Author: jetbrane
I am a Pastor of a small Church in Mid-Michigan who delights in my family, my congregation and my calling.
I am postmillennial in my eschatology.
Paedo-Calvinist Covenantal in my Christianity
Reformed in my Soteriology
Presuppositional in my apologetics
Familialist in my family theology
Agrarian in my regional community social order belief
Christianity creates culture and so Christendom in my national social order belief
Mythic-Poetic / Grammatical Historical in my Hermeneutic
Pre-modern, Medieval, & Feudal before Enlightenment, modernity, & postmodern
Reconstructionist / Theonomic in my Worldview
One part paleo-conservative / one part micro Libertarian in my politics
Systematic and Biblical theology need one another but Systematics has pride of place
Some of my favorite authors,
Augustine, Turretin, Calvin, Tolkien, Chesterton, Nock, Tozer, Dabney, Bavinck, Wodehouse, Rushdoony, Bahnsen, Schaeffer, C. Van Til, H. Van Til, G. H. Clark, C. Dawson, H. Berman, R. Nash, C. G. Singer, R. Kipling, G. North, J. Edwards, S. Foote, F. Hayek, O. Guiness, J. Witte, M. Rothbard, Clyde Wilson, Mencken, Lasch, Postman, Gatto, T. Boston, Thomas Brooks, Terry Brooks, C. Hodge, J. Calhoun, Llyod-Jones, T. Sowell, A. McClaren, M. Muggeridge, C. F. H. Henry, F. Swarz, M. Henry, G. Marten, P. Schaff, T. S. Elliott, K. Van Hoozer, K. Gentry, etc.
My passion is to write in such a way that the Lord Christ might be pleased. It is my hope that people will be challenged to reconsider what are considered the givens of the current culture.
Your biggest help to me dear reader will be to often remind me that God is Sovereign and that all that is, is because it pleases him.
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It seems that levelling or anarchistic doctrines are (ironically) “naturally” connected to anti-natural ascetic notions that detest the physical material world (thus the connection to anti-incarnationalist notions of some Anabaptists), and the hierarchies that it imposes, not wanting to believe that this could have been God’s will. “How could a loving God have created such an unequal, oppressive world as this”, goes the perverse Gnostic logic of many Leftists.
This is an interesting and fruitful, concise academic study (even though it is apparently written by a Jew) about pacifism among Christians in pre-Constantinian times, which also touches the issue at hand:
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/228277490_Christian_Pacifism_Before_Constantine
“The Marcionite and other forms of Gnostic pacifism have a reasonable internal logic. If the entire world and every human body is repulsively unclean (if one looks on the whole creation the same way that the Old Testament regarded a leprous corpse), then it makes sense never to lift a finger to defend a human being who is being attacked. Why try to preserve the evil human body from destruction? And how sinful it would seem, in the Gnostic view, to involve oneself in the material world so greatly that one would actually use a physical weapon.
The earliest Christians seem to have foreseen that something like Gnosticism would attempt to substitute itself for Christianity. In the First Epistle to Timothy, Paul specifically warned about the false teaching that would arise from “doctrines of devils.” The evil doctrines that would arise in “latter times” would be “Forbidding to marry, and commanding to abstain from meats, which God hath created to be received with thanksgiving of them which believe and know the truth. For every creature of God is good, and nothing to be refused, if it be received with thanksgiving.”69
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91. It is perhaps not a coincidence that the only early Christian sects which were officially pacifist were heretical sects which hated the created world. The hostility to Creation is directly opposed to Jewish and Christian doctrine from the first chapter of Genesis all the way through the New Testament.
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Tertullian is the most famous pacifist of early Christian writers, but he cannot be considered representative of mainstream Christian thought. His pacifism was the one of the products of a heresy founded on hatred of the material world, and a longing for human suffering. Tertullian does not speak for Christians and others who view the natural world and the human body as glorious gifts from God, and who therefore reject Tertullian’s command that force must never be used to defend those wonderful gifts from torture or destruction.”
The Anabaptists may well deserve lots of criticism, but still, I cannot help feeling, observing their history, that I can see some illustration of Our Lord’s striking words: “But many that are first shall be last; and the last shall be first” (Matt. 19:30) – how in the providential progress of history can turn the former stereotypes on their heads.
As was observed here:
https://occidentaldissent.com/2019/12/19/luther-and-liberalism/
“It is a Catholic myth that the Reformation inexorably led to liberalism. The Anabaptists were the most radical fringe group that came out of the Reformation. Today, Anabaptists are the most socially conservative religious group with the highest birthrate in the United States. The Amish population has exploded since the 1960s. In fact, the Amish are projected to overtake the current American population in 200 years.”
The original Anabaptists were the most wild-eyed radicals of the Reformation era, but (at least some) their descendants are now bywords of reactionary conservatism! That is irony indeed.
It is also cruel truth that the descendants of hierarchical 16th century Reformers might be in their DEEDS, or in their everyday life, much less patriarchal than conservative Anabaptists are these days. And from the racialist point of view, the Old Order Amish and Mennonites are like “living fossil” survivals of the kind of vital folkish spirit that made the White Protestant conquest and settlement of North America possible in the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries.