175 results for tag: Q & R
Q&R with Brad Jersak: “Under grace, are we still ‘sinners’? Is confessing sin a denial of grace?”
Question
Under grace, are we still 'sinners'? Is confessing sin a denial of grace? What about saying "the Lord's Prayer," which asks God to forgive our sins? Some grace teachers regard the Lord's Prayer as Old Covenant since Jesus taught it before the Cross and at the Cross, all sins were already forgiven. What's your take on this?
Responses
These questions are loaded with a backstory, for sure. I can hear the wounds of shame in how the words "sin" and "sinner" were used as bludgeons on sensitive hearts. And believe me, I can relate. As long as these are still associated with the old pangs of religious shaming, it will be hard to use ...
Q&R with Brad Jersak – “How can God both never give up & ‘give us up’?”
QUESTION
Hello Brad,
I am exploring the PTM website. My heart certainly wants to believe in full what you write, but then I find things that don’t, in my understanding, square up to other parts of the Bible:
Can you explain this? You say that "... the whole chapter [Isaiah 59] describes the Trinitarian love of Abba, Christ and the Spirit of Grace, in hot pursuit of children who suffer alienation.”
I know God does indeed do this, for how else was I saved? But on the other hand, how can we reconcile God being in hot pursuit of his children with those verses in Romans that suggest three times that he ‘gave them up’ ...
Q&R with Brad Jersak – “How do we comprehend the Son and Spirit without demoting them to less than the Father?”
Question
So cleary I knew everything in my 20’s and now I know nothing.
How do we comprehend Son and Spirit without demotion or less than the Father while having full reverence to 3 and 1?
Response
Re: the Trinity -- The good news is that you don't have to figure it all out from scratch. Historically, that took Christianity's best minds 300 years and even then, "it's a mystery" was one of their major conclusions. But mystery means more than "we don't know." It included, we couldn't know by reason but learned it by revelation" (i.e. the Scriptures).
What we can do is start with some really basic confessions, which require ...
Q&R with Brad Jersak – “If God consents to our freedom, what’s the point of the relationship?”
Question
Hi Mr. Jersak,
I’ve been on a deconstruction of theology path the past couple years, as so many have, and have listened to many of your talks. I’ve been stuck for a while now and thought maybe it’s time to reach out. One of the big things that triggered my journey was my daughter getting hurt. My old theology could no longer stand. I have a good pastor who is on a similar journey and have been meeting with him as well.
I now understand that God has such high regard for human choices that he won’t intervene, and yet he is good all the time. But it seems like God is always submitting to peoples choices and standing ...
Q&R with Brad Jersak – “Is preaching Christ’s any-day return right? Is it helpful?”
Question
I remember back in the 1970s being scared by Garner Ted Armstrong’s preaching on the World Tomorrow telecasts, taking Matthew 24 out of context and saying the return of Jesus Christ would cut short those tumultuous times, otherwise no flesh would be saved alive.
Now I watch Jack van Impe preaching something very similar. I should not be too cynical as the world is a mess and we may well be headed for horrible wars but I am not letting fear religion grip me again.
For decades they have been preaching the imminent return of Jesus Christ. Imminent? Right away? As Greg Albrecht says, dispensationalism is fatally flawed. Do you ...
Q&R with Brad Jersak – The Creepy Twins of Spiritual Pride and Self-Loathing
Screenshot from Stephen King's "The Shining"
Question
Do you have any advice in the spiritual pride behind the deeply held belief that “God can’t forgive me”? I've dealt with this for years and it's beginning to hit me how prideful it was.
Response
Yes, ironically, rejecting the forgiveness of God "because I'm not worthy" is totally prideful but the pride is so often obscured by our self-loathing. We think that if we condemn ourselves that it can't possibly be pride. But what does self-loathing reveal except that the ego has become so deluded that it imagines it has usurped Christ from his throne and his judgment seat and has ...
Q & R with Brad Jersak – “What does ‘the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world?” mean?
Question
Greetings brother Brad. I have been privileged to hold your book, Stricken by God? in my hands. In the book, you talk about the importance of not collapsing the whole gospel narrative nor our entire soteriology (doctrine of salvation) into Good Friday. We mustn't forget the life and ministry and resurrection of Christ as part of his saving work. I agree with you wholeheartedly. The sending of God's son in toto is what makes our salvation possible--that is true indeed. You say, "the atonement precedes the cross," so we look not only to Good Friday but to the whole mission of Christ from his birth, life death, resurrection, and ...
Q&R with Brad Jersak: “If the Bible isn’t inerrant, can we trust what the Gospels say about Jesus?”
QUESTION:
I have read many of your articles with interest and agree with much of what is written. May I ask a question, though?You say that the bible is not infallible and inerrant. And while I can see the logic for that view, how then do we know what is written about the life and mission of Jesus is accurate? If the accounts of some of the incidents in the Old Testament are open to question, why not what is written about Jesus?Thank you in advance for an answer.
RESPONSE:
A very fair question, thank you.
Let me first begin by addressing the question of inspiration, infallibility and inerrancy. Then I’ll move on to ...
Q&R with Brad Jersak & Richard Murray – “C.S.I. Jerusalem: Who killed Ananias & Sapphira?”
Question:
Dear Brad,
I have read your book, A More Christlike God, and I am on board wholeheartedly, knowing that we are still learning every day. I have given your book to a friend whose worldview has shifted dramatically. Yesterday he asked me, “What shall I make of Ananias and Sapphira (Acts 5:1-11) in light of the "unwrathing" chapters in Brad's book?” It is a problematic text. Where have you landed on this one? Thanks for all you do … Faithfully reading your CWR blogs.
Response:
Because of my conviction that Christ revealed that our Abba is not retributive, this question comes up a lot. The greatest difficulty is that ...
Q&R with Brad Jersak – “Do people who die just sleep or are they in God’s presence?”
Question 1:
Do you think when a person dies they just sleep or do they go to be in God's presence?
Response:
When someone dies, we know that they are are in God's presence, since Paul says, "To be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord" (2 Corinthians 5:8) and they join the "cloud of witnesses" with Christ on "Mount Zion" along with all those "spirits of righteous men and women made perfect" (Hebrews 12). They are part of the great multitude who worship at God's throne (Revelation 5). We know from these passages that at the very least, those who died "in Christ" are now with Christ and are alive and conscious, as we see with ...
Q&R with Brad Jersak: “Condemnation in Mark 16?”
“God our Father, we find it difficult to come to you, because our knowledge of you is imperfect. In our ignorance of you, we have imagined you to be our enemy; we have wrongly thought that you take pleasure in punishing our sins; and we have foolishly conceived you to be a tyrant over human life. But since Jesus came among us, he has shown that you are loving, that you are on our side against all that stunts life, and that our resentments against you are groundless.” —Augustine of Hippo
Question: "How do we read 'condemnation' in Mark 16:16 as other than juridical?"
Hi Brad,
I was wondering about Mark 16:16: "Whoever believes ...
Q & R with Brad Jersak: “What if my spouse stops believing?”
Question:
When my husband and I were married, we were both following Christ. Now he says he wants to believe but no longer can. He feels he might now be an atheist. We still love each other, but I'm still a Christian and this has been the most painful thing we've ever encountered together. I’m afraid. I don’t know how a marriage or raising kids like this works? Help!
Response:
Thank you for checking in on this important question! I hear your heart and your pain. In times like these, I like to pray "the Serenity Prayer" a lot:
"God, grant me the serenity to accept what I cannot change,the courage to change the things I can,and the ...
Q & R with Brad Jersak: “How do we practice Matt. 18:15-18 discipline without using it as a bludgeon?”
Question
I am part of a Christian group going through some unresolved conflict. One side keeps trying to use Matt 18:15-18 like a sledgehammer against the other. How do we read this passage in context when people try to weaponize it?
Response
Here are Christ’s instructions as translated in N.T. Wright’s New Testament for Everyone version:
‘If another disciple sins against you,’ Jesus continued, ‘go and have it out, just between the two of you alone. If they listen to you, you’ve won back a brother or sister. But if they won’t listen, you should take with you one or two others, so that “ever...
Q & R with Brad Jersak: In whom and when does the Holy Spirit “enter” us?
Question:
Thanks, Brad for bringing so much needed clarity to “the sons issue” in your blog post, “Are All People God’s Children or Only Christians?”
I would love to see a follow up to that in regards to the work of Holy Spirit. When does he enter, manifesting his presence as sons, etc.
Response:
That’s an excellent question, the answer to which has filled volumes of books for two millennia. My brief response will cover just the two major features of your question:
First, “When does the Holy Spirit enter”? Some say we all “receive” the Spirit when we come to faith in ...
Q&R follow-up with Greg Albrecht – Would Jesus Attend a Gay Wedding?
This Q & A is a response to Greg Albrecht's "Pastoral Perspective" column in the October edition of CWRm. To view the original Q & A, entitled, "Should I attend my gay daughter's wedding?" CLICK HERE and go to page 14. A CWRm read wrote in with this follow-up question and Greg responds.
QUESTION
I read your Pastoral Perspective in the October 2017, CWRm and what I get from your answer is, “It's your decision there is no right or wrong answer.” You even claim Jesus attended “sinful and spiritually toxic places.” I would like you to elaborate on that, because I don't know what your are referring to. I'm sure if he ...