Snapshot Contradictions of Different Religions

Polytheism — The religion that can’t see the contradiction in applying the word “God” to more than one being.

Talmudism — The religion which can’t see contradiction unless it can see contradiction until it can’t see contradiction while seeing no contradiction in the contradiction of contradiction according to various Rabbis and books.
Neo-Orthodoxy (Barthianism) — The religion which can’t see the contradiction in insisting that which is subjective can be made into the Objective by an act of the will of the subjective.
Humanism — The religion which can’t see the contradiction in denying God while presupposing the self as the ultimate starting point and authority.
Islam — The religion which can’t see the contradiction in knowing the will of a god who is so transcendent that nobody can possibly know him.
Buddhism — The religion which can’t see the contradiction that finds their chief desire to be the loss of all desire.


Arminianism — The religion which can’t see the contradiction of having a God who is sovereign enough to not be sovereign.

R2K — The religions which can’t see the contradiction that God’s left-hand rule is in direct contradiction to His right-hand rule.

Reformed Baptists — The religion that can’t see that whatever you are requiring of an adult to bring for Baptism that a baby can’t bring is the point where you no longer can talk about being Reformed.

Eucatastrophe

This morning we are speaking about the Gospel as eucatastrophe. We want to see how the God’s Word employs eucatastrophe as a literary technique in order to turn the gloom of the story into bright happiness by a desperately needed deliverance that occurs at the last second. It is that moment when seemingly all hope is lost and yet by God’s providence there is a sudden turn in events and the relief is so sudden and unexpected that the consequent joy is driven all the deeper because of the darkness that had preceded it.

Eucatastrophe – An event wherein a person or people go through much unpleasantness, tears, and trials that finally ends with a great good to the people coming from the most unlikely of sources – all of which could not have happened except for the great cost that happened to them.

Eu catastrophe – A series of monumental and tragic series of events that by divine serendipity end in unexpected deliverance by unexpected means and so rapturous joy.

The word eucatastrophe,’ adds the prefix ‘eu’ to the word “catastrophe.” That little “eu” there means “good” in the Greek. We use it when we say “eulogy,” or “euphoria,” and “Eucharist.” The word catastrophe then comes from the Greek meaning ‘down or against’, and ‘strephein’ which means ‘to turn’.

So literally eucatastrophe is a good turn in that which is down or against.

Tolkien who coined the phrase had this to say in applying it to literature

Eucatastropheis a sudden and miraculous grace […] It does not deny the existence of dyscatastrophe, of sorrow and failure: the possibility of these is necessary to the joy of deliverance; Eucatastrophe denies… universal final defeat and in so far is evangelium (good news), giving a fleeting glimpse of Joy. Joy beyond the walls of the world, and is as poignant as grief because it was so completely unexpected.

We see this usage in the fairy tales we read to our children.

Jack and the Beanstalk Begins with a widow who is very poor and has a son she has to provide for, and their daily bread comes from selling the milk of their cow at the town market. What happens to the cow though? Jack, the son, sells it for some beans which are promised to be magic. Now they are impoverished with no source of income. There is the catastrophe. However, the very beans which where thought to be ruinous end up providing Jack a beans to seize a goose that lays golden eggs and so is family is rescued after many harrowing turns. There is the Eu in the Catastrophe and as brought on by means which were thought to have been the catastrophe.

In C. S. Lewis’ The Last Battle (1956) the children in their world experience a train wreck while in Narnia Aslan makes an end to the old Narnia. The train wreck was a catastrophe that found them dying but the Eu in it is that the children find themselves running “further up and further in” Aslan’s land.

We see this in our films … I’m going to let you trace this out in your heads but if you think of films like Braveheart.

When William Wallace dies, all seems hopeless; the Scots have just lost their leader, the only man who could keep them from fighting each other long enough to fight the English. There is the Catastrophe

The Eu is found in how the death of Wallace becomes a rallying point so that 9 years later in comes the smashing victory that he had been preparing them for all along. It’s one of the fiercest, grimmest happy eu-catastrophes in film history.

But as look in Scripture we see Eucatastrophe at its most thrilling and poignant point.

Biblical Eucatastrophe

Catastrophe – Fall (Eu – Incarnation)

We are all familiar with the fall but have we ever considered that without the Fall there would have been no incarnation of Christ … no prefect obedience … no sin bearing on the cross … no resurrection, ascension, and session.

Remember God did not come up with the intent of Christ on the Cross after the fall occurred. From eternity past God decreed the fall as He decreed the cure and reconciliation that would be found in Christ. When God created Adam He had already ordained the Last Adam who would repair what Adam had marred so the Fall catastrophe and the incarnation Eucatastrophe.

The fall was instrumental to the good ending that we call good Friday.

Here we find all the elements of Eucatastrophe. We find the what the catastrophe that is the fall, we find the sorrow, trials, and tears that come from the catastrophe, we find the longing for relief and rescue, we find help coming not from the kind of power for deliverance that man might expect but instead we find relief coming from a low born child born to a virgin peasant in the backwaters of the Empire with a court comprised of riff-raff shepherds and eventually foreigners. Without the previous millenniums of disappointment that no Messiah had risen could there be the joy experienced by Anna & Simeon as they beheld the one long promised as the deliverer?

We find eucatastrophe in some of the stories that lead up to the Incarnation.

Catastrophe – Bondage In Egypt – (Eu – Entry into the Promised land)

We find in Israel going down into Egypt which eventually ends in bondage. Then there is the 400 years of looking and longing for relief … for a deliverer. One arises – Moses — but he seeks to deliver in his own power and is exiled to the far side of the desert before God brings him back to be Israel’s deliverer. This deliverer ends up being the reason for the increase of their labors and trials and yet the one who made life harder for them ends up being the one that God uses to deliver. Eu-catastrophe. Deliverance coming unexpectedly from the last place one might expect it.

Catastrophe – Samson – (Eu – End of life)

One more example is Sampson. He experiences the catastrophe by his loss of strength because he was shorn of his hair. This leads to the catastrophe of his being blinded and imprisoned. But the Philistines slept and his catastrophe grew back and so became to Him eucatastrophe as the Scriptures praise him by saying, “So the dead which he slew at his death were more than they which he slew in his life.”

Catastrophe – Cross – (Eu – Defeat of Satan)

The whole notion of our phrase “Good Friday” has eucatastrophe hard-baked into it. We could not … dare not call it “Good,” if we did not know how it was that despite all appearances of catastrophe, there was a goodly ending in that God’s name was vindicated, Satan was defeated and our rescue was accomplished, and that by the very means of the Cross which was catastrophic.

Colossians 2:15, the text this morning captures this idea of Eucatastrophe. Speaking of Christ the Spirit-inspired Apostle writes,

And having disarmed the powers and authorities, he made a public spectacle of them, triumphing over them by the cross.

The disarming or stripping of power and authorities is likely a reference to angelic beings who are here pictured as resisting God. Paul perhaps interjects these fallen angelic beings as the personal accusers who correspond to the Law as the impersonal accuser who he mentions in vs. 14. These accusers who are hinted at also in Romans 8:33-34 Christ has disarmed so that their accusations no longer carry any sting.

Alternately, Paul may be referring that the believers in the ancient world filled with the occult as it was, was no longer a threat to the Christian. Christ in his Eucatastrophic work had defanged them. Christ, by the cross is the victor over all who would oppose His people.

And he did all this by the most unexpected means.

The public spectacle

This refers to the way a conquering general would return from victory, with his conquest marching in humiliation behind him. The spoils of his victory would include prisoner from the nobility of those conquered. They were being made a public spectacle to be scorned and laughed at. It was public inasmuch as it was done in the face of the whole cosmos. It refers to the grand display of victory as achieved by Christ. It is another way of stating that Christ has bound the strong man (Mt. 12:29). Another way of Christ stating that “He saw Satan falling from heaven as lightning (Luke. 10:18). Another way of demonstrating His victory has He did in casting out Demons and healing the sick. Satan and His minions have been the booty of the conquering Son.

And all this occurred by

“Triumphing over them by the cross.”

Eucatastrophe. Who but God could have ever written such a marvelous true story? The Cross was seen in the ancient world as torture endured by the worst of criminals. It was dehumanizing and degrading — reserved for only the wickedest of men. And here in classic Eucatastrophic fashion, God saves the world in the last place one would expect salvation to be found. On the Cross Christ disarms His enemies and makes a public spectacle of them. Mankind experiences catastrophe by eating of the forbidden fruit of the tree now experiences eucatastrophe only by looking to the one hanging on a tree.

To those with eyes to see this is the deliverance from chaos, sin, and disharmony that had characterized life. He was God in Christ reconciling the World to Himself.

Jesus Himself hinted at this when he said… 32 And I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all men unto me.

Of course the Resurrection and Ascension and Session continue with the good in the Eucatastrophe.

For those who have seen their sin … their rebellion … their utter selfishness the Cross is reconciliation after all hope was lost. The hopelessness of it all before seeing the Cross makes the seeing of the Cross all the more good. It makes it Eucatastrophic.

The perplexity in tales of Eucatastrophe is that the Eu can’t be appreciated apart from the Catastrophe. The joy is only as sublime as the night was dark. It is the sense of gathering gloom that makes the Eucatastrophe so spectacular.

I think it was the Eucatastrophic that Thomas experienced after examining the wounds of Jesus when he cried out … “My Lord and My God.” It was to impossible to believe and yet it was true.

It was the Eucatastrophic that filled Rhoda with joy in Acts 12.

14When she recognized Peter’s voice, she was so overjoyed that she forgot to open the gate, but ran inside and announced, “Peter is standing at the gate!”

What more can we take from this idea of the Eucatastrophic that God has weaved into our reality?

We can take from this the reminder that no matter how hard the trials … no matter how dark the night … no matter how insane the church and culture is … no matter how corrupt the clergy corps becomes … no matter how absolutely certain it seems that defeat is imminent that God has in the past and can again go all Eucatastrophic.

That doesn’t mean He will at every turn. Sometimes the Eu only comes after a long time of Catastrophe so that generations could well pass before weeping ends and the joy comes. But the point is that it can come suddenly … unexpectedly … from the least likely of sources.

The Eucatastrophe reminds us that though

Truth forever on the scaffold,
wrong forever on the throne.”
Yet that 
scaffold sways the future.
And behind the dim unknown
Standeth God within the shadows
Keeping watch upon His own

The Christian has no reason to utterly and completely despair. Oh, sure, there will be disappointments that drive the blues. There will be times of being downcast because of what we have before us but the Christian can always say, because of the truth of Eucatastrophe,

Why are you so downcast O my soul
Hope yet in God.

The Christian can sing,

3 This is my Father’s world:

O let me ne’er forget

That though the wrong seems oft so strong,

God is the Ruler yet.

This is my Father’s world:

The night shall be dispelled

The Good shall come; God’s Triumph won

God Reigns; let earth be glad

We’ve seen God do the Eucatastrophic in post-Biblical times.

In 1588 the Spanish Roman Catholics had sent an Armada to defeat the English so as to destroy the Protestant Kingdom of Elizabeth. Their force was superior. Matters looked bleak for the Protestants. But God decided to go all Eucatastrophic. He raised an unexpected storm that aided the English in the battle.

So great was the seeing of God’s hand in all that happened to the Spanish Armada the Latin phrase, “He blew with His winds, and they were scattered” was used to describe the Eucatastrophe. Later that was reduced in history books as “the Protestant Wind,” inspired by the phrase inscribed on medallions to honor the event.

We can see the Eucatastrophic in the events of the Alamo. The catastrophe was found in the defeat of that small mission outpost but that defeat led to the Eu that became Texas independence from Catholic Mexico. Without the catastrophe that was the Alamo there would not have been the good of a Texas state.

God gave the victory by the most unlikely means anticipated.

So, how can we end this?

We can thank God for the way He Eucatastrophically worked to bring about so great a salvation.

We can look for the Eucatastrophic in our reading of our Bibles, our Western literature and our history in order to see God’s providential hand at work.

We can be brave when it is easy to lose courage.

We can affirm that only the understanding of the Eucatastrophic is key component of postmillennialism. The postmillennialism does not believe that things will go from bad to worse as Amillennialism and Premillennialism does. The Postmillennialist believes that Reformation can come in the darkest of situations and that is because of this belief in Eucatastrophe.

We can be thankful that we belong to a God who always leads us in triumph.

If we can hold on to the possibility of Eucatastrope we will confound God’s enemies and ours. They won’t know what to do with a people who look for and believe in looming victory when they should be acting defeated.

Musings After Listening to Sodomite but Celibate Rev. Dr. Greg Johnson Interview

After listening to a Greg Johnson (he of PCA celibate sodomite Pastor fame) interview last night followed immediately by reading the PCA open letter penned and signed by 13 of the past 15 PCA Moderators assuring God and the world that all is fine in the good ship PCA I was struck with the fact of how this is a classic worldview contest.

I am convinced that these moderators who penned this open letter as well as the nearly 600 Elders who signed the previous open letter are completely bumfuzzled as to why anybody could possibly have a problem with Dr. Greg Johnson serving as a PCA minister. In point of fact, these folks believe that Johnson is proof of God’s rich mercy and thank God for Johnson’s presence in the PCA.

Meanwhile, I am at the same time equally convinced that those who oppose Johnson are overwrought with the shame that Johnson brings to the PCA.

These two groups might as well be living on two different planets speaking two different languages. There is simply no way that anyone member of one group can thoroughly understand the position of the other group on this subject.

This kind of thing happens when people on both sides are each using the same words but are filling those words with completely different content. And that happens because there are two completely different worldviews. Words take their meaning depending upon the worldview in which they are operating.

So in this PCA mess, everyone is talking about “grace,” “sin,” “God,” “forgiveness,” “sanctification,” etc. but each side is obviously filling those words with a different meaning. The PCA wouldn’t be at this point if that was not the case.

In my estimation, those who are championing Johnson have their roots in some way in the Sonship movement originally started by Jack Miller. The hallmark of this movement is the graciousness of grace but the danger is that grace would often end up being defined by the Sonship advocates in such a way as to leave the door open for antinomianism. Grace was so wrongly emphasized that it diminished the necessity to take seriously God’s word when we are instructed,

20 But ye have not so learned Christ;21 If so be that ye have heard him, and have been taught by him, as the truth is in Jesus: 22 That ye put off concerning the former conversation the old man, which is corrupt according to the deceitful lusts; 23 And be renewed in the spirit of your mind; 24 And that ye put on the new man, which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness.

Johnson, in embracing his same-sex attraction reality that can’t be changed as somehow normative for him and others who have the same attraction Johnson champions a kind of grace that makes way for an antinomian license. Grace not only reminds us of how we are always forgiven, loved, and accepted in Christ. Grace also drives a gratitude that is relentless in making it our goal to please God.  God is not pleased with His children turning grace into license.

In the past the knock against some Sonship devotees is that they forgot St. Paul’s words, “Shall we go on sinning that grace may abound? God forbid.” As this works itself out in the Dr. Greg Johnson (a celibate sodomite Pastor) case, it is my conviction that God’s grace is being used as a cover for the embrace of Johnson’s same-sex attraction.

Another thing this means is that the PCA has to split or congregations have to start individually leaving as they can. This is a massive worldview split that is going to start revealing itself more and more all the way down the line in every subject matter.

Of Janissaries and Government Schools

In a cruelty that was both useful and cynical, Islamic Sultans would forcefully implement a blood tax on the peoples of Byzantium. This “blood tax” found the Islamic Infidel seizing from the people of Byzantium their finest sons in order to take them back to Islamadom in order to turn these sons into the most elite special forces military units. These “Janissaries” were not allowed to marry and were considered personally owned by the Sultan. They were provided the very best of foods and drink. Eventually, they would be used as the shock troops against their former land from which they were kidnapped — Byzantium.

Today much the same is done by the Marxist conditioning as accomplished in our K-12 government schools and then our Universities all augmented and supported by our Churches. Only instead of having to kidnap the children Christian parents freely turn their children over to the enemy to be brainwashed. Like the Janissaries of old these children eventually turn on their parents and their former Christian lands in order to conquer them for the cause of Cultural Marxism.

Of Liturgical Calendars & The State

 “State is the March of God on Earth.”

G. F. W. Hegel

If the state is God walking on the earth, per Hegel, (and I believe that it believes that it is) and if the State as God assigns a National Holiday then by default that holiday is a religious holiday. In the situation we are now in the West the State is the God in whom we live and move and have our being. The State, in controlling the calendar year the way it has by assigning annual feast days (Thanksgiving), and by assigning days for the acknowledgment of the humanist saints (Martin Luther King Day) and by assigning high holy days (Juneteenth) is giving us a Statist liturgical calendar. This is another way of identifying the State as God and ourselves as the worshipers of the State God.

This means by merely looking at our Statist religious liturgical calendar with its federal holidays the wise man can see what the civil religion is that we as a people objectively practice. To be sure, many of us subjectively practice other religions, but as the State, as God now owns the movement of the calendar we can see that what we own subjectively and what the state is giving us objectively are two very different religions. Likewise, when we consider the recent Federal holidays that have been sanctioned (Martin Luther King Day and Juneteenth) we begin to get an idea of the drift of the State in terms of where the State God’s interest lies.

This brings us to the most recently minted Federal Holiday labeled “Juneteenth.” Initially, this was recognized as a state holiday in Texas in 1938 for the black people. Here is the original language recognizing that state holiday for Texan blacks;

Whereas, the Negroes in the State of Texas observe June 19 as the official day for the celebration of Emancipation from slavery; and

Whereas, June 19, 1865, was the date when General Robert [sic] S. Granger, who had command of the Military District of Texas, issued a proclamation notifying the Negroes of Texas that they were free; and

Whereas, since that time, Texas Negroes have observed this day with suitable holiday ceremony, except during such years when the day comes on a Sunday; when the Governor of the State is asked to proclaim the following day as the holiday for State observance by Negroes; and

Whereas, June 19, 1938, this year falls on Sunday;

NOW, THEREFORE, I, JAMES V. ALLRED, Governor of the State of Texas, do set aside and proclaim the day of June 20, 1938, as the date for observance of EMANCIPATION DAY in Texas, and do urge all members of the Negro race in Texas to observe the day in a manner appropriate to its importance to them.

Notice that the State holiday recognized Juneteenth as being important to blacks but did not recognize the holiday for the non-black community such as been done by the FEDS in creating of Juneteenth.

In the last two Federal Holidays now we have set aside days to honor non-Whites. If one counts the ever-expanding change of “Columbus Day” to “Indigenous Peoples Day,” the count is three. That means 30% of paid Federal Holidays on the state liturgical calendar are given over to non-caucasian citizens. Each of those days implies offense given to the non-caucasian citizens by caucasian citizens.

Six other paid Federal Holidays all recognize the glory of the State in one way or another.

  • New Year’s Day (January 1).
  • President’s Day (Third Monday in February).
  • Memorial Day (Last Monday in May).
  • Independence Day (July 4).
  • Labor Day (First Monday in September)
  • Veterans Day (November 11). Of the other two paid Federal Holidays I would argue we find days wherein the citizenry is encouraged to bolster the state economy.
  • Thanksgiving Day (Fourth Thursday in November).
  • Christmas Day (December 25)

    So, when all that is considered as a whole it is clear that the following conclusions follow;

    1.) The State is incrementally a God who favors itself above all.
    2.) After favoring itself above all the current State is making it clear that the new favorites of the State are non-Caucasians.

    These are the religious convictions of the State. Clearly, the God-State is non-caucasian Humanist as seen in its bequeathing to us the liturgical calendar we currently have.