Erasing the handwriting of the decrees against us, which was hostile to us, and has taken it away out of the midst, nailing it to the cross
Paul to the Colossians 2: 14, Concordant New Testament
Lately I've been scrolling through a few social media videos of disgraced pastor Mark Driscoll. That's right, I said disgraced. The former pastor of the Mars Hill church in Seattle has definitely has his share of controversy. Not for speaking the word, mind you. No, Mark Driscoll was admonished for, among other things, using church funds to promote his personal book sales. But it's the message now preached by this man that sounds alarm bells for me. His message is a version of the neo calvanist theology made popular by the late Abraham Kuyper. The Dutch minister insisted on holding to the traditional teachings of calvanism. However, if you listen to just a few moments of the words of Mark Driscoll, you began to see the authoritarian nature of the theology He preaches. I commented to a good friend of mine the other day that I've often come away from watching one of these sermons feeling extremely guilty and condemned. Why? Because this sect of Christian theology primarily speaks to the law of God. If I were to guess, I'd say that the most commonly used phrase in a sermon from Mark Driscoll is "Thou shall not!" That's it, those who speak this branch of Christianity can lock onto any segment of society and immediately turn it into something absolutely forbidden by God. To justify their claims, they often point to the scriptures of the law we find within the old testament. Thou shalt not lie. Thou shalt not steal. Thou shalt not profane the word of God. How about this one, Mark, thou shalt not misrepresent the true nature of God! For the apostle John has spoken to the one true nature of God, and that is love {First Epistle of John 4:8}. As I commented to a friend the other day, where is the love of God in the majority of sermons spoken by these speakers of the law? The apostle Paul has spoken that it is through the death of Christ Jesus on the cross that these decrees have been taken away from us {Paul to the Colossians 2:14}. But for preachers like Mark Driscoll, their words all too often find a home within a small segment of the Christian faith.
Now as they persisted asking Him, He unbends and said to them, "Let the sinless one of you first cast a stone at her"
Johns Account 8: 7, Concordant New Testament
There once was a woman who had sinned. Her crime was adultery, obviously a forbidden offense to those who preach the law. In fact, the religious leaders of her day were all but prepared to punish and condemn her for her offense against the law of God. That is, until the embodiment of God in the flesh insisted on the mercy offered by the Lord. As these religious leaders stood poised to condemn the woman caught in adultery, Jesus shut them down with one simple phrase, "Let the sinless one of you first cast a stone at her" {Johns Account 8:7}. The religious leaders, who only moments earlier were ready to condemn her, dropped their stones and walked away. The words of Jesus spoken to her brokenness stand in contrast to those who would condemn her according to the law, "Neither am I condemning you" {Johns Account 8:11}. I can only imagine that Mark Driscoll would have been among the church leaders that day hell bent upon condemning this breaker of the law of God. But Jesus Himself speaks a different gospel, "Neither am I condemning you." For Jesus did not come to condemn the world, but that the world might be saved through Him {Johns Account 3:16-17}. THIS fulfills the true love nature of God. I wonder if preachers like Mark Driscoll are even aware of this truth. What is painfully obvious from listening to him preach, despite being a disgraced pastor, is that he often places himself in the role of being the judge of men. Of course, that is something reserved for the Father {First Epistle of John 4:10}. It has never been the intent of God that all should perish, but that through His Son all would live through Him {Johns Account 14:20}.
~Scott~