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Showing posts with label qadosh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label qadosh. Show all posts

Thursday, November 19, 2015

Definition of Holy: The Contribution of Mental Health to Defining it Correctly

I recently completed a book titled, Mental Health for Everyone, that is one part of what will be two parts to my post-graduate degrees including a Ph.D., where the central thesis will be on the definition of holy.  Fortunately, one of advisers for my first thesis paper noticed that my work on definition of holy originally had two papers inside of one paper.  As a result, I wrote my book on mental health since it is really my method for approaching the definition of holy.

I am excited to announce that my book on mental health is now officially published as of October 27, 2015.  It is on sites like Amazon.com and Barnes and Noble.

The link for Amazon.com is:

http://www.amazon.com/Mental-Health-Everyone-Making-Choices-ebook/dp/B017ADOLBS/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1447991414&sr=8-1&keywords=mental+health+for+everyone

The link for Barnes and Noble is:

http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/mental-health-for-everyone-jon-westlund/1122880720?ean=9781498438858

If either link does not work for you, then use either my full name or the full title or both together.

You can also see a video on the book on youtube at:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uC5XDFly3GA


If you need to, then copy these links into your browser.  I am not convinced that they will work otherwise.


The key to a successful definition of holy and blessed is the use of the principles that the mind uses to successfully reach decisions on things in our world.  These principles of teaching, coaching, schooling, and educating are the method that I use in solving the differences over the meaning of holy as it is found in the Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek Scriptures.  There is truly one definition for it, not the many available on the internet!

My next project will be to write another version of this book on mental health and my method that will fill in the all the footnotes that formed the foundation for my published book.  That version will be what I submit for my project for my S.T.M. (Masters of Sacred Theology).  I can't wait until it too is complete.

The following 2 years I hope to devote to the meaning of blessed and holy.  Please pray that I might even finish my footnoted version by this coming Spring and then devote myself on THE big project - the definitions of blessed and holy!  That wish or goal is a stretch, but I would love it if it happened that way.

For now, I will let you know what you are looking for as in a definition of blessed and holy with further proof coming in the future. Blessed consists of an exhaustive set of wonderful things.  Holy consists of the the fullness of these things.  These definitions are a bit abstract, but if you read further I fill the details in more fully.

May God richly bless you with being mentally healthy and even more with being blessed and holy!


In Christ,

Jon

Wednesday, May 06, 2015

Definition of Blessed and Holy: Comprehension Scores on my Blogs over Time

Yesterday I did some teaching in our public schools.  While I was doing that I happened across a great tool for scoring my post or entry values.  It is a method of scoring comprehension before and after certain times.  I am going to score my entries for this blog and previously by decade leading up to August and September 2014.  That is when my comprehension scores again jumped noticeably in a decade.


  1. In 1984, I had no idea what the definition of holy was nor how it applied to my understanding of God.  I found the word to be without either clarity (what Pastors were saying) and without real meaning because the word flew over my head or over the cuckoo's nest perhaps.  I would give myself a 1 out of 4 for my score during this time - since I at least knew it had no clarity and no meaning for me.  I wasn't oblivious to that fact.  
  2. In approximately 1994, the beginning of my first decade of real work on the definition of holy (I really was only working on it and not blessed regularly), I realized that the traditional definition of holy needed to be questioned.  I learned this from Dr. Daniel Payton Fuller at Fuller Theological Seminary.  His own proposal at that time had ties to the meaning of "worth".  What I learned most at the time was that there was the threat of an error here and an opportunity for correction from Scripture.  Dr. Fuller, though his own definition was not a great substitute, at least made me aware of a different SWOT analysis - strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats. Beginning with 1994, I would get a 2 out of 4 score due to moving up to a specific awareness of searching the Scriptures and going beyond the translation in English in front of me.
  3. In November 2004, the beginning of my second decade of definitive work on the definition of holy, I realized the usefulness of the clarity given to the meaning of holy by the use of Eugene Nida's TEAR or semantic domain analysis in a more simplified form.  The problem was that I did not also tie to this the aspect of the meaning level from his dynamic equivalence translation theory.  So I missed out on an opportunity to move up to a higher score.  The two major developments now was by better knowledge of both a traditional definition ("set apart") and a classical definition ("morally whole").  So I would give myself a 3 out of 4 on most of what appears in my blog.  It is clarifying in distinguishing two major candidates for defining holy naturally and Scripturally. 
  4. In September 2014, I completed my first manuscript for Mental Health for Everbody: A Field Guide (the title at that time).  Since that time, using the pictures or diagrams in that book I was able to figure out that blessed better fit the classical definition for holy and that holy fit with a more meaningful understanding of levels - 1/4 full, 1/2 full, 3/4 full, 4/4 full.  The kind of holy being defined by holy fit with the 4/4 idea.  So now I can score myself as barely inside 4/4 - maybe a 4-.  After I finish my work on mental health, I may achieve a 4.  After that and with the completion of a paper specifically on the definitions of blessed and holy in the effort to earn a full Ph.D., then I could maybe get a 4+.  The point is that there is always a little more to do in the next race you run. 

How well I can persuade others is not yet part of this score. This only scores how well I am persuaded myself.  It is my self-score.  That is a great beginning but it is not the ending.

Feedback like scores in seminary will come later, as I work on getting my ideas out there and before professors.  I am persuaded, though, that the definition I have arrived at is the one that in essence will stick with me for the long haul.

That fact is what will make my Ph.D. work so worth pursuing further. Having a good idea when you start a race of where you are going is a good thing and not a bad thing. Take care.


Sincerely,

Jon

Blessed and Holy: A Quick Exciting Update

There was a saying I used to hear that never made much sense to me, when I was very young.  Maybe now this saying has some meaning - "You will know, when you know".  I sort of feel that way now about the meaning of holy (and blessed).  Things have come full circle for me after a lot of study, but the key study has been for my book Mental Health for Everyone: In Captivating, Motivating, Inspiring, Meaningful Pictures.  (That book is the main reason you have not seen me posting here regularly in this last year.)  So I now am convinced that holy does in fact mean whole, but in a different sense than the materials that I have presented previously in this blog.

Let me explain this in short version today, because my ultimate goal is to write as my final Ph.D. paper on the topic of the definitions for both blessed and holy.  The paper could end up with a title something like this: Blessed and Holy is Yahweh and His Followers.

Let me give you a glimpse first into my start into the race of knowing the meaning of these two key biblical words - blessed and holy.  Let me define what I mean by a classical and traditional definition of holy before I talk about the history of the definition of holy.

When I speak of the classical definition of holy, I am talking about its definition beginning no later than the 1500s (16th ct.) and extending into the 1900s (20th ct.).   During this time, beginning from the Reformation, scholars relied heavily on the renaissance (renewal) of classical thinking.

The traditional definition refers to a definition that began in the late 1800s to gain a real foothold among scholars and it extends into the 1900s (20th ct.).  It is a movement that primarily tries to remove the errors of classical thinking, dating back to the Greeks and Romans and including the Renaissance.

Each of these has a longer history, I am sure.  What I am doing here is limiting it to the scholarship of these times.  The evidence outside of these time periods is much more susceptible to different interpretations.  The emergence of another renewal of science in the late 1800s removed some of the mist surrounding the meanings that biblical scholars were expressing.  This made the separation of the two definitions much more clear and meaningful.  A little book on holy, by Andrew Murray, a pastor and not a scholar technically, summaries the benefits of the work of scholarship in the late 1800s (19th ct.).

With those imposed limits, the history of the definition of holy can be boiled down to this:


  • Classical definition of holy (16th - 20th ct.) - whole as in righteous, just, true, loving, and good.  Whole as perfect; whole as the summation of God's character, etc.  



  • Traditional (19th-20th ct.) definition of holy - set apart; separate; relational separation; moral separation; object separation; etc.  


These were the two competing views, when I started my best efforts to settle the issue of the definition of holy.

I have now arrived at a definition for holy that uses the insights from the classical definition of holy, but also applies a corrective.  I likewise am convinced that elements of the traditional view are helpful here, though its helpfulness varies from scholar to scholar.

My goal is to arrive at a definition for blessed and holy that is both natural (fits with all of nature) and Scriptural (fits with all of Scripture).  That is a very tall order, but I think a worth finish line.

I am not at all interested in classical view or traditional views unless they first meet those criteria.  In some ways they do not.  That is the main reason why I depart from their views.  I find good among the efforts under each umbrella, but where I find unnatural things I remove them.  I do the same, when I find un-scriptural things as well.  I eliminate them.

So here are my preliminary definitions:

blessed . blessed as in righteous, true, loving, and good.  (ex. Abraham has many sons)

holy - whole as in wholly just, wholly humble, wholly perfect, wholly great.  (ex. Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy - the whole of the day)

The proof of all this will be mainly in my first book to be published soon, Mental Health for Everyone and it will be further supported by my final paper for my S.T.M. Degree (a 2 year doctoral program).  It too will be titled Mental Health for Everyone, but it will have a different subtitle like - The Evidence from the Original Languages of Scripture.

The reason for the proof being separate is that my advisers in seminary recognized that I had two projects going in my thesis proposal.  These two projects are each big enough alone to merit individual treatment.  So I am doing my mind-related work first, because the mind is the natural thing to address when we are working on definitions.  Without first thinking well, it will be very hard to define blessed and holy well.  It will end up very sloppy.  Mental health eliminates the basic errors in definition that we otherwise make.

I am very excited about the definitions that I give.  My mental health material which addresses the mind more naturally also addresses the mind more scripturally or biblically.  Those two sources furnish a ton of evidence for those willing to give up being classical and traditional when it contradicts nature or Scripture.  I am willing.

So I am now speaking from the finish line of my first race on the definition of blessed and holy. I will enter another race soon after I am done writing on mental health for seminary.

That race will then be run for a minimum of 2 years.  I can't wait to start the next leg of my journey.  I know that I know at the first finish line, if you know what I mean!  May God truly bless you and make you holy even as he is blessed and holy.


In Christ,

Jon


Wednesday, July 09, 2014

Blessed and Holy: An Explanation on My Change of Focus

Sometimes a speaker must adapt to their audience rather than wait for the audience to adapt to them.  This has come to a real threshold the last couple of months.  There is no vigilance by scholars or lay people on the topic of holy - the ability to hold a topic in the attention span long enough for it to make a difference.  So this is one of those times that I must adapt to my audience and start equipping them further back in the process.

As I have dealt with holiness, I have noticed that Christian minds especially are not well-equipped to handle the topic.  Their emotions and thinking are sloppy.  I don't say this to insult anyone.  But "the fear of Yahweh is the beginning of wisdom".  So in this case, the fear that our thinking may be sloppy is the right place to begin.  So I am taking a new approach.

I'm narrowing my focus in TEACHING AND MINISTRY (down from holiness) due to emotional aimlessness and due to a lack of mental focus or over-focus among Christians.  So the solution, I figure, is to focus on the first health the US and Christians in the US need - mental health.  I'll deal with world mental health later, since the issues are different across the globe.  I'll also go back to other health areas under holiness later.

Please don't think that I have lost my vigilance on holiness.  I am not at all distracted from the topic, but there comes a time as a teacher when adaption is your only option.  Even my supervisor at my current seminary didn't seem to get what I was accomplishing.  So I believe that there are basics that are missing.  I need to provide those to those I teach.

If you go to my communication basics blog, I will be producing much more there than here for the time being. I am also under a self-imposed deadline to finish the transcript for my book by the end of July - "Mental Health for Everybody".  It will focus on the mind and how it is supposed to work and how we should equip our minds as opposed to the current approach.  That will then form a basis both emotionally and logically for what holiness means by definition, by implication and by significance.

Go there for more.  Thank you for your understanding.  I will say this, I have more and more reasons to believe from the biblical text and not from etymology or cognate languages that holy as translated from words in Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek means ethical or moral wholeness.  Have a blessed day.

In Christ,

Jon

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Blessed and Holy: Understanding Them Better When the Understanding is Right Under Your Nose

Have you ever had someone tell you, when you are looking for something, "It is right under your nose!"  I have.  And I have a confession to make.  The definition of holy that I have proposed has left its proof right under my nose.

One of my best teachers over the years still remains on my top ten list.  His name is Dr. Daniel P. Fuller.  He set a high standard in our classes.  He wanted us to learn to do inductive Bible study, where we rely not so much on lexicons and commentaries as on our own observation of the text of Scripture.

One of his favorite stories was of a teacher insisting that his students continue making observations even after they thought they had exhausted all the possibilities.  Though the object was right under their nose, they might have missed something.

I have missed something.  It is so obvious.  So right under my nose for so long that I can't believe I missed it!

Here's the Biblical text that has been right under my nose for years. I knew this was a primary text in the discussion of the meaning of holy, but I did not realize just how very valuable it is.  Here it is from Biblical Gateway:


1 Peter 1:14-16

New International Version (NIV)
14 As obedient children, do not conform to the evil desires you had when you lived in ignorance. 15 But just as he who called you is holy, so be holy in all you do; 16 for it is written: “Be holy, because I am holy.”[a]

Footnotes:

  1. 1 Peter 1:16 Lev. 11:44,45; 19:2
New International Version (NIV)Holy Bible, New International Version®, NIV® Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.® Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.

ΠΕΤΡΟΥ Α΄ 1:14-16
SBL Greek New Testament (SBLGNT)
14 ὡς τέκνα ὑπακοῆς, μὴ συσχηματιζόμενοι ταῖς πρότερον ἐν τῇ ἀγνοίᾳ ὑμῶν ἐπιθυμίαις, 15 ἀλλὰ κατὰ τὸν καλέσαντα ὑμᾶς ἅγιον καὶ αὐτοὶ ἅγιοι ἐν πάσῃ ἀναστροφῇ γενήθητε, 16 διότι γέγραπται [a]ὅτι Ἅγιοι [b]ἔσεσθε, ὅτι ἐγὼ [c]ἅγιος.

Footnotes:

  1. ΠΕΤΡΟΥ Α΄ 1:16 ὅτι WH NIV] – Treg RP
  2. ΠΕΤΡΟΥ Α΄ 1:16 ἔσεσθε WH Treg NIV] γίνεσθε RP
  3. ΠΕΤΡΟΥ Α΄ 1:16 ἅγιος WH Treg] + εἰμι NIV RP


What the text contains is a parallel notion to holy, not just once but twice.  So it assists us in defining holy.   The other great thing is that it is also quoting from Leviticus 11:44, 45 or 19:2.   So it also pulls in not just a definition for Greek, but also one that we can be sure would also apply in those contexts in Hebrew.

So what did I miss that was right under my nose?  Here it is:  "be holy in all you do" or as some translations have it "be holy in all your conduct".   (I did notice this at an earlier time based on past notes, but like in the book of James I was like a man who looks in the mirror and then forgets what he saw.)  There is a further clue before even this one.  It is a negative contrast to holy: "do not conform to your evil desires".

These are great parallels, if like me, you believe that one of the possible meanings of holy is: "moral wholeness or "ethical wholeness".  So let's examine the evidence further.

Whether you translate the Greek as "in all you do" or "in your manner of life" or "in all your conduct", the idea is quite similar.  What matters most is the use of "all" in English translation or πάσῃ (pase) in the original Greek.

Many people are not aware that the Greek πάσῃ is also used for the Hebrew word כֹּל (kol).   כֹּל in its core definition is the idea of "whole" more than the idea of "all".  Gesenius in his lexicon and others wisely note that the Greek equivalent of πάσῃ is the Greek meaningful equivalent, but not an exact equivalent.  Gesenius' description says it is a grammatical difference between the languages.  I think it is something more.

Thinking right to left as Hebrews of ancient Israel would do, you would start with "whole" and proceed left to "all the parts".  It appears that in Koine Greek of the first century, Greek moves from the left to the right and so from "all the parts" to the "whole".  Each side expresses the other, but yet with a different emphasis or starting point.

So it would not be illegitimate to substitute the idea of whole into our text and read it as "in the whole of your doing", or "in the whole of your manner of life", or "the whole of your conduct".   You've changed emphasis and starting point, but not equivalence.

So the logic goes like this.  Since "be holy in all you do" in Greek is the equivalent to "be holy in the whole of what you do" in Hebrew, we as English speakers could then see that "moral wholeness" (holy) and "the whole of what you do" could be very near fully synonymous.  If this is not enough proof, we also have the idea of evil desires in contrast to being holy.  If holy were to have more than one part, it is easy to explain the use of a plural being used in contrast to it.  With many parts of good may come plural evils.

But the key idea that I have overlooked is that "whole" is once again placed at the very doorstep of "holy" and is hardly being noticed not only under my nose, but also under the noses of biblical exegetes or biblical readers everywhere.  Let's begin to notice what is right under our nose.  Holy can certainly mean "moral or ethical wholeness".  I can't see why not.

Sincerely,

Jon

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Blessed and Holy: Understanding Them Better By Understanding the Emotion of Fear

Today, I read an immensely sad article, How We Forgot the Holiness of God, in an email from Christianity Today (5/20/14).  The article should lead to the emotion of grief, not to the emotion of joy.  Once again an author makes a plea for the Rudolph Otto kind of holiness that inspires fear and awe. Hey, those are necessary emotions in the right context, but there is the possibility of emotional manipulation going on in this plea.  There is no concern for logical exegesis in the article, only getting people like you and me off our chair or couch and instead being fearful of being a sinner in the hands of an angry God.  But this is not like Jonathan Edwards' sermon that has an authentic basis for fear.  This instead comes off as a rather shoddy and cheap way of dealing with fear as an emotion. Holiness for me means a lot of more than this author in Christianity Today is implying.  A great deal more.  For me it means ultimately moving from an emotion of jealousy (I don't want to be like you) to an emotion of emulation (I want to be like you).

I'll show you how much  more holiness means to me by pointing out all kinds of errors in the article.  Perhaps before the author suggests we all fear, the author should fear more than anyone else.  You see fear is a great emotion, when it is understood properly.  But only when understood properly.  It cannot be used for manipulation or without emotional intelligence.  You have to have the latter to also avoid the former, even when by accident and not purposeful.

Let me illustrate.  When I was young and first learning to use a table saw my dad taught me to fear it, because it did not only cut off inches but also fingers.  That was good.  I haven't cut a finger off due to a healthy respect.  But he did not leave me stuck in fear.  He also taught me how to confidently avoid cutting off a finger so that my hand and fingers remained attached.  You need to move people from fear to confidence.  You don't start off with the silly idea of walking up to a table saw and using it fearlessly without lessons.  My dad was not manipulating me, but he was training me.  He made me a person confident in how to do what I wanted.  I wanted to accomplish the result ofcutting a board to the right length with a square cut end.  So he gave me a lesson in the emotions of fear and confidence, but also in the logic of how and why.

So let's look at the errors.  Keep in mind that I have been writing on holiness for around 10 years.  This blog has a link to some of my earliest beginnings in a separate blog.  I have read nearly everything that pertains to the topic that is worthwhile.

THE FIRST MISTAKE

So why is this author so confident that Rudolph Otto's right and the prior 400 years of Protestant exegesis is wrong?  My dad taught me to fear a table saw.  Why is this author not afraid that he's wrong in his definition of holy?  My dad taught me to fear a table saw, because a saw CAN do things.  I think we should be a little more fearful that Luther, Calvin, Cranmer, Wesley, and Spurgeon COULD do things.  I am a lot more fearful of their abilities than I am of Otto's CANNOT.

Otto's own weakness and can't do attitude is revealed by himself in his study of holiness' meaning.  He gets to a point where he is not sure of the meaning of the word for holy, so he chooses the one which fits better with his preferred philosophy.  Doesn't that scare you?  It scares me, like working with a table saw carelessly.  Otto is careless and carefree which means he is what is otherwise known as fearless.  I am confident, but I am not fearless as a result.  I know when to fear and when to be confident.  Don't let me ever get careless at the table saw.  But let's use it how it is to be used confidently.

THE SECOND MISTAKE

It is great to bring in Isaiah 6 as Otto uses this too as a central passage.  That makes perfect sense.  So it is true that Isaiah experiences fear in the passage.  But that does not define holy.  It is funny how the author misses other parts in the context.  He wants to go with Otto's definition having to do with fear and awe, but he ignores the concept of "whole" in the "whole earth is full of his glory".  He misses the argument for "moral wholeness" that Jonathan Edwards, Johann Bengel, and many others make from other contexts for their definition.  He skips past it.  Perhaps he has a historical bias about conclusions based on time and place.  Otto comes later, so he's correct.   He does not test Otto's view with other witnesses to see what they witnessed.  He does not ask famous commentators for their testimony.  One testimony in a real sense is enough.  The author and Otto experience no sadness in their testimony separating from leaders over a four hundred year period.  He misses out on the joy of finding the same conclusions with others.  No shared joy over a 500 year period to celebrate.  He's not worried about joy and connections with others.

THE THIRD MISTAKE

He takes the second mistake still further as far as emotions are concerned.  Not only is he not saddened by his break with past testimonies, he is also not afraid of going forward without an act of experimentation.

Let me illustrate.  Just yesterday I could not find my coffee mug that I uses on a regular basis.  I was not confident where it was.  I decided that rather than dilly dally in my brain, I would instead start to experiment with the different possible locations by going to them and seeing if the cup was there.  If it was, then I could be confident where it was.  If I did not find it, at least my confidence would grow from eliminating possible locations.  So off to my car I went.  It was not in the passenger's seat though I knew I had in the car the prior day.  So I went back to the most obvious, the kitchen where I normally kept it.  Not on the counters nor in the cupboard.  So off to other rooms in the house beginning with the most likely to the least likely.  Not there either, so I returned to the most obvious location again, the kitchen.  And there it was.  I couldn't see it yet, but there was my lunch container.  I was pretty sure my cup was inside it, because I recalled placing something in there that normally I did not.  I had forgotten to empty it the night before like I usually did.  So I opened it - I experimented with the idea that the cup was in my lunch container - sure enough there it was.

You see, it is very important to experiment with ideas by doing something with them, not just assuming the outcome from some hypothetical action.  I did something.  In this case of exegesis (reading a passage from an insider's perspective, not an outsider's), nothing is done except a connection between Isaiah's dread and what holy means.  That is a very sloppy experiment.  In my experiment above, I experimented with all the possibilities until I arrived at one that ruled out any others.  Is this kind insisting they found the thing they were looking for immediately without any failed experiments?  Did they even consider other possibilities at all?

The problem with Otto and this author is they try one possibility for fear - God's holiness - and stop there.  They don't consider other possibilities.  Maybe Isaiah had read how no one can see God's face an live and he thought he had seen his face and that regardless of holy or not, you die.  Or maybe the main issue was his uncleanness and he was ashamed of himself before such a clean assembly.  Like a wedding guest attending a wedding feast without proper clean attire.  He nor Otto does even look at that as a possibility in itself as a reason for fear.  Jesus was holy and yet it did not automatically lead to dread.  The Holy Spirit is in us, yet it does not lead automatically to dread.  I think fear and dread come in certain instances to us.  I don't think that is the constant state before holiness.  I would think the great emotion there is that of emulation - I want to be like Him.

An added problem inside the text that is not considered from an insider's perspective is that 'the whole earth is full of his glory" is much closer in the context to "holy, holy, holy" than the material on fear and dread.  Maybe what should be experimented with is the idea that God's "moral wholeness" is reflected in a view of the "earth's wholeness".  It possesses the glory that God has even if only a reflection of it as the moon is a reflector of the light of the sun.

So my question is why the author does not feel fear?  Why is he so cavalier and fearless as to make illusion to Otto's sloppy exegesis?  Why doesn't he have a goal of preferring the more immediate context over the more distant?

It appears he does not possess the skills of an exegete.  If he does not, then he should fear and stay away from exegetical comments based on an outsider, who admits his exegesis was built on an outsider philosophical perspective.


Holy, Holy, Holy is Yahweh God Almighty,
the whole earth is full of his glory.


Those words are the immediate context.  That is where the test is.  The testimony has to come from the most immediate.  The ones with the eye witness kind of testimony.  Not from the second rate witness in the next room or the larger context beyond that.  Stick to the most immediate.

Likewise, experiment.  Don't just show up with one option as a place to find the lost.  Check around until you find what you are looking for.  But don't stop short or you will end up like "U2" and "still trying to find what you are looking for".

THE FOURTH MISTAKE

I dislike it when people set up a straw man argument or a wet paper sack argument.  In other words, they make it so easy to win by having no competition.  I see this every year, when some college team rolls over some weakling and the polls move that team up to #1, only to see them get trounced three weeks later.  What this author is arguing about is supposed to be why holiness is forgotten, not about whether people are afraid of God or not.  I was expecting an emotional and logical argument.  I only got the former.

Here's his straw man argument.  People don't know the definition of holy, because they are not afraid of God's holiness.  People when asked for God's attributes don't mention holiness, because they want to avoid an attribute that leads to fear.  He even illogically treats love not as a requirement, but as a kindness or gift. He is illogical here.  The commandment (requirement) is love.  How is that like compassion?  It is mixing demands with gifts.

Listen, I have gone to churches with public sharing.  That is not a good forum for deciding whether the church teaches holiness or not.  As for the definition, they don't know it, because there are too many options. Who's fault is that?  To blame it on the common people not fearing enough from their pews is to set up a straw man argument. The sad thing is the argument he gives cannot fight its way out of a wet paper sack (weakling!) either.

CONCLUSION

There are more errors, but suffice it to say, "Why is this author asking others to fear God, when he does not fear his own lack of ability?"   Lack of ability is the basic reason to fear.  Its counter part is another's ability to do what I cannot.

Take the table saw again.  The table saw CAN cut off a finger.  My finger CANNOT stop the table saw blade from doing just that, if it is in the wrong place at the wrong time.  So you bet I fear God.  I fear him more than this author in Christianity Today does.

But God has also given me good teachers, so that I am not just caught up in God's alien nature (as Luther called it), but I am caught up more in what I can do through God's compassion and God's heaven sent instructors on exegesis.  May God's children have more confidence and may this erring child of many mistakes realize what he CANNOT do and have greater fear.  Don't instruct others in what you yourself do not possess - healthy fear and a definition for holiness.


In Christ,

Jon
.

Monday, May 19, 2014

Blessed and Holy: Understanding Them Better Through 1 Kings 18 as the Text and Now Your Testimony

People want to know things like definitions for certain.  That is an admirable desire on high importance topics like blessed and holy.  The problem is that the same people don't know how to get there.  The same people who want certainty also can get trapped in wavering rather than knowing.  Knowing the meanings of blessed and  holy for certain, as found in Genesis 2:1-3, requires something that most lexicons and scholars don't provide.  They don't test the meanings of these words from inside the text.

Instead, they test the meaning of each word from outside the text.  They use etymology (in some instances when they claim they don't) or they use cognate languages (these are languages like French in relation to English).  I don't think that either one of these tests is very valid or certain.  If you want reasonable certainty on a very important set of topics, then a lexicon or reading another 100 scholars won't get  you there.  The way to know something for certain over another possibility is to test what is true and humble versus what is false and proud.  But it has to be a complete test.  So how do we get to a better place and time, where and when we know for certain the meaning of blessed and holy?  I got an answer for that.  Read on.

I think the story of Elijah and the prophets of Baal in 1 Kings 18 shows how to get past various the many opinions on the meanings of blessed and holy.  I'm going to present the story in the following format of questions:

1) What are the numbers?  (to form judgments)  (i.e. must be)
2) What is the test?  (to form testimonies)  (i.e. will be)
3) What are complete guidelines?  (to form laws)  (i.e. wants to be)
4) What is  the action?  (to form commandments)  (i.e. can be)
5) What is the thing?  (to form statutes)  (i.e. let be)

Before I continue let me present the major opinions I think are worth considering on the definition (one of three kinds of meaning) of holy:

1) "set apart" (by far the most popular in the last 100 years, but not previously)
2) "pure" (made popular in groups like the Puritans, but that is no surprise)
3) "moral wholeness" (the most popular of the last 500 years in Protestant theology)

I believe the latter wins after a thorough testing and experimentation.  But for the testing to be successful there must be many testifiers, not just many experiments.  Too many times we think of them as the same thing. Read on and see the difference.


What are the numbers?  Let me stack up the numbers for you first.  Do you remember the story of Elijah?  He asks the people for a test.  He asks for a time out.  He says, "How long will you continue to waver between two opinions?"  The people like his idea for ending their wavering.  So here is how it went #s wise.

Baal's prophets, Yahweh's prophet

1)  2 opinions, 1 opinion
2)  400 reps/prophets of Baal, 1 rep/prophet for Yahweh (Elijah)
3)  1 altar for Baal, 1 altar for Elijah
4)  the whole community assembled as testers/witnesses, the whole community assembled as testers/witnesses
5)  Only fire from heaven, only fire from heaven.
6)  many slashings leading to bleeding, not even one slashing
7)  0 gallons of water, excess gallons of water
8)  Very dry wood, very wet wood

I think you can tell that Elijah is not even worried about the odds being stacked against him in this test.  He knows there are two options: 1) a guaranteed decline or failure, which is why he makes fun of them, and 2) an uncertain possibility, which he believes will test out just fine.

I likewise am not at all bothered by the numbers.  The number of lexicons means little to nothing, if they all are just Xerox copies of each other.  The answers that lexicons, dictionaries, word studies, newer scholarship, older scholarship, and church leaders give wavers between opinions.

So what is the test?  Let me stack up the test for you.  The test is what will be your opinion here and now.  Notice that Elijah is not willing to deal with further procrastination on their part.  Their desire to avoid the topic in the here and now is seen in his primary question: "How long will you waver between two opinions?"

Here is my breakdown on the place and time:

Baal's prophets, Yahweh's prophet

1) at present they go to worship Baal and Yahweh, Elijah wants them to go to worship only Yahweh,
2)  they have perhaps in even the same building worship to each, Elijah wants them to have separate worship,
3)  they want to continue waiting, Elijah wants the waiting to stop,
4)  they have put off agreeing to test each view at a place and time, Elijah asks them for a test at a place and time - a here and now test (very shortly)
5) they have gotten comfortable with their uncertainty (wavering), Elijah wants them to rid themselves of their uncertainty  (He wants them to say: "As for me and my house we will serve Yahweh".
6)  apparently they have been putting the place of decision off for a long time, Elijah wants the time out to end so they can get back to action,
7)  procrastination, urgency
8)  traveling from place to place, finding their place

What Elijah asked for and what he got from the people was a test.  That is all he needed from the witnesses.  He needed one agreed upon place and time when they could all testify to the results.  He alone as a witness was not enough.  He wanted maximum testing or witnessing.  They made a covenant or bond with Elijah that they would be witnesses to a test.  It is no test to hear the testimony of only one witness.  That is all that I am.  He did not give them any guarantees except that he would be present, when Yahweh proved who he was.  They agreed to the same place and time as Elijah and they did not require certainty from him in advance, but rather they sought certainty after the test where they were present to testify.  Maybe their wavering was directly a result of their desire to have guarantees in advance, rather than waiting for til the time that they could testify to guarantee what was true and humble.  

The difficulty in the present, especially regarding holy's definition is that the tests are quasi-tests.  The are not tests that give you a great deal of certainty.  In fact, as scholars have assessed the definition of holy more recently, the tests are coming back more uncertain than previously.  The Dictionary of Classical Hebrew (the grandest work on the Hebrew language) casts serious doubt on the etymological argument for "set apart".  It also made the courageous step of leaving out cognate (other language) material and relying primarily on the Hebrew language internally.  

I am afraid that the one test of blessed and holy has not really been performed up to here and now standards.  Since James Barr, no one has written a full blown test for the definition of holy after he successfully unseated the argument from etymology alone.  (He did not say it has no value, but he does say its value is limited.)  That is what I am trying to do otherwise in this blog and in an upcoming book.  I want to set the stage for a grand test of definitions of blessed and holy.  .

So what is complete?  What is complete is playing by all the laws.

I think the laws for Elijah and the prophets might have been something like this:

Baal's prophets, Yahweh's prophet

1)  no stranger fire other than from heaven, no strange fire other than from heaven,
2)  Prayers are permitted, prayers are permitted
3)  We can play with up to 400 players against Elijah by himself, I will permit them to have 400 as long as I can play
4)  bleeding and slashing is permitted, heckling is permitted without any need for physical violence
5)  There is no requirement to use green or wet wood, wet wood will be used that goes beyond required
6)  Baal gets to go first based on the "coin toss", Elijah will go second based on the same "coin toss"
7)  The contest will continue until a side gets the result of a fire.  Elijah continues until fire arrives
8)  If Baal wins then everyone is to go with him, if Yahweh wins then everyone is to go with him


What is the action?  What is the action is the experiment.

I think the rules for Elijah the prophets of Baal and the crowd of spectators were these:

Baal's prophets, Yahweh's prophet

1)  no matches were allowed (that is cheating), no matches were allowed (that is cheating)
2)  each side was to set up their own altar, each side was to set up their own altar
3)  each side was to ask their god to send fire from heaven, each side was to ask their god to send fire from heaven
4)  the action of the people of Israel was to be witnesses, the action of the people was to be witnesses
5)  neither side could sell money back guarantees in advance, neither side could sell money back guarantees
6)  the guarantee came after the experiment, the guarantee came after the experiment
7)  certainty would come from knowing the results following the experiment, certainty would come from knowing the results after the experiment,
8)  prayers and blood-letting allowed, prayers allowed but no blood-letting except from animals


To sum it up, it is to set up an experiment and perform it.  To be specific about the definitions of blessed an holy, I have only given a rough sketch of the experiment mainly for the definition of holy.  I still have a lot of writing to do and a lot of writing that is not on my blog yet.  I have thought it all through in my own mind and I already know the outcome for me personally.  But that does not mean there are many testimonies to that definition.

I knew holy's definition with certainty and personally back in November 2013.  Before that time, mainly the last 10 years, I knew through experimenting that there were lots of problems with the etymological argument arriving at "set apart" as the definition (one of three kinds of meaning).  I also knew that in the last 500 years that the Christian church and even the Jewish synagogue are divided on its meaning.  My question is a lot like Elijah's: "Why are satisfied with procrastinating between so many opinions?"  So I have begun the experiment that people can give witness to on-line.  I want witnesses.  I am not doing this in the dark somewhere.  I am doing it in the light of everywhere and at hyper-speed.   These are the twin advantages of the internet.  

Let me illustrate the importance of experimenting and not just guessing in our brains.  This is how I used experimenting just this morning (5/19/14).  .

So this morning, I did not know where my coffee or tea cup had disappeared to.  Rather than waver too long as to where it might be, I started out by experimenting with where it might be.  I had a few opinions in my mind.  I experimented first with the location of the passenger's side seat in my car.  I seemed to recall that the solution to this mystery had some connection with my car.  Well, it wasn't there.  Then I decided, let's re-check the kitchen looking in the open at the counter space and then in the cupboard.  I didn't find it there either.  Then I checked the other lower probability rooms.like the living room, etc.  Still, no success.  Then upon returning to the kitchen, I spotted where it was most likely hidden.  I noticed that I had not emptied my lunch container from the day before.  Than I recalled also that there was something I had placed in there the day before that was unusual for me. It was then that I opened the packet and there it was!  I found in truth where my cup was located and I also have to admit humbly that I did not know were it was with certainty until that moment.  No mental experiment was as good as finishing the experiment by opening the bag.

The problem is that too many people rely on their minds and not on their souls.  They think of knowledge as something that is mind-based rather than relationship-based.  I now realize for myself more than ever that knowledge in the Bible makes a lot more sense as a term of intimacy as one of my professors once called it.  I think his idea leans in the right direction.  Where and when will we be?  That is where and when we shall know.  No elsewhere and not any time before.

I also found my cup fairly fast, because I tested my theories rather than tried to just think my way into certainty in advance.  This is, I think, a great mistake by many people.  They don't just do it - experiment that is.  Peter Drucker taught me, through one of his books many years ago, the superiority of this method of experimenting.  People who are unsure need to experiment, to paraphrase his advice.



What is the thing?  No longer wavering between two opinions as to which one is god.  It is either Baal or it is Yahweh.  Which one shows that he is God?

 Let me stack up the things for you at last:

Baal's prophets, Yahweh's prophet

1)  fire from heaven will demonstrate that Baal is god, fire from heaven will demonstrate that Yahweh is god
2)  we don't believe that any human being can command fire from heaven, we don't believe that any human being can command fire from heaven
3)  the demonstration has to be something that we cannot do ourselves, the demonstration has to be something that we cannot do ourselves
4)  the demonstration cannot be subject to coincidence (fire from heaven during a lightning storm), the demonstration cannot be subject to coincidence (it has not even rained for a long time and there are no clouds)
5)  the demonstration can happen using wood that burns very easily, the demonstration can be with dry wood but let's make it more miraculous by adding water than no human being can overcome without trouble)
6)  our god will answer us while the people are still there, my god will answer even after part of the day is lost and the people might be starting to want to go back home
7)  our god surely knows he has a stake in this and hasn't been distracted, your god I think is distracted by the latreen while my god is still interested
8)  we think by slashing ourselves greater attention will come from our god, my god needs no such attention getting measures

Some at least have heard who the winner in this experiment was in terms of demonstrating which god was the God.  It was the god named Yahweh.  Elijah now had not only his own testimony, he also now had the testimony of the people of Israel.  No longer was it him alone while the crowds limped along.  I know that later in the story Elijah starts to feel sorry for himself all over again.  But notice that God reminds him that he is not the only prophet of Yahweh who did not bend the knee and he certainly too was no longer the only one to testify as to who is God among the people.  There were now many witnesses.

That is where every reader of this blog can make their mark. They can become witnesses of the things they have seen.  You can do it by leaving a comment to let others know you have witnessed what I have said.  Others can then add their testimony to yours.  I know that I am not alone.  I don't have Elijah's problem today at least.

So I would like the testifiers of truth and humility, people who wait until after the experiment and have stopped procrastinating, to join with me and start using my tools under my "communication tools" tab and to start reading my prior experiments in this blog.  You'll be surprised what you'll find once you kick procrastination to the back seat of the bus.  It is an absolute necessity to understand your importance as fellow connection, witness, and testifier, who waits truthfully and humbly for certainty.  Then you shall know and not before.  Ah, isn't it fun to stop procrastinating and instead begin to get things done?  Take care my fellow witnesses.


In Christ,

Jon

Saturday, May 10, 2014

Blessed and Holy: Understanding Them Better Through Exodus 19:1-8 (Credibility - Part 5 of 5)

Credibility is a thing that is hard to find.  It is also hard to establish it with others.  It requires more than a high IQ.  It also requires EQ.  EQ is an emotional quotient like there is an intelligence quotient, IQ.  You may have a very high IQ and fail at EQ.  Notice the following picture:




What I find is that too many people are emotionally afraid of considering the option that the most popular definition in lexicons in the last 100 years and among the majority of current scholars is incorrect.  Too often the definition that people settle for is fear driven rather than confidence driven.  It can also be fearless driven as though confidence is the total absence of fear.  I am convinced that the definition of holy is "moral wholeness" and I can emotionally say it with confidence under control (it is not a fearless over-correction.

"What is moral wholeness?", you might ask.  It is all these moral traits as a whole:

1) Righteous and just
2) True and humble
3) Loving and perfect,
4) Good and great.

To lack anyone of these would mean that a person is not morally whole.  It goes almost without saying, but "steadfast kindness" is the sequel to holiness when it comes to salvation.  This kindness is a gift while holiness is a demand or requirement.

BIBLICAL TEXT OF EXODUS 19:1-8

I want to point out that I agree fully to Scripture alone as the principal by which the meaning of holy should be tested.  It is not the lazy man's way of defining holy, but the brain exercising way to define holy.  My purpose is not to convince people to read all the scholarly materials on holy, though some are helpful, but to better equip them to understand the meaning of holy in the biblical text for themselves.  Note this quote by a guy who exercised his brain pretty well and I understand had an IQ in the 160s.




Here one also has to be cautious not to take this quote too far.  Einstein is not suggesting that reading others is a waste of time entirely, but he is more concerned that people develop their own habits of thinking rather than relying primarily or only on an authoritative source outside of one's own understanding.  I like to think of it this way.  It is the difference between those raised by parents to be adults themselves and those who remain mainly dependent on their parents even as adults.  These thinkers are not independent thinkers.

The danger in going too far in one's independence is though like the person who becomes an adult and forbids themselves to ever get the advice of a parent.  You can be independent even if you know your parents' view.  That does not necessarily block you from independence unless you are still dependent on them can cannot chose other than their view.

So let's examine the text itself as a starting point:

Exodus 19:1-8

New King James Version (NKJV)

Israel at Mount Sinai

19 In the third month after the children of Israel had gone out of the land of Egypt, on the same day, they came to the Wilderness of Sinai. For they had departed from Rephidim, had come to the Wilderness of Sinai, and camped in the wilderness. So Israel camped there before the mountain.
And Moses went up to God, and the Lord called to him from the mountain, saying, “Thus you shall say to the house of Jacob, and tell the children of Israel: ‘You have seen what I did to the Egyptians, and how I bore you on eagles’ wings and brought you to Myself.Now therefore, if you will indeed obey My voice and keep My covenant, then you shall be a special treasure to Me above all people; for all the earth is Mine. And you shall be to Me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation.’ These are the words which you shall speak to the children of Israel.”
So Moses came and called for the elders of the people, and laid before them all these words which the Lord commanded him. Then all the people answered together and said, “All that the Lord has spoken we will do.” So Moses brought back the words of the people to the Lord.


Jo Bailey Wells in her fine consideration of these verses points out some significant characteristics in this text.  She points out some relevant parallelism in relationship to the definition of holy.


[This post with some other recent posts is under construction.  Next week should afford another opportunity to revisit those that are incomplete.  Sorry for the delay.]



In Christ,

Jon



Thursday, May 08, 2014

Blessed and Holy: Understanding Them Better Through Exodus 19:1-8 (Credibility - Part 4 of 5)

I think I am going to be wrapping up my work on the definition of holy this week.  I am now going to re-direct my major efforts toward the parts of Scripture that are much simpler and provided the tools for me to recognize that the popular definition of holy in our day is an error.

The definition of holy as "set apart" is reading too much into one ancient writing that say that "holy means set apart".  Means does not always mean definition.  In this case, I am convinced that it means significance.  I do believe that being blessed and being morally whole do set people apart from those who are not.  This is just like a hospital separates the healthy from the unhealthy in cases of communicable diseases.  But to claim that what we are chiefly to imitate in God in being blessed like he is with some kind of prosperity (which seems kind of weird) and to claim that we are chiefly to be like him in his separation from sin (again which seems kind of weird) is not the God that I want to emulate.  I want to emulate a greater God who has a blessedness that indicates "I am who I am" and a God who is above all else chiefly "morally whole" as holy.  My God is not morally one kind like just love.  Give me a much more robust God than that and then I will emulate God for the rest of all eternity!

May you learn the meaning of holy as I have and long the day when all the world knows it too!


[This piece too is still in process, but it does cut the point doesn't it?]



"Are you afraid of success?"  Remember that line from "It's a Wonderful Life"?  Maybe the fear of success is greater than we imagine.  "The only thing to fear is fear itself".  Remember that line from FDR?  Could it be that our fear is greater than fear itself?  Could it be that our greatest fear is not that we are inadequate, but rather our fear is that our adequacy or confidence demonstrates the inadequacy of others?  How can we possibly succeed where they failed?  Are we also fearful of hurting other people's feelings of adequacy or confidence?   I believe I can see and feel these fears every day.  So now fear rather than confidence is our primary stance.

Perhaps, following failure after failure which came after proclaiming success after success, we are a bit weary and fearful of confidence.  Look at the path of our own pasts and those leaders around us covered with failed successes.  From religion, Jimmy Baker; from politics, Richard Nixon; from business, Kenneth Lay; from sports, Tiger Wood and the list for all these areas goes on and on.  People who once had our confidence that then turned around and shattered it.  It is a fearful past that we live with everyday.

In a very real sense, fear is helpful.  We need confidence that is not just fearless.  We have to be able to discern when confidence makes sense and when fear makes sense.  The problem is when fear so controls us that we now believe that we too will not possess the strength to solve the previously unsolvable.  The ones older than us didn't, goes the reasoning.  Why would this generation of human beings in the 21st century succeed, where many in the 20th century did not?  Could we possibly be more adequate than the so-called "Greatest Generation"?  Is this our fear?  Does latching on to them as the "Greatest Generation" just give us a convenient excuse to not try what they found impossible?  Is it an attempt to shield us from the fears of the 20th century?  Is it an attempt to find one place and time where we can be confident?

I believe excess fear and excess confidence are both hurting the legitimate feeling of confidence.  In the story of Joshua, he is told that instead of being afraid that he is to "be strong and courageous".  Notice not strong and fearless.  Remember too that "the fear of God is the beginning of wisdom".  So woe to the fearless!  So what about us?  We are not to be frightened by other people' s feelings of fear and inadequacy, are we?   We are not to join the fearless, are we?

A biblical theology is one of those specific areas where people are afraid.  People are afraid that a biblical theology is not possible.   The let's boil that all the way down to a specific biblical definition of holy.  It simply is not possible, we reason, based on all the ones before us that failed. I repeat and capitalize for emphasis two words: NOT POSSIBLE.

Now before I say much more about a biblical passage this week over 5 steps in 5 days, I want to point out the many times that I have learned the danger of these words "not possible" and why they ought to be feared (fear itself again!).   They can be very dangerous words.  They can undercut confidence itself.  So here is some instances outside of biblical theology but still part of life's experiences, where I have experienced the danger of NOT POSSIBLE.  They are:

1) it is not possible for your parents to love you as much as their natural born, because you are adopted,
2) it is not possible to beat someone in wrestling, because they beat you a year ago,
3) it is not possible for you to be a mile runner on the high school track team, because the first time you were ever timed in a mile run in high school, you were beaten by an offensive lineman,
4) it is not possible for you to ever be smart, because your IQ score in high school was very low,
5) it is not possible to get a high grade in college Greek, because you struggled even with English grammar,
6) it is not possible for you to become a good communicator, because who scored very low in the English section of the ACT during high school,
7) it is not possible for you to be a good basketball coach, because at one point you did not know the short list of fundamentals,
8) it is not possible for you to succeed as a fisherman, because you previously failed as a fisherman,
9) it is not possible for the tool you have to be better, because others used it before you and it did not prove better but instead controversial,
10) It is not possible to be emotionally intelligent, because you previously were not emotionally intelligent.

All of these and more (ex. player, coach, and AD) contribute to why I believe "not possible" is dangerous.   Everyone has proved instead to be very possible.  Besides that, it makes us (me included) all hypocrites, who sang when we were younger, "nothing is impossible with God".  It is not our mindset alone that needs to change as much as our strength-set.  We need to boost our confidence, when it is appropriate!

An emotionally healthy person knows there is a time to be confident and there is a time to fear.  The healthy person knows when to be one and not the other.  Again, they are not fearless.  They are confident.  There is a huge difference.  Lots of people get hurt being fearless.  Me included, so that is not what I am looking for from us.  I am instead looking for confident people, who know when to be confident.







In Christ,


Jon


Wednesday, May 07, 2014

Blessed and Holy: Understanding Them Better Through Exodus 19:1-8 (Credibility - Part 3 of 5)

In speaking to the issue of what is the definition of holy, as one part of what holy means, we should all agree that we need to engage our minds in the process.  We should also all agree that it needs to be all of our mind or brain that is engaged.   So let me engage your whole brain.  Who is most credible in the use of their mind? Is it: 1) a person who is very smart and feels little, 2) a person who feels much and is not very smart, or a person who feels deeply and is very smart?  I am convinced the most credible mind for deciding on a definition for holy is that person who both feels deeply and is deeply smart.  This kind of person has a quiet ethical credibility,

Further, I do believe our emotional state does influence our decision making, so that it is best to bring it out into the open and handle it positively rather than hide it or try to subdue it.  It is the person who ignores their emotions and/or the person who ignores their logic that gets in the most trouble.

I continue to be convinced from my devotional reading of Scripture that this is true, since emotions are found in many stories influencing decisions.  From these biblical instances and other evidence, I believe that the person whose thinking is most credible is that person who considers both feeling and logic.  Peter F. Drucker, the great management guru of the 20th century, lays out an obviously logical format for making decisions in his many books on management, but he also acknowledged the need to listen to that voice he called the "daemon" for a short time to make sure we heard its voice and not just the logical voice in decision making.  Ironically, it seems that emotions could most effect those most unaware of them.


[This piece of writing is likely to be broken into 2 parts with one section staying in this post and the other going to my communication basics blog for a more full treatment.]




For a number of years, I have been studying the topic of emotional intelligence alongside of rational or logical intelligence.  The pages in my notebook on emotional intelligence go back to at least 2006, but some of the things on the topic I may have been studying much longer.  Personally, I have been "studying" emotions since I was pulled out of my 3rd grade class to see the principal and then the school psychologist.  Today, I will limit my discussion to psychologists and philosophers, who are also authors, that have especially helped me with my emotional intelligence.  They are: 1) Daniel Goleman, 2) Robert Plutchik, and 3) Aristotle (yes, that Greek philosopher).  To sum up what I have learned, I would say four things directly related to each of them:

1) emotional intelligence is more important than logical intelligence based on biological factors (Goleman),
2) there are basic emotions from which the other combinations of emotions spring (Plutchik), and
3) psychology has been hindered by the notion that fight and flight are opposites and so are both anger and fear, which can easily be shown to be a false set of opposites by its inconsistency with other emotions and other approaches (Aristotle)
4) the important triad of ethos (ethical/credible), pathos (emotions), and logos (logical) have been overlooked to our detriment when it comes to appeals for our decisions (Aristotle).

I find that every one of these lessons is important, but especially the last one.  I find that by ignoring the emotional component when it comes to people's minds being persuaded and by not recognizing that both emotional and logical appeals are necessary for a person to be considered ethical or credible are both critical to defining holy correctly.

Perhaps the biggest hurdle people need to get over is the negative view of their emotions.  I think Daniel Goleman's work on emotional intelligence and his rooting his ideas in the biology of the brain are a big help in cutting edge science of the brain.  But there is also an ancient tradition in rhetoric that shows that ancients like Aristotle also recognized its great role a long time before the latest science.  Not all  have taken a negative or dim view of emotions.  In going through the educational system of the United States, whether private or public, we are tested on our IQ, but there is not an equivalent EQ test.  Goleman's own test is nowhere near a type of compliment.  But the picture below does show importance of the emotional part of our brain that interacts with the logical portion.





There are some helpful things written on emotions, but also some that are confusing or misleading.

On a personal level three people have helped me the most: 1) my mother, 2) my Great Aunt Lilly, and 3) Pastor B. Wayne Johnson.

Three professional people have helped me with my emotional intelligence perhaps the most: 1) Dottie Lideen (the schoool pychologist mentioned earlier), 2) Pastor Jim Learned, and Roger Buck, a Director of Christian Education and Stephens Ministry Coordinator.




In studying under Dr. John S. Piper, Tom Stellar, and Dr. Daniel P. Fuller, I learned to use my own brain more and other people's brains less to keep my own brain from becoming lazy.  This does not mean other views are not important (they are!) for seeing options for biblical interpretation, but what it does mean is what Einstein discovered:




So let's look at the text now that we have a better sense of how our minds work overall.


[while this is still under construction, next week (5/11/14) is when I hope to add to it.]


Sincerely,

Jon

Saturday, April 26, 2014

Blessed and Holy: Understanding Them Better through Luke 10:25-28 (Things - Part 5 of 5)

When it comes to the definition of holy it is important to understand the meaning of each option on a common sense level or slightly higher level at most.  This has been largely overlooked in some of the quirky distinctions of definition on the part of some writers on the topic. The most comical in my mind is the distinction between whether one is separated from something or separated to something.  I doubt very much that qadosh in Hebrew communicates such a subtle point.  It shows the great lengths some will go to in trying to fix obvious problems with a definition.  I find it much better to try to simplify definitions rather than complicate them. 

For me, there are five fairly basic classes that words fall into.  They are:

1) Amounts,
2) Relationships,
3) Wholes
4) Actions
5) Things

In following the idea of set apart, the distinction is usually that of relationships.  Sometimes it is also seen as a separate thing from sin. 

[Sorry the day has gotten late and it is time for me to conclude.  I hope to be able to revisit this post next week based on a change in my writing schedule.  My new goal is to now write on week for each of 5 days and then return the next week to tidy up any writing that was left incomplete.]


In Christ,

Jon




Friday, April 25, 2014

Blessed and Holy: Understanding Them Better Through Luke 10:25-28 (Action - Part 4 of 5)

OPENING OF ACTION

I love this quote that I heard from a friend of mine yesterday: "Where there is a why, there is a how".  It sounds a lot like "Where there is a will, there is a way", doesn't it?  The first quote fits extremely well with the training that I hope to accomplish today from Luke 10:25-28.  Today the goal is to be immensely practical. From the Greatest Commandment, which includes the 1st and the 2nd, everyone can learn a great deal about the why and the how of action.

Amount of action

At the core of training are two aspects, both the level of focus and the level of effort required, when taking action.  In this case, it is important to answer two basic questions:

1) How many?  for a) 1st commandment, and for b) 2nd commandment
2) How much?  for a) 1st commandment, and for b) 2nd commandment

So what things in our text indicate the answer to the first question?  I found these things to be very good answer to very good question:

1) a) one by four, b) two by self

What does one by four mean in this answer?  It means that there is "one" God and that there are four parts of ourselves, "heart", "soul", "strength" and "mind",  that are supposed to love Yahweh God.  There is one God for all four parts of ourselves, rather than one god for each one of the four parts or some other combinations of one and four.  

What does "two by self" mean in my answer?   It means that there are two people who both are selves.   There is yourself and myself, making two.

So what things in our text indicate the answer to the second question?  I found these things to be a very good answer to a very good question:

2) a) with whole, b) as much as

What does "with whole" mean in this answer?  It means that we are to love God with the whole of each of four parts.  Notice the same level or quality for each one.  (I curiously had never thought of this quite this way until today.)   There is no preference for either the heart, the soul, the strength, or the mind.  They are treated as equal in quality though somewhat distinct in order.

So how does this all translate to us in determining the how and the why?   Action like love needs to be focused on one God, even if we ourselves have four parts.  Likewise the quality from each part needs to be equal.  This is the clarity and the meaningfulness that we need today.

In our day, that appears that a lack of favoritism is a big problem as denominations tend to favor their one part over the others.  From both my personal experience (which is worth more) and my reading (which is worth less), I have noted that seldom do denominations notice their favoritism for one part over another part due to their historically different questions.  To mention just one example, Luther asked as his primary question, "How much?" is enough to satisfy an angry God.  He responded with justification being primary. Calvin, while not against Luther on his question, asked a different primary question, "When" as in who precedes the other.  He responded with humility being primary, since humanity follows after divinity.  It would seem that the danger for each is favoring the heart in the first case and the soul in the second.  The rule of action here is that they are to be equal without favoritism.  With the loss of their understanding of holiness, it appears that favoritism has gotten worse not better.  

Relationship of action

At the core of training are two other aspects, both the location and the timing required, when taking action. In this case, it is important to answer two basic questions:

1) Where?  for a) 1st commandment, and for b) 2nd commandment
2) When?  for a) 1st commandment, and for b) 2nd commandment

So what things in our text indicate the answer to question of location?  I found these things to be very good answer to very good question:

1) a) Israel, b) neighbor (lit. "near wiling")

What does Israel mean in this answer?  What does it say about location.  It means that those in the location of a nation are being addressed and not just the location of one household.  This would also explain the expanded location to all nations being discussed in passages where there is mention of the "Jew first and also the Gentiles (Nations).  This rule is not limited to inside some narrow place.  There is one God for all Israel and by implication then all other nations rather than one god for each narrow household.  This God who ought to reign over one nation and goes beyond just narrow locations should also be the God of all locations.
What does neighbor mean in my answer?   It means that there are people near us by their willing to be there. They as free people chose to live in the house next door.  They  have chosen to pass down the path we are passing also.  There are many ways that people come near to us versus pass far from us.  But by rule, when the come near to us, they are now our neighbors.  There are ourselves and them in the same close proximity.
So what things in our text indicate the answer to the second question of time?  I found these things to be a very good answer to a very good question:

2) a) Moses' century BC, b) 1st century AD

What does Moses' century B.C." mean in this answer?  It means that this rule that is greatest also has an historic past.  It isn't just here and now, though it is that.  It is also from the past, into the present, and so into the future a rule.  Notice that the timing for this rule does not change with time.  It perseveres with time.  If it still applied in first century long after Moses, it would still apply now.  There is no preference for either the the past, the present, or the future.  All three times mean it is an acceptable time to live by the neighbor rule. These times are treated as equal in quality though very distinct in order.

So how does this all transfer to us in determining the how and the why?   Action like love needs to be aimed at the there and before, the here and now, and the elsewhere and after.  We cannot place everything into one place and time.  Likewise the quality from place and time needs to be equal no matter where and when the rule is applied.  This is the transfer of time and place we need today in our rules where time and place doesn't make the rule obsolete.

In our day, it appears that the elsewhere and future is all that matters over the there and past or here and present for others.  For others it is all about the there and past to the neglect of the other two.  For others it is all about living for the here and now.  Rarely do you hear of the value of all three places and times as equal in their own place and time.  Rather we here that here and now we are better or then and there they were better or here and now is better.  Rarely is each seen as an acceptable place and time for its place and time.   We try to put everything into our time limits of choice rather than each thing its rightful place and time.   People forget that placement and timing are of the essence and that preference for one over the others is likely its own prejudice.  Don't try to tell anyone that placement and timing isn't a problem. They will think you are nuts.

Whole of action

At the core of training are two aspects, both the issue of identity and the core issue of the wholeness required, when a person is taking action.  In this case, it is important to answer two basic questions:

1) Who?  for a) 1st commandment, and for b) 2nd commandment
2) Whole?  for a) 1st commandment, and for b) 2nd commandment

At the core of training are two aspects, both the level of focus and the level of effort required, when taking action.  In this case, it is important to answer two basic questions:

1) How many?  for a) 1st commandment, and for b) 2nd commandment
2) How much?  for a) 1st commandment, and for b) 2nd commandment

So what things in our text indicate the answer to the first question?  I found these things to be very good answer to very good question:

1) a) one by four, b) two by self

What does one by four mean in this answer?  It means that there is "one" God and that there are four parts of ourselves, "heart", "soul", "strength" and "mind",  that are supposed to love Yahweh God.  There is one God for all four parts of ourselves, rather than one god for each one of the four parts or some other combinations of one and four.  

What does "two by self" mean in my answer?   It means that there are two people who both are selves.   There is yourself and myself, making two.

So what things in our text indicate the answer to the second question?  I found these things to be a very good answer to a very good question:

2) a) with whole, b) as much as

What does "with whole" mean in this answer?  It means that we are to love God with the whole of each of four parts.  Notice the same level or quality for each one.  (I curiously had never thought of this quite this way until today.)   There is no preference for either the heart, the soul, the strength, or the mind.  They are treated as equal in quality though somewhat distinct in order.

So how does this all translate to us in determining the how and the why?   Action like love needs to be focused on one God, even if we ourselves have four parts.  Likewise the quality from each part needs to be equal.  This is the clarity and the meaningfulness that we need today.

In our day, that appears that a lack of favoritism is a big problem as denominations tend to favor their one part over the others.  From both my personal experience (which is worth more) and my reading (which is worth less), I have noted that seldom do denominations notice their favoritism for one part over another part due to their historically different questions.  To mention just one example, Luther asked as his primary question, "How much?" is enough to satisfy an angry God.  He responded with justification being primary. Calvin, while not against Luther on his question, asked a different primary question, "When" as in who precedes the other.  He responded with humility being primary, since humanity follows after divinity.  It would seem that the danger for each is favoring the heart in the first case and the soul in the second.  The rule of action here is that they are to be equal without favoritism.  With the loss of their understanding of holiness, it appears that favoritism has gotten worse not better.  


So what things in our text indicate the answer to the first question?  I found these things to be very good answer to very good question:

1) a) Yahweh & Israel, and 2) another & self

What does "Yahweh and Israel" mean in this answer?  Yahweh means that here is God with a personal rather than impersonal name.  It also means that Israel (the name given to Jacob by God) that later became the name for a nation is being addressed by Yahweh.  That is the "you" being referred to in this case.  So the entire address is personal.

What does "another and self" mean in my answer?   It means that there are two people who both can be referred to as a self or selves. There is another self and myself that are critical in this case for answering who is being referred to.  This commandment leaves no person out in the sense that all of us are not an island all by ourselves.  There is nowhere for a person to hide from responsibility for others as well as themselves.

So what things in our text indicate the answer to the second question?  I found these things to be a very good answer to a very good question:

2) a) of heart, of soul, of strength, of mind (of yourself), b) of you (your)

What does "of heart, etc." mean in this answer?  It means that we are to love God with the the four parts of ourselves.  Each is undeniably part of who we are.  Notice the same level for each one.  (I curiously had never thought of this quite this way until today.)   It isn't a heart of a soul , soul of strength, etc. where one is the part of the other.  No each one is an equal part of who we are as a person.  There is no preference for either the heart, the soul, the strength, or the mind.  They are treated as equal parts though in a somewhat distinct order.

So how does this all total up for us in determining the how and the why?   Actions like love need to be personal and regard the entire person rather than just one part of who people are.  No training and all teaching means our strength gets weak while the mind prospers.  All training and no teaching means the mind goes mindless. Likewise the treatment of each part needs to be equal.  This personal and healthy touch we need in our actions.  Impersonal and only a part of the job will not do.

Also in our day, it appears that a lack of being personal is growing with more and more focus on technology and its strength as a tool over the other parts that make up who we are.  There also seems to be a kind of smugness coming over those who like the increased intelligence of the computer, but are ill-equipped to better train the brain. We could use some brain training equal to technological training.


Action of action  

At the core of training are two aspects, both how to do something and why to do something.  Without the how confidence wanes, without a why motivation wanes.  In this case, it is important to answer two basic questions:

1) How?  for a) 1st commandment, and for b) 2nd commandment
2) Why?  for a) 1st commandment, and for b) 2nd commandment

So what things in our text indicate the answer to the first question?  I found these things to be very good answer to very good question:

1) a) love, b) love

What does "love" mean in this answer?  It means that love matters, because it is something that we do.  If it is something that we do, then we need training in loving.  We know to potty train a child, but do we know how to love train them and adults?   Sure, we ought to love Yahweh God, but how do we love?  How do we practice love?   It is ironic that I have trained many athletes to do a wide assortment of skills, but I have never explicitly taught people how to love.  Since the Bible points out a lot of hatred in this world (the failure to do for others), I would think love training is not optional.

What does the next "love" mean in my answer?   Again, I think there are skilled lovers and then there are unskilled lovers (who are very close to haters).   I think I need to start offering love workshops the more I reflect on love as the answer for the how.  It like faith and hope is an action, but a different kind and the greatest action we can perform.  So let's learn how to love to drive out any hatred that shows in us, when we ought to do the loving thing.  .

So what things in our text indicate the answer to the second question?  I found these things to be a very good answer to a very good question:

2) a) with the whole of , b) as much as

What does "with the whole of" mean in this answer?  It means what the measure of our love toward God ought to be from the whole of each of four parts.  Notice again the same level or quality for each one.  How might love look different if it were done "with the whole" of each part of ourselves?  So why love with such passion?  Perhaps it is because He first loved us!  Remember also that "He so loved ... that He gave his only begotten son.  Again, why?   Because so great a love deserves so great a response in return.  He is your God, so love Him in a way somewhat equal to His love.

So how does this all train us in determining the how and the why?   Actions of love need to be both skilled and motivated to a high degree.  We need passion for our trade and passion toward a high degree.  Likewise the quality of love on our part needs to be equal to love for ourselves.  This is the loving measure that we need to communicate more effectively.

What does "as much as" mean in this answer?  The typical translation reads "love your neighbor as yourself".  I put in "as much as" in place of "as" to make the degree or measure more explicit and meaningful without changing the meaning.  It makes me think more about the "why" behind my love when I realize that my neighbor is in that sense my equal and so deserves that kind of love.

So how is training in love going?  In our day, it seems that love has become almost hatred, since it is one area that is seldom practiced to make the activity perfect, but rather is left in the arms of spontaneity or blind luck.  I would argue we need to work on it like we work on a jump shot, like we work on a recipe, like we work in accounting, etc.  Let's get to work, practice, and then love rather that hate.


Thing of action

At the core of training are two aspects, both the definition of what is love and which kind is it
, when taking action.  In this case, it is important to answer two basic questions:

1) What?  for a) 1st commandment, and for b) 2nd commandment
2) Which?  for a) 1st commandment, and for b) 2nd commandment

So what things in our text indicate the answer to the first question?  I found these things to be very good answer to very good question:

1) a) You , God, b) you and neighbor

What does "you and God" mean in this answer?   It means you as in lawyer, disciples, and the people.   It means the God for all as identified by the Jews for generations.

What does "two by self" mean in my answer?   It means that there are two people who both are selves.   There is yourself and myself, making two.

So what things in our text indicate the answer to the second question?  I found these things to be a very good answer to a very good question:

2) a) , b) as much as

What does "with whole" mean in this answer?  It means that we are to love God with the whole of each of four parts.  Notice the same level or quality for each one.  (I curiously had never thought of this quite this way until today.)   There is no preference for either the heart, the soul, the strength, or the mind.  They are treated as equal in quality though somewhat distinct in order.

So how does this all translate to us in determining the how and the why?   Action like love needs to be focused on one God, even if we ourselves have four parts.  Likewise the quality from each part needs to be equal.  This is the clarity and the meaningfulness that we need today.

In our day, ....


what?  lawyer, teacher, God, disciples, the people

which?  1st greater commandment, 2nd lesser commandment, greatest summary altogether

teach

CLOSING OF ACTION


[just a bit more to go]

In Christ,

Jon