Inhumanity and righteousness

The people for whom Christ died includes us! Tares are people who just haven’t accepted him yet, and if they don’t that’s between him and them.

Jesus presented another parable to them, saying, “The kingdom of heaven may be compared to a man who sowed good seed in his field. But while his men were sleeping, his enemy came and sowed tares among the wheat, and went away. But when the wheat sprouted and bore grain, then the tares became evident also. The slaves of the landowner came and said today him, ‘Sir, did you not sow good seed in your field? How then does it have tares?’ And he said to them, ‘An enemy has done this!’ The slaves said to him, ‘Do you want us, then, to go and gather them up?’ But he said, ‘No; for while you are gathering up the tares, you may uproot the wheat with them. ‘Allow both to grow together until the harvest; and in the time of the harvest I will say to the reapers, ‘First gather up the tares and bind them in bundles to burn them up; but gather the wheat into my barn.’ (Matthew 13:24-30, NASB)

My God. I have heard the ranting and raving about people in the church who don’t measure up. We are going to love those tares, take care of them, and leave them alone. What are we going to do, start stoning sinners?

Drawing the line with his brother in mind

Both James and Jude are brothers of Yeshua, and each calls himself “slave of Yeshua” but the content of their letters leaves no doubt about what is important to the siblings of the Saviour of the world. Why Jude calls himself James’ brother but says nothing about being Jesus’ brother is the kind of textual evidence that can be picked up by those who understand the value of diversity apart from the crass interests of marketing the gospel like partisan politics. The line between these two brothers is thick and says to this observer, Jude wants it to be known that he and James, a person whose attempt to contribute to the Way carves a telling portrait of what can happen even when people are exposed to divine presence all their lives,

Mary and Joseph pointed these two boys in the same direction and Mary was present in the last three years of Yeshua’s life, rught down to the passion. Heavenly intelligence alone can tell us why James ended up in the chair of the Jerusalem church and Jude is only mentioned when the whole family is mentioned. For example when the family comes looking for Yeshua, he tells the crowd that his family are those who do God’s will. The other instance of family mention is when the brothers (perhaps both brothers and sisters) taunt Yeshua about going to Judea (John 7:-3) particularly at a time when Yeshua was avoiding Judea due to persistent assassination plots by the Jews (at least we can distinguish Roman intentions from the Jewish ones). At one point the only person in that household who believed in Messiah’s mission might have been his mother. It is possible that Joseph believed, but the gospels are silent. John telss us that “Not even his brothers believed in him” (John 7:5).

The undeniable divide

From the days when sibling rivalry may have dominated their relationships the boys had their death wish and not one of them was reported to have witnessed the crucifixion up front as did other family members, mother Mary, and aunt Mary,

“Therefore the soldiers did these things. But standing by the cross of Jesus were His mother, and His mother’s sister, Mary the wife of Clopas, and Mary Magdalene.”

John 19:25, NASB

Yakov and Yehuda make their mark

One cannot miss James’ focus: to him Jesus is the Lord og glory. That is so nebulous one has to invent the link ot James’crucified and risen brother. James elevates the law and Abraham, he twists the facts about Abraham’s justification, denying the gift of God. In James’book, grace is a thing that God adds to people who are humble. James did not forget that Christ died to save humanuty from their sins, and gave the Holy Spirit to his followers. We can suggest that James is pure weed among the wheat, especially for his persistent attempts to subject Gentile believers to the law of Moses and meaningless practices. James’misguided leadership goes from demanding Gentiles be circumcised and be required to observe the law of Moses to requiring Gentiles to follow regukations of ritual cleanness and incestuous pracrtices, since murder was a recognized vice everywhere, and prostitution – porneia, is a known drain on family life.

“that you abstain from things sacrificed to idols and from blood and from things strangled and from fornication; if you keep yourselves free from such things, you will do well. .”

Acts 15:29,a NASB

Jude’s focus is messianic all the way. If you miss is, you are deliberately blind. Jude begins with his diligence to write to huis audience about the common salvation, and the faith once-for-all delivered to the saints. He certainly takes aim at James, who would have intimat knowledge of Jesus, and especially his miracles, when he talks about “… men [who] revile the things which they do not understand” and men who are destroyed by the things which they know by instinct like unreasoning animals (Jude 10, NASB). For Jude, faith is the most precious thing, not the so-called law of liberty or the royal (kingdom) law, both of whuch are undoubtedly James’ terms for the Mosaic legacy.

There is no doubt that James, clearly in league with the Pharisees, is like Ezra, a man who did not see the writing on the wall. James was a man who kept Moses as God’s spokesman even when he had the evidence, up close, from childhood, of who Yeshua wa, and was familiar with Jewish attempts to extinguish the Messianic light. The difference betwen Yakov and Yehuda is a light from the Messianic lighthouse warning us about the reefs we need to avoid.

“These are the men who are hidden reefs in your love feasts when they feast with you without fear, caring for themselves; clouds without water, carried along by winds; autumn trees without fruit, doubly dead, uprooted;”

Jude 12, NASB

No church until the incarnation

Some people read “church” in Acts 7:38 (KJV) and conclude that there was a church in ancient times. That may explain why practically every new movement in Christianity is bound to be a juvenile enterprise, an Israel copycat, full of conflicted meditations, grounded in inferiority, and offensively oddball. Church is a Messianic construct: it is either a diverse group of people defined by Christ or it is a Jews-only entity. You do not have to guess why the church, in a council (Acts 15), decided to reject circumcision, and the law of Moses.

People are God’s tabernacle, not leather, wood and metals,

“The Holy Spirit is signifying this, that the way into the holy place has not yet been disclosed while the outer tabernacle is still standing,”

Hebrews 9:8

Connecting God’s way to the tabernacle is risky business, because the tabernacle has no final function in God’s effective work for humanity. Christ is propitiation for the whole world. Christ is the sacrifice, the mercy seat, and the perpetual advocate (Romans 3:25, Hebrews 2:17, 1John 2:2, 1 John 4:10). The tabernacle and its furniture are irrelevant and ineffective (1 Peter 1:18). The law governing the levitical system is expired (Hebrews 7:12). Whenever there are tabernacle descriptions of salvation apart from Christ himself something is fatally amiss.

JICIO

  • Juvenile: the elementary principles of animism (agricultural practices, astronomical observances, and physical taboos) are a juvenile phase (Galatians 4:8-9, Colossians 2:20)
  • An Israel copycat was never a goal (Acts 15, Romans 11:1-2)
  • Conflicted: because Moses himself predicted that he would not be the authority (Deuteronomy 18:15-19)
  • Inferior: deference to “the prophet” makes Mosaic instruction either secondary or irrelevant (Deuteronomy 18:15ff)
  • Oddball; not only uniquely weird but notoriously deformed, instead of wondrously peculiar (Gal 2:14, Jeremiah 24:9)

I can’t imagine a responsible and literate teacher trying to establish that long before Christ sent the Holy Spirit to live in believing persons there was a church. When Christ spoke about the church it was then future. “I will build my church” is a prediction.

Accordion-playing liar

Squeezing out another deluge of lies

As soon as those soiled hands take the accordion playing position you know lies are streaming out of the hollow recesses of the republican mind.  A similar phenomenon is on display when a preacher keeps trying to impress his audience with “I believe…”.  People have been known to believe absolute balderdash and only the gullible and cult-prone are sitting on the edge of their seats waiting to hear what their spiritual leaders (or peers!) believe. Teachers ought to teach what they know, and preachers or to preach the revelation that convinces them. Belief is not knowledge.

Accordion player

The accordion-playing hands may be an imitation of a great prophet parting a large body of water, or it may be an attempt to show clean hands, as a person does when praying.  In either case this accordion player has neither clean hands nor water parting powers.  If you have the time you should close your eyes and start fact checking the Duke of Doodoo as soon as you see the hands begin to play the invisible accordion.

Out of place and right on time

Tell us about a time when you felt out of place.

This pairing of time and place is a good reason to explore the vital connection between time and place, two things that imprison us.  I have to imagine that for some creatures neither time or place are not as traumatic as for humans. I have felt out of place for four years, and the geographic disorientation I experienced during that time – the points of the compass were out of place – cements my appreciation of being out of place and being right on time. For more see my https://eejoseph.com/2023/10/06/out-of-place-and-right-on-time/

Out of place and right on time

On my way, literally on a train cross country, to college, I made discoveries that made me realize that the place I was traveling to could not possibly be right.  With no reason to doubt the advice that sparked the decision to be formally educated, I journeyed on.  The experience turned out to be beneficial even though every class proved to be more evidence that time and place do not have to be right for truly monumental things to happen.


Saul of Tarsus was a guy who was convinced that he was doing the right thing, and that “he had arrived” at the destination chosen for him by God.  I can imagine his surprise when he left Jesus of Nazareth, and when the disciples of Jesus of Nazareth met him in their places of gathering. Paul was always out of place and out of time until he landed in prison in Rome facing execution. 


The man we know as Paul the apostle was first zealous rabbi, then humbled supplicant to Jesus, then teacher of the Way, then missionary to the Gentiles, then church-planting pastor (bishop, elder) and until his death, preacher and teacher.

Paul, the Christian gentleman, was welcome almost nowhere, as he journeyed across Asia.  He spent his last years in Rome living in a rented house “preaching the kingdom of God and teaching concerning the Lord Jesus Christ with all openness, unhindered.” (Acts 28:31, NASB)

I can relate to being out of place almost all the time but being perfectly on time.

Scratch until there’s no head

Humanity loves a lie because we have loved lies when confronted with the truth. We live in a stream of falsehoods, even at the expense of defining ourselves as something wholesome and especially as people who treasure the light shining on our deeds.  We set up commentary that contains contradictions then we revel in the fact that people will scratch their heads, and it just happens that heads scratched will eventually disappear.

Nobody’s ever seen what we see

Nobody’s ever seen what we  in the 21st century are observing gets said often and it is a white lie, partially true but a lie nonetheless.  Every second in the whole of human history is unique, so we all see something unique to us.  People still like to label our times as unprecedented and public media is fond of reporting first occurrences and broken records. The bottom of the barrel has been reached at the point where murdering innocent people became essential for the fox and the hen in the coop.

In camera without lights

But he who practices the truth comes to the Light, so that his deeds may be manifested as having been wrought in God.

John 3:21, NASB

All sorts of powerbrokers retreat to the backrooms, privy councils, and scuffs when accountability is in demand. Judges do it in plain sight with sidebars and sometimes in their chambers.

But a Pharisee named Gamaliel, a teacher of the Law, respected by all the people, stood up in the Council and gave orders to put the men outside for a short time.

Acts 5:34

Delusions, illusions, and virtual reality will be the death of us.  Hiding the truth and choosing to scratch our heads won’t get past the followers of the Way. They cannot be deceived even though we frequently see large numbers of people gathered in “churches” who are obviously being led down the garden path. We are not scratching our heads.

Vibrant, victim no more

Why are we going crazy about walls, land and loot? Could it be we’ve given up loving the truth? Your life without a computer: what does it look like?

Pushing Through. Song by Kyu and Ganjy

I have enough years on this planet to remember life before Microsoft, Dell, Acer, Google and Apple and mobile telephones. I also have enough sobriety to take strategic breaks from personal computing power, and I am acquainted with how to use books to gather information and do the kind of research that matters in my life. I will not be wringing my hands over life without a computer, even when the demand for all citizens to be computer literate and connected is universal. It will be a good thing to have nothing to sell or buy when the vast majority of humans will be identified as salespersons.

Life is vibrant today without computing power. To be a participant in the marketplace of the future is to be a victim of the lords of rapacious merchandising.