Dan Olinger

"If the Bible is true, then none of our fears are legitimate, none of our frustrations are permanent, and none of our opposition is significant."

Dan Olinger

 

Retired Bible Professor,

Bob Jones University

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How God Makes Well-Rounded Christians, Part 1: Introduction

August 21, 2025 by Dan Olinger Leave a Comment

Decades ago one of my professors (the late Charles W. Smith, for those who may remember him) suggested that a good way to study prayer was to focus on Paul’s prayers at the openings of his epistles. I took note of that and started noticing the kinds of things Paul prayed for his churches. I found then, and I still find, that my prayers, particularly the requests, could use a significant upgrade. 

Why the need? In my case, it was because I was focused on the wrong stuff—or at least, my focus was too narrow: help this sick person feel better, provide more money for this person or that ministry, that sort of thing. 

Paul, on the other hand, is focused like a laser beam on the Big Idea: the spiritual growth and well-being of those to whom he ministers. Along the way, he’s not just asking God for things; he’s instructing his readers (including us) as to what kinds of “things” we should be giving our attention to. 

I’d like to pursue this idea here by spending a few posts working through Paul’s prayer in the opening to Colossians. This follows naturally on my recent meditations on the supremacy of Christ as the firstborn, which Paul lays out in one portion of this prayer (Co 1.15). 

The prayer itself is in Colossians 1.9-12, but at the end of it he moves quickly past a comma to offer an extended reflection on the works of God in our salvation, for which we should be thankful—a reflection that runs through the end of the chapter. 

When taken as a whole, then, Paul’s prayer lays out the works of God in our salvation, works that cover every facet of our “inner man”—what we often call the heart, the mind, the psyche, the emotions, the wishes, the dreams. God does a complete renovation of the house that we call our selves (2Co 5.1). There is nothing in us that his work doesn’t touch. Hence the title of this series: “How God Makes Well-Rounded Christians.” 

Note the subject and verb. I don’t intend this series to be a list of more stuff ya gotta do, or a list of virtues for you to work on, a la Benjamin Franklin. This is work that God does in you; you can’t do it without him. 

But the Bible does indicate that although justification is monergistic (God does it without our help), sanctification, or growth in Christ-likeness, is synergistic: we play a role in making it happen, by God’s grace. (Even Calvinists teach that. Yes, they do.) For example, Peter speaks of “making effort” toward spiritual growth (2P 1.5). Paul speaks of “presenting our bodies” (Ro 12.1), of “bringing holiness to completion” (2Co 7.1), and of “working out our own salvation” (Php 2.12); the author of Hebrews speaks of “striving for … holiness” (He 12.14). 

So it’s wise stewardship to know the goals that God is working toward in us, and to be purposeful is seeking opportunities to work with him in developing the characteristics that will get us there. 

That’s one purpose of this series. There is a second. 

If any of us finds that these characteristics are missing—not just imperfect, but missing, strange, out of the ordinary—then it’s time to go back to the beginning and ask the big question. Has God begun a work in us by justifying us? We know that he has if we have repented and believed (Mk 1.15; Ac 3.19; Ro 5.1). But in Western “Christian” culture it’s easy, particularly for those raised in Christian homes, to just go along, be agreeable, give the right answer to the questions in Sunday school—but never genuinely repent. 

This series is chance for all of us to inspect our inner selves and ask, is God in fact sanctifying me? Am I making progress in Christ-likeness? 

If the answer is “No,” there’s a free and simple solution. 

Next time, we’ll begin looking at Paul’s prayer for his Colossian readers, and for us. 

Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash

Filed Under: Bible, Theology Tagged With: Colossians, New Testament, sanctification, soteriology

On Spiritual Decline, Part 7: The Outcome 

August 18, 2025 by Dan Olinger Leave a Comment

Part 1: Introduction | Part 2: Situation | Part 3: Jacob, not Esau | Part 4: Defective Leadership | Part 5: Defective Populace | Part 6: The Choice 

In Malachi’s brief prophecy God has stated his case against Judah for its arrogant inattention to his will and words. He has presented them with a stark choice: you can return to me, or you can continue further down the path you’re on. Now, in this closing chapter, he lays out the consequences of that choice. 

He begins with those who choose not to return to him. There is a day of accounting and judgment coming. He uses the image of fire, the burning of an oven (Mal 4.1), in which the wicked will be burned up. He cites a metaphor quite familiar to ancient Israel and to us. When developers clear a wooded lot, they cut down the trees, leaving behind the stumps and roots, as well as the stubble generated by the work of clearing. And then they pile all the unusable stuff up and burn it. It’s all reduced to ash. 

The fire image is used often elsewhere in Scripture. Jesus compares unbelievers to vines that don’t produce fruit; he says they’ll be gathered and burned (Jn 15.1-6). In his Kingdom Parables, he describes angels gathering unbelievers (“tares”) at the end of the world and burning them (Mt 13.30, 40-42). But elsewhere he adds an important note: these metaphors do not mean that the wicked cease to exist; “the fire is not quenched” (Mk 9.48). Images of God cannot cease to exist; the fire is eternal. 

But there is a different fire, also an eternal one, that awaits those who choose to follow God. It is the sun, brightening the sky, bringing life to earth. Here Malachi calls it “the Sun of righteousness” (Mal 4.2), the perfect, brilliant light of righteousness that God bestows freely on those who believe (1Jn 1.9). In his Sermon on the Mount, Jesus speaks of his followers being “the light of the world” (Mt 5.14), a candle not to be hidden (Mt 5.15). Paul uses similar language (Php 2.15). This is fire that brings life, not death. 

Malachi describes this “Sun of righteousness” as having “healing in its wings” (Mal 4.2). This was a common image in biblical times; what we would call the “rays” of the sun, they would call its “wings” (cf Ps 139.9). Those who rise and go outside early enough can feel the healing warmth of the sun as it rises in the east and warms the air around them. 

That’s what righteousness does. 

We should spread that around. 

In that day, the power of those who attack and abuse God’s people will be destroyed, and there will be victory (Mal 4.3). 

So what does Judah do in the meantime? 

First, they “remember the law of Moses” (Mal 4.4), which is simply to say that they obey God. He has addressed the specifics earlier in the prophecy. That’s their part in all this; and it’s our part too, even though we are not bound by the law of Moses, but by the law of love (Ga 3-4). 

What’s God’s part? 

He will send Elijah. 

Jesus will later make it clear that the preaching ministry of John the Baptist is the “coming of Elijah” that God has promised through Malachi (Mt 17.12). John, of course, was a forerunner, who pointed to the ministry of Jesus, “the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world” (Jn 1.29). 

God’s part is to bring salvation to all who will believe. 

These two figures—Moses and Elijah—represent the entire Old Testament, the Law and the Prophets. In four centuries they will stand on a mountain in Israel (Mt 17.1-8) and demonstrate submission to the Lamb, who is all, and in all (Co 3.11). 

With these final words, Judah waits—as it turns out, through four centuries of silence. And similarly, we wait for “the restitution of all things” (Ac 3.21) at the revelation of the Lamb. Even through an age of decline. 

Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash

Filed Under: Bible Tagged With: Malachi, Old Testament

On Spiritual Decline, Part 6: The Choice

August 14, 2025 by Dan Olinger Leave a Comment

Part 1: Introduction | Part 2: Situation | Part 3: Jacob, not Esau | Part 4: Defective Leadership | Part 5: Defective Populace   

As God approaches the end of his message through Malachi—his last words to his people Israel before going silent for 400 years—he presents them with the big choice: will they serve God, or will they resent him? 

He begins by laying out Judah’s current attitude, which is resentful (Mal 3.13-15). “Your words,” he says, “have been stout [KJV; arrogant, NASB NIV; hard, ESV] against me” (Mal 3.13). The Hebrew word here is the one used of Pharaoh when he hardened his heart against God and brought down the plagues upon his country. To put it in today’s vernacular, they’ve gone toe to toe with God, defying him to his face. 

Astonishingly, they respond with gaslighting: “How have we spoken against you?” (Mal 3.13 ESV). 

And God, patiently, answers their insincere question. They have said by their actions, “It’s futile [NIV] to serve God. We gain nothing by obeying him” (Mal 3.14). Commentator Gordon Hugenberger (in the New Bible Commentary) observes wryly, “After the list of sins exposed already by Malachi, one may wonder to what requirements they could be referring.” It doesn’t appear that they have tried obeying God long enough to support their conclusion. 

What’s especially remarkable about these words is that in the immediately preceding passage (Mal 3.10-12), God has promised abundant, global, and eternal blessings for their simple obedience. This is a lack of faith, probably prompted by sheer laziness. 

And they’re not done. They complain further that the wicked have it better than they do (Mal 3.15; cf 2.17). If the wicked escape judgment, why should we bother? 

That’s the current state of Judah’s culture. 

But there’s another option. God lays it out in the last stanza of chapter 3. 

There are some, apparently a small minority, who fear God. They found each other—birds of a feather always do—and they encouraged one another to swim against the tide. (Sorry about the mixed metaphor.) 

And God, as he always does, notices. And he takes notes (Mal 3.16). 

This isn’t the only place in Scripture where he talks like this. He writes about his people even in their fetal stage (Ps 139.16); he writes the names of his people in a “Book of Life,” to be consulted at the judgment (Da 12.1; Re 20.12, 15). 

Now, God’s omniscient, and he doesn’t need to write things down so he doesn’t forget them. But he describes himself as writing these good things down; he delights in them, and he wants to keep a record. 

And for those written in the book, he describes his feelings toward them. He calls them “jewels,” (Mal 3.17), his personal possession, and even his sons. Peter says something similar in 1P 2.9. 

There’s an old gospel song based on this verse, written by William Cushing (1823-1902). We don’t sing it much anymore; some people may think it’s doctrinally light. But I’d suggest that there’s room for songs in the assembly that just express simple delight in God and in fellowship with him. Even “In the Garden.” (There. I’ve said it.) 

Here at the end of chapter 3 God has laid out the choice in stark terms. We can serve God, or we can deny him. There are two teams (Mal 3.18), and we have to join one of them. 

In the next chapter, and in the next post, we’ll see the eternal outcome of that choice. 

Part 7: The Outcome

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Filed Under: Bible Tagged With: Malachi, Old Testament

On Spiritual Decline, Part 5: Defective Populace 

August 11, 2025 by Dan Olinger Leave a Comment

Part 1: Introduction | Part 2: Situation | Part 3: Jacob, not Esau | Part 4: Defective Leadership  

Having addressed the leaders of Judah, God, through Malachi, turns to the sins of the people. 

They are extensive. 

Marriage 

He begins with a pathology in their deepest personal relationship, that of marriage. He sees two problems: first, that the Judahites have married foreign wives (Mal 2.10-13), and second, that they have divorced their original wives (Mal 2.14-15). 

God did not completely forbid marriage to Gentiles; Moses married a Midianite (Ex 2.21), and Boaz married a Moabite, Ruth (Ru 4.10). The Law forbade marriage to Canaanites (Dt 7.3) to prevent the worship of false gods, as later happened with Solomon (1K 11.4) and most especially with Ahab (1K 16.31). Here the problem is exactly that: Judah has married the daughter of a foreign god (Mal 2.11). Both Ezra (Ezra 9.2-15) and Nehemiah (Ne 13.23-29) record more details about this problem in this historical period. 

And further, Judah has dealt treacherously with the wife of his youth (Mal 2.14). That is, he has broken his most important promise. We have abundant evidence in our own society of the damage and pain that divorce brings. 

I’ll note that interpreting Malachi 2.15 is very difficult; it’s worth taking the time to consult a few different English versions, and some commentaries if you have access. But the driving point is clear: Judah’s divorce problem is evidence of a serious societal pathology. 

Injustice 

There’s a second problem, one hinted at by the previous one. A society that breaks its promises will want to justify themselves, and they do that by blurring their definitions of right and wrong (Mal 2.17). Further on, Malachi will get more specific: occult practices, adultery, perjury, and abuse of the powerless, including employees, widows, orphans, and foreigners (Mal 3.5). 

God reminds them that a delay in judgment does not signify approval; God is just, and justice will certainly come (Mal 3.2-3). I think this particular threat is a reference to the advents of Christ, who will come first to enable justice, and then later to enforce it. 

God expects better of his people. 

Disrespect 

Third, God turns to Judah’s failure to worship him as they should (Mal 3.6-12). God is in a unique covenant relationship with this people, which in Malachi’s day was a thousand years old. He had rescued them from bondage and given them a land and a promise of a coming king and, through them, blessing to all the world. They had sworn to be faithful to him. 

But they had never been faithful to their promises. And now, their unfaithfulness to their wives, to their most vulnerable citizens, and to their God himself had come to a head. Now they don’t know how to return to him, because they deny that they have wandered (Mal 3.7). 

Their failure to tithe (Mal 3.8-10) is simply the most objective indicator of their faithlessness. 

Astonishingly, God offers them an opportunity to repent and be restored, yet again. God will fill their storehouses with abundant harvests, if they will simply return (Mal 3.10-12). 

As noted earlier, we live in a different time and place. We are not Judah, but God is not speaking only to them (1Co 10.11). 

Should we tithe? That’s an open question for Christians; some say we should, and some say we operate on a higher standard, that of love. But nothing here encourages us to think that our relationship with God should be peripheral in our thinking; we love him, and because we love him, 

  • We love our spouses; 
  • We obey his Word; 
  • We love our neighbors; 
  • We gather with his people; 
  • We spend our money in ways that make a difference. 

Next time: a sea change. 

Part 6: The Choice | Part 7: The Outcome

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Filed Under: Bible Tagged With: Malachi, Old Testament

On Spiritual Decline, Part 4: Defective Leadership 

August 7, 2025 by Dan Olinger Leave a Comment

Part 1: Introduction | Part 2: Situation | Part 3: Jacob, not Esau 

Malachi’s audience has questioned God’s love for them, and God has demonstrated that their suspicion of him is both unfounded and inobservant; they simply haven’t been paying attention. 

Next God turns the tables on them, demonstrating that it is their love for God, not God’s love for them, that is in question (Mal 1.6-3.15). He begins with the leadership, the priests (Mal 1.6-2.9)—it being often observed that “the fish rots from the head down.”* (Of course, with the end of the monarchy at the Babylonian exile, the priests are the only real leaders Judah has.) 

How are the priests failing in their spiritual leadership? Malachi, quoting God’s words, identifies two problems, which we might call pollution (Mal 1.6-14) and perversion (Mal 2.1-9). I would suggest that these are common failures in leadership, ones that we should watch for in our own spiritual leaders. 

More on that in a moment. 

Pollution 

The priests’ work is polluted because they offer to God less than their best. God specifically names offering blind, lame, and sick animals (Mal 1.8). Apparently they keep for themselves the most valuable animals and fulfill their offering obligations with cast-offs, like what’s on the discounted “ugly table” at your local produce stand. 

The problem here is not that God is harmed or deprived of what he needs, for he doesn’t need anything. The problem is in not merely the action, but the attitude: “You say, ‘The table of the Lord is contemptible’ ” (Mal 1.7). Try offering this stuff to the Persian governor, God says; he certainly won’t accept it (Mal 1.8). 

You priests, he says, are just doing your jobs for the money you can make; your heart’s not in it (Mal 1.10). You see all this ceremony as drudgery (Mal 1.13), something you despise, despite the fact that this work is designed to bring honor to the God of the universe, the infinitely worthy one, far higher than a mere provincial governor (Mal 1.11). 

Perversion 

Here there’s a chapter break, but Malachi continues to address the priests. But now he accuses them of a second offense: perverting, or twisting, the Law (Mal 2.8-9). This is in stark contrast to the earlier priests’ reverent and attentive behavior at the beginning of the priesthood (Mal 2.4-7). The result will be a curse from God upon their work (Mal 2.1-3). 

The curse is expressed in graphic terms. In their daily activity, the priests are butchering animals, a task that involves extracting and disposing of the entrails, which might include a significant quantity of fecal matter. In an outburst of rare intensity, God says that he will take that fecal material and spread it across the priests’ faces as a graphic demonstration of his curse (Mal 2.3). 

There’s a wordplay here: “I will corrupt your seed (Heb zera’) and spread (Heb zerah) dung upon your faces.” Even this little twist adds intensity to the statement as Malachi’s audience heard it. 

This is serious business. 

These days God doesn’t ask us for animal sacrifices, and we don’t have priests offering them; so how might we evaluate the quality of our spiritual leaders? 

First, do they display a carelessness, or a lack of seriousness, about the things of God? Do they handle the Scripture diligently? Are their sermons carefully prepared, or just thrown together? Are they just a string of jokes and perhaps moving stories designed to bring the congregation around to the preacher’s pet ideas? 

Are they just in it for what they can get out of it, whether in money or in influence? Do they seek power in the political sphere? Do they name-drop to makes themselves look important? 

Second, do they twist the Scripture to gain abusive power over those whom they should be serving? That is what the word minister means, after all. 

Enough of that. Let’s not endure it, tolerate it, excuse it. Let’s name it, expose it, end it. 

As long as such behavior is profitable, there are people who will seek to profit from it. But they can’t do that if they can’t get any customers. That’s our responsibility—ours, in the pews. 

In the next post, God turns to the sins of the people. There is plenty there for us to consider soberly. 

* The saying’s origins are lost in the mists of ancient time; some sources say it’s Turkish, others Chinese. Former presidential candidate Michael Dukakis claimed it was Greek. I would observe that it doesn’t seem to be literally true, but it’s sure memorable. 

Part 5: Defective Populace | Part 6: The Choice | Part 7: The Outcome

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Filed Under: Bible Tagged With: Malachi, Old Testament

On Spiritual Decline, Part 3: Jacob, not Esau 

August 4, 2025 by Dan Olinger Leave a Comment

Part 1: Introduction | Part 2: Situation 

After God declares his love for Judah in the opening verse of this prophecy, the rest of the book flows neatly. First, Judah rejects his assertion of love (chapters 1-3), as evidenced in the sins of the priests (chapters 1-2) and then in the sins of the people (chapters 2-3). And then God demonstrates his love for them despite their rejection (chapter 4). That is, of course, the point of the prophecy, and it’s the primary application for us when we find ourselves in spiritual decline. 

When God asserts his love, he is immediately challenged: “How have you loved us?” (Mal 1.2). Given the long history of God’s relationship with Israel, those words come as a shock. But as we’ve noted, the recent history since the return from Babylon has given Judah what they think is a basis for complaint. And as we’ve noted further, the proper response when you don’t understand what your friend is doing is to start by defaulting to trust. 

They don’t do that. They demand that God defend himself. 

Perhaps surprisingly, he does. 

His defense is simply to call to mind his long relationship with them. He focuses on his ancient choice of Jacob over his older twin brother, Esau. 

It’s often observed that if you had known these two boys, you’d definitely have preferred Esau. He’s an outdoorsman, and good at it. He doesn’t hold a grudge (Ge 33.1-9). He is what we might call a Good Old Boy. Jacob, on the other hand, is a cheat; he’ll lie and steal if it’s to his advantage. 

God has no reason to prefer the scoundrel. But he reveals himself to him as he’s fleeing from the wrath of his cheated brother (Ge 28.10-15), and then again as he’s leaving his father-in-law Laban after a sharp disagreement (Ge 32.24-29), and he makes it clear that his covenant with Abraham, and then with Isaac, is now bestowed on Jacob. 

We learn later that God made this choice before the boys were even born (Ro 9.10-13), and thus not on the basis of anything they had done to deserve (or not deserve) it. 

That’s grace. 

What does it look like when God gives a people what they deserve? The rains don’t come; the crops don’t grow; the buildings fall apart; the wild animals make themselves at home in what had once been a civilization (Mal 1.3-5). 

God sends destruction to Edom, the land of Esau’s descendants. Interestingly, during the Babylonian invasion the Edomites had avoided the kind of devastation that came to Jerusalem and the surrounding territory of Judah. (There were reasons that Nebuchadnezzar was particularly angry at the Jews.) But here God promises that destruction is coming to Edom too. 

Malachi alludes to an earlier prophecy from Jeremiah, given before the exile to Judah: 

I will make Jerusalem heaps, and a den of dragons; And I will make the cities of Judah desolate, without an inhabitant (Jer 9.11). 

But here he applies it to Edom (Mal 1.3). And he keeps that promise:  shortly after this prophecy, Nabatean Arabs invaded and possessed Edom, and the Edomites migrated around the Dead Sea to southern Judah (the Negev), where they were eventually called Idumeans. The Herods were part of this tribe, which was destroyed by Rome during the Jewish Wars of the first century AD. 

The end was not pretty. 

God chose Jacob, and even after the exile Judah was benefiting greatly from that choice and the love that accompanied it. 

A historical footnote: 

7 But Jesus withdrew himself with his disciples to the sea: and a great multitude from Galilee followed him, and from Judaea, 8 And from Jerusalem, and from

—well, lookee here!— 

Idumaea, and from beyond Jordan; and they about Tyre and Sidon, a great multitude, when they had heard what great things he did, came unto him (Mk 3.7-8). 

Descendants of Esau, the rejected one, come to Jesus, and he receives them. 

As he does all who come. 

Part 4: Defective Leadership | Part 5: Defective Populace | Part 6: The Choice | Part 7: The Outcome

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Filed Under: Bible Tagged With: Malachi, Old Testament

On Spiritual Decline, Part 2: Situation 

July 31, 2025 by Dan Olinger Leave a Comment

Part 1: Introduction 

Malachi begins his message to Israel by assuring them that God loves them: 

1 The burden of the word of the LORD to Israel by Malachi. 2 I have loved you, saith the LORD. 

Why does he do that? 

It helps if we understand the historical situation. 

As noted in the previous post, when Judah returned from the Babylonian Exile, two prophets, Haggai and Zechariah, brought messages from God to them. The first message was to rebuild the Temple despite opposition from the local non-Jews. But both prophets included a look into the future, promising that God would bless his people, and that all nations of the earth would bring their treasures to Jerusalem and worship there (Hag 2.7; Zec 14.16-21). 

Now, we know that this promise is long-term—so long-term, in fact, that it still hasn’t happened. Premillennialists (of which I am one) believe that this will happen in the future Millennial Kingdom (Re 20.1-6), when Christ reigns on earth for a thousand years (hence the name). 

But these returnees had no idea that it would be that long. We know that over the next four centuries (what we call the Intertestamental Period) Messianic expectations would be at a fever pitch. Some speculate that the reason Judas betrayed Jesus was that he was not overthrowing the Roman overlords and establishing his kingdom. And after Jesus’ resurrection, even the remaining disciples apparently expected that Now Is The Time for the kingdom to come on earth (Ac 1.6). And even then Jesus said that it was not yet time (Ac 1.7-8). 

Now, from our lofty perch here millennia later, we may be tempted to look down on these misguided folks as overly eager and slow to comprehend. But I suspect that all of us would have had similar expectations at the time. The prophets of the return said that this new Temple would be something really great, specifically because God was going to make Jerusalem a global focus (Hag 2.3-9). I’m not going to criticize the returnees for believing him. 

Well, as we all know, that didn’t happen. That doesn’t mean God was mistaken or was deceiving them; lots of biblical prophecy has very long-term fulfilment. Given their disappointment, what would be a natural response? 

“Welp, I guess it’s not gonna happen.” 

And what’s a predictable next response? Disappointment with God, a decline of spiritual focus, frustration with the way things are currently going. Oh, maybe make your sacrifices, but don’t knock yourself out—don’t sacrifice your best animals—and don’t take it all that seriously. Already tried that, and it didn’t work. 

And that’s exactly what we’ll see Malachi dealing with in his brief prophecy. 

Now, before we get to that, it’s worth thinking for a minute about how they should have responded. 

What do you do when God makes a promise but takes his time fulfilling it? 

A couple of things. 

  • First, you remind yourself that God is not a stranger. You know him. You have asked him for things, and he has answered. Even when you have not asked, he has been abundantly gracious to you, giving you everything you really need. Do you trust your friends? Of course. Why? Because they have proved themselves trustworthy. It’s not naive to trust your long-time friends. 
  • Second, you look to the Scripture to see further evidence of his trustworthiness. He has made promise after promise that has been fulfilled, from the seed of the woman (Ge 3.15) to the Abrahamic Covenant (Ge 15.1-21) and well beyond. He has predicted scores of things about the first advent of Messiah; why should he be unreliable about the second? 

As we’ve noted, Jesus himself taught just before his Ascension that it was not yet time for the Kingdom. But earlier he had said, “Occupy till I come” (Lk 19.13; cf Lk 19.11-27). 

They should have believed him, and they should have continued to work for the future kingdom. 

As should we. 

Part 3: Jacob, not Esau | Part 4: Defective Leadership | Part 5: Defective Populace | Part 6: The Choice | Part 7: The Outcome

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Filed Under: Bible Tagged With: Malachi, Old Testament

On Spiritual Decline, Part 1: Introduction

July 28, 2025 by Dan Olinger 2 Comments

Every generation has believed that the future was in peril. “Kids these days …” has been a constant cry. 

I don’t buy that, for a couple of reasons: 

  • The lesson of history: the kids are scary because they’re kids. But they don’t stay kids; they grow up, and they deal with the world that, for better or worse, was handed to them. Thus has it always been. I’ve been working with “the next generation” my whole adult life, and while there is always a spectrum of talent, wisdom, and morality, there is always a high end of that spectrum, and they’re all right. 
  • The lesson of theology: God is working his plan throughout the passage of time, and he will bring it to a successful conclusion. He is great, and he is good. 

So on the big picture, I’m at peace and wildly optimistic. 

But along the way, there’s brokenness. Times are tough—cyclically—and we are called to steward the times in which we live, to address the problems we face, and to leave the world a better place than when we found it. 

Some of my Christian fellow travelers might take issue with that. The Bible does speak of a time, at the end of time, when things pretty much fall apart, apocalyptically (literally). They would say the world is fated to decline generally rather than to improve. But I think it’s clear from history—both biblical and extrabiblical—that things get better, and then they get worse, and then they get better again, and on it goes. I believe it will all fall apart in the end, but in the meantime, I think it’s foolish to assume decline as a general characteristic. 

With all that duly noted, I think we can agree that times are tough for a lot of people today. There’s an almost palpable sense of frustration in the current world. I sense it more deeply in my own country, due, I suppose, to the political polarization and the resultant chaos in our public spaces. No, that’s not unprecedented, but it does exist currently, and I would suggest that Christians have a duty to contribute, as best we can, to ameliorating its worst effects. 

I wonder whether we as the Church are in a position to do that. 

There’s been significant failure among Christian leaders in recent days—again, not unprecedented—and I would suggest that that’s a symptom of weakness in the broader church. Are the believers sitting in the pews generally being prepared to live out their faith, to proclaim it, to answer objections to it, to improve the conditions in which they live through spiritual power? 

Or is the church largely feckless because it is largely powerless? 

I wonder. 

There have been other such times in the history of God’s people—times that come with irritating regularity. Pick a biblical book—Genesis, Numbers, Judges, Kings, pretty much any of them—and you find God’s people cycling through malaise and revival, ad nauseum. 

There’s a part of biblical history—just a thin slice of it—that I think can serve as instructive for us. This period doesn’t get mentioned in Sunday School, I suppose because it doesn’t feature any significant names. It occurs after the return from Babylon. Several biblical books—Ezra, Nehemiah, Haggai, Zechariah—discuss the mechanics of the return itself and the rebuilding of the Temple; but what then? 

There’s just one prophet who addresses Israel as it settles into life after the Exile, in what we call The Persian Period. He calls Israel to account for its sin, and he prescribes a solution. 

But apparently nobody listens, and God goes silent for 400 years. 

What if they had listened? 

What if we were to listen today? 

The prophet is called “My Messenger” (“Malachi,” in Hebrew). Is that his name, or a title? 

Nobody knows. 

He may be just an unnamed preacher speaking for God as He goes out the back door for a few centuries. 

Perhaps we should give him some attention. 

Part 2: Situation | Part 3: Jacob, not Esau | Part 4: Defective Leadership | Part 5: Defective Populace | Part 6: The Choice | Part 7: The Outcome

Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash

Filed Under: Bible Tagged With: Malachi, Old Testament

On Protest, Part 4: Protesting Well 

July 24, 2025 by Dan Olinger Leave a Comment

Part 1: First Things | Part 2: The Landscape | Part 3: Levels of Authority 

It’s time to get down to brass tacks, as they say. We’ve looked at the key biblical material on authority and civil disobedience; now how do we live that out today? 

What do we do when the government—the law—orders us to disobey Scripture? 

Let’s get specific. Should you feed and house an illegal immigrant (or undocumented migrant, if you prefer)? Should you hide him from ICE? Should you lie to ICE? Should you try to stop them physically? 

You and I have Christian brothers and sisters who are asking themselves these questions right now, and who need answers—right now. 

Let me suggest a pathway for thinking through to a wise and right decision. 

 First thing first: recognize that God has providentially brought you to this place for His purposes (Ps 37.23). This issue didn’t come out of nowhere, and you are precisely where you are by the will and plan of God. He will provide the wisdom you need to make a right decision. 

Further, a significant part of his plan is to develop in you the character of Christ (2Co 3.18). Look for His purpose in your own character development, submit humbly to it, and pursue it. That might include improving your understanding of his Word, interacting appropriately with other believers (especially those further down the path of sanctification than you are), deepening your prayer life—Jesus, the perfect Son of God, felt the need to pray all night sometimes; how about you? and me? 

Evaluate your disagreement with the authority figure in light of the Bible’s teaching. Be honest with yourself. And as I noted earlier, consider carefully the thinking of believers, particularly long-time believers, who disagree with you. To do this, you’re going to have to swim against the polarizing forces in the current culture. You’re going to need to talk calmly and respectfully with people you disagree with. 

Nobody does that anymore. 

Further, recognize your own limitations. You cannot reliably discern motives, nor can you know all the considerations in any decision by an authority.  

If you are convinced that the authority is acting unbiblically, begin by submitting to the authority’s procedure(s) for challenging the decision. It is not an accident that you are under that particular authority. Most of us live in a democratically oriented state system, and there are things we can do short of burning it all down. We can interact with those in authority; and there are legal ways to exert political pressure. 

If your conscience, informed by Scripture, forbids you to submit to that authority’s procedures for redress, then disobey humbly and graciously, and submit to the penalty. On the other hand, if you can and do follow the procedures, and the authority overrules your plea, then you need to make the same decision: must you disobey in order to protect your conscience? If so, then do so, and accept whatever penalty the authority determines.  

 Let me add a rider to this. The Bible indicates that Paul responded to government persecution in various ways. As mentioned in the previous post, sometimes he went underground with his civil disobedience (2Co 11.32-33). Some would see that as evidence that you need not disobey publicly and take the penalty. Fair enough. 

More often, however, Paul disobeyed publicly and faced the state’s response squarely. But even in these cases his tactics varied. Once, tied to a whipping post, he asserted his right as a Roman citizen by turning to the nearest official and saying essentially, “Say, isn’t it illegal to beat a Roman citizen without a trial?” (Ac 22.24-29). At which point the whip disappeared. 

That story always makes me laugh. 

Earlier in his career, he used a different tactic. In Philippi, he and his colleague Silas took the beating, making no mention of their rights (Ac 16.22-24). The next day they confronted the authorities by revealing their Roman citizenship (Silas was apparently a citizen too, Ac 16.37), a fact that put these authorities in jeopardy of the death penalty. Paul insisted on a public escort out of town and even took the group by the church’s house (Ac 16.39-40), as if to say, “These are my friends. It would be a shame if anything happened to my friends.” 

Is it too strong to say that Paul was blackmailing them? That’s a good question. 

Paul knew how the system worked, and he worked it, to his own advantage and to that of the work of the kingdom. 

Even an unjust steward knows how to do that (Lk 16.8). 

Jesus instructed us all to be “wise as serpents and harmless as doves” (Mt 10.16). In this chaotic culture, he will enable us to do that. 

Together. 

Photo by Koshu Kunii on Unsplash

Filed Under: Culture, Politics Tagged With: church and state

On Protest, Part 3: Levels of Authority 

July 21, 2025 by Dan Olinger Leave a Comment

Part 1: First Things | Part 2: The Landscape 

Given that the world system, and its inhabitants, are broken, we have to expect that the divinely created order, as represented in the biblical authority structures, will not perfectly conform to the divine standard of justice. Thus those in various degrees of authority over us will at least occasionally be unjust. 

What do we do then? Man the barricades? Take it to the streets? Burn it all down? 

There are some that think this way. My suspicion is that they’re a relatively small portion of society, but they outsize their influence by the sheer volume of the noise they make. Squeaky wheels, after all, do get greased. 

We’ve based our thinking about authority structures on a quick survey of the biblical material. Looking a little more deeply, however, makes a couple of things abundantly clear: 

  • As just noted, our authorities are imperfect. 
  • When they fail in their obligation to promote justice, we have options. 

Since God created these authority structures (as noted in the previous post), and since God is Lord of Hosts, Creator of Heaven and Earth, he holds authority over the existing powers, and we owe him obedience in all things. Thus if your home, or state, or church orders you to do something that violates God’s will as expressed in his Word, then you must disobey that earthly authority. 

We have multiple examples of this. David ran from King Saul (1S 19.18ff) even while respecting his position as king (1S 24.1-15). Paul escaped from the king of Damascus by going over the wall in the middle of the night (2Co 11.32-33). In an appearance before the Sanhedrin, the Jewish Supreme Court, Paul called the high priest a “whitewashed [and by implication deeply filthy] wall” (Ac 23.3). (To be fair, I note that the interpretation of Paul’s intent here is disputed; some think he didn’t realize to whom he was speaking, as he says in verse 5. But I’m doubtful that he wouldn’t recognize the high priest, and I suspect he was being sarcastic in verse 5, implying that a genuine high priest wouldn’t act this way.) 

Most interpreters think the clearest illustration of this principle of Higher Authority is in Acts 4, where the Sanhedrin orders Peter and John to stop preaching about Jesus. This restriction, if obeyed, would clearly be disobedience to Jesus’ last command, the Great Commission, which obligates the two to preach in his name. 

Their response is classic: 

Whether it be right in the sight of God to hearken unto you more than unto God, judge ye. 20 For we cannot but speak the things which we have seen and heard (Ac 4.19-20). 

In the Olinger Revised Version, it reads, 

You do what you want; we’re going to do what we have to do. 

And they continued to preach, directly disobeying their governmental authority. In Peter’s case, that brought him imprisonment (Ac 12.1-3) and eventually, tradition says, execution by crucifixion. John, on the other hand, lived a long life and died a natural death—if you can call slaving in the salt mines in your 80s a natural death. 

There is indeed a higher authority. 

Now, if we are to obey God when our authorities contradict his will, then it’s really important that we know what that will is. If a voice in your head tells you to take a shot at the President, and you think that voice belongs to God, you’re going to be in a pile of trouble with guys in black suits who talk to their wrists, and even worse, it will all have been for nothing, because that voice in your head is not in fact from God. 

There’s only one reliable source of God’s words and will, and that is the Scripture. We all need to know what it says. 

And further, we need to be sure of our biblical understanding. If the Bible-believing population is divided on whether the Bible actually says this or that, we need to slow down and evaluate what we’ve read. Maybe one side’s wrong and the other is right; but the very division among people who love God and believe their Bibles should call for some extra thought and careful consideration. 

Next time: bringing it all together on a Thursday in July. 

Photo by Koshu Kunii on Unsplash

Filed Under: Culture, Politics Tagged With: church and state

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