IT’S NOT ABOUT SWEARING Because most religious people put a high value on using clean language, they do not use four letter words — at least not in public. They would especially avoid using Jesus’ name or God’s name in a way that would be offensive to other religious people. And if they can do this, they congratulate themselves for being obedient to the third commandment.
People who have a habit of using Jesus’ name and God’s name in an offensive, non-religious way would eventually be called heretics. They will be unwelcome at religious gatherings where only clean, religious language is allowed.
Using clean language seems reasonable and right according to man’s religious rules which are based on a wrong understanding of the Third Commandment. The clean language rule disagrees with God’s habit of judging the heart — not the external person. The truth that religious people fail to understand is that the so-called “Third Commandment” is not about using the literal names of Jesus and God in speech. It is much more complex and spiritual.
See this link for understanding of what God means when he warns against taking his name in vain.
Most Christians, when asked to define grace, love or mercy, would have a ready answer. Because they have heard these concepts mentioned often in church, they are pretty sure they know what they mean. And they are pretty sure that they possess them.
But, if you ask a Christian what the Bible says about grace, love or mercy, most cannot give a ready answer or even quote scriptures that explain what they are from God’s point of view. They may know that grace, for example, is a free gift, and they might cite the “God’s riches at Christs Expense,” but they could not explain with confidence what God’s riches are. They know that God loves them, and that God has gives mercy to his people, but beyond these simple answers, they don’t know what God says and they have no real sense of how these concepts are manifest in their lives today. The reason they don’t know what God means by these terms is that they put their trust for understanding in what man has taught them — not in what God says. This is not good. Actually, trusting what man says is sin.
A good way to begin trusting God is to discover his definition of grace. It is not what man teaches. See this link for God’s idea of grace.
Another good way to learn how to trust God is understand his concept of love. Again, it is not what man teaches. See this link for God’s idea of love.
These links reveal the fact that grace, love and mercy all point to God’s voice. That God should use these three concepts to describe one thing should not be surprising because God actually uses many words to describe his voice.
WHAT GOD DOES NOT WANT:
The ability to understand the written words of the Bible does not depend on the ability to hear God’s spoken voice. Anyone, even people who do not believe in God, can make some logical sense out of the written words. God calls people who read, interpret and preach/teach/write their interpretations of the literal Bible false prophets
WHAT GOD DOES WANT:
God has filled the Bible with mystery and symbolism. Only people who can hear God’s spoken voice understand the spiritual meanings contained in these mysteries, symbols, signs and parables.
When we understand topic of creation correctly, we see that it bookends the entire Bible beginning with the creation of heaven and earth, and ending with the creation of a new heaven, a new earth. And, in between, whether we realize it or not, every story is about creation which more correctly should be interpreted as “re-creation”. It is all about the creation/re-creation of a new heart.
Coming to a right understanding of creation depends on how scriptures are interpreted. To understand the symbolic meanings of stories of creation, we must learn how to hear God’s spoken voice.
Listening to God’s spoken voice first means that we interpret scriptures symbolically — not literally.
STUDY TIP: See these links for insights on symbolic interpretation: Understanding of the principles in these pages are absolutely necessary to understanding of the topic of creation.
ROMANS 7 The book of Romans is a very challenging book to understand. Romans 7 and Romans 8 are particularly difficult because of many references to “the law” which at times seem contradictory. When we listen to God’s voice, however, we understand that these chapters are about choosing between God’s commands and religion,
Romans 7 contains many references to law. In order to understand these scriptures, it is necessary to understand the laws (i.e. Old/First Covenant or New Covenant) to which each scripture refers.
STUDY TIP: For clarity, these two types of laws are distinguished with red and bold letters. References to Old/First Covenant law are highlighted in red, and references to the New Covenant are highlighted in bold.
Another way to look at these laws is in terms of religious laws and God’s spiritual laws. Again for understanding, religious laws are highlighted in red and spiritual laws are highlighted in bold.
Romans 7: 1 Or do you not know, brethren (for I am speaking to those who know the law), that the law has jurisdiction over a person as long as he lives? 2 For the married woman is bound by law to her husband while he is living; but if her husband dies, she is released from the law concerning the husband. 3 So then, if while her husband is living she is joined to another man, she shall be called an adulteress; but if her husband dies, she is free from the law, so that she is not an adulteress though she is joined to another man.
COMMENTARY: The law here refers to Old/First Covenant laws which are religious laws. A married woman is a symbolic reference to Israel, or the church.
This makes sense because religious laws are always conceived, taught, and enforced by men. The woman becomes an adulteress with a false prophet when she listens to his teaching (i.e. follows religious laws) rather than listen to the voice of God (i.e. her real husband).
The other husband (i.e. false prophet) effectively (i.e. symbolically) dies (i.e. is separated from the woman) when she stops listening to his teaching and instead begins to listen to God’s voice. At that point, the woman is no longer an adulteress (i.e. a woman who is in an illicit relationship with another man) because she is joined (i.e. married) with God who was always her first husband.
All of the above symbolizes individuals ceasing to follow Old/First Covenant religion in favor of becoming New Covenant disciples.
In God’s eyes, religious people are effectively married to the religious leaders they follow. People are not free to be joined (i.e. married) to God until they are separated from (i.e. dead to) the religious leaders and institutions to which they are currently married (i.e. emotionally tied).
Religious leaders do not die physically, of course, but the relationship must die/end. Only the religious person can end the relationship. Religious leaders will not voluntarily terminate relationships with people who follow them because they lose income and influence when people stop following them.
4 Therefore, my brethren, you also were made to die to the Law through the body of Christ, so that you might be joined to another, to Him who was raised from the dead, in order that we might bear fruit for God.
COMMENTARY: The laws to which we are made to die are religious laws.
6 But now we have been released from the Law, having died to that by which we were bound, so that we serve in newness of the Spirit and not in oldness of the letter.
In the Bible, literal interpretations of flesh and sinful passions are commonly symbolized as sex, greed and other moral issues. While sex, greed and other moral issues are not unimportant to God, they are not God’s primary concern. What he is concerned about is the sin of religion.
Being in the flesh is God’s language for describing the compelling desires that cause people to practice religion. Religious laws have a toxic way of arousing people to practice religion by doing various kinds of religious activities (e.g. prayer, singing, kneeling, raising hands, going to church, etc.) with their physical bodies.
7 What shall we say then? Is the Law sin? May it never be! On the contrary, I would not have come to know sin except through the Law; for I would not have known about coveting if the Law had not said, “YOU SHALL NOT COVET.” 8 But sin, taking opportunity through the commandment, produced in me coveting of every kind; for apart from the Law sin is dead.
We are typically introduced to the sin of religion by parents who teach us to practice religious laws. Through this training, we are deceived into believing that we are practicing righteousness when we practice religion (i.e. sin).
Verse 8 says that while we are in this deceived condition in which we practice religion, we are apart from God’s spiritual laws and have no idea that religion is sin. In other words, religious people are dead (i.e. not spiritually alive or aware) to the fact that they sin by practicing religion.
If we could see our hearts the way God sees them, we would know that we covet the praise and affirmation that religious people give to their religious brothers and sisters who are exemplary in the practice of their particular style of religion. Because special authority and status accrues to highly religious people because of the Biblical knowledge they have and because of the many religious things that they do so faithfully, we all aspire to acquire that status to some degree. In other words, we covet the status and authority that highly religious people have.
MORE COMMENTARY: We must go through a period of being religious before we can become New Covenant disciples. It is part of our training to discern good and evil. We cannot know good unless we are able to compare it to evil. We must be humbled in the knowledge that we were once proud and arrogant in practicing our religion. Remembering that we were once guilty of the sin of religion is necessary to having mercy and compassion on those who are still religious.
Eve saw that the tree was good for food. We interpret this to mean that religion feeds our soulish — not spiritual — human need to be busy with our bodies and for acceptance and praise from others. Being a member of a religious community is a great place to earn praise and acceptance while being physically busy. It feels good, it feeds our pride and makes us feel alive. It is our reward for being religious. It is what the people of Babylon sought when they built a tower to reach God. Feeling good about your religiosity is the essence of pride.
While practicing Old/First Covenant religion, we covet all kinds of things such as position, and praise that we receive from people who value the religious things we do because they do the same things. This relates to the clean and unclean issue. Clean is the New Covenant, and unclean is the Old/First Covenant.
Verse 8 says that we would not know about sin unless we had sinned and then come to recognize it as sin. Awareness that religion is sin only comes to New Covenant disciples who have ceased practicing religion.
9 I was once alive apart from the Law; but when the commandment came, sin became alive and I died; 10 and this commandment, which was to result in life, proved to result in death for me; 11 for sin, taking an opportunity through the commandment, deceived me and through it killed me.
COMMENTARY: Understanding of these very difficult verses depends on understanding of the fact that religion is sin, and of the differences between man’s religious laws and God’s spiritual law. With these understandings we can rephrase the verses as follows:
9. When I obeyed man’s religious laws, I thought I was spiritually alive. However, when I came to understand that what God really wanted was that I obey his spiritual laws written on my heart (i.e. New Covenant), not religious laws written by men, I realized that religion is sin and I chose to die to practicing religion.
10. The command to obey God’s spiritual laws gave me new life after I chose to die to practicing religion.
11. The decisions I made to sin by practicing religion were inspired by literal interpretation of the commandments upon which religious laws are based. I was deceived by religion into believing that obedience to the literal words of the Bible were what God wanted me to do. Instead of giving me life, however, obedience to the literal laws produced spiritual death in me.
12 So then, the Law is holy, and the commandment is holy and righteous and good. 13 Therefore did that which is good become a cause of death for me? May it never be! Rather it was sin, in order that it might be shown to be sin by effecting my death through that which is good, so that through the commandment sin would become utterly sinful.
COMMENTARY: With the understandings mentioned in the Commentary above, still in place, these verses may be paraphrased as follows:
12. All of the written law is holy, righteous and good if it is interpreted by God’s voice. The problem is that people choose to interpret it literally instead of listening to God’s voice which reveals the mysteries of the law.
13. Because the written law is good, the written law is not the problem that caused me to die spiritually. The real problem is religion based on my literal interpretation of the written law which I now see as the cause of my spiritual death. Because I now see this so clearly, I understand how religion based on the written law which I interpret literally leads me to sin by creating religion from it.
14 For we know that the Law is spiritual, but I am of flesh, sold into bondage to sin. 15 For what I am doing, I do not understand; for I am not practicing what I would like to do, but I am doing the very thing I hate. 16 But if I do the very thing I do not want to do, I agree with the Law, confessing that the Law is good. 17 So now, no longer am I the one doing it, but sin which dwells in me.
COMMENTARY: These verses can be paraphrased as follows:
14: Even though the written law led me to sin, it is still true that the written law is spiritual. However, because I am in bondage to sin that compels me to interpret the written law literally, and because I do not listen for God’s voice to interpret the written law’s spiritual meaning for me, the written law is not spiritual for me.
15. I do not really understand why I practice religion. I do not want to be religious but I can’t help it. My problem is my fleshly tendency to interpret the law literally instead of listening to the voice of God to interpret its symbolic, mysterious meanings for me. Even though my real desire is to obey God, my tendency to interpret the written law literally compels me to be religious.
16. Now, when I read the Bible carefully and listen to God’s voice to explain it to me, I understand that God knew that I would have this problem with religion. But this was good because it is all a part of God’s plan to teach me to stop listening to false prophets and listen to his voice instead.
17. So I now understand that my sinful tendency is to interpret the written law literally and to listen to others who claim that they can interpret it for me. This sinful tendency dictates that I listen to others instead of listening to God’s voice which interprets the symbolic meaning of scripture for me. This tendency is the root problem that causes me to sin by practicing religion.
18 For I know that nothing good dwells in me, that is, in my flesh; for the willing is present in me, but the doing of the good is not. 19 For the good that I want, I do not do, but I practice the very evil that I do not want.
COMMENTARY: These verses testify to the toxicity of religion. The author of the book of Romans (assumed to be Paul the Apostle) recognizes that the religion he practices with his body (i.e. flesh) has no spiritual value. And he acknowledges that, despite his sincere desire that he should not practice religion, he is unable to stop doing it.
20 But if I am doing the very thing I do not want, I am no longer the one doing it, but sin which dwells in me. 21 I find then the principle that evil is present in me, the one who wants to do good.
COMMENTARY: Here the author says that the compelling power (i.e. toxicity) of his inclination to be religious has taken over his will to the degree that, despite his good intentions, he is unable to stop practicing religion.
22 For I joyfully concur with the law of God in the inner man, 23 but I see a different law in the members of my body, waging war against the law of my mind and making me a prisoner of the law of sin which is in my members.
COMMENTARY: Here the author says that in his heart (i.e. his inner man) he wants to be a New Covenant disciple (i.e. someone who follows God’s spiritual laws). But he also says that the fleshly instincts that compel him to practice religion also successfully prevent him from choosing to do the right thing (i.e. stop practicing religion). Thus, despite what he wants to do in his heart (i.e. worship God in spirit and truth), he is enslaved to practicing religion with his physical body.
24 Wretched man that I am! Who will set me free from the body of this death? 25 Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord! So then, on the one hand I myself with my mind am serving the law of God, but on the other, with my flesh the law of sin.
COMMENTARY: Here we get a feel for the author’s inner conflict and turmoil over trying to escape religion. This is common for people who want to break free from religion but are unable to do so. They are in a double-minded condition where they do the best they can to worship God in spirit and truth while also practicing religion.
Paul gives thanks to Jesus for his teaching about the difference between the written law and God’s spiritual law written on his heart. Essentially, this means he is thankful that Jesus has taught him to reject religion and be a New Covenant disciple.
The first thing you need to do is get rid of the box with the picture of the puzzle that your religious leaders gave you to guide you. It is a picture for a very old puzzle of another god. It will not help you assemble your puzzle. You also need to ignore what your friends have done. Their puzzle is old, small, incomplete, and wrong. You will waste a lot of time assembling your puzzle if you try to create an accurate, meaningful picture of God if you model it after the picture that your friends and religious leaders have created.
So what you need to do is get rid of all the help others try to give you and resolve to let God alone help you assemble your puzzle. Your puzzle, after you work on it for a while is new, large, vibrant and multidimensional. It will never be fully complete but you will not care because you will be excited about the picture of God you already have and full of anticipation for the new aspects of God that are yet to come.
Begin without a picture to guide you. You would never do that with a material picture puzzle, but that is what you need to do when trying to understand God. Best you can, try to rid yourself of all your preconceptions of who God is, how he works, and what he expects from his people. Humbly admit that you don’t really know what God looks like. That might not seem important until you recognize that he wants to recreate us to conform to his image. That means that, as much as possible, the physical religious people we are must decrease as the spiritual person God wants us to be increases.
If you thought you had a picture of what he looked like, and if you listened to others to help create that image, you will do well to repent for trusting men instead of God for creating the image you have of him. Admit that, in addition to trusting men, you have been walking by sight and not by faith to assemble your understanding of God. Forgive those who have taught you wrongly.
And after you have done all that, quit looking to others for help. They will only confuse you. More importantly, you do not need anyone’s help to know God. God has made this very clear in Jeremiah’ prophecy about the New Covenant:
Jeremiah 31:31-34: “Behold, the days are coming, says the LORD, when I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and the house of Judah, 32 not like the covenant which I made with their fathers when I took them by the hand to bring them out of the land of Egypt, my covenant which they broke, though I was their husband, says the LORD. 33 But this is the covenant which I will make with the house of Israel after those days, says the LORD: I will put my law within them, and I will write it upon their hearts; and I will be their God, and they shall be my people. 34 And no longer shall each man teach his neighbor and each his brother, saying, ‘Know the LORD,’ for they shall all know me, from the least of them to the greatest, says the LORD; for I will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their sin no more.”
If you really trust God, you will accept that the time for the fulfillment of this prophecy has indeed come for you. It is not some future event that will occur for a bunch of people all at one time. It will happen one-by-one as the Spirit is poured out on individual believers. This is the promise of the New Covenant that was and is mediated by Christ to people who are ready to abandon the Old/First Covenant (i.e. the incomplete picture of God) in favor of a better covenant that allows people to know God directly.
Resolve to commit as much time as it takes to assemble your puzzle. The goal is to know God and be conformed to his likeness — no matter how long it takes. Then begin by looking for a few pieces that go together. A few here, and a few there. If you work at it, you will be surprised and excited about your spiritual growth.
Do not allow yourself to get frustrated for lack of a big picture of what you are trying to assemble. Be satisfied with the little sections that fit and trust that it will all come together eventually. And do not forget to look for the spiritual image that exists below the physical image — this is the key to understanding. Every time you find two or more pieces that fit, thank God. When you think you are beginning to see what a little section looks like, ask God to help you find the missing pieces. But keep searching.
If possible, find one or two others to work with you. In order to be useful in the task of assembling the picture, however, your coworkers must be willing to discard their previous picture of what God looks like and proceed in faith — not by sight. If your coworkers do not have the same attitude as you about the puzzle, he/she will slow you down and lead you astray.
Always keep in mind that God has promised that those who seek him will find him. So that is what you will do — even during the dry wilderness times. It is all part of the process by which God leads us through the wilderness of the literal Bible (i.e. the law) as he tests us to show how our hearts are inclined toward him. And those who are faithful are the ones who enter into the Promised Land where God writes his spiritual law on their hearts.