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    <title>Marion&apos;s Blog</title>
    <link>http://heritagecenterville.org/marionsblog/</link>
    <description></description>
    <dc:language>en</dc:language>
    <dc:creator>marionlovett@heritagecenterville.org</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights>Copyright 2008</dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2008-02-26T14:24:00-06:00</dc:date>
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    <item>
      <title>Sacraments for the Body</title>
      <link>http://heritagecenterville.org/marionsblog/render/sacraments-for-the-body/</link>
      <guid>http://heritagecenterville.org/marionsblog/render/sacraments-for-the-body/#When:14:24:00Z</guid>
      <description>I have been considering the topic of covenant communion.&amp;nbsp; Covenant communion holds that communion is for the body of Christ.&amp;nbsp; It is a corporate meal and needs to be seen in that light.&amp;nbsp; Therefore, those who are in the “body” are included in the invitation to come to the Table.&amp;nbsp; This includes baptized children of believing parents who have not yet made an outward profession of faith.


Baptized children of believing parents are a part of the body (i.e. the Church).&amp;nbsp; Paul begins his address in the first letter to the church at Corinth with, “Paul, called to be an apostle of Jesus Christ through the will of God, and Sosthenes our brother, Unto the church of God which is at Corinth, to them that are sanctified in Christ Jesus, called to be saints . . . (1 Corinthians 1:1&#45;2).&amp;nbsp; He write to the church which he refers to as “sanctified in Christ Jesus”  and &#8220;saints.&#8221;


The term sanctified is the same term he later uses of children of believing parents in 1 Corinthians 7:14, “For the unbelieving husband is sanctified by the wife, and the unbelieving wife is sanctified by the husband: else were your children unclean; but now are they holy [i.e. sancitified].”  Paul calls children of at least one believing parent “holy” or a “saint.”  It is not my intention to unpack the meaning of that verse here, but only to point out that Paul includes children of believing parents in the body of the church.&amp;nbsp; And if our children are a part of the covenant body, then they are included in the sacraments of the New Covenant, including the covenant meal of the body of Christ.


Paul appeals to the Old Testament in 1 Corinthians 10 (which, by the way, is the immediate context for chapter 11) that provides a framework for the NT sacraments.&amp;nbsp; He says “all were baptized unto Moses, all ate the same spiritual food, and all drank the same spiritual drink. For they drank of that spiritual Rock that followed them, and that Rock was Christ.” (1 Corinthians 10:2&#45;4). Clearly the children in the covenant were included in the body as they partook of these sacramental foods.&amp;nbsp; Therefore, would not those who disallow our covenant children from the Table be included in those who do not rightly discern the body?</description>
      <dc:subject>Sacraments</dc:subject>
      <dc:date>2008-02-26T14:24:00-06:00</dc:date>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>The Context for Discerning the Body</title>
      <link>http://heritagecenterville.org/marionsblog/render/the-context-for-discerning-the-body/</link>
      <guid>http://heritagecenterville.org/marionsblog/render/the-context-for-discerning-the-body/#When:17:53:00Z</guid>
      <description>The main argument against covenant communion goes something like this – “if a child cannot yet examine himself or discern the Lord’s body – then he is eating in an unworthy manner and shouldn’t eat the Lord’s Supper until such a time that he can do so.”  This, of course, is taken from the only passage opponents of covenant communion can cite for their position – 1 Corinthians 11:27&#45;29.


But this notion is not at all what Paul was intended his readers to understand here. This “warning passage” (v.27&#45;34) is a safeguard for the Lord’s Supper.&amp;nbsp; The sin Paul was addressing was schism at the Table.&amp;nbsp; 


It’s important to remember the context for the passage.&amp;nbsp; The book of Corinthians begins in chapter 1 addressing the sin of divisions in the body.&amp;nbsp; “Now I beseech you, brethren, by the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that ye all speak the same thing, and that there be no divisions among you; but that ye be perfectly joined together in the same mind and in the same judgment . . . Is Christ divided?” (1 Corinthians 1:10,13)


In Chapter 3, Paul addresses the carnality of the divisions and sectarianism that was rampant in the church.&amp;nbsp; The brethren were proud and acting in many unloving ways towards each other.&amp;nbsp; In chapter 6, he exhorts against the sin of lawsuits among the brethren – which of course was not keeping the spirit of unity in the body.&amp;nbsp; Chapters 12 and 14 are passages where Paul rebukes and corrects the Corinthians for their proud and divisive abuse of the spiritual gifts.&amp;nbsp; Chapter 13 is a needful excursus to reveal to the church the nature of God’s love in which they were so lacking.&amp;nbsp; In Chapter 15, Paul addresses a heresy in the church regarding the resurrection which was confusing and dividing the body.&amp;nbsp; And in chapter 11, the chapter for our interest, sandwiched between all the other exhortations to unify the body of Christ, Paul speaks against the schism in the body regarding the how people were taking the Lord’s Supper (cf. 1 Corinthians11:18&#45;21).


Therefore, the purpose of Paul’s warning regarding the Lord’s Supper was not to set a prerequisite for an intelligent participation, but the self&#45;examination was a preventative measure to come to the table in communion with one another, not disunity. That’s the main point of what Paul is saying here.&amp;nbsp; Discerning the Lord’s body is primarily speaking about the rightly discerning the body of Christ – i.e. the church. 


Peer back at the passage through those spectacles, and you might see it open up for you.</description>
      <dc:subject></dc:subject>
      <dc:date>2008-02-22T17:53:00-06:00</dc:date>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>It’s Really About How We View Our Children</title>
      <link>http://heritagecenterville.org/marionsblog/render/its-really-about-how-we-view-our-children/</link>
      <guid>http://heritagecenterville.org/marionsblog/render/its-really-about-how-we-view-our-children/#When:17:53:00Z</guid>
      <description>There are two sacraments in the New Covenant, baptism and the Lord’s Supper.&amp;nbsp; The major argument in the Church these days seem to be the question of who are the rightful recipients of these sacraments.&amp;nbsp; In the circles I traversed, the question really narrows down to a question about covenant children.&amp;nbsp; Are children of believers to be baptized even before they can articulate a verbal profession of faith?&amp;nbsp; Should baptized children partake of the Lord’s Supper before they can articulate a personal profession of faith?&amp;nbsp; 


These are the questions with which evangelicals are struggling today.&amp;nbsp; It is about our children.&amp;nbsp; How do we view our children – are they in the covenant, out of the covenant, or somewhere in between?&amp;nbsp; How you answer that question should determine how you observe the sacraments.


The view of children seems to be an easy one to answer in the Old Covenant, and yet, somehow a lot harder in the New.&amp;nbsp;  There was no question in the Old Covenant that Israelite children were set apart from other children.&amp;nbsp; They were circumcised which was a sign of the covenant (cf. Genesis 17:7&#45;14).&amp;nbsp; They also ate the covenant meals their parents ate (cf. Deuteronomy 16:1&#45;17).&amp;nbsp; But when we come to the New Covenant, we sometimes too easily set aside the Old Covenant context upon which the New is built.&amp;nbsp; 


The Church today is called Israel (Galatians 6:16).&amp;nbsp; Often the New Testament uses Jewish language as it directly pertains to the church (cf. Galatians 4:26; Ephesians 2:11ff; Philippians 3:3; 1 Corinthians 10; et al.).&amp;nbsp; So why then do we treat our children as “Moabites,” “Hittites,” and “Amalekites,” when we should treat them as “Jews?”  Or said another way – why do we treat our children as pagans, when we should treat them as Christians?&amp;nbsp; 


Why is circumcision relevant for children of the Old Covenant and baptism not?&amp;nbsp; Why are the feasts of Passover, Pentecost, and Tabernacles inclusive of the children in the covenant, and the Lord’s Supper not?


The majority of American Evangelicals make a major disconnect between the Old and New Covenants that the Bible does not make, and both their doctrine and practice becomes skewed.&amp;nbsp; Hebrews 8&#45;10 reveals the distinction between the Old and New Covenants, and it’s not about the way we view our children in the Covenant.&amp;nbsp; The distinction is not a difference in the good news of salvation in Jesus Christ. It’s not the means of salvation – for it has always been by faith in the Person and work of Christ.&amp;nbsp; The distinction is the Old Covenant held forth Christ through the ceremonial laws as types and shadows, and the New Covenant holds forth Christ as the fulfillment and the reality of that which was before promised.&amp;nbsp; Look it up and see for yourself.&amp;nbsp; Hebrews 8&#45;10 specifically reveals the difference between the Old and New covenants as it pertains to ceremonial law – not moral law, and not even civil law, but ceremonial law.


If the gospel message to Abraham was that God would be His God and also the God of his children (Genesis 17:7), and the Bible reveals to us who believe that we are children of Abraham by faith (Galatians 3:7, 29), then doesn’t the same covenant message apply to us for our children?&amp;nbsp; In other words, part of the gospel promise and good news includes our children just as it did with Abraham (cf. Acts 2:39; 16:31).&amp;nbsp;  Now this doesn’t mean that our children are saved by virtue of their genes.&amp;nbsp; However, the gospel promise does include our children.&amp;nbsp; For their salvation, they must believe the gospel as well, but are they not privy to all of the means of grace in the Covenant to that end – just like the children of the Old Covenant were?


We don’t baptize our children to ensure their salvation. We baptize our children because they are in the Covenant, set apart unto God and holy (1 Corinthians 7:14).&amp;nbsp; Therefore, we are instructed to bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord trusting God’s promise for their salvation.&amp;nbsp; We are to view and treat our children differently than if they were the Moabite children from next door.&amp;nbsp; We teach them to worship Jehovah – even before they can speak.&amp;nbsp; We include them in worship – even before they can make a profession of faith.&amp;nbsp; We view them as children of the covenant privy to the benefits and privileges of covenant members – and if members of the covenant, then baptized, and if baptized, then partakers of the covenant meal.&amp;nbsp; God has not changed the organic familial structure through which the gospel propagates.&amp;nbsp; 


So if you view your children as outside of the covenant until they make a profession of faith (like that fixes all the problems), then you will neither baptize them nor allow them to the Table.&amp;nbsp; If you view your children as somehow half&#45;way in the covenant, then you may baptize them before their profession of faith, but will not allow them to the Table until they articulate an active faith in Christ.&amp;nbsp; But if you view your children as in the covenant of God and are “holy” (cf. 1 Corinthians 7:14), then we will treat them as such with the means of grace God has provided, including baptism and the Lord’s Supper.</description>
      <dc:subject></dc:subject>
      <dc:date>2008-02-16T17:53:00-06:00</dc:date>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>Our Children and Their Worship at the Feast</title>
      <link>http://heritagecenterville.org/marionsblog/render/our-children-and-their-worship-at-the-feast/</link>
      <guid>http://heritagecenterville.org/marionsblog/render/our-children-and-their-worship-at-the-feast/#When:13:49:00Z</guid>
      <description>I thought I would once again take up my blog. The past year has been quite an experience for us, but more on that on a future post. Today I would like to interact a bit on other posts in cyber&#45;world regarding our children and their worship of God. A much discussed and often debated topic today regarding this topic is baptized children’s participation in the Lord’s Table. Are baptized children allowed at the Lord’s Table, or should we fence the Table from the little children until such a time when they can make a credible profession of faith? This is the question.


Since Passover has such a strong connection with the Lord’s Supper, it is often used to understand more of the meaning and recipients of the New Covenant meal we enjoy today. So in addressing the question if baptized children should eat the Lord’s Supper, we might back up a bit and ask if the children of the Old Covenant ate the sacrificial and sacred meals of their time. After all, they all point to the same truths that the Lord’s Supper points to. Some would even say that the Lord’s Supper is the culmination of all the sacred meals and feasts of the Old Covenant, and a foretaste (or even a part of) the eschatological Marriage Supper of the Lamb.


With that said, I want to show that the children of the Old Covenant ate the Passover Meal along with their parents, and that baptized covenant children in the New Covenant ought to eat the Lord’s Supper.


Opponents of covenant communion (the term I am using to express that all who are in the covenant ought to eat the covenant meal, including baptized children) usually take one of two roads to “prove” their case (at least in its connection with Passover). The first road is, while admitting that children partook of the Passover meal, that there exist such a strong discontinuity between Passover and the Lord’s Supper that we can’t apply any of the principles of the Old Covenant meal to its New Covenant predecessor. According to this view, these two meals are completely different, isolated from one another, and therefore, nothing from one can carry over to the other. This is a hard road to travel when we see that the Lord instituted His New Covenant Meal in the process of observing Passover. Also other New Testament revelation would seem to relate the two very closely (e.g. 1 Corinthians 5:7&#45;8,11).


While it is hard to escape the close tie between Passover and the Lord’s Supper, opponents to covenant communion try to take issue with children partaking of Passover. They can see the logic at this point – IF children partook of Passover, and IF the Lord’s Supper is the New Covenant meal that replaces Passover, then . . . well . . . you can see where reason takes us – children ought to come to the Table. Therefore, those who take this second road will do everything in their power (even to ridiculous lengths) to find that children in the Old Covenant did not eat of the Passover.


The notion that children were excluded from Passover is wholly without biblical support, and it is my intent to demonstrate such.


1. When God instituted the Passover, He gave instructions for each man to take a lamb for a household, according to how many were in the household.


Exodus 12:3&#45;4 gives us the account,


3&quot;Speak to all the congregation of Israel, saying: &#8216;On the tenth day of this month every man shall take for himself a lamb, according to the house of his father, a lamb for a household. 4 &#8216;And if the household is too small for the lamb, let him and his neighbor next to his house take it according to the number of the persons; according to each man&#8217;s need you shall make your count for the lamb. (Exodus 12:3&#45;4)


The phrase, “according to the number of persons” in the Hebrew is literally, “a man according to his eating.” The word for man is ‘ish. Some have argued from this that only men were to eat the Passover. However, the term ‘ish is often used, very generally, to denote “person,” and our translation above indicates. I checked seven translations (KJV, NKJV, ESV, NIV, ASV, RSV, NASB), and all agree with each other that the word should be translated more generally to indicate persons (not men). In fact, I could not find any translation that translated the term or phrase narrowly to indicate that only “men” is indicated. The exact same phrase is also used in Exodus 16:16,18, and 21 in the gathering of manna. Clearly every human in Israel except newborn infants, ate the manna, since there was nothing else to eat. The term ‘ish is used in other texts such as Genesis 10:5, Exodus 19:13, and Leviticus 15:5 where it is obviously used in the more general way to denote persons and not merely grown males.


With that said, the Passover lamb was chosen according to the number of persons in the household, men, women, and children. The idea that children were served something else, while only the adults, or only men, partook of Passover is wholly without any foundation in the text.


2. It was customary in Israel to assume that the children, including the little ones, would eat sacrificial (i.e. sacred or worship) meals along with the whole body.


At this point, we should recall the interaction between Moses and Pharaoh that was leading up to the first Passover. Just prior to the eighth plague, Moses requested Pharaoh to let his people go into the wilderness to hold a feast to the Lord. This feast, which would ultimately be realized at Pentecost, was a sacrificial meal of God’s people. It was worship. This can be seen more clearly when Moses appealed to Pharaoh to allow their animals to go with them so they could offer up sacrifices at their feast (cf. Exodus 10:24&#45;25). When Pharaoh finally consented to allow the only the men to go, Moses refused Pharaoh’s consent saying that their young and old, their sons and daughters must go with them as well. When Pharaoh allowed the men only to go, but excluded the women and children, God sent the eighth plague! It’s important to realize that the whole body of Israel was to go into the wilderness to participate in a sacrificial meal with their God, including their “little ones” (Exodus 10:24).


I highlight this point to illustrate the fact that Israel expected their children (including their little ones) to eat sacrificial meals in worship to God along with the whole body.


3. It should be remembered that the whole purpose of the original Passover event was to spare the firstborn sons of Israel.


When Moses later took a census of the firstborn sons of Israel, he included in his number firstborn males from one month old and older (Numbers 3:43). These sons who were spared during the Passover event were the most notable participants in the meal – and should we say they should be excluded? The notion that God was claiming these boys (as the census would indicate), but at the same time exclude them from His feast and worship is nonsensical.


4. God commanded the whole congregation of Israel to keep Passover (Exodus 12:47).


The whole congregation includes the women and children and is not merely the male population over the age of 20. In keeping Passover, the congregation had to observe the Feast of Unleavened Bread which required all the congregation to abstain from leavened bread for the week. It was expected that all of the congregation of Israel would observe this (not merely the men). In fact, the command God gave was not to have any leaven in the house or dwelling which would of course keep anyone (including the children) from eating leavened bread. God would not require unleavened bread for the males while the women and children could eat leavened bread during that week (which is analogous to the males eating Passover while the children were excluded). No, the whole congregation was to eat the Passover and also eat unleavened bread for the week. These two go together. So strict was God’s requirement that any person failing to keep the Passover and the Feast of Unleavened Bread would be cut off from Israel.


5. The only people excluded from Passover were the uncircumcised and the unclean, not the children. (cf. Exodus 12:43&#45;44; Number 9:1&#45;14)


God makes it clear to Israel (to whom the Passover was given) who was included and who was excluded. If children were to be barred from Passover, God would have included them in the instruction to exclude them. But He is very clear who is included and who is not, and children are not ones to be excluded from the Feast.


6. Children were explicitly included in other required Sabbath Feasts


God required Israel to keep three annual feasts: Passover; Pentecost; and Tabernacles. Now God did indeed command all the males to keep the feasts (Exodus 23:17). However, that was the minimum requirement and not the exclusive requirement. There would be times when the women and children would not be able to make the pilgrimage to Jerusalem for the feast, but when they could they went and participated. The Scripture also states that Pentecost was a time of rejoicing before the Lord, “You shall rejoice before the Lord your God, you and your son and your daughter, your male servant and your female servant . . .” (Deut 16:11). In addition, the Feast of Tabernacles includes the family members and members of the household (Deut 16:14). While the males were required to attend, the women and children were certainly welcome and encouraged to participate. God includes all the body in every sacred feast and Sabbath celebration. It can be argued that all the Sabbath Feasts of the Old Covenant culminate in the one covenant meal we observe in the New – the Lord’s Supper, and children ought to be included in the Feast.


Again, I reiterate, the notion that children were excluded from Passover does not have biblical support. Children, like their dads ate the Passover meal. And also, like their dads, they ate unleavened bread for the week following. In fact, they ate at all the Sabbath Feasts.


Likewise, children are included in the New Covenant meal, and we should be careful not to exclude them.


Rightly discerning the Lord’s body (1 Corinthians 11:29) includes discerning who is included in the body (i.e. congregation), and the Scriptures are clear throughout that covenant children (either circumcised males in the Old Covenant, or baptized ones in the New Covenant) are included in the “body” of the Church and should participate in the worship of God (including sacred meals).


Let the little children come unto me!</description>
      <dc:subject>Theology</dc:subject>
      <dc:date>2007-10-26T13:49:00-06:00</dc:date>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>I&#8217;m Back!</title>
      <link>http://heritagecenterville.org/marionsblog/render/im-back/</link>
      <guid>http://heritagecenterville.org/marionsblog/render/im-back/#When:20:45:00Z</guid>
      <description>Wow! As I looked at the date of my last post, I can&#8217;t believe how much time has passed. About the time of my last post, I got a contract on my house which was on the market. While the contract was almost my full asking price, it had one stipulation, we had to be out in eleven days. Uhg!! Well, we agreed to the terms, and went to work. With the hard sacrificial work of our good friends at Heritage, we made our deadline.


We had previously made plans for a 2&#45;week vacation, and left the day after closing for Lancaster, PA. Upon our return, I was faced with many boxes of unpacked &#8220;stuff&#8221; to find its place in our temporary dwelling. In addition, I had to prepare for our national presbytery meeting which was being hosted by our church. I also was the elected moderator, and served on the credentials committee which spend 24 hours over the course of two days examining eight elder candidates. Whew! While I enjoyed the time with the men, I&#8217;m glad that&#8217;s all over.


So maybe you can see a bit of my distraction away from my blog as of late. I am beginning to get settled, though still working out of cardboard boxes. Hopefully, I will return to blogging substantive articles on Christian Culture in the next day or two. For now, the ice of &#8220;writer&#8217;s block&#8221; is rebroken, and I am happily back online.


Thanks for staying in tune. In my next blog, I will share a little application of my blog with you in describing our move to Tennessee to begin a new church there.</description>
      <dc:subject>General</dc:subject>
      <dc:date>2006-11-30T20:45:00-06:00</dc:date>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>Culture and Religion</title>
      <link>http://heritagecenterville.org/marionsblog/render/culture-and-religion/</link>
      <guid>http://heritagecenterville.org/marionsblog/render/culture-and-religion/#When:02:53:00Z</guid>
      <description>If you have ever traveled to a foreign country whose culture is far different from our own, you may have thought that religion played a big part in the country’s culture. One spring my former church had a missionary emphasis week, and we housed one of the missionaries from Japan. This man loved the outdoors, but he refrained himself from venturing too far, and for too long in the beautiful outdoors in America while on furlough here. When I inquired into his reasoning, he informed me that in Japan, one cannot go into any part of the outdoors, on a hike, mountain climbing, etc. without running into pagan idolatry, i.e. some statue of Buddha. The idolatry is everywhere, and it stifles the pleasure from enjoying God’s pristine creation. So while in America, this man kept himself from enjoying too much the great outdoors of America, lest he be tempted not to go back to the field to which God had called him. The culture of Japan, which extended into every corridor of the outdoors, was discouraging to this man because of the perversion of their religion.


We often think that a people’s religion is a part of their culture, but that is wrong thinking. When we think like that, it makes religion a subset, or a particular part of the cultural whole. And while religion and culture are inseparable from each other, religion is not a part of culture, culture is the outward expression of one’s religion.


In fact, man’s service to God, which we call religion, finds expression in cultural activity, and this cultural activity expresses one’s religious faith. The idea that there exists a secular realm separate from the sacred is a false one. Secularism believes there are aspects of life that can be maintained apart from one’s religion, but this false dichotomy cannot be maintained. There is no such thing as neutrality. A man’s religion is the spring head from which all of life, thought, and activity flow.


As Henry VanTill said, “The total character of man’s religion, then determines his cultus [worship] and culture. Thus man’s morality and economics, his jurisprudence and his aesthetics, are all religiously oriented and determined. This is why apostasy produces, not only a false religion, but also a false culture, namely a culture that does not seek God and serve Him as the highest good.” Every culture is animated by religion.


T. S. Eliot once said, “However, bigoted the announcement may sound, the Christian cannot be satisfied with nothing less than a Christian organization of society . . . which is not the same thing as a society consisting exclusively of devout Christians.” This is very much the mind of the founding fathers of America. While they were not all Christians, they sought to establish a unified religious social code of behavior and education that was directed by a Christian worldview. In other words, they did not compel people to become Christian, for that work is the work of God, but they did seek to establish the culture of society that was governed by Christian ideals and principles.


Van Til provides an apt summary, “It is folly for God’s people to think that they can live in two separate worlds, one for their religious life and devotional exercises, and the other usurping all other time, energy, money – an area in which the priests of secularism are calling the numbers. One cannot keep on evangelizing the world without interfering with the world’s culture. It devolves upon God’s people, therefore, to contend for such a ‘condition of society which will give the maximum of opportunity for us to lead wholly Christian lives and the maximum of opportunity for others to become Christians.’ To divide life into areas of sacred and secular, letting our devotions take care of the former while becoming secular reformers during the week, is to fail to understand the true end of man.”</description>
      <dc:subject>Culture</dc:subject>
      <dc:date>2006-09-29T02:53:00-06:00</dc:date>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>An Illustrative Excursus</title>
      <link>http://heritagecenterville.org/marionsblog/render/an-illustrative-excursus/</link>
      <guid>http://heritagecenterville.org/marionsblog/render/an-illustrative-excursus/#When:14:25:00Z</guid>
      <description>Last night we read the parable of the ten virgins and the bridegroom from Matthew 25. Parables are stories meant to teach a lesson. Today’s post in sort of like a parable. While the content is not a story, but rather an excerpt from a “how&#45;to” book, it is designed to get a lesson across.


I am currently reading a book called, Building a Timber Frame House by Tedd Benson. Regardless of why I am reading such a book, I was struck at the contents of one of the chapters. The following are contents from chapter entitled, “The Joiner’s Work Removing Wood.” See if you get my point.


The chapter begins,


&#8220;In our shop there are some fine people. Because I have worked closely with them for several years, I am convinced that working wood is only partially the mastery of cutting, shaping, and mortising – the removal of wood. It’s a delicate operation. The tools for the task also include those stored on the inside: feelings and emotions and values. If they are not also maintained with a sharp edge, the result can be a hacking of timber and boredom in the individual. On the other hand, I have observed in the people that quality work is interwoven with quality in the individual, and that one brings a sense of richness and clarity to the other.


One of the great benefits of being in the business of putting houses together is that it has so much to do with people. People need places to live; we are builders. The involvement between ourselves and the people we work for is necessarily deep and personal. Caring about the work being done also means caring for the people these buildings house.


Timbers are heavy and require the hands of several people working together to transform a natural resource into a meaningful structure. In this little ship we have become like brothers. We have learned so much from each other and had such a good time in the process that other kinds of crafts that are more individual would seem monastic in comparison. Part of the gift of each person’s presence hangs lightly in the air, and though not one of us can describe it, it affects us all. Other things we give to each other are specific thoughts and ideas that are cast into the breezes that circle around the shop. They are always there for each person to watch or use, and yet sometimes nobody quite remembers their origin. And it really doesn’t matter. What does matter is that we have the same goal.


My respect for the people who work here is complete. How good they are with their hands and how quick to respond to new challenge! To work with these people every day is to receive a daily dose of humility, and to learn daily new things: from original ideas in the use of the circular saw to the importance of maintaining a sense of humor, from learning how to ‘put’ a timber in the frame mentally while it is still in the pile, to many valuable lessons concerning the nature of wood. Because of all that I have learned from and all that I feel toward these people, I strongly suggest to those who are beginning that they find co&#45;workers whose goals are the same as their own. The frame will be better. The time spent will be richer.


If the learning and camaraderie we have seem so beneficial, it’s because the element of the human being is so important to timber framing. The world has changed a lot since the days when this building technique was really alive. Some changes are good and some are bad. We should be thankful that so many needs are provided for so efficiently and be saddened by the degree that humans have been removed from their work. In the unwritten commandments that prescribe the morality of the twentieth century, there is one that tells us it is wrong to love our work, for it reduces production speed. In the strict adherence to this commandment, the fact of meaning behind techniques is all but lost. Too many people who build with their hands no longer respond to the rhythm and romance of their work. In this age, life for that person becomes an apology for the fact that machines cannot yet do that task.


Had we lived in the old days, we might have learned this craft from our fathers or spent years in apprenticeship. Values and sensitivities would have been learned instinctively along with the techniques. Without these old masters, it is good that we can learn from each other the subtleties and nuances of tools and wood. And it’s good that we can encourage in each other the pursuit of, instead of resistance to, those magic moments when all the senses we possess are brought to our work.&#8221;</description>
      <dc:subject>Parable</dc:subject>
      <dc:date>2006-09-16T14:25:00-06:00</dc:date>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>The Unbiblical Individual</title>
      <link>http://heritagecenterville.org/marionsblog/render/the-unbiblical-individual/</link>
      <guid>http://heritagecenterville.org/marionsblog/render/the-unbiblical-individual/#When:15:32:00Z</guid>
      <description>God made man a social being. The only time when God looked upon His creative work in those six days and declared that “it was not good” was when man was alone. He then made woman and put the two together to multiply and fill the earth. God’s creation of male and female, as creatures of communion, was in the likeness of God Himself.


God Himself is a social Being. Long before the world ever was, the three Persons of the Trinity enjoyed fellowship One with Another. The Father loved the Son, the Son sang the praises of the Father, and the Spirit enjoyed the communion of the other two. The three persons of the Godhead were in intimate, joyful, communion with each Other. While we see clear evidences of this Trinitarian interaction in redemptive history (e.g. John 5:20; Hebrews 2:12; John 16:13&#45;14), this communion was, and always will be eternally true.


Mankind, being made in the likeness of God, is a social creature. It is against God’s creative purposes and against His “image in man” for man to seclude himself as a hermit away from others. Yet in the post&#45;modern world in which we live today, man often thinks of himself, in Soren Kierkegaard’s words, as “The Individual.” While we may not live in monasteries away from civilization, we have all too much individualism flowing through our veins. Individualism is an old, old, sin. It is really about self&#45;autonomy and independence from all others – including God. This was the first sin in the garden. Man desired to be like God (Genesis 3:5) and acted in an autonomous fashion not considering the divine restraints that God had put on the man. The very root of man’s sinful nature is self&#45;autonomy, and since the falls this is the spirit that prevails. This spirit stands against God’s covenantal framework and yields a degenerate culture (cf. Babel).


I will reiterate Henry Van Til from yesterday’s post, “Culture is a social enterprise; it is not achieved in isolation, but through the interaction and cooperation of men in communion.” For Christian culture to be productive with the gospel in advancing the kingdom, it must be founded on God’s principles of the covenant. Covenantal living is contrary to “The Individual.” Covenantal living is social. It is cultural. It is godly (like God). God is a covenant God, and covenantalism and individualism are antithetical ideas.</description>
      <dc:subject>Culture</dc:subject>
      <dc:date>2006-09-15T15:32:00-06:00</dc:date>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>What is Culture &#45; Part 2</title>
      <link>http://heritagecenterville.org/marionsblog/render/what-is-culture-part-2/</link>
      <guid>http://heritagecenterville.org/marionsblog/render/what-is-culture-part-2/#When:15:47:00Z</guid>
      <description>Today’s blog was pulled from Henry Van Til’s book The Calvinistic Concept of Culture. It was so good, and fundamental, I thought I would try pass along a summary of some of his thoughts. To be clear, the content is Van Til’s and not mine. I have added a closing comment at the end.


Culture is a social enterprise; it is not achieved in isolation, but through the interaction and cooperation of men in communion. Of course, it is possible for some lone Robinson Crusoe to fashion things and have a form of civilized life, but he was able to set up shop because of his past cultural training and the many cultural objects salvaged from the shipwreck.


Culture, then, takes in the whole man, not merely as an individual, but as member of the human organism, and therefore, in various relationships to other men, and in different institutions that are thus called into existence, the institution of home, of society, with its relationships between employer and employee, capital and labor, commerce and industry, education and science, politics and government.


Culture is human and social, and therefore, as individuals within the cultural stream, we are formed by it. Culture is the secondary environment by which we are formed, and it is inescapable. This is involved in the fact that culture and social existence are inseparable. Culture influences the individual through custom, which is the social aspect of habit. However, no man is totally determined by custom in his culture, since he is himself a moral agent, able to act and to form the culture, to impregnate it with new ideas and ideals, and to reinvigorate its languishing spirit. Furthermore, the variety of cultural patterns is not merely a reflection of the varying times and climes but also of man’s freedom as cultural agent and subject.


Culture is never neutral, but it must be patent to all that culture is concerned with ends. Culture is concerned with the world of values, and all cultures are irreducibly value&#45;oriented. For by culture, we do not merely understand the historical action of man and his moulding power in subduing the earth and bringing it to the fullest fruition, but culture also comes to expression in definite patterns of life which portrays certain ideals.


We may say that apostate culture in all its forms is concerned with the temporal and material realization of values. Man seeks to realize in this world that which is good for himself as a being within time. He transforms nature, he uses animals and cultural objects not merely to satisfy his basic needs, but also to impress his idea and ideals upon matter.


Biblically, however, culture is the fulfillment of purposive moulding of nature in execution of the creative will of God. Man as cultural creature is an analogue of the great Architect and Artist of the universe. Man as creature, therefore, is co&#45;worker with God in bringing creation to its fulfillment. He is not, of course, a collaborator, but neither is he a blind fool. Man is an instrument who is conscious of what he is doing. But due to the fall of man into sin, he is no longer willing to admit the claims of his Creator or to serve God.


Culture is a gift of God to man as well as an obligation. The cultural urge, the will to rule and to have power is increated. This is not demonic, or satanic, but divine in its origin. True, men may misuse and abuse power after the entrance of sin into the world, but to say that all absolute power corrupts absolutely is not wisdom but folly and confusion. For power belongs to man by virtue of his creation as a cultural creature. He was made to function in the realm of power and to develop his power to its highest potency – for God, of course! There’s the rub! Men continually forget the divine original in Paradise and take the condition of Paradise lost for granted as being normative.


It may be observed that when the works of man lose their ultimate goal, they don not lose their cultural character, but they may be designated as apostate culture, since the true direction of man’s labor under the sun has been lost. Through sin man has lost the love and motivation to execute the creative will of God, and therefore, culture has been perverted. Instead of serving God, he now serves himself. Yet God is working, in Christ, to reconcile all things, including culture, to Himself. Culture then, in the words of T.S. Elliot is “lived religion” and this is being restored in Christ.


End of Van Til, now I will add my closing comment. I hope you can see where this is going. This talk on culture puts the entire gospel and Christian life into perspective. It reveals how we are to live all of life to the glory of God – no exceptions. If we understand the dominion mandate, the fall, the antithesis, and the redemptive work of Christ, we should understand that the Church itself becomes a counter&#45;culture to the world’s fallen culture. If the Church is not a culture in antithesis with the world’s where then will be the salt and light. How then we make sense of this will and apply it to our lives will be the topic of future posts.</description>
      <dc:subject>Culture</dc:subject>
      <dc:date>2006-09-13T15:47:00-06:00</dc:date>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>What is Culture?</title>
      <link>http://heritagecenterville.org/marionsblog/render/what-is-culture/</link>
      <guid>http://heritagecenterville.org/marionsblog/render/what-is-culture/#When:16:06:00Z</guid>
      <description>Part 1

Culture is not a part of one’s religion, as such, but is the very incarnation of one’s religion. It is never an end unto itself, but an expression of one’s faith in God. There are atheistic cultures, and heathen cultures, and Christian cultures. Culture, however, is not neutral. It expresses the values, principles, and way of life in what a people truly believe. So said again, it is a means of expressing one’s religious faith.


Henry VanTil said it this way, “culture is any and all human effort and labor expended upon the cosmos, to unearth its treasures and its riches and bring them into the service of man for the enrichment of human existence to the glory of God. As such it is always a human enterprise.” Remember that culture began as “tending the garden of God,” and spreads its endeavor from there.


Culture is an aspect of man’s dominion mandate as image&#45;bearer of God, and is distinguished from animal instincts and nature. Neither man nor culture evolved, but was God’s design for man whom He created from the beginning. Animal instincts remain unchanged from generation to generation, but man, in making history, develops his work and himself in that work (Van Til). The bee has been stinging its victims in the same way for thousands of years, but a surgeon improves his methods and tools from age to age. Birds build their nest from instinct, but man has developed and changed his building materials and methods from primitive living huts to architectural marvels.


Nature is also different from culture. A river is natural, a canal is cultural. A horse is natural, a Tennessee Walker is cultural. Grapes are natural, wine is cultural. Wheat is natural, bread is cultural. Speech is natural, a Shakespeare drama is cultural. You get the idea by now – culture is a human enterprise that requires ingenuity and work.


Culture is such a part of man’s design and being that God emphasizes it in Psalm 104 in the way He provides sustenance for man in clear distinction from the rest of nature. While the Psalm indicates that God provides food directly for His plants and animals, it states that He provides work for man (from which he gets his sustenance).

“He causeth the grass to grow for the cattle, and herb for the service of man: that he may bring forth food out of the earth; And wine that maketh glad the heart of man, and oil to make his face to shine, and bread which strengtheneth man&#8217;s heart. . . . Man goeth forth unto his work and to his labour until the evening.” (Psalm 104:14&#45;15, 23).

Wine, oil, and bread are all a part of man’s cultural endeavor made for our enjoyment, and that which requires his work, whereas a cow just walks around chewing his boring ole cud. Our culture also becomes the means by which we live. If a man isn&#8217;t willing to work, neither should he eat (2 Thessalonians 3:10). Culture and life are inseparable.</description>
      <dc:subject>Culture</dc:subject>
      <dc:date>2006-09-06T16:06:00-06:00</dc:date>
    </item>

    
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