Thursday, September 14, 2006


How Did Christ Die?
Tradition & Scripture

I walked into work this morning and was immediately presented with the question: "was Jesus crucified on a stake (a vertical post) or a cross (t-shape)?"
My co-workers and I were baffled.
Jehovah's Witnesses claim that Jesus died on a torture stake, and that the cross is a pagan symbol that was adopted later.
Ecclesiastical Tradition holds (through paintings, songs, etc.) that it was a t-shaped cross. However, it was not extremely rare for Romans to crucify on a stake.
We were stumped.
Thankfully, the Scriptures are not without an answer.
Three proofs at a minimum are supplied in Scripture:
First, if Jesus were crucified on a stake or post, His hands would be placed above His head and nailed with one nail (like His feet). However, the Bible indicates that Jesus had nails (plural) in His hands. Nails require that Jesus was crucified on a cross, not a stake:

"The other disciples therefore said unto him, We have seen the LORD. But he said unto them, Except I shall see in his hands the print of the nails, and put my finger into the print of the nails, and thrust my hand into his side, I will not believe." [Plural nails requires a cross, not a stake!]

Second, the Bible also indicates that the Romans placed a sign over Jesus' head, again indicating that He died on a cross and not a stake:

And set up over his head his accusation written, THIS IS JESUS THE KING OF THE JEWS. (Matthew 27:37) [If on a stake, the sign would have been over His hands, not His head!]

Lastly, As John MacArthur points out:

"...look at an original Greek text. Say, of Colossians 2:14, 2:11-14. See what the word says there: 2:10 and following, and see if you see the word cross, see what the original Greek text says. And, I think you’ll see that it’s the word “cross”.

Many, however argue MacAruthur's point, claiming that the Greek word staurovß does not designate a t-shaped cross, but only a pointed stake.
However, all commentators of note are agreed that a t-shaped cross is here intended, including John Gill, Matthew Henry, Adam Clarke, etc.

This position is especially true of the Early Church Fathers, who all held (universally) that either a t or an x shape was intended, although a good number seem to favour the x-shape.

Ultimate question: does any of this really matter?

Sure. All things pertaining to the Scriptures are important...but I think the real truth that matters is this one:

"Having abolished in his flesh the enmity, even the law of commandments contained in ordinances; for to make in himself of twain one new man, so making peace; And that he might reconcile both unto God in one body by the cross, having slain the enmity thereby: And came and preached peace..."

Monday, September 11, 2006


Councils
"Gone like wind in the Meadows"
J.R.R. Tolkien gave us the Ents: deliberate-acting, cautious-thinking wise Tree-Shepherds who command our respect.
The Ents, in turn, give us the Entmoot: an assembly of Ents (often the wise and older ones) who convene to discuss matters of import. By the end of the Third Age, however these meetings had become rare.
What is significant about an Entmoot?
Two things:
Firstly, because Entmoots correspond to our world's Councils. Many long years ago, Christendom was full of Councils, some of the more notable being the Council of Carthage, the Nicene Council, and so forth. These Councils and creeds were important; not because they superceded Scripture, but because they clarified the Orthodox position in light of Scripture. Had the Nicene Council been heeded in modern times, the Jehovah's Witnesses could not have gained the foothold they now claim. Entmoots were called to resolve issues that dealt (primarily, but sometimes indirectly) with the Ents and their trees. Treebeard told Merry & Pippin that the Ents rarely concerned themselves with the World, unless it pertained to Ents.
Secondly, the importance of Entmoots is that we are able to directly link the decline of that which is sacred, to the decline of the Entmoot.
For instance, the Entmoot held while Merry & Pippin were with Treebeard, lasted for three days. This was short compared to earlier Entmoots, but - as I point out - times were changing.
Merry and Pippin could hear the voices of the Ents rising and falling as they debated. Then suddenly, on the afternoon of March 2, there was silence followed by a great shout. The Ents had decided to go to war against Saruman. They marched out of Derndingle, singing as they went, and headed south to Isengard.
They were resolute. When they decided upon a thing, they acted upon it. Men were not that way...impulsive and head-strong, they were often foolish and corrupt. When the Age of Men was on the rise, the Age of Councils (Entmoots) and all things sacred was passing. The Age of Magic, Age of the Elves, Age of the Ancients, was dying.
We would do well to take heed. When Christendom closes their ears to the Councils of our Fathers, the decline of all things holy is sure to find us racing into battle with no wise deliberation.
Where, O Where, Treebeard, have the Councils gone? Why does the Age of Men find us with such unconcern for Scripture? If we truly care for It, let us affirm it with our lives, our words...our Councils.
King Theoden mourned when he asked:
"Where is the Horse and the Rider?
Where is the Horn that was blowing?
They have passed like Rain on the Mountains,
Like Wind in the Meadows.
The Days have gone down in the West,
Behind the Hills,
Into Shadow.
How did it come to this?"

Thursday, September 07, 2006


The Promise Of Autumn
The Hope Of Tomorrow

II Peter reads,
"We have also a more sure word of prophecy; whereunto ye do well that ye take heed, as unto a light that shineth in a dark place, until the day dawn, and the day star arise in your hearts: Knowing this first, that no prophecy of the scripture is of any private interpretation. For the prophecy came not in old time by the will of man: but holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost."

The Psalmist said, "Lead me in thy truth, and teach me: for thou art the God of my salvation; on thee do I wait all the day."

I find an inexorable law of the human race (I might well say depraved man), which is that wherever there is depravity, Righteousness is desired.
Now, I do not mean desired in the sense that man is seeking after God. I do not pretend that there is any good in man which would cause him to draw near His Creator. It is only the mercy of God that regenerates the soul.
However; it is true that man is always seeking.
He is always longing for something he does not have, and the thing he is longing for is always exactly what he wants until the moment he gets it. (Google keywords: Sehnsucht Lewis)
But I have found - after many long Autumns of being lost - the secret to this longing, and not having...the secret to Autumn.

Autumn is in itself a sort of Sehnsucht. It embodies that blustery sort of desire which is not perfectly fulfilled (Autumn is a transition), but is not something to be trivialised. We might be tempted to think of Autumn as only a transition, but it does not end there. Autumn is also a destination. It is a longing, but that in itself is a longing for a longing.
It's like longing for Autumn during Spring, or Summer. Even when Autumn comes, you may still find yourself longing.

This is Christianity...mere Christianity, at any rate.
We can try looking to pantheism or occultism for the answers, but we will still be longing for something else.
But what if we were to long for the longing itself? What if that intangible Autumn were to turn out to be - not Autumn - but the desire for Autumn:
That desire that rises from your heart to your throat in the frosty pre-dawn of Summer's last morning, when you stand on the edge of the Worlde and look out at the flat expanse before you, half-revealed in the pale moonlight...

What if we were created with the desire to desire? What if all our longings and wantings were there because He put them there? Not so that we might fulfill them here on earth, but so that we might realise we were not ultimately created for this life...
Just as fish do not yearn the dry land, because they were not created for it...
Lewis remarks: "If I find in myself a desire which no experience in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that I was made for another world."