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I. Revelation

A. Harwood Part 1

Revelation, from the Latin word revelatio, refers to “an uncovering.” The doctrine of revelation concerns God’s uncovering or making known what is covered or unknown about himself
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 31.

1.General Revelation

General revelation is God’s revelation of general truths about himself to all people in every time and place, such as his roles of Creator and Judge, available through the creation and human conscience.(Avaiable to all people at all times.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 31

a. Scripture

1.Psalm 19
2. Job 36:24-40:2
3. John 1:4,9
4.ROMANS 1:18–32

b. Church History

Early Church
1. Athanasius the hero of Nicene orthodoxy, begins his case for the incarnation of the Word by pointing to order in creation to argue for a Creator who ordered all things
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 51.
2. Augustine taught that God’s existence was revealed through creation, and he discerned analogies for the Trinity in humanity. First, creation reveals a Creator
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 52.
MIDDLE AGES

Early in his Summa Theologica, Thomas Aquinas addresses the question of whether the existence of God is self-evident. His answer is that a thing can be self-evident in itself in two ways, either to us or not to us. God’s essence is not evident to people, but God’s essence can be demonstrated through creation. Aquinas responds to a potential objection, “To know that God exists in a general and confused way is implanted in us by nature, inasmuch as God is man’s beatitude.”

THE REFORMATION ERA

Martin Luther, like teachers during the early church and Middle Ages, affirms that all people in every place know by observing creation that there exists a Creator. Luther also distinguishes between and affirms both general and particular knowledge of God.

John Calvin taught that God implanted in every person an awareness of God. In the Institutes, he writes, “There is within the human mind, and indeed by natural instinct, an awareness of divinity.

THE CONTEMPORARY ERA

William Paley published Natural Theology. The book’s aim is apparent from its longer title, Evidences of the Existence and Attributes of the Deity, Collected from the Appearances of Nature. Just as no one looks at a watch and thinks it came into being naturally, nature demonstrates the presence of an unseen maker

Immanuel Kant explains in Critique of Practical Reason that all people possess a categorical imperative, or a moral impulse. Since being good does not always pay in this life, there must be some basis for that impulse, such as the existence of immortality, ultimate judgment, and a God who establishes and supports morality. This type of argument has been called the anthropological argument, the view that the existence of a universally known moral code within the human conscience implies a lawgiver. J. P. Moreland and William Craig revised the argument for God’s existence as a syllogism:

1. If God does not exist, objective moral values and duties would not exist.

2. Objective moral values and duties do exist.

3. Therefore, God exists.

c. THEOLOGICAL ISSUES
WHAT EXACTLY CAN BE KNOWN ABOUT GOD VIA GENERAL REVELATION?
CAN AND SHOULD ARGUMENTS FOR GOD’S EXISTENCE BE MADE VIA NATURAL THEOLOGY?
CAN A PERSON BE SAVED THROUGH CHRIST BY RESPONDING TO GENERAL REVELATION ONLY?
Natural theology
A theological approach related to general revelation is natural theology, which is the attempt to learn about God using only creation and reason as theological source
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 33

2. Special Revelation

Special revelation is God’s revelation of special truths about himself to particular people at definite times and places, by various means but primarily through Scripture, culminating in the witness of Jesus as God’s Son.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 31–32.
a. BIBLICAL SURVEY: A RECORD OF GOD’S SPECIAL REVELATION IN HISTORY
1.DIVINE SPEECH: Divine speech is a category distinct from instances in which God spoke through his prophets or by other means because it refers to instances in which God spoke without a mediator
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 83.
2.PROPHECY:God spoke to the people through prophets to declare his will, announce judgment, and provide hope.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 84–85.
3.DREAMS AND VISIONS:As examples, God spoke to Jacob in a dream (Gen 28:10–22), God spoke to Joseph through dreams (Gen 37), and God spoke to Pharaoh through dreams that Joseph interpreted (Gen 41). One of the Hebrew words that is translated into English as “prophet” is ḥōzeh (“seer”) because some people had a ḥāzôn (“vision”), such as Isaiah (Isa 1:1), Amos (Amos 7:12), Asaph (2 Chr 29:30), Gad (2 Sam 24:11), Heman (1 Chr 25:5), Iddo (2 Chr 9:29), and Jeduthun (2 Chr 35:15). The books of Isaiah and Ezekiel open with statements of divine visions (Isa 1:1; Ezek 1:1).
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 86.
4.DIVINE OR ANGELIC Appearances:theophanies
(appearances of God), Christophanies (appearances of the preincarnate Christ), and appearances of the angel of the Lord (which is sometimes combined with the previous category) or heavenly angels.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 87.
5.THE INCARNATION
6.SCRIPTURE
b. THEOLOGICAL ISSUES
DID GOD SOMETIMES REVEAL HIMSELF TO AND THROUGH UNBELIEVERS?
HOW WAS SCRIPTURE INSPIRED BY GOD?
IS SCRIPTURE INERRANT?
WHICH BOOKS SHOULD BE IN THE CANON, AND IS THE CANON CLOSED?

B .Blount, Article 1

A. Scripture

The Bible is a book of books (i.e., a book comprising many books), and the Book of books (i.e., the most important of all books). The Baptist Faith and Message 2000 rightly refers to Scripture as holy, inspired, perfect, divine, true, trustworthy, the supreme standard; it also strongly implies that Scripture is inerrant
Douglas K. Blount, Joseph D. Wooddell, and Susie Hawkins, The Baptist Faith and Message 2000: Critical Issues in America’s Largest Protestant Denomination (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2007).

1. INSPIRATION

Historically, the Church normally has taken biblical inspiration to involve more than mere human intuition or illumination. The Church Fathers, Medievals, and Reformers generally shared a robust view of inspiration. While opinions differed about whether the human agent was more passive (per dictation and verbal theories of inspiration) or active (per dynamic theories, according to which the human author freely chose words, style, etc.) in writing Scripture, almost none would say divine inspiration was merely some “higher development of man’s natural insight” (per intuition theory), or “an intensifying and elevating” of man’s “religious perceptions” (per illumination theory)
Douglas K. Blount, Joseph D. Wooddell, and Susie Hawkins, The Baptist Faith and Message 2000: Critical Issues in America’s Largest Protestant Denomination (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2007).

2. INERRANCY

Normally, inerrancy is thought to characterize only the original documents penned by the human author. But, as far as we know, we possess no such documents. How then is the doctrine of biblical inerrancy helpful, practical, or relevant? After all, if the doctrine applies only to documents, which for all we know we don’t possess, what use is it? Here again the answer is not far to seek. If the original documents speak falsely, there seems no way to determine which of their claims are true and which false. However, if the original documents were wholly truthful, then at those points on which our current manuscripts agree, we may be confident that what the text affirms is in fact true. In cases where those manuscripts do not agree, moreover, textual criticism can in nearly all such cases determine the probable reading of the original documents. And where textual criticism cannot determine the probable reading, the textual disagreements threaten no fundamental Baptist—or even orthodox Christian—doctrine.

3.RECORD OR REVELATION?

General revelation (which is available to all men) is found both in creation and conscience. Special revelation is found foremost in Christ and Scripture. The Baptist Faith and Message 2000 states that the Bible “is God’s revelation” of Himself to man, while the 1963 version states that it is “the record of” God’s revelation
Douglas K. Blount, Joseph D. Wooddell, and Susie Hawkins, The Baptist Faith and Message 2000: Critical Issues in America’s Largest Protestant Denomination (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2007).

4. THE CRITERION STATEMENT :

The most contentious revision in the Baptist Faith and Message 2000 is the deletion of the criterion statement (C), which states, “The criterion by which the Bible is to be interpreted is Jesus Christ.”
Douglas K. Blount, Joseph D. Wooddell, and Susie Hawkins, The Baptist Faith and Message 2000: Critical Issues in America’s Largest Protestant Denomination (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2007).

II. Doctrine Of God

A. Hardwood Part 2

1. Challenges to studying the Doctrine of God

a. Irreverence

b. Uncertainty

c. differences

2. The need to study the doctrine of God

a. First, God is the subject of theology etymologically. Theology is the study of God (Grk. theos). Thus, one has not studied theology until one has dealt with the doctrine of God

Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 130.

b. Second, our view of God functions as a worldview, a filter through which we interpret the world and events of life. Thus, our worldview filter should be grounded in historically orthodox and biblically reasoned views of God and his ways

Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 130.

c.Third, it is God with whom all people must eventually deal. Thus, it would be wise to improve one’s understanding of God in the present to improve one’s relationship with God and, as a result, with others

Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 130.

d. Fourth, all doctrines are interconnected with one another, and the doctrine of God is no exception. What one believes about God affects one’s understanding of Christ, the Holy Spirit, humanity, salvation, the church, and last things.

Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 130.

e.Fifth, as believers, this doctrine concerns the God who is Creator and sustainer of all things, including you.

Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 130.

3.Mapping out who God is.

a. Who God is in the trinity?

1. OLD TESTAMENT REVELATION OF THE TRIUNE GOD:In some Old Testament texts, God refers to himself in the plural, or in both singular and plural forms. In the creation account, for example, God spoke of himself using plural pronouns: “Let us make man in our image, in our likeness” (Gen 1:26a)
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 138.
Add to the preexistence of Christ the Old Testament references to the “angel of the Lord” (malʾak yhwh). It is not clear whether these were appearances of heavenly angels or whether they were preincarnate appearances of Christ, also called Christophanies. Examples of appearances of the angel of the Lord include the visitation to Hagar (Gen 16:7–14) and the wrestling with Jacob (Gen 31:11–13; 32:22–32). In favor of this figure being only a heavenly messenger, the biblical text never identifies the messenger as Christ. In some instances, however, the narrator or character declares that the person has been in the presence of God. For example, the angel of the Lord spoke to Hagar (Gen 16:7–12), then Hagar “gave this name to the LORD who spoke to her: You are the God who sees me” (Gen 16:13a). Also, “the angel of God” who appeared to Jacob in a dream declared, “I am the God of Bethel” (Gen 31:11–13). Then, Jacob wrestled “a man” and renamed the place Peniel, stating, “I saw God face to face” (32:30). In both cases, the biblical character treats the encounter with the messenger as an encounter with God himself.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 141.
2. NEW TESTAMENT REVELATION OF THE TRIUNE GOD
a.JESUS IS INCLUDED IN THE IDENTITY OF ISRAEL’S GOD:
• Jesus was honored and worshiped in ways appropriate only for God (Matt 2:2, 11; 9:18; John 5:23; 14:14).
• Attributes were predicated to Jesus that are appropriate only to God (uncreated, John 1:1–3; believing and looking at Jesus is like believing and looking at the one who sent him, John 12:44–45)
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 145.
3.THE HOLY SPIRIT IS INCLUDED WITH THE FATHER AND THE SON IN THE IDENTITY OF ISRAEL’S GOD
• The Spirit shares in the name of God (baptism is in the name [singular] of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, Matt 28:19; “the Spirit of God,” Rom 8:14).
• Attributes are predicated to the Spirit that are appropriate only to God (eternity, Heb 9:14; knows all things/thoughts, 1 Cor 2:10–12).
• The Spirit acts in ways only God can act (gives life, John 6:63; rebirth and renewal, Titus 3:5).
• The Spirit is in a divine position (the Son offered himself to the Father through the Spirit, Heb 9:14; the agent of the Virgin Mary’s conception of Jesus, Matt 1:18, 20; Luke 1:35)
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 146.

The doctrine of the Trinity can be stated as follows: God, who is Father, Son, and Spirit, is one. The unity of the Trinity can be seen in each person of the Godhead sharing fully in the divine nature; the Father, Son, and Spirit are each fully and eternally God. The diversity of the Trinity can be seen in the distinctions among the persons of the Trinity; the persons of the Trinity should not be confused with one another.

b. God’s Name

We consider God’s identity by affirming God is a personal and relational being, surveying Scripture on God’s name and names, and examining a key biblical text.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 160.
1. GOD’S NAMES IN THE OLD TESTAMEMNT:
a. El :Also, many other titles are built on those two names. El (“God”) appears in the plural form (Elohim) in the Old Testament twenty-six hundred times. More than two thousand of those occurrences refer to the God of Israel (Gen 31:29; 33:20; Num 12:13), but the word also refers to the gods of other nations (Exod 15:11; Ps 44:20) and the gods of Yahweh’s assembly (Ps 82:1, 6; 89:5–8). Elohim is the first occurrence of God’s name in Scripture
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 164.
b. Yahweh:.
• Yahweh Elohim—the LORD God, Genesis 2:4
• Yahweh Yireh—the LORD will provide, Genesis 22:14
• Yahweh Rophe—the LORD who heals you, Exodus 15:26
• Yahweh Nissi—the LORD is my Banner, Exodus 17:15
• Yahweh Shalom—the LORD is Peace, Judges 6:24
• Yahweh Roiy—the LORD is my shepherd, Psalm 23:1
• Yahweh Tsidqenu—the LORD is our righteousness, Jeremiah 23:6
• Yahweh Shammah—the LORD is there, Ezekiel 48:35
• Yahweh Sabaoth—the LORD of armies, Zechariah 4:
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 165–166.
Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic Chapter Summary > Chapter 5: God’s Name

God is a relational and personal being. His name—progressively revealed through names, metaphors, and titles—represents and reveals God. The fullest revelation was the name of Jesus.

c. God’s Attributes

1.GOD IS HOLY:Scripture explicitly says God is holy. Moses and the Israelites sing, “Who among the gods is like you, LORD? Who is like you—majestic in holiness, awesome in glory, working wonders?” (Exod 15:11). God’s ways are holy (Ps 77:13) and God is holy (Josh 24:19; Ps 99:9). Moses was required to remove his shoes at the burning bush because God’s presence extended holiness to the ground on which he stood (Exod 3:5). Isaiah saw a vision of God high and lifted up, and seraphim called out an early Trisagion (Grk. trisagion, “thrice holy”), a triple-declaration of God’s holiness (Isa 6:3). In John’s vision, creatures call out continuously, “Holy, holy, holy is the Lord God Almighty, who was, and is, and is to come” (Rev 4:8
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 179–180.
2. God is love: Scripture declares, “God is love” (1 John 4:8, 16)
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 181.
3.GOD IS JUST
4. GOD IS SELF-EXISTING
5. God is unchangeing
God’s attributes are descriptions of his nature. God is the holy, loving, just, self-existing, unchanging, eternal, all-present, all-powerful, all-knowing, Creator.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 201.
d. God in creation
Any biblical foundation of creation should begin with the bare assertion, “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth” (Gen 1:1). Although this assertion simply repeats the first verse of the Bible, it is important to highlight this verse because it has become a long-standing confession of the church.
Additionally, God created ex nihilo (Latin, “out of nothing”), or without the use of preexisting materials. Such a view can be derived from verses such as Romans 4:17; 2 Corinthians 4:6, and Hebrews 11:3. In Romans 4:17c, Paul refers to “the God who gives life to the dead and calls into being things that were not.” Although this verse concerns God calling out a nation from Abraham, consider that Abraham and Sarah were unable to have children in their old age. In the context of that verse, God gave life to the dead in the sense that he gave children to a barren couple. Although Paul was not referring to God creating all things out of nothing, the second part of that phrase is relevant when considering the act of creation: God called into being things that were not, which is the precise issue when claiming that God created ex nihilo.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 206–207.

B. Blount Article 2.1

A. God

1. THAT GOD EXHAUSTIVELY KNOWS THE FUTURE
The divide separating open theists from traditional theists thus turns out to be deep and wide. In affirming exhaustive divine foreknowledge, the Baptist Faith and Message 2000 places its adherents squarely on the orthodox side of that divide. According to the London Confession (1644), “God hath decreed in himselfe from everlasting touching all things, effectually to work and dispose them according to the counsell of his owne will, to the glory of his name. . . .” Such was the God of Baptists in the seventeenth century; and such also is the God of Baptists at the beginning of the twenty-first century.
Douglas K. Blount, Joseph D. Wooddell, and Susie Hawkins, The Baptist Faith and Message 2000: Critical Issues in America’s Largest Protestant Denomination (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2007).

2. THAT GOD IS TRIUNE

The 2000 edition rectifies this problem by inserting ‘triune’ in the last sentence of Article II’s first paragraph—which now states, “The eternal triune God reveals Himself to us as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, with distinct personal attributes, but without division of nature, essence, or being” (emphasis added)—thus making explicit the Baptist rejection of modalism

Unlike the confession’s articles on, say, Baptism and the Lord’s Supper or Religious Liberty, its article on God does not set Southern Baptists apart from other Christians. For when it comes to their doctrine of God, Southern Baptists do not wish to stand outside the mainstream of historic, orthodox Christianity. On the contrary, they seek to dwell within the midst of that stream. So while the Baptist Faith and Message 2000—like its predecessors—distinguishes Baptist faith and practice from that of other communities of Christians, Article II functions primarily to situate its adherents within the midst of the broader community of historic, orthodox Christianity. Although Baptists are not merely Christian, neither are they less than Christian

III. The Doctrine of Christ

A. Harwood Part IV.

1.four theological-hermeneutical assumptions and explanations

a.First, Jesus was and is God. The early church worshiped Jesus and considered him to be divine, not because particular creeds claimed he was God. Instead, the early church worshiped Jesus and affirmed he was and is divine because they saw it in the Scripture interpreted in light of the resurrection.

Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 386.

b. Second, the Bible is a reliable record of the life and ministry of Jesus. Some questions concerning textual variants in the manuscript tradition are difficult to answer, and the historical-religious context of the first century might never be known fully. Even so, those difficulties do not preclude one from affirming that the Bible was inspired by God and is a trustworthy account of Yahweh, his relationship with Israel, and Israel’s Messiah Jesus

Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 387.

c. Third, the New Testament provides the historical witness for understanding the person and work of Jesus. This data does not distinguish between the person of Christ and the work of Christ. The New Testament simply testifies of Jesus.

Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 387.

d. The present study proceeds with a survey of the New Testament, in which the authors present the divinity and lordship of Christ as well as his earthly life along with noting how his birth and ministry fulfilled Old Testament promises. Thus, one is not required to choose among the options of whether to do Christology from above, below, or behind.

Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 388.

2. THE PERSON OF CHRIST New Testament Survey

a. The New Testament provides a variety of complementary portraits of Jesus. In Matthew, Jesus is Israel’s long-awaited Messiah, who inaugurates and teaches about the kingdom of heaven as well as fulfills Old Testament promises by his birth, life, death, and resurrection for sins. In Mark’s Gospel, Jesus is the Son of Man who has all power and authority, yet he gave his life as a ransom for many. Luke’s Gospel reveals reversals and surprises in the ministry of Jesus, the greatest of which is when the Son of God is killed, and then he kills death by his resurrection. In the book of Acts, believers are empowered by the Spirit in their witness of Jesus to all people, as seen in the ethno-geographic expansion of the gospel as well as the speeches of Peter, Stephen, and Paul. In John’s Gospel and letters, Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God, who gives life to those who believe in his name. For Paul, Jesus is Lord and Christ, who died for sinners. The audience of the book of Hebrews is warned that in Jesus, God’s provision for people is superior in every way to the old covenant. James, Peter, and Jude together testify to Jesus as the Lord, who is coming for his suffering people. The book of Revelation provides a graphic depiction of the victory of God in Jesus Christ.

Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 407–408

b. THEOLOGICAL ISSUES IN THE DOCTRINE OF THE PERSON OF CHRIST

1. Docetism: not human
2. Apollinarianism: Not fully human
3. Eboionism: Not God
4. Arianism: Not Fully God
5. Nestorianism: two Persons
6. Eutychaniam: Two Natures
7. Wasn’t Virgin Born:The scientific objection is that it is not possible to create human life from the material of only one parent. In reply, those who affirm the virgin birth also tend to affirm that a heavenly angel visited Mary and Joseph. Also, the theological backstory is more shocking than a virgin conception: God became flesh. The virgin birth naturally raises scientific objections because scientists observe natural occurrences, but the virgin birth would have been a miracle—an incident that transcends typical patterns
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 418.
8. Jesus Sinless :In the end we must affirm the two propositions with which we began: (1) Jesus was genuinely tempted, and (2) Jesus did not sin. Scripture does not address directly the “could he have sinned” question, and we should rest content in what has been revealed to us. Second Corinthians 5:21 and Hebrews 4:15 make clear that Jesus was sinless. This is the nonnegotiable teaching of the Bible
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 426.

3. Work of Christ

A proper study of the work of Christ should begin with the death and resurrection of Jesus because the primary reason he became flesh was to die. Although it is true that Jesus revealed the Father, healed the sick, and taught the crowds, his primary mission was to die. By his death and resurrection, Jesus defeated the powers of sin, death, and Satan; he inaugurated the kingdom of heaven; and he offered himself as the perfect sacrifice so that sinful humans could be forgiven, cleansed, and restored to a right relationship with their loving and holy Creator.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 429.

a. Death and Resurrection

1.First, it is important to establish that Jesus actually died. Some people affirm a version of the swoon theory that Jesus was only wounded and fell into a condition in which his heart rate slowed down so that he only appeared to have died
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 430.
2.Second, Jesus was not an unwilling victim. Rather, he clearly gave his life for the sins of the world. Jesus identified himself as the good shepherd who lays down his life for his sheep (John 10). Christ’s death on the cross was a demonstration of God’s love for sinners (Rom 5:8). Jesus was not an unwilling victim. Rather, he willingly gave his life as a payment for sin.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 430.
3.Clearly, the weight of historical and medical evidence indicates that Jesus was dead before the wound to his side was inflicted and supports the traditional view that the spear, thrust between his right ribs, probably perforated not only the right lung but also the pericardium and heart and thereby ensured his death. Accordingly, interpretations based on the assumption that Jesus did not die on the cross appear to be at odds with modern medical knowledge.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 433.
4.Interestingly, the biblical accounts provide no eyewitnesses of the event of the resurrection. Instead, the resurrection is an event that is believed as a matter of both faith and reason. The resurrection is a matter of faith in the sense that it is believed and affirmed by Christians even with no eyewitnesses to the event itself. The resurrection is a matter of reason in this sense: it is not necessary to produce any eyewitness claims because if one establishes that Jesus was genuinely alive in a glorified body after he was genuinely dead, then he must have been raised. If Jesus had not been raised, then Christians are still dead in their sins, and physical death will be their end. But if Jesus was raised, then Christians have the hope that they too will be raised because they have been united with him through repentance and faith. Also, if Jesus was raised from the dead, then physical death will be the beginning of the rest of their lives. Everything about Christianity depends on the resurrection of Jesus from the dead.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 433–434.

b. Atonement in the Bible

We survey the theme of atonement, or the reconciliation of humanity to God as found in the Old Testament; describe how Jesus fulfilled the Old Testament sacrificial system; and then conclude with a review of the concept of atonement in the New Testament.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 434.
1. The Old Testatment
Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic The Law > Biblical Survey of the Atonement

Genesis 3:21 reveals another picture of God’s mercy when he provided clothing for Adam and Eve to cover their nakedness. This is an example of implied atonement. A garment of skin would have come from an animal. The killing of an animal in order to make garments to cover their shame after their sin implies an animal sacrifice to atone for sin.

Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic The Law > Biblical Survey of the Atonement

In Exodus 11–12, God provides for atonement through the application of the blood of the Passover Lamb above the doorposts to save households from his judgment through the death angel. We observe themes of God’s sovereignty, the judgment of sin, and God’s people marked by blood (Exod 12:13) and ransomed from slavery (Exod 12:15) by the blood of an unblemished lamb. In Exodus 25–30, God provides specific instructions for the layout and ceremonies of the tabernacle, which demonstrates that people approach God on his terms, not on their terms.

Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic The Law > Biblical Survey of the Atonement

Day of Atonement (Lev 16–17

2.THE PROPHETS
• “He did not commit sin, neither was deceit found in his mouth” (Isa 53:9 LXX; quoted in 1 Pet 2:22).
• “He did not retaliate” (Isa 53:7c); “he did not make threats” (53:7d); “trusted” (53:4a, 12) “the one who judges justly” (53:8a); these may be allusions in 1 Peter 2:23.
• Peter conflates, “he himself … bore” (Isa 53:12) and “our sins” (53:4). The resulting quotation from Peter is, “He himself bore our sins in his own body on the tree” (1 Pet 2:24a).
• Peter, quoting Isaiah 53:5 LXX and MT, employs “you” rather than “we” when he declares, “by his wounds you have been healed” (1 Pet 2:24c).
• Peter tells the believers, “For you were like wandering sheep” (1 Pet 2:25). This language draws from Isaiah 53:6a as well as (perhaps) Isaiah 40:10–11; Ezekiel 34; and Psalm 23.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 437–438.
3. New testament

Jesus came to give his life a ransom (Matt 20:17–19, 28; Mark 10:45). In John 1:29, John the Baptist declared, “Look, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!” Leon Morris offers the following nine possibilities for understanding the phrase “Lamb of God”: the Passover lamb; the Isaiah 53:7 lamb; the Isaiah 53 servant of the Lord; the lamb of the daily sacrifices in the temple; the “gentle lamb” of Jeremiah 11:19; the scapegoat (which was not a lamb); the triumphant lamb in Revelation; the God-provided lamb of Genesis 22:8 (Isaac asked about a lamb, but God provided a ram); a guilt offering (Lev 14:24) or sin offering. Morris concludes that the expression is “definitely sacrificial,

Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic Paul’s Letters > Biblical Survey of the Atonement

According to Paul, the death of Jesus was a demonstration of God’s righteousness and love (Rom 3:25; 5:8). Jesus died for all and became sin that sinners might become the righteousness of God (2 Cor 5:14–21). In Galatians 3:10, 13, Paul explains that Jesus became a curse for us. At the cross, God provided redemption for adoption (Gal 4:5), God provided redemption through Jesus’s blood (Eph 1:7), and God reconciles us to each other and to himself (Eph 2:16).

Christ, the just, suffered for us, the unjust (1 Pet 3:18–21). Jesus was the propitiation for the sins of the world (1 John 2:1–2). The final book of the New Testament ends with images of Jesus as the slain Lamb, whose blood brought redemption (Rev 5:9; 7:14) as well as the defeat of Satan (Rev 12:11), and who will return soon (Rev 22:7, 12, 20).

4.Church History
Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic Chapter Summary > Chapter 17: The Work of Christ: Historical Survey of Atonement Models

Throughout the history of the church, Christian thinkers have attempted to describe Christ’s work accomplished at the cross by focusing on certain biblical-theological models. In this chapter, we surveyed eight models of the atonement: ransom, Christus Victor, satisfaction, moral influence, example, governmental, substitution, and penal substitution.

5.In his life and ministry, Jesus fulfilled the offices of prophet, priest, and king. Though all Christians affirm that Christ died for sinners, they differ concerning the intent and extent of the atonement. Those who affirm particular atonement say God the Father sent the Son to die for the sins of and to accomplish the salvation of his elect only. Those who affirm general atonement say God the Father sent the Son to die for the sins of every person so that any person who repents and believes will become one of God’s elect.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 485.
Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic The Contemporary Significance of the Doctrine of Christ

First, because of the incarnation of the eternal Son, God the Father can be known

Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic The Contemporary Significance of the Doctrine of Christ

Second, Jesus is the prototype for humanity. Christians sometimes wrongly think of themselves as the model for humanity and wonder whether Jesus can truly relate to the human condition. Such a view is exactly backward

Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic The Contemporary Significance of the Doctrine of Christ

Third, the incarnation of the eternal Son reveals God’s free and loving desire to know and be known by his creatures.

B. Blount Article 2.2

1.THAT CHRIST IS GOD AND MAN

a.Setting forth the early church’s understanding of the Christ of Scripture, the Symbol of Chalcedon remains the classic statement of orthodox Christology. According to it, Jesus Christ is “truly God and truly man.”

Douglas K. Blount, Joseph D. Wooddell, and Susie Hawkins, The Baptist Faith and Message 2000: Critical Issues in America’s Largest Protestant Denomination (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2007).

In the end, then, one can affirm the 1963 edition of the Baptist Faith and Message without affirming an orthodox Christology. This sad fact explains the changes in Article II §B of the 2000 edition concerning the nature of Christ. As Baptists have long affirmed, Jesus of Nazareth is not merely a partaker of human nature. He is not merely partly human; He is rather fully human. He did not merely take on the demands and necessities of human nature; rather, He took on that very nature itself. Yet in doing so, He nonetheless remained fully divine. So says the Baptist Faith and Message 2000; and so say Southern Baptists as a people.

IV.The Doctrine of The Holy Spirit

A. Haywood Part 5

1. Biblical Survey of Holy Spirit person and work

a. Old testament survey

In the books of the Law, Prophets, and Writings, God’s Spirit would “come upon” certain people to empower them to serve God or speak his word. There is no indication in the Old Testament that most followers of the Lord were indwelt with God’s Spirit. Rather, he came upon certain people at certain times for particular tasks.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 495.

b.New testament Survey

In the New Testament, the person and work of the Holy Spirit are intimately related to God the Father and the Son. The Son, who was sent by and accomplished the will of the Father, was empowered and indwelled by the Spirit. The same Spirit who empowered Jesus while he accomplished ministry in his earthly body also empowers his body, the church, in its witness of Jesus throughout the earth. The Spirit indwells and empowers believers to do the Father’s work on earth. That work includes Spirit-filled living and Spirit-filled preaching about the Son, who gave himself for sinners. God redeems, transforms, and sanctifies people today by the power and work of his Spirit through his people.

In the Old Testament, God’s Spirit came upon certain people to empower them to serve God or speak his word. In the New Testament, the person and work of the Holy Spirit are intimately related to God the Father and the Son. The Son, who was sent by and accomplished the will of the Father, was empowered and indwelled by the Spirit. The same Spirit who empowered Jesus while he accomplished ministry in his earthly body also empowers his body, the church, in its witness throughout the earth for Jesus.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 511.

2. Historical Survey

We will consider selected writings and theologians from the early, medieval, and early modern eras of the church. The historical survey will conclude by briefly mentioning the contemporary renewal movement.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 513.

a. Apostolic Fathers

The prominent theme in these writings was the Spirit’s work of inspiration—both during and following the biblical period. For example, 1 Clement contains several statements in which Old or New Testament texts are quoted, and the author of 1 Clement attributes the words to the Holy Spirit
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 513.

b. Early Apologist

1. Justin Martyr: wrote Dialogue with Trypho in the format of a conversation. In Dialogue 4, Trypho asks, “Will the mind of man see God at any time, if it is uninstructed by the Holy Spirit?” In reply, Justin mentions that prophets filled with the Holy Spirit spoke what they heard and saw. Justin also wrote this phrase when quoting from the prophet Isaiah, “as the Holy Spirit, by the mouth of Isaiah, cries, speaking thus while he personates them.” In that text, Justin revealed his view that the Holy Spirit both spoke through and indwelled Isaiah. Justin indicts Trypho’s Jewish teachers because of their rejection of Jesus the Christ and Son of God as “convicted by the Holy Spirit of inability to perceive the truths taught by God.” Further, the Holy Spirit declared by the prophet Isaiah that the virgin would have a son, fulfilled in Christ
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 514–515.
2. Athenagoras: argues against the charge of atheism and for the Christian view of God as uncreated and who “framed all things by the Logos, and holds them in being by His Spirit.” Also, Athenagoras refers to the prophets, who were “guided by the Spirit of God” and “who moved the mouths of the prophets like musical instruments.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 515.

c. Church Fathers

1. Irenaeus: views on the Holy Spirit are seen in his responses to the gnostics and early adoptionists. Irenaeus emphasizes the Spirit’s work in creation, in the life of Jesus, and in the revelation of prophecy and Scripture
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 516.
2. Tertullian :summarized the “rule of faith” by explaining that the one God created all things through the Word, his Son, who was “brought down by the Spirit and Power of the Father into the Virgin Mary” and who sent “the Power of the Holy Ghost to lead such as believe.” For Tertullian, the Spirit was active in the incarnation of Christ as well as his ministry, and then the Spirit led those who would believe in Jesus after his ascension to the Father.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 517.
3. Basil of Caesarea responded to doubts about the full divinity of the Spirit in his work On the Holy Spirit. Basil accused a group of heresy16 because they argued from three prepositional phrases (from whom, through whom, and in whom) that Scripture indicates differences in nature among the Father, the Son, and the Spirit. Through an abundance of biblical quotations, Basil demonstrates that the phrases are not limited to the person, as attributed by his opponents. The references in Scripture to the Father, Son, and Spirit do not indicate differences in nature. Basil points to the biblical references to the Spirit as well as the Father and Son at baptism, the indivisibility of the Spirit from the Father and the Son, and argues against the “sub-numeration” (ontological subordination) of the Spirit to the Father or the Son. Finally, Basil argues, Scripture uses the term “Lord” when referring to the activity of the Spirit, and—like the Father and the Son—the Spirit is beyond comprehension
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 518.
4. Augustine: views on the Holy Spirit are best discerned by considering his views on the Trinity, to which he gave a considerable amount of thought, reflected in his work On the Trinity. Augustine clarifies that whatever one affirms about one person of the Trinity, one also affirms about the others because they are of the same essence.21 For Augustine, neither the Father nor the Son is more true than the Spirit, and neither the Father nor the Son is greater than the Spirit; the persons of the Trinity are equally true and great
The church fathers surveyed above worked out their doctrine of the Holy Spirit in the context of errant teachings
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 520.

d. Medieval theologians

Medieval theologians understood the Holy Spirit to be one of the persons of the Trinity who ministered to Jesus and believers, and who imparted gifts for growth in the knowledge of God and service to others. Claims of personal experiences of Pentecost, baptism in the Spirit, and prophetic visions occurred during the middle ages, exemplified in the life and ministry of Hildegard of Bingen.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 523.

e. EARLY MODERN THEOLOGIANS

Early modern theologians such as Luther emphasized the teachings of Scripture when addressing claims of extrabiblical revelation. Others, such as George Fox, preferred such revelations and experiences with the Spirit to the teachings of Scripture. John Wesley’s evangelistic ministry attempted to strike a balance of elevating the teachings of Scripture without dismissing claims of extrabiblical revelation or unusual manifestations of the Spirit’s ministry. Edward Irving’s eagerness for manifestations such as tongue-speaking and physical healing, as well as his emphasis on the imminent return of Christ, anticipated the renewal movement.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 527.

f. THE RENEWAL MOVEMENT

The term renewal movement refers to the current global charismatic-Pentecostal movement of theology and practice expressed at Azusa Street in 1906, among other places.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 528.

3. THEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF THE HOLY SPIRIT’S PERSON AND WORK

Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic Chapter Summary > Chapter 21: Theological Survey of the Holy Spirit’s Person and Work

The Holy Spirit is the Third Person of the Trinity, who is personal and can be grieved. The Spirit’s work in salvation includes conviction, conversion, sanctification, and empowerment. He baptizes, fills, and seals believers. The Spirit gifts believers for the advance of God’s work and the benefit of others. Christians differ on whether the miraculous gifts that occurred in the first century should be expected in the twenty-first century. Cessationists say, “no”; continuationists say, “yes”; contextualists say, “sometimes.”

B. Blount Article 2.3

Given the significance of Article II, then, it comes as no surprise that it contains some of the most significant changes made to the confession. To be sure, some of the changes in it simply update the article’s language. So, for instance, in §C—the section of Article II dealing with the Holy Spirit—the 1963 edition’s affirmation that the Spirit’s “presence in the Christian is the assurance of God to bring the believer into the fulness of the stature of Christ” becomes the 2000 edition’s affirmation that the Spirit’s “presence in the Christian is the guarantee that God will bring the believer into the fullness of the stature of Christ” (emphases added).
Douglas K. Blount, Joseph D. Wooddell, and Susie Hawkins, The Baptist Faith and Message 2000: Critical Issues in America’s Largest Protestant Denomination (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2000

V.Doctrine of Humanity

A. Harwood Part 3

The doctrine of humanity should be studied because people matter to God
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 276.

1. Human Identity and construction

a. What are human beings

1.Made in God’s image:Though mentioned in only five biblical texts, the idea that people are made in God’s image is a fundamental belief, affirmed by Jews, Muslims, and Christians. The Bible affirms but does not define what it means to be made in God’s image. Genesis 1:26–27 states, “Then God said, ‘Let us make mankind [ʾādām] in our image [ṣelem], in our likeness [dəmût], so that they may rule over the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky, over the livestock and all the wild animals, and over all the creatures that move along the ground.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 283.

b.What are people made of?

Being made in God’s image also indicates its purpose of relationship with God. Oliver Crisp notes that Christ’s incarnation entails the union of both the image of God and “the blueprint for all other human natures.” He observes that “all human beings are given a nature that has the requisite image of God so that God the Son may unite himself with human nature.” Crisp concludes, “Human nature is created in order that it might reflect the divine image and be united to God.” People are made to be in a relationship with God. As Augustine famously prayed, “You have made us for yourself, and our heart is restless until it rests in you

Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic Chapter Summary > Chapter 10: Human Identity and Constitution

People are created in the image of God and for a relationship with God and others.

God created humans in his image as male and female. The resulting distortion of male-female relations is seen in patriarchy, polygamy, and abuse. The status of women is elevated above the cultural views of women in the Old and New Testaments. Though Christians affirm the equal value and legitimacy of women serving in Christian ministry, they differ on whether women should lead and teach men in the church and home. God designed humans for covenant faithfulness to God and others, whether single or married. The distortion of God’s design for singleness and marriage is seen in sexual relations outside marriage as well as divorce.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 338.

The Bible chronicles the universal problem and effects of human sin as well as God’s solution in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus.

Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic Chapter Summary > Chapter 13: Original Sin: A Biblical, Historical, and Theological Analysis

In this chapter, I summarized and critiqued the views and biblical interpretations of Augustine, whose views have significantly influenced the Christian tradition. I also presented six major views on original sin. Though Christians differ on whether and in what ways subsequent generations are affected by the first couple’s sin, Christians should be united in declaring that all people are sinners in need of God’s grace that is available only through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus. As these doctrinal discussions continue, may God’s people be faithful witnesses of the crucified, risen, and returning Son.

B. Blount articles 3,18

A. Article 3

1.Changes from the 1963 edition to the 2000 edition are minimal. The 2000 edition of Article III replaces a single sentence in the 1963 edition, “Man was created by the special act of God, in His own image, and is the crowning work of His creation,” with two sentences: “Man is the special creation of God, made in His own image. He created them male and female as the crowning work of His creation.” It also adds the sentence: “The gift of gender is thus part of the goodness of God’s creation.” It then replaces yet another sentence, “Through the temptation of Satan man transgressed the command of God, and fell from his original innocence; whereby his posterity inherit a nature and an environment inclined toward sin, and as soon as they are capable of moral action become transgressors and are under condemnation,” with two sentences: “Through the temptation of Satan man transgressed the command of God, and fell from his original innocence whereby his posterity inherit a nature and an environment inclined toward sin

Douglas K. Blount, Joseph D. Wooddell, and Susie Hawkins, The Baptist Faith and Message 2000: Critical Issues in America’s Largest Protestant Denomination (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2007).

2. Marriage:God’s plan for marriage, inaugurated in Genesis and reaffirmed in the New Testament (Gen. 2:24; Matt. 19:5; Mark 10:6–8; Eph. 5:31) has three parts:

•  leaving father and mother, the public proclamation of commitment, the wedding celebration of the exclusive union that takes priority over every other earthly relationship;
•  cleaving or clinging to one another, the personal development of growing in love and commitment to each other;
•  the climactic one-flesh sexual and physical union; the highest intimacy, which is to be shared only by husband and wife.
Douglas K. Blount, Joseph D. Wooddell, and Susie Hawkins, The Baptist Faith and Message 2000: Critical Issues in America’s Largest Protestant Denomination (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2007).

3.Husbands:God commands husbands to love their wives as Christ loves the church (Eph. 5:25). This love, which is protective, nurturing, serving, and edifying, is not replaced with, but accompanied by, headship. This headship calls the husband to a loving servant leadership in which he cares responsibly for his wife’s spiritual, emotional, and physical needs.

As defined in Scripture, the husband’s headship was established by God before the Fall; it was not the result of sin (Gen. 2:15–17; see also Num. 1:2–3,17–19). His responsibility is to be assumed with humility and administered with a servant’s heart; it is not a right to be demanded with unbridled pride or pursued with oppressive tyranny. The wife is to respond with submission to her husband’s loving headship and with honor and respect for his God-given leadership (Eph. 5:21–22,33; 1 Pet. 3:1–4).
Douglas K. Blount, Joseph D. Wooddell, and Susie Hawkins, The Baptist Faith and Message 2000: Critical Issues in America’s Largest Protestant Denomination (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2007).

Wives, on the other hand, were created to be “helpers” to their husbands (Gen. 2:18). The term “helper,” which is also used by God to identify Himself (Exod. 18:4; Deut. 33:7), describes the woman God created to become a partner with the man in the overwhelming task of exercising dominion over the world and extending the generations (Gen. 1:28; 2:18). When you call upon God to be your “Helper,” you are not suggesting that He divest Himself of His deity and supernatural powers. Rather you ask Him to come to your aid with the powers of His divine person. There is no hint of inferiority in the term

Douglas K. Blount, Joseph D. Wooddell, and Susie Hawkins, The Baptist Faith and Message 2000: Critical Issues in America’s Largest Protestant Denomination (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2007).

VI. Doctrine of Salvation

A. Haywood Part 6

1. What is salvation?

The Bible contains the following words and images for salvation: deliverance, entrance into God’s kingdom, new life, belonging to God’s family, forgiveness of sin, reconciliation to God, redemption from sin, sanctification, transformation, righteousness, and participation.

Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 576.

2. Predestination and Election the How and Why

Predestination is God’s choice of persons for eternal life or eternal death.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 581.

The word “predestine” occurs only six times in the Bible, all in the New Testament.

Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic Conclusion > Predestination in the Bible

As demonstrated by examining the occurrences of the word in the Bible, predestination does not refer to God selecting individuals for salvation. Rather, predestination refers to God’s promises for believers.

a. ELECTION IN THEOLOGY

Augustinian predestination was adopted by some of the Protestant Reformers and is known as the Calvinist-Arminian view of election. Though these perspectives are often portrayed as competing alternatives, they share many presuppositions. According to this framework, election concerns God’s choice from eternity of the salvation of individuals. Both groups insist that God’s grace is prior to the salvation of sinners. Calvinists affirm effectual grace (God unilaterally converts some sinners), and Arminians affirm prevenient grace (God enables a person to repent and believe). Calvinists affirm unconditional election, God’s choice of individuals for salvation, based on nothing about them—including God’s knowledge of how they will respond to the message of the gospel. Arminians affirm conditional election, God’s choice of individuals for salvation, based on their response to the message of the gospel. Both perspectives presuppose that election refers to God’s choice of certain individuals for salvation.40 Though Calvinists and Arminians differ at some points, their shared understanding of election as God’s choice of certain individuals for salvation unites them. Both perspectives are vulnerable if their definition of election is not required by faithful interpretations of the Scripture.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 591–592.

b. Election in the Bible

1.GOD’S CHOICE OF ABRAM
2.GOD’S CHOICE Individuals
3. GOD’S CHOICE OF A NATION
4.GOD’S CHOSEN PEOPLE

3. decretal theology model

God decreed all events, including the salvation of certain individuals, before creating the world.
Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 619.

4. THE ORDO SALUTIS: (“order of salvation”), which refers to the sequence of events in an individual’s salvation. The ordo salutis concerns the logical rather than the temporal sequence of events. The phrase “logical sequence” refers to events as conceived of and planned by God, in contrast to the order in which those events are experienced by humans in time.

Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 621.

5. whosoever will model:God loves and desires to save every person, Christ died for every person, and anyone can respond in repentance and faith to the message of the gospel and be saved.

Adam Harwood, Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2022), 630.
Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic Spiritual Death and the Inability to Respond

All Christians, Jew or Gentile, once lived according to the desires of “our flesh,” by which he means carrying out in actions one’s sinful inclinations. Thus “we,” which clearly refers to Jews, were once “children of wrath by nature like everyone else.” It should be clear that Paul does not mean that people were destined for wrath, since he is talking about himself and in this case other Jewish Christians. He means that they were acting in a fallen way like those who deserved God’s wrath.

Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic Chapter Summary > Chapter 24: Historical Survey and Issue in the Doctrine of Salvation

In the early church, salvation was commonly understood as theosis, which refers to the view that God became a human so humans could be transformed by the Holy Spirit to become like God and participate in God forever. According to Augustine’s later writings, God gives faith to and justifies selected sinners. Martin Luther emphasized justification by faith alone. The Calvinist-Arminian dialogue that crested at the Synod of Dort corresponds roughly to the decretal theology and whosoever will models of salvation presented in the chapter.

B. Blount Articles 4,5,13

A confession of faith is like a mirror held up to an age. Like a mirror it reveals a great deal about ourselves and the age in which we live. Our epoch is resistant to particularity and distrustful of claims to universal truth. Nevertheless, the church’s responsibility is to maintain the apostolic witness in the face of contemporary challenges to truth-telling. In the end, the sum and substance of the article on salvation in the Baptist Faith and Message 2000 is something every authentic believer—and surely every authentic Baptist—can instantly understand and gladly affirm—Jesus saves.

VII. Doctrine of the church

A. Bibilical and historical Survey The nature and marks of the church

Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic Chapter Summary > Chapter 25: Biblical and Historical Survey: The Nature and Marks of the Church

In the Old Testament, God’s people were united to him by covenant, elected for service, and on mission to the nations. In the New Testament, God’s people were linked to the previous group through covenant, election, and mission, as well as Israel’s Messiah. The church is represented in the New Testament by various images, including the family of God, the people of God, the body of Christ, and the temple of the Spirit. The marks of the church are one, holy, catholic, apostolic, proper preaching, proper administration of the sacraments, and regenerate church membership.

B.MINISTRIES AND ORDINANCES

Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic Chapter Summary > Chapter 26: Ministries and Ordinances

The church’s primary ministries are worship, proclamation, evangelism and missions, edification, and care. To the extent that local churches are engaged in these ministries, they are engaged in the purposes to which God has called his people. The two ordinances observed by most Christians are baptism and the Lord’s Supper. The major views of the ordinances are Roman Catholic, Lutheran, Reformed, and symbolic. Though Christians differ in their theology and practice of the ordinances, Christians are united in their focus on the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus to reconcile sinners to God.

C. STructures within and among the church

Christian Theology: Biblical, Historical, and Systematic Chapter Summary > Chapter 27: Structures within and among Churches

Churches are composed of members who organize according to three major forms of polity: episcopal, presbyterian, and congregational. Churches can relate to one another by remaining independent, voluntarily associating, networking for resources, or through multisite congregations. Churches should be led by pastors and served by deacons.

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