A version of something I posted on Facebook:
So this passed. I know some will disagree but I think there
were much better ways of resolving this sort of issue than this bill.
Sorry, but I'd rather not have my daughters shower with someone with
male equipment just because that person has some innate wish
they were born female. In my opinion, girls'/womens' restrooms were
made for the female sex and transgender females are admittedly not of
the female sex (hence the "transgender" label - although one could argue
about this if they've had a "sex-change" surgery). Proponents of this
bill, I think, are assuming that restrooms are segregated by socially
constructed gender role, in which case it would make sense to allow
socially female males to use female restrooms. But I think restrooms
are actually segregated by the equipment you currently have (that is, by
sex), which has nothing to do with which gender you identify with. In
which case allowing only the female sex in the restroom for the female
sex has nothing to do with transgender issues or discrimination against
such people. There are other ways to accommodate transgender people,
such as gender-neutral bathrooms or shower stalls, etc. that do not
violate persons' privacy rights in regards to the opposite sex.
Friday, August 30, 2013
Saturday, August 10, 2013
Notes on Galatians 5:1-12
More study notes by me for the sermon prep:
In verse 1, Paul is drawing on the idea that the Law with
its Jewish particulars was one of the things that enslaved the Jews in a sense
(along with sin and death), separating them from other peoples until the time
of Christ (3:23-25), and cursing
them for violation of the covenant with God.
Christ, then, provided rescue from this curse and deliverance from sin
and the division between Jew and Gentile.
Jesus gave freedom – a new exodus, deliverance, or rescue of Israel
from its exile/curse of the Law, something promised in the Old Testament to
bring with it the ingathering of the nations (i.e., the Gentiles) into God’s
one family. This freedom from sin,
death, Jewish-Gentile division, and the Law’s curse on Israel,
then, belongs to those who truly belong to God’s one promised family – as
chapter 4 has it, they are the children of God’s promise to Abraham – the Sarah
people, not the Hagar people still under bondage to sin, death, division, and
curse.
In other words, Jesus came to fulfill God’s promise to
Abraham of a single family of all nations on earth by bringing God’s salvation
to the ends of the earth beginning with his exhaustion of Israel’s
curse which it had acquired for covenant disobedience. This sets up verses 2-4, as this is precisely
what the agitators are, in effect, denying by forcing Gentiles to become
circumcised – God’s family, in their thinking, was supposed to be restricted to
one nation, the Jews alone. They in
effect deny the work of Christ in bringing about God’s promises. So to go back to the old use of the Law in
dividing Jew from Gentile (as opposed to Jesus’ and Paul’s use) is to reject
what Christ has already done, to deny his work on the cross in bringing
redemption and reconciliation between the nations.
Paul’s point in verse 3, then, is that since being Jewish
means, for the agitators, following all the Law’s Jewish particulars, Gentiles
who obey the agitators (to become Jewish in order to become part of God’s
people) are not done there – Gentiles being Jewish will have to go all the way
and add to circumcision food laws, and so forth. This is not about circumcision itself per se
but the motives and theology behind why these Gentiles were becoming
circumcised (Paul circumcised Timothy and would not say these things in 2-4
about Timothy). Unfortunately, for
centuries Gentile Christians became a version of these agitators themselves
when they used this verse to deny that Jews could be Christians unless they became
Gentiles first, thus again denying the work of Christ. Even today, Christians unfortunately use
terms like “Jew” or “Jewish” as contraries of “Christian”, further pushing the
un-Pauline view that one cannot remain a Jew and be a true Christian.
In 5 and 6, Paul turns to the true marks of God’s
family. What sets them apart are not
whether they are Jewish or not but whether they have faith, which is itself
expressed outwardly in love, not necessarily in works of the Law (circumcision,
etc.) – a love which by its very nature welcomes both Jews and Gentiles. On the basis of this life led in faith, led
by the Holy Spirit (associated with freedom from sin, etc. – see, e.g., II Cor
3:17) who is the sign that the new time of faith and Israel’s rescue has come,
believers may now hope for the completion of God’s work in us, fully bringing
his kingdom and establishing his new people in his new creation, even among
Gentiles.
In verses 7-9, Paul turns from Christ’s work to that of the
agitators. These agitators are basically
trying to counteract Christ’s work in bringing together a family of both Jews
and Gentiles, free from enslavement. And
what grieves Paul most is that it seems to be working at least somewhat! False teaching, if not checked, can easily
poison the church and cause people to stumble when they are easily swayed not
to attend to the truth. It takes only a
few bad influences to start affecting the life of the whole church if they are
allowed to continue. In verse 10, Paul
is, however, confident in the Galatians’ case that they will ultimately side
with him over the agitators, no matter what is going wrong at the moment, since
it is ultimately the agitators themselves who are to blame for this mess.
The false teaching, hinted at in verse 11, was that Paul had
kept back part of the gospel and of the full Christian life from the Galatians
– the part about having to become a Jew in order to be a Christian. The position was that Paul agreed with their
version of the gospel but had been too stingy and had not given the Galatians
the whole thing. Summing up his
self-defense so far, Paul makes it clear that he does not agree with the agitators’
version of the gospel and he certainly has not left out what they wanted to put
in since it was never a part of the gospel in the first place. If he had agreed with them that Gentiles had
to become Jews, he would not be persecuted by his fellow Jews (who thought he
was betraying God and Moses with his message).
Paul concludes then in this section that cutting off part of
your body (like in circumcision) does not matter since both Jew and Gentile are
now accepted equally into a single family – why not just go all the way and be
castrated rather than stop at circumcision?
According to Paul, there is no significant religious difference. The irony here, of course, is that to be
castrated would, by the stipulations of the Law, bar one from the religious
assembly of Israel. Only the time of Israel’s rescue and the
ingathering of the Gentiles, as foretold by Isaiah, would break down that barrier
and allow eunuchs in on equal footing with others – precisely the work of
Christ that these agitators who think they are in a privileged religious
position are now denying. Paul is
therefore being even cleverer here than it seems on first glance!
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