middle East these kinds of mass actions against civilians are pretty much par for the course,

“But the opposite is not true either. None of the above examples turns the IDF into the most immoral army in the world. As Defense Minister Liberman pointed out when defending the IDF’s actions on the border with Gaza: “In the entire region, half a million were murdered in Syria, hundreds of thousands were murdered in Yemen, Libya and Iraq. No one notices....”

Yet still, Israeli leaders, and Christians I know personally, like to try and argue that the Israeli military is the most moral in the world. This is a good example of the “Big Lie” if I ever heard one. And it is proclaimed with such gusto that some people actually believe it. I have had people say it to me personally, on many occasions, and especially in the last 12 to 14 months. But it is clearly not true, and never has been true.

Ilan Pappe notes, about a previous Israeli war,

“This exploded in a most horrific way in September 1982, when the Phalangists, under the watchful eyes of the Israeli army, massacred between eight hundred and two thousand refugees living in two camps in the south of Beirut: Sabra and Shatila.

The invasion was a brutal affair, which included constant shelling and air bombardment of Beirut and led to the flight of hundreds of thousands of Lebanese from the south to the north. The Israelis remained in many parts that they invaded more or less until the year 2000, and established harsh military rule that included infamous prison camps such as Khiam, where Palestinians and Lebanese were tortured and imprisoned without trial. At the same time, the Lebanese resistance, led by the Shiite minority residing mostly in the south of Lebanon, inflicted a high number of casualties on the Israeli army that eventually forced the Israelis out of Lebanon.

The scenes from Lebanon played out on every TV screen in British homes and energised those within British civil society to institutionalise advocacy for the Palestinians.”[3]

Ilan Pappe is an Israeli historian, and he is honestly reflecting on the way his own nation has acted in the past. He is being far more open and honest about his nation's misdeeds than many Christians. Indeed, many Christians I know will deny this reality even when informed about it. They deny it ever happened, or pretend you didn’t say anything, and some even go so far as to say that if such crimes did happen, then Israel must have had good reasons for it. But what is a good reason for torturing prisoners being held without trial? In fact, what happened in Lebanon was so terrible even Ronald Regan, a very pro-Israel president (are there any who aren’t) called for the Israelis to stop what they were doing.

Then there was what Israel did to its own greatest ally in 1967,

“But it may seem that this carte blanche had limits which were breached when the Israeli air force bombed an American spy ship called Liberty, killing thirty-four navy personnel and wounding more than a hundred. Israel apologised, explaining it away as a case of mistaken identity scarcely plausible given that the Star-Spangled Banner flew high on the deck.

ALPAC realised that it could not prevent President Johnson from admonishing Israel in public for its assault on the ship. All it could do was damage control, as it was clear that even the usually pro-Israel mainstream media would find it hard to swallow the Israeli explanation. Israel's reasons for attacking the ship are still debated today. It probably had to do with information the spy ship was able to collect that might have tarnished Israel's international reputation. Most scholars assume that the ship had gathered intelligence about an Israeli massacre of Egyptian soldiers and about the expulsion of Palestinians from the Gaza Strip, which Israel wanted to conceal. But we still need further substantiation of this reasonable, and in many ways only acceptable, explanation. The most important task for AIPAC was to dissuade members of Congress who wanted an official inquiry from making this demand — a goal they successfully achieved.”[4]

Ron Unz has done a series of fantastic articles on his website outlining what Israel did to the USS Liberty. All the American eyewitnesses note that there is no way that the Israelis could not have known it was an American ship, as Pappe himself notes. The ship was flying the US flag high and visible, and many of the soldiers remember their cries that they were Americans going ignored by the attacking Israeli forces. An unarmed American ship as well, remember; it was not a warship, but an intelligence ship. These are not the actions of even a moderately moral military, let alone the most moral military in the world.

What is significant though is that the Israel lobby, in particular AIPAC, was able to get the Americans to bury any investigation into the matter. Which is incredible. It is because of lobbying actions like this that many Australian and American Christians believe the propaganda line that the IDF is the most moral military in the world. Something that even many Israelis themselves would reject, as we noted above, and as is noted by this next Israeli piece,

“While Palestinians are officially prohibited from entering, the reality is more severe than a simple exclusion zone. "It's military whitewashing," explains a senior officer in Division 252, who has served three reserve rotations in Gaza. "The division commander designated this area as a 'kill zone.' Anyone who enters is shot."

A recently discharged Division 252 officer describes the arbitrary nature of this boundary: "For the division, the kill zone extends as far as a sniper can see." But the issue goes beyond geography. "We're killing civilians there who are then counted as terrorists," he says. "The IDF spokesperson's announcements about casualty numbers have turned this into a competition between units. If Division 99 kills 150 [people], the next unit aims for 200."

These accounts of indiscriminate killing and the routine classification of civilian casualties as terrorists emerged repeatedly in Haaretz's conversations with recent Gaza veterans.

"Calling ourselves the world's most moral army absolves soldiers who know exactly what we're doing," says a senior reserve commander who has recently returned from the Netzarim corridor. "It means ignoring that for over a year, we've operated in a lawless space where human life holds no value. Yes, we commanders and combatants are participating in the atrocity unfolding in Gaza. Now everyone must face this reality."[5]

The clear war crimes being committed in Gaza prove that it is a lie that the Israeli military is the most moral in the world, and this is recognized by many Israelis themselves. Just like many Americans now know that their military is not always the good guys. Israel’s army is acting much like any other military force in the Middle East, with indiscriminate brutality against civilians. And while this is happening a massive propaganda campaign is run throughout the western media to convince the average American or Australian, that the IDF is going out of its way to minimize casualties.

I noted on Substack a week or so ago that Christians are fallen people like any other people.


We make mistakes and believe lies, just like anyone else. But unlike others, we have a deep and abiding moral responsibility to correct our errors and speak the truth, and when we have believed lies to then correct those lies. I once believed the Israel military was the most moral military in the world. I once believed much of the hype that many of my Christian brothers and sisters still believe. However, for some time now I have seen through them, and I have seen many other people begin to see through them as well. Sadly, though, many believers are resistant to the idea that Israeli forces and leadership could be bad guys in a sea of other bad guys in the region.

The problem with getting involved in the Middle East is that the people who live there do not want to be ruled by western forces, even Eastern Europeans who have a tangential claim to heritage in the region. This reality means that all foreign militaries that get involved there end up becoming as brutal as the enemies they fight. To be fair this happens anywhere where one people seek to rule another people by force. It is part of the dirty business of empire. We should have nothing to do with this. And it certainly should not be sanctioned as being in the name of God.

The Apostle Paul wrote something to confront his own people in Romans 2. He noted,

“22 You who say that one must not commit adultery, do you commit adultery? You who abhor idols, do you rob temples? 23 You who boast in the law dishonor God by breaking the law. 24 For, as it is written, “The name of God is blasphemed among the Gentiles because of you” (Rom. 2:22-24).  

Paul wrote this to challenge his own people and note that they were no less sinners than the Gentiles they looked down on, and because of this they had led many Gentiles into blaspheming the name of God. But I wonder how many non-believers today are blaspheming God because of the Church’s support for clearly evil actions in the Middle East? Not just from Israel of course, but from the US, UK, France, and other western countries. How badly has Christian support for these forever wars of empire, and the evil actions that often accompany this, and then even sometimes denial that these evil things are actually happening, how badly has this tarnished the image of Christ and his Church in the eyes of many secular people today, or even people of other faiths?

Every human has a duty to speak the truth, but we Christians believe in the one who tells us that he is the truth (John 14:6). Therefore, we will be held to a much higher account for spreading lies. Let’s make sure we do not do this.

List of References



[2] Ibid.

[3] Ilan Pappe, 2024, p.212.

[4] Ilan Pappe, 2024, 256-257.

[5] Yaniv Kubovich, 2024, https://archive.vn/hFruD

Friday, 27 December 2024

The Legacy of Boxing Day

 




One of the most overlooked Christian holidays is St Stephen’s Day, or as you have more commonly heard it called, Boxing Day. In fact, this holiday is so overlooked, you might not even know that it is a Christian holiday. We generally just think about it as the day after Christmas, an extra public holiday set aside for many to rest their belt loops. A lot of people see it as the day to spend the Christmas money they just got. How strange is that, on a day after excess gifts and excess food, many Aussies want to actually go back to the shopping malls and spend. Aren’t we a strange bunch.

But I thought as this is such an overlooked holiday that I would investigate it. I have always wondered what boxing day was, and why we celebrate it. There are many parts of our culture that we just follow along with, without understanding why. So, I thought we could examine some of the historical significance of this day, and why we celebrate it.

As someone with a historically inquisitive mind, I love to look into the reasons why we do things. I also ask myself ‘why’. Some people just accept that the way things are is the way things are. I am not like that. I love to investigate how and why we get to where we are as a society. I think examining why we do things is important, because we might find paths where we have deviated and also the right path to getting back on track. So, I decided to take a brief look at why we celebrate boxing day, and what this means for us today.

I think that there is some interesting information for us, whichever aspect of our tradition we seek to emphasize on this holiday. So, what I want to do is look at those traditions and reflect on them biblically. As a Baptist, I do not believe that tradition is supreme. But nothing is more Baptist than questioning traditions in light of the Bible. I think these ancient traditions can give us interesting insight into how Christians of the past applied God’s teaching on charity and generosity.

Just a note to start. None of the history I could find was certain where boxing day came from. It is more likely that it is a few different traditions melded in together. So, this piece is not meant to be the final word on what boxing day is. One of the beauties of man-made traditions is that we are free in how we approach them, and free to reapply them as we see fit, as long as it is in line with the word of God of course.

My purpose here is to reflect on various aspects of our Christian history and what they tell us about who we are in Christ, and how we can learn from that history. Australia is predominately an Anglo-Saxon land. Of course, over time many other people have been welcomed here. But historically we have gained our Christian traditions, our legal traditions and our over arching identity from the British Isles. There have been many efforts to try and change this in the last few decades, but the Bible teaches us something very important about a nation’s history: if you forget who you are and where you come from, you can be easily manipulated towards evil.

It is not a coincidence that this reinterpreting of who we are has coincided with the greatest moral decline in our history. This is exactly what you should expect when a Christian nation forgets its identity. Even the convicts had a truer sense of God and his ways, than many modern Australians. Which is a remarkably frightening thought.

But this is important: reflecting on our history is only valuable as long as it directs us towards the truth of who we are and who we are meant to be. The reason why I love history so much is because it tells the story of humanity, and the story of humanity is filled with the work of God.

The Bible isn’t filled with mostly history for no reason – God designed the first real history book and inspired the Jewish people to write it, creating, in my view, the most important genre because it tells us something very important about where we came from, why we came from such a place, how we got to where we are, and all this sums up to who we are and what we should be. So, let’s examine this history of boxing day in light of God’s word.

Tradition One – The Poor Box.

The first tradition associated with Boxing Day is an old Christian tradition of taking a collection over Christmas time in the alms box in the church,

“It is sometimes believed to be in reference to the alms box placed in the narthex of Christian churches to collect donations for the poor. The tradition may come from a custom in the late Roman/ early Christian era wherein alms boxes placed in churches were used to collect special offerings tied to the Feast of Saint Stephen, which, in the Western Christian Churches, falls on the same day as Boxing Day, the second day of Christmastide. On this day, it is customary in some localities for the alms boxes to be opened and distributed to the poor.”[1]

This is a wonderful tradition. A godly tradition that is reminiscent of many practices in Scripture.

2 Corinthians 8:12-15 says, that we should share our abundance with those who have less,

“12 For if the readiness is there, it is acceptable according to what a person has, not according to what he does not have. 13 For I do not mean that others should be eased and you burdened, but that as a matter of fairness 14 your abundance at the present time should supply their need, so that their abundance may supply your need, that there may be fairness. 15 As it is written, “Whoever gathered much had nothing left over, and whoever gathered little had no lack.”

God wants us to celebrate festivals out of our excess. Paul also wants us to give out of our excess to those with less, and then if we are ever in need he wants it go the other way. Paul also wants those who give in such a situation to do so willingly and with a cheerful heart, 2 Corinthians 9:6-8,

“6 The point is this: whoever sows sparingly will also reap sparingly, and whoever sows bountifully will also reap bountifully. 7 Each one must give as he has decided in his heart, not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver. 8 And God is able to make all grace abound to you, so that having all sufficiency in all things at all times, you may abound in every good work.”

It is vitally important that we in the Church remember to consider those who have less than us. And cheerfully seek to bless them.

This is an ancient principle in the Bible and is mentioned in many ways throughout it. A good example is Isaiah 58, which tells us how God wants us to live. Isaiah 58:10-11, says,

“10 if you pour yourself out for the hungry and satisfy the desire of the afflicted, then shall your light rise in the darkness and your gloom be as the noonday. 11 And the Lord will guide you continually and satisfy your desire in scorched places and make your bones strong; and you shall be like a watered garden, like a spring of water, whose waters do not fail.”

This world is unfair, and because of that some people have so much more than others. Even though they may have just been born into better circumstances and did not necessarily earn it. It is not wrong to be blessed by the hard work of your parents, or your grandparents, indeed this is how things should work. I love it when I hear about how parents or grandparents help out their young adults to get established in life, it is awesome.

The church of God is supposed to be a place where some of that unfairness is corrected. Where some balance is restored. Where the plenty of some is shared with the few without. The Bible is not concerned with making everyone equal in possessions. But it is concerned with making sure some people are not too self-indulgent and others are not too poor. When the extremes become too disconnected, this is when nations fall apart.

So, we can see that this first tradition is entirely good and thoroughly biblical. We should continue to do this kind of work of sharing with those in need. However you can find a way to bless the poor.

Tradition Two – the Wealthy blessing their servants with Christmas boxes.

We can trace this custom back into the 17th century.

“In Britain, it was a custom for tradesmen to collect "Christmas boxes" of money or presents on the first weekday after Christmas as thanks for good service throughout the year. This is mentioned in Samuel Pepys' diary entry for 19 December 1663. This custom is linked to an older British tradition where the servants of the wealthy were allowed the next day to visit their families since they would have had to serve their masters on Christmas Day. The employers would give each servant a box to take home containing gifts, bonuses, and sometimes leftover food. Until the late 20th century there continued to be a tradition among many in the UK to give a Christmas gift, usually cash, to vendors, although not on Boxing Day as many would not work on that day.”[2]

I remember when I worked at the Petfood factory when I was younger, we would get a Christmas box at the end of the year. It generally included certain bonuses, Christmas food, and coupons. I miss getting those big giant hams. Our bosses would often throw a big party for us as well, usually at a fancy resort.

This is a very biblical tradition as well, being generous with those who are under your authority, or with those who have worked for you in the year. The Proverbs is filled with encouragements to bless those with less, who serve you:

Proverbs 14:21 – “Whoever despises his neighbor is a sinner, but blessed is he who is generous to the poor.”

Proverbs 14:31 – “Whoever oppresses a poor man insults his Maker, but he who is generous to the needy honors him.”

Proverbs 19:17 – “Whoever is generous to the poor lends to the Lord, and he will repay him for his deed.”

We are not all rich in Australian terms, but in historical terms we are incredibly wealthy. We have leisure time, excess food, excess comfort, excess enjoyment. We have a lot, we have many different people who earn less than us, whom we can choose to bless from our abundance.

I like the idea of bosses going out of their way to bless their workers, and masters their servants, because we have a Lord such as this,

“5 Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus, 6 who, though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped, 7 but emptied himself, by taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men. 8 And being found in human form, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross” (Phil. 2:5-8).

We serve a Lord who saw it fit to serve his servants, us, in the most important way that we needed him to. That is exactly what Christmas is about: the servant king came in the form a little child, so he could live the life we could not live and then die on our behalf. He used his power to save us.

God gives power that the strong may protect the weak. God gives riches that the wealthy may be generous to poor. The Lord gave himself that he may save us all. The strongest in existence used his strength to help us all, who, when it comes to sin, are remarkably weak. Nothing is more important than the service that the Lord has given us, and I think this tradition of the powerful blessing those whom they can on boxing day is also a wonderful tradition.  

Tradition Three

But I think the most important tradition of boxing day, is the most ancient, the celebration of the life and death of St Stephen: “Saint Stephen's Day is the second day of Christmastide and is celebrated in honour of one of the first Christian martyrs, Saint Stephen, who was stoned to death in 36 AD.”

As Baptists we generally don’t tend to refer to saints as a special class of people, because all who are sanctified by Christ are saints. Though we do recognize that God has worked more powerfully through some individuals than through others. Stephen was a remarkable man in the Bible. He is generally known as the first martyr. But that is not all he should be known for. Stephen was also dedicated to helping the poor. Acts 6:1-6 tells us,

“6 Now in these days when the disciples were increasing in number, a complaint by the Hellenists arose against the Hebrews because their widows were being neglected in the daily distribution. 2 And the twelve summoned the full number of the disciples and said, “It is not right that we should give up preaching the word of God to serve tables. 3 Therefore, brothers, pick out from among you seven men of good repute, full of the Spirit and of wisdom, whom we will appoint to this duty. 4 But we will devote ourselves to prayer and to the ministry of the word.” 5 And what they said pleased the whole gathering, and they chose Stephen, a man full of faith and of the Holy Spirit, and Philip, and Prochorus, and Nicanor, and Timon, and Parmenas, and Nicolaus, a proselyte of Antioch. 6 These they set before the apostles, and they prayed and laid their hands on them.”

Stephen was chosen along with six other men to take care of the poor widows. Obviously, he and these other men had shown distinction in their service of the poor, and so were selected to head up this charitable work. Notice, what sort of person does it take to help the poor, the needy, the destitute? A man full of faith and the Holy Spirit. Such a man was Stephen.  

What I want to finish with though is Stephen’s speech. Even though Stephen is recorded being given responsibility to look after the poor widows in Scripture, the thing we most remember about him is his speech and his martyrdom. This is some speech! Stephen was one of deacons chosen so that the Apostles could focus on preaching. But note this: we have Stephen’s sermon recorded in the Bible, alongside of Peter’s and Paul’s messages. That say’s something about the quality of this sermon and its importance in the Christian tradition. Let’s look at a few of his key points.

He begins by reminding the Jews where they come from. Acts 7:2-4,

“2 And Stephen said: “Brothers and fathers, hear me. The God of glory appeared to our father Abraham when he was in Mesopotamia, before he lived in Haran, 3 and said to him, ‘Go out from your land and from your kindred and go into the land that I will show you.’ 4 Then he went out from the land of the Chaldeans and lived in Haran. And after his father died, God removed him from there into this land in which you are now living.”

As we saw above, knowing our history, knowing our origins, helps us to know our true identity. As Christians, this is really important, knowing where we are from, and where we are now, should breed in us gratitude. It is out of this gratitude that our generosity to those in need is fostered. Because we know how desperately in need we were, before God saved us from ourselves. Because we know that apart from God we have no good thing.

He then reminds them of how their ancestors often turned away from God:

They betrayed Joseph, “9 And the patriarchs, jealous of Joseph, sold him into Egypt; but God was with him…”

They rejected Moses when he offered to try and help them the first time,

“…27 But the man who was wronging his neighbor thrust him aside, saying, ‘Who made you a ruler and a judge over us? 28 Do you want to kill me as you killed the Egyptian yesterday?’ 29 At this retort Moses fled and became an exile in the land of Midian, where he became the father of two sons…”

Even after he rescued them from Egypt they would not listen to him,

“…38 This is the one who was in the congregation in the wilderness with the angel who spoke to him at Mount Sinai, and with our fathers. He received living oracles to give to us. 39 Our fathers refused to obey him, but thrust him aside, and in their hearts they turned to Egypt, 40 saying to Aaron, ‘Make for us gods who will go before us. As for this Moses who led us out from the land of Egypt, we do not know what has become of him…’ They chased after continually the false gods Yahweh had saved them from, “43 You took up the tent of Moloch and the star of your god Rephan, the images that you made to worship; and I will send you into exile beyond Babylon…’”

Stephen is angry, it comes across in his message. He reminds the Jews of their sinful origins in Mesopotamia (Babylon), and he reminds them that like gravity they were drawn back to their sinful origins. When he then tells the Israelites standing in front of him that they are just like those who turned away from God, they prove him right by killing him, “58 Then they cast him out of the city and stoned him. And the witnesses laid down their garments at the feet of a young man named Saul.”

Stephen’s speech pulls no punches. It is succinct and powerful power. As a historian I also recognize that he is doing what historians love to do: he is pointing his people back to their origins and history and saying; learn from it. Learn from your history, learn from your ancestors, your people. Don’t make the same mistakes they did!   

I was a bit naïve when I was younger. I thought history was one of the safest subjects, not being very controversial, and just being very interesting. But if you take it seriously, it can get you killed. The first martyr in the Church was a man who reminded God’s apostate people of their true history, and how they were repeating it by rejecting Jesus, and they killed him for it.

That is a big deal. Evil wants to suppress our history, however it can, so we forget who we are and where we come from. This is happening in our nation today. There are elements in our own society who want us to forget our Anglo-Saxon and Christian origins as a nation, so that they can form us in their own image.

Historically boxing day, at least partly, is supposed to be a reminder to us of the character and quality of St Stephen, a man who knew his origins, and knew the importance of trusting in Jesus. A man who was willing to suffer to preach the message of the Bible.

I think there are a few key lessons we learn from Stephen. He gave of himself to help the weak, and he challenged the powerful who were corrupt. Who does that sound like? It sounds like Jesus.

Stephen shows he completely got what it meant to be a Christian. To be Christian means to trust in Jesus, recognizing our desperate spiritual poverty because of our sin and that only Jesus can save us.

To be a Christian also means to turn around and treat those who are weaker than us the same way Jesus did, just like Stephen did, and when necessary to stand up against the powerful who try to take advantage of the weak. 

But he also shows us that we should never forget who we are and who we are supposed to be. Our ancestors often have something to teach us, let’s remember as we move forward in the New Year, that we should not reject our past, but learn from it, and grow in light of it. The Church is at its best when it remembers its origins. We, as people, as Christians, are at our best when we remember our origins. The Bible was written to force God’s people to meditate on their origins and God’s mercy to them despite their sinfulness, often. It was written and designed to help us never forget who we are.

Let me encourage you today, if you are reading this and have not yet trusted in Jesus, he made a way for your debt of sins to be paid, your record of debt to be cancelled, if you would turn to him and trust in him. For those of us who are Christians, let’s meditate on St Stephen, not because it is a tradition, but because, out of all of the non-Apostles in the Bible, the Spirit of God preserved this man’s sermon for us to read again and again, to reflect on what it means to be a follower of Jesus.

Tuesday, 24 December 2024

We Need More Songs Like The Psalms

 


 


Back in 2006 when I came to the Lord, I got involved in a really good church where the worship pastor would often sing songs he had written and composed himself. He was not just a worship pastor either, he was an evangelist, a disciple maker, a preacher, and a mentor. I was really blown away by the quality of the songs he wrote.

After I moved on to another Church, I realized just how blessed I was to have a pastor like that man who wrote such biblical but touching and meaningful songs. I noticed that many other churches sung the popular Christian songs of the moment, some of which were great, but many were not that great. They were not heretical or anything, they just lacked depth, and most of them sounded exactly the same. I also noticed how there were so many topics in the Bible, and especially the Psalms, that modern worship did not touch. I have written about this in the past here.

There are heaps of wonderful Christian worship songs, some of them are some of the most beautiful songs ever written. There are even many great modern worship songs. But we seem to have lost the ability to write with the same breadth of range of topic that the Book of Psalms itself displays. This book is written to teach us how to worship, but many of its lessons are not heeded by the Church.

So, in my early days as a Christian I started to write what I call ‘Psalms for the 21st Century’. They are not to be considered scripture, of course, I want to say that so there is no misunderstanding. They are simply to be modelled on the Psalms and cover some of the topics we don’t sing about so much in modern worship. Like God fighting against our enemies for us, for instance, as a powerful avenger.

Now that we have the ability to create music through AI, I can finally take my old poems and Psalms and turn them into full fledged songs, in a variety of formats and genres. Here is the first of my own songs. I wrote these lyrics myself many years ago.

Now you can listen to them in song: here, here and here. Three different versions. Depending on your tastes. Merry Christmas, let’s do our best to worship our Lord in Spirit and in Truth in the new year and beyond.

 

Rejoice in the Lord

 

My heart rejoices in you Lord

For all that you have done

You have saved me from myself

Delivered me from the evil one

 

I can call on your name

And I know that you will hear

Because I know that you oh God love me

My heart knows no true fear

 

Strike at my enemies

With your mighty power

Save me from myself

In my darkest hour

 

I can rejoice in you God

My heart is so free

To take joy in your presence

Let it wash all over me

 

Your strength is like the roar of the sea

Your glory is like none other can be

You have taken me from the deep

And set me on firm ground

You have claimed my soul to keep

And filled me with joy to go round

 

My heart rejoices Lord

For all that you have done

My soul cries aloud for God

Like you there is not one

 

Monday, 23 December 2024

New Christmas Carols

 




I have been inspired by others to do something I have wanted to do for a long time, write some new Christmas carols. As I am not a musician or very musically talented, I am very thankful for AI, which makes this process really easy. There are many great Christmas carols, but there are many that are so, so, and don’t really lift up the true meaning of Christmas, which is really about the advent of the true King of kings. So I thought I would seek to contribute a couple of new carols.

There is a verse from the scriptures that says “even the rocks will cry out”. Jesus said this meaning that if no one else will cry out the rocks will. But I think it is pretty incredible that in our day and age silicone, which is a metalioid that comes from rocks and is the basis for our computer chips and other modern technology, can be made to worship God. Even the rocks will cry out, now literally, they can even write the music. 

I have created a few songs, but here are few that I think are apretty good, both lyrically and in sound. I might need to tweak the lyrics a little in future, but these songs are not bad at all.

The first one is called ‘We Three Defy’, and it is about the three wise men defying King Herod and seeking to worship the true King, Jesus. This song is in part based on a sermon I preached a couple of weeks ago that Christmas time is a time to remember we should defy tyrants like the wise men did, like John the Baptist did too. These wise men fear no earthly king, but only want to honour and praise the one true King, “No throne or crown can deter, Our hearts from this journey pure.” They will let no human king stand in the way of the desire to honour Jesus. An important message for us to all take to heart.  

The second song I asked to be created in Irish folksong style. I have always loved Irish style music, and I think that the Celtic sound goes great with Christmas carols. It is titled, Oiche Nollag, which means Christmas Eve. I have put the lyrics of both of these songs below, I may do an updated version of them at some future time. There is also a heavy metal version of We Three Defy. 

For now, let me encourage you to give Suno a go and try and create your own Christmas music. With these tools anyone can give it a go. What an incredible tool to help us make a new song unto the Lord, even if we cannot write music ourselves.

You can listen to We Three Defy here, Oiche Nollag (Christmas Eve) here, and We Three Defy the metal remix here

We Three Defy

[Verse]

We three kings on a silent night

On a journey guided by starlight

Through sand and shadow we stride

With faith as our only guide

 

[Chorus]

Defy the dark and follow bright

Herod's words we take with might

To Bethlehem where dreams ignite

In a manger on this holy night

 

[Verse 2]

Gold and frankincense and myrrh

For the child born to conquer

No throne or crown can deter

Our hearts from this journey pure

 

[Bridge]

Herod's anger we shall face

But from our path we won’t erase

For a savior born in humble grace

We journey on at steady pace

 

[Chorus]

Defy the dark and follow bright

Herod's words we take with might

To Bethlehem where dreams ignite

In a manger on this holy night

 

[Verse 3]

O’er hills and valleys through the night

Carrying gifts to bless the light

No king of man can change our flight

We seek the one who ends our plight

Oiche Nollag

[Verse]

Under starry skies of Bethlehem

A child is born to save us all

Angels sing a heavenly hymn

In a humble manger stall

 

[Verse 2]

Shepherds from the fields they came

Drawn by light and angel's word

Kneeled before the Holy Name

Heard the news their hearts had stirred

 

[Chorus]

Oiche Nollag

Hope at last

God among us

Peace is near

Years of longing now have passed

In a child so pure and dear

 

[Verse 3]

Wise men travel from afar

Guided by a shining star

Gifts they bring

A sight bizarre

For a King where beasts reside

 

[Bridge]

Silent night

The world's rebirth

Heaven's promise come to life

In this child of humble worth

End of sorrow

End of strife

 

[Chorus]

Oiche Nollag

Hope at last

God among us

Peace is near

Years of longing now have passed

In a child so pure and dear