Maybe our real heroes were forced into janitorial service

Anthony Weiner Scandal: C’mon, America, Nobody’s Perfect – The Daily Beast.

Here’s the picture:

 

Compare and contrast

OK, I want to know: would the civil rights movement never happened without Martin Luther King Jr? Would we still have Democrats ruling a segregated South?

I don’t believe it.

How do we know that Martin Luther King, Jr.’s real gift wasn’t seeing a means to ascension and jumping on it?

How do we know?

For all we know there were other possible leaders who were truly of heroic character as well as integrity who lived and died in obscurity because MLK elbowed his way in.

All of this is speculative. It requires biographical and historical research before anything more could be said. But those questions immediately come to mind in response to the argument Lee Stiegal uses.

Every time we endorse flawed “heroes” we turn our backs on others and encourage people not to care about their own flaws.

[Addendum: This post by Doug Wilson led me to the article.]

 

So when will Weiner get to lead a pride parade?

Anyone hear that Weiner was just  born that way?

Anyone claim that he has a sexual orientation and that his critics are all cyberexhibitiophobes?

One would almost think people believed that a man/husband/father has a public and objective calling to which he has a duty to respond and to which his sexual impulses should be harnessed.

But that can’t possibly be right. Our sexual natures are just given to us apart from our will in the matter and have nothing to do with biology or duty. That is the modern Faith.

Every once in a long while we get a public scandal and media response which is like Gideon sneaking into the Midianite camp.

Pentecost

Then the cloud covered the tent of meeting, and the glory of the Lord filled the tabernacle. And Moses was not able to enter the tent of meeting because the cloud settled on it, and the glory of the Lord filled the tabernacle.

As soon as Solomon finished his prayer, fire came down from heaven and consumed the burnt offering and the sacrifices, and the glory of the Lord filled the temple.  And the priests could not enter the house of the Lord, because the glory of the Lord filled the Lord’s house.  When all the people of Israel saw the fire come down and the glory of the Lord on the temple, they bowed down with their faces to the ground on the pavement and worshiped and gave thanks to the Lord, saying, “For he is good, for his steadfast love endures forever.”

When the day of Pentecost arrived, they were all together in one place. And suddenly there came from heaven a sound like a mighty rushing wind, and it filled the entire house where they were sitting. And divided tongues as of fire appeared to them and rested on each one of them. And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other tongues as the Spirit gave them utterance.

John Calvin & Paedocommunion

John Calvin writes in the Institutes about the possibility of admitting children to the Lord’s Supper by virtue of their baptism once and only once:

At length they object, that there is not greater reason for admitting infants to baptism than to the Lord’s Supper, to which, however, they are never admitted: as if Scripture did not in every way draw a wide distinction between them. In the early Church, indeed, the Lord’s Supper was frequently given to infants, as appears from Cyprian and Augustine, (August. ad Bonif. Lib. 1;) but the practice justly became obsolete. For if we attend to the peculiar nature of baptism, it is a kind of entrance, and as it were initiation into the Church, by which we are ranked among the people of God, a sign of our spiritual regeneration, by which we are again born to be children of God, whereas on the contrary the Supper is intended for those of riper years, who, having passed the tender period of infancy, are fit to bear solid food.This distinction is very clearly pointed out in Scripture. For there, as far as regards baptism, the Lord makes no selection of age, whereas he does not admit all to partake of the Supper, but confines it to those who are fit to discern the body and blood of the Lord, to examine their own conscience, to show forth the Lord’s death, and understand its power. Can we wish anything clearer than what the apostle says, when he thus exhorts, “Let a man examine himself, and so let him eat of that bread, and drink of that cup?” (1 Cor. 11: 28.) Examination, therefore, must precede, and this it were vain to expect from infants. Again, “He that eateth and drinketh unworthily, eateth and drinketh damnation to himself, not discerning the Lord’s body.” If they cannot partake worthily without being able duly to discern the sanctity of the Lord’s body, why should we stretch out poison to our young children instead of vivifying food? Then what is our Lord’s injunction? “Do this in remembrance of me.” And what the inference which the apostle draws from this? “As often as ye eat this bread, and drink this cup, ye do show the Lord’s death till he come.” How, pray, can we require infants to commemorate any event of which they have no understanding; how require them to “show forth the Lord’s death,” of the nature and benefit of which they have no idea? Nothing of the kind is prescribed by baptism. Wherefore, there is the greatest difference between the two signs. This also we observe in similar signs under the old dispensation. Circumcision, which, as is well known, corresponds to our baptism, was intended for infants, but the Passover, for which the Supper is substituted, did not admit all kinds of guests promiscuously, but was duly eaten only by those who were of an age sufficient to ask the meaning of it, (Exod. 12: 26.) Had these men the least particle of soundness in their brain, would they be thus blind as to a matter so very clear and obvious?” (Institutes of the Christian Religion, Book 4, Chapter 16, Section 30)

So wrote John Calvin. Why are so many people in the Reformed heritage finding themselves in disagreement with him?

  • The first thing to note is that Calvin is not responding to a Reformed paedocommunionist. To claim that Calvin condemned paedocommunion is simply not the case. He condemned Anabaptists who postulated paedocommunion as a way of defeating arguments for paedobaptism. If Calvin was interacting with, say, Martin Bucer, or Melanchthon, or even commenting on John Huss and described one of them in such vitriolic terms, then anti-paedocommunionists would have some justification for condemning G. I. Williamson or Dr. Robert Rayburn with such vehemence .As it is, the fact remains that paedocommunion received no serious consideration at the time of the Reformation so that we heirs of the Reformation have any prima facie reason not to reconsider the tradition we inherited from the medieval Roman Catholic Church. John Calvin and Martin Luther and many others had grown up with a certain sort of practice as well as a rationalization for that practice that appealed to Scripture. They were not in the position of John Huss and his followers, over a century earlier and farther east, who still remembered that at one time children had been given access to the Communion Meal and then later barred.Thus, the simple fact that Calvin took the same basic line as the medieval schoolmen on this issue simply does not hold much weight of itself. If his Scriptural arguments are good, then his position is sound, but his mere opinion is not of much help in defining orthodoxy at this point.
  • A second thing to notice is that the first of the two paragraphs quoted above contains no argument at all but is simply an assertion of Calvin’s position.Calvin’s assertion about the “requirement” to discern the Lord’s body simply begs the question. Why assume such a requirement is placed on infants or toddlers? He has already dealt with passages which state that one must repent before being baptized and that one must work in order to eat. Why are these passages not applied to infants? Baptists in fact do apply exhortations to repent and believe to infants. Since infants cannot consciously believe in the way that older people can, they reason that infants are not to be baptized. Calvin’s argument here would require him to agree with credobaptism. Obviously, Calvin really didn’t have any reformed paedobaptists to deal with. He was simply snapping at Anabaptist enemies and felt no need to take them seriously.
  • Calvin’s text to support the notion that children did not partake of Passover is completely inadequate for the task that he wants it to perform. The text only tells parents what to answer their children when they as about Passover. It says nothing about this being a catechism that they must master before they partake (as some have recently asserted). What sort of catechism is it in which the children ask the question and the parents answer? Nor does the text even give any indication that this question is to be asked at the Passover meal. All it says is that when a child asks, the parents are supposed to give a certain answer. Nothing is said about the child reaching a certain level of understanding before being permitted to participate.
  • It is important to note that God is careful to tell Moses who should be restricted from partaking the Passover: those who have not been circumcised. If there were any additional classes of persons who should not be permitted to eat of the meal one would expect God to actually bother to say something about it. God says that the meal is only for the circumcised. Calvin says that young circumcised males were also prohibited from participation but he gives no text for this prohibition. Is this not a good reason to wonder whether God is pleased with us in following Calvin on this matter? As great as Calvin was shouldn’t we be following God in this case?
  • It is interesting to note that modern anti-paedocommunionists quite commonly now claim that it is a distinctively paedocommunionist error to tie the Lord’s Supper to Passover (Leonard Coppes, for example). Yes, they say, Passover was for children by virtue of their membership in God’s covenant people, but the Lord’s Supper is different. One can only be amazed at how strained their new interpretions are and how they implicitly admit that Calvin’s reasoning means he should have been a paedocommunionist. This again should give one reason to reconsider Calvin’s stance on the matter.
  • In light of the above defects in Calvin’s argumentation and the resulting shifts that have occurred among those who wish to find some way to maintain his conclusion, John Murray’s statement on the issue is quite interesting:

    It is objected that paedobaptists are strangely inconsistent in dispensing baptism to infants and yet refusing to admit them to the Lord’s able … At the outset it should be admitted that if paedobaptists are inconsistent in this discrimination, then the relinquishment of infant baptism is not the only way of resolving the inconsistency. It could be resolved by going in the other direction, namely, that of admitting infants to the Lord’s Supper. And when all factors entering into this dispute are taken into account, particularly the principle involved in infant baptism, then far less would be at stake in admitting infants to the Lord’s Supper than would be at stake in abandoning infant baptism. This will serve to point up the significance of infant baptism in the divine economy of grace [Christian Baptism (Phillipsburg, NJ: Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Company, 1980). pp. 73-74].

Other reasons could be added, but this hopefully will give readers initial reasons why they should reconsider Calvin’s position on the issue, and why doing so need not constitute a rejection of the entire legacy of the great Reformer. Surely Calvin would want his intellectual heirs to follow what Jesus tells us in the Bible rather than his own writings.

A communion hymn sung by the followers of John Huss

You gave us his body to eat,
His holy blood to drink
What more could he have done for us?

Let us not deny it to little children
Nor forbid them
When they eat Jesus’ body.

Of such is the kingdom of heaven
As Christ himself told us,
And holy David says also:

From the mouths of small children
And of all innocent babes
Has come forth God’s praise
That the adversary may be cast down…

Praise God, you children You tiny babes, For he will not drive you away, But feed you on his holy body.

Some points on paedocommunion in the PCA

Mark Horne » Blog Archive » The “drunken uncle” didn’t seem to think it struck at those “vitals”.

Following up the obvious observation that paedocommunion, while not agreed to by Reformed Confessions or notable Reformed Theologians before this century, with one exception…

  • The best paper on the history of paedocommunion is here.
  • The best paper on the theology of paedocommunion is here.
  • Both papers were submitted and received in the mid -90s by a PCA presbytery to as part of the requirement that allowed a candidate for the ministry to be ordained.
  • Anti-paedocommunionism is incoherent: (1) Many of the defenses of “the traditional view” actually repudiate the traditional view and adopt a novel scheme which implies we all should have been paedocommunionists until recently. (2) Thus, there is no exegetical position to require to “force” a paedocommunionist to sound like an anti-paedocommunionist, (3) Yet traditioalist and innovative anti-paedocommunionists both assume the role of defenders of a tradition even while the entire basis is contradicted by their alliance.
  • Etc.. more later.

 

Gotta love the Feminist “sisterhood” power

Last night, Rachel Maddow went on a rant against my recent “Conceived in Rape Tour” for Personhood Mississippi. Once again, she ignorantly referred to children like me as being “the rapist’s child.”

First of all, I am not the rapist’s child! He doesn’t even know of my existence, as in most rape cases. And what an insult to the majority of rape victims who not only choose life for their child, but choose to raise their child — after everything they’ve been through, Maddow has the audacity to refer to the rape victim’s child as being “the rapist’s child”?! The ones who abort are four times more likely to die within the next year. If you truly have compassion for a rape victim, you’d want to protect her from the abortion and not the baby! A baby is not the worst thing that could ever happen to a rape victim — an abortion is.

To be pro-woman is to recognize that women are much stronger than they are given credit for, and to understand that a baby is not the scary enemy. No woman has to be afraid of a baby!

Rachel Maddow is the one who is extreme because she’s against the death penalty for rapists, but supports the death penalty for the innocent child who happened to be conceived in rape. That’s extreme! However, I did not miss the fact that she failed to mention that the “Conceived in Rape” tour involved a real human being — and I’m a woman no less!

My birthmother did not choose life for me. She chose abortion. But pro-life advocates in Michigan chose life for me by making sure abortion was illegal in Michigan, even in cases of rape. They are my heroes and I owe my life to them! My near-death experience is very real. I feel like I was saved from a burning building and as I have the opportunity to go back and save others, I most certainly will.

Despite wanting to abort me more than 4 decades ago, my birthmother is proud of me today, has shared her story alongside me, and is so thankful we were both protected from the abortion. I honor her and I bring her healing, which is why she and her husband legally adopted me last fall, 22 years from the day we met. But Rachel Maddow doesn’t have the heart to understand something so wonderful. She only pretends to care about women.

via Attorney Rebecca Kiessling Responds to Attack from MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow – Christian Newswire.

The “drunken uncle” didn’t seem to think it struck at those “vitals”

It is objected that paedobaptists are strangely inconsistent in dispensing baptism to infants and yet refusing to admit them to the Lord’s Table …

At the outset it should be admitted that if paedobaptists are inconsistent in this discrimination, then the relinquishment of infant baptism is not the only way of resolving the inconsistency. It could be resolved by going in the other direction, namely, that of admitting infants to the Lord’s Supper.

And when all factors entering into this dispute are taken into account, particularly the principle involved in infant baptism, then far less would be at stake in admitting infants to the Lord’s Supper than would be at stake in abandoning infant baptism.

This will serve to point up the significance of infant baptism in the divine economy of grace [John Murray, Christian Baptism (Phillipsburg, NJ: Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Company, 1980). pp. 73-74].

via Theologia » John Calvin & Paedocommunion.

Augustine the baptist

I notice here that Wikipedia claims that one of Augustine’s teachings against Pelagius was as follows:

Children dying without baptism are excluded from both the Kingdom of heaven and eternal life.

Why did Augustine think this was true?

If you think the answer is obvious, bear in mind that even though Augustine knew and taught that baptism was a means of grace and ordinarily the way in which a person received the forgiveness of sins and all other blessings of the New Covenant, he did not think that a believer who was barred from baptism was therefore damned.

While Christians in the early centuries saw baptism as the ordinary means of grace they also knew that believers would not be separated from Christ just because providence (often a violent death as a martyr) separated them from baptism.

Believers would be saved. Period.

They said many things about baptism to those who were holding back (and thus really holding back a credible confession of faith), but I don’t think they would ever apply these things to a known sincere believer who was prevented from being baptized.

So why make babies a special case?

If believers can be “baptized by desire” (i.e. count as baptized because they wanted to be baptized), then why can’t infants be considered baptized on the desire of the Christian parent(s)?

It makes no sense. It actually puts a higher standard on babies than adults. And it implicitly denies that our little ones are believers even from the womb, in plain contradiction to the Scriptures. As I have written:

I have sung many hymns about adult conversion from unbelief yet I’m not aware of one Psalm which speaks of that subject. On the other hand, I don’t think I’ve ever sung a hymn that called for me to put myself in the place of one who was regenerated in the womb. That is a sad state of affairs. These Psalms were sung in Israel’s public worship of God. They were means of discipling Israel and forming their outlook and expectations. Our hymns do the same but in the wrong direction.

The idea that their relationship began from the womb was not some sort of fantastic exception, but the general expectation.

And why shouldn’t all Christians possess the expectation that their children are believers? After all, that is what God has promised us. God promised “to be God to you and to your offspring after you” (Gen 17.7). The “lovingkindness of the Lord is from everlasting to everlasting on those who fear Him, and His righteousness to children’s children” (Psa 103.17).

Read the rest, including samples from the Psalms at: Mark Horne » Blog Archive » Dare we believe our children are converted? 1.

The only out I can give Augustine is that there were plenty many Christian parents married to a pagan spouse. They would have felt pressure to not baptize their children. But any pastor would have been worried about a child growing up in such a mixed household without the support of a Christian identity. Baptism would have told the child that he was not outside the covenant, but had privileges and responsibilities to appreciate and uphold. It would have added the threat of what happens to those who fall away over and above what happens to pagans in general.

But I still think that treating infants differently than older professing believers was a mistake. And I can’t help but wonder if it didn’t bear fruit in the rise of anabaptism more than a millennium later.