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		<title>BERNARD BEAR</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Jan 2012 18:30:21 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>May You &amp; Your Love Ones Have A Wonderful Blessed Year 2012!</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Jan 2012 15:09:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>rudyvrodriguez</dc:creator>
		
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_2393" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 291px"><a href="http://rudyvrodriguez.wordpress.com/2012/01/05/may-you-your-love-ones-have-a-wonderful-blessed-year-2012/389425_2166900703909_1588419570_31626119_1782137618_n/" rel="attachment wp-att-2393"><img class="size-medium wp-image-2393" title="389425_2166900703909_1588419570_31626119_1782137618_n" src="http://rudyvrodriguez.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/389425_2166900703909_1588419570_31626119_1782137618_n.jpg?w=281&#038;h=375" alt="" width="281" height="375" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Rudy &amp; Irma Rodriguez</p></div>
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		<title>4 Christian Principles For Making New Year’s Resolutions from Nathan W. Bingham Dec 30, 2011</title>
		<link>http://rudyvrodriguez.wordpress.com/2012/01/05/4-christian-principles-for-making-new-years-resolutions-from-nathan-w-bingham-dec-30-2011/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Jan 2012 14:55:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>rudyvrodriguez</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Devotional]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[“What’s your New Year’s resolution?” If you haven’t been asked that question this month, with only two days remaining in 2011 &#8230;<p><a href="http://rudyvrodriguez.wordpress.com/2012/01/05/4-christian-principles-for-making-new-years-resolutions-from-nathan-w-bingham-dec-30-2011/">Continue reading &#187;</a></p><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=rudyvrodriguez.wordpress.com&amp;blog=6228862&amp;post=2384&amp;subd=rudyvrodriguez&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
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<div>
<p><em>“What’s your New Year’s resolution?”</em></p>
<p>If you haven’t been asked that question this month, with only two days remaining in 2011 it’s likely you’ll be asked soon enough. As a culture it seems we’re obsessed with making New Year’s resolutions in December, and then breaking them in January. Before you follow the pattern of the world, it is worth considering how a Christian should think about resolutions.</p>
<p>In the January 2009 edition of <a href="http://www.ligonier.org/tabletalk/"><em>Tabletalk</em></a> Burk Parson’s wrote a very helpful article titled, <a href="http://www.ligonier.org/learn/articles/resolved-grace-god/">Resolved by the Grace of God</a>. In that article he reflects on some words from the great theologian, Jonathan Edwards—suggesting four Christian principles for making resolutions.</p>
<p>Please prayerfully consider these before you make any New Year’s resolutions.</p>
<hr />
<p>“Being sensible that I am unable to do anything without God’s help, I do humbly entreat him by his grace to enable me to keep these resolutions, so far as they are agreeable to his will, for Christ’s sake.” — Jonathan Edwards</p>
<p><strong>1. Resolve Sensibly</strong></p>
<blockquote><p>Our resolutions must be in accord with the Word of God.</p></blockquote>
<p>“Being sensible,” Edwards begins his preface — we must be sensible, reasonable, in making resolutions. If we set ourselves about the business of hastily making resolutions as the result of our grand illusions of sinless perfection, it is likely that we will not merely fail in our attempt to keep such resolutions, we will likely be less inclined to make any further resolutions for similar desired ends. We must go about making resolutions with genuine prayer and thorough study of God’s Word. Our resolutions must be in accord with the Word of God; therefore, any resolution we make must necessarily allow us to fulfill all our particular callings in life. We must consider all the implications of our resolutions and be careful to make resolutions with others in mind, even if it means implementing new resolutions incrementally over time.</p>
<p><strong>2. Resolve Dependently</strong></p>
<blockquote><p>Every resolution must be made in dependence on God.</p></blockquote>
<p>“I am unable to do anything without God’s help,” Edwards admits. We must be sensible in grasping the simple truth that every resolution must be made in dependence on God. And while every Christian would respond by saying, “Well, of course we must depend on God for all things,” most Christians have been sold the world’s bill of goods. They think that once they become dependent on God, then they will have immediate strength. They mimic the world’s mantra: “Whatever doesn’t kill me will make me stronger.” While the principle is generally true, such thinking can foster an attitude of proud independence. We must understand that in being able to do all things through Christ who strengthens us means that we must depend on His strength continuously in order to do all things and to keep all our resolutions (<a href="http://biblia.com/bible/esv/Eph.%203.16" target="_blank">Eph. 3:16</a>; <a href="http://biblia.com/bible/esv/Col.%201.11" target="_blank">Col. 1:11</a>). In truth, whatever doesn’t kill us, by God’s conforming grace, makes us weak so that in our weakness we will rely continuously on the strength of our Lord (2 Cor. 12:7-10).</p>
<p><strong>3. Resolve Humbly</strong></p>
<blockquote><p>We should approach God in humble reliance, seeking not merely the blessings but the one who blesses.</p></blockquote>
<p>“I do humbly entreat him by his grace to enable me to keep these resolutions.” In making resolutions for the glory of God and before the face of God, we must not come into His presence pounding our chests in triumphal arrogance as if God must now love and bless us more because we have made certain resolutions to follow Him more. In reality, the Lord in His providence may choose to allow even more trials to enter our lives; in His unchanging fatherly love for us, He may decide to discipline us even more in order that we might more so detest our sin and delight in Him. We should approach Him in humble reliance on His grace as we seek not merely the blessings but the one who blesses.</p>
<p><strong>4. Resolve For Christ’s Sake</strong></p>
<blockquote><p>We cannot resolve to do anything with a presumptuous attitude before God.</p></blockquote>
<p>“So far as they are agreeable to his will for Christ’s sake.” We cannot resolve to do anything with a presumptuous attitude before God. The whole matter of making resolutions is not just goal setting so that we might have happier lives. We are called by God to live according to His will, not our own — for Christ’s sake, not our own — for it is not unto us but unto Him that all glory belongs (Ps. 115:1).</p>
<hr />
<p>Adapted from Burk Parson’s contribution to the January 2009 issue of <a href="http://www.ligonier.org/tabletalk/"><em>Tabletalk</em></a>, <a href="http://www.ligonier.org/learn/articles/resolved-grace-god/">Resolved by the Grace of God. </a></p>
</div>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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		<title>The Greatest Gift!</title>
		<link>http://rudyvrodriguez.wordpress.com/2011/12/29/the-greatest-gift/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 29 Dec 2011 21:05:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>rudyvrodriguez</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Devotional]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[The greatest gift is the one of greatest value. Nothing is more valuable than God, and it is the gift &#8230;<p><a href="http://rudyvrodriguez.wordpress.com/2011/12/29/the-greatest-gift/">Continue reading &#187;</a></p><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=rudyvrodriguez.wordpress.com&amp;blog=6228862&amp;post=2368&amp;subd=rudyvrodriguez&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The greatest gift is the one of greatest value. Nothing is more valuable than God, and it is the gift of His love that is the greatest thing we can possess. That He gives it freely to His children is a grace beyond description. Let us celebrate His entrance into human history, let us rejoice in the coming of His incarnation, let us glorify His name and His love and the salvation He has given us from our sin. Let us remember the Christ of Christmas and the peace of Him who prepared the joy of this season.</p>
<p><a href="http://rudyvrodriguez.wordpress.com/2011/12/29/the-greatest-gift/nativity-story-5/" rel="attachment wp-att-2377"><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-2377" title="nativity-story" src="http://rudyvrodriguez.files.wordpress.com/2011/12/nativity-story4.jpg?w=500&#038;h=333" alt="" width="500" height="333" /></a></p>
<p>Behold, a virgin shall be with child, and shall bring forth a son, and they shall call his name Emmanuel, which being interpreted is, God with us. &#8211;Matthew 1:23</p>
<p>By: <a href="http://witnessinggod.wordpress.com">http://witnessinggod.wordpress.com</a></p>
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		<title>CHRISTMAS LIGHTS</title>
		<link>http://rudyvrodriguez.wordpress.com/2011/12/29/christmas-lights/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 29 Dec 2011 21:00:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>rudyvrodriguez</dc:creator>
		
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		<title>The Christmas Story of the Birth of Jesus By Mary Fairchild</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 29 Dec 2011 20:47:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>rudyvrodriguez</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Bible Teaching]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Devotional]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[The Christmas Story of the Birth of Jesus &#8211; Paraphrased from the Bible:   This Christmas story gives a biblical &#8230;<p><a href="http://rudyvrodriguez.wordpress.com/2011/12/29/the-christmas-story-of-the-birth-of-jesus-by-mary-fairchild/">Continue reading &#187;</a></p><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=rudyvrodriguez.wordpress.com&amp;blog=6228862&amp;post=2357&amp;subd=rudyvrodriguez&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3 id="pd1">The Christmas Story of the Birth of Jesus &#8211; Paraphrased from the Bible:</h3>
<p><a href="http://rudyvrodriguez.wordpress.com/2011/12/29/the-christmas-story-of-the-birth-of-jesus-by-mary-fairchild/nativity_scene_by_dashinvaine-2/" rel="attachment wp-att-2363"><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-2363" title="Nativity_Scene_by_dashinvaine" src="http://rudyvrodriguez.files.wordpress.com/2011/12/nativity_scene_by_dashinvaine1.jpg?w=272&#038;h=375" alt="" width="272" height="375" /></a></p>
<h3> </h3>
<div>
<p>This Christmas story gives a biblical account of the events surrounding the birth of <a href="http://christianity.about.com/od/newtestamentpeople/p/jesuschrist.htm">Jesus Christ</a>. The Christmas story is paraphrased from the New Testament books of <a href="http://christianity.about.com/od/newtestamentbooks/qt/MatthewIntro.htm">Matthew</a> and <a href="http://christianity.about.com/od/newtestamentbooks/qt/gospellukeintro.htm">Luke</a> in the Bible.</p>
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<h3>References:</h3>
<p>Matthew 1:18-25; Matthew 2:1-12; Luke 1:26-38; Luke 2:1-20.</p>
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<h3>The Conception of Jesus Foretold</h3>
<p><a href="http://christianity.about.com/od/newtestamentpeople/p/marymotherjesus.htm">Mary</a>, a virgin, was living in Galilee of Nazareth and was engaged to be married to <a href="http://christianity.about.com/od/newtestamentpeople/p/josephprofile.htm">Joseph</a>, a Jewish carpenter. An angel visited her and explained to her that she would conceive a son by the power of the <a href="http://christianity.about.com/od/topicalbiblestudies/a/whoisholyspirit.htm">Holy Spirit</a>. She would carry and give birth to this child and she would name him Jesus.</p>
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<p>At first Mary was afraid and troubled by the angel&#8217;s words. Being a virgin, Mary questioned the angel, &#8220;How will this be?&#8221; The angel explained that the child would be God&#8217;s own Son and, therefore, &#8220;nothing is impossible with God.&#8221; Humbled and in awe, Mary believed the angel of the Lord and rejoiced in God her Savior.</p>
<p>Surely Mary reflected with wonder on the words found in <a href="http://christianity.about.com/od/oldtestamentbooks/qt/isaiahintro.htm">Isaiah</a> 7:14 foretelling this event, &#8220;Therefore the Lord himself will give you a sign: The virgin will be with child and will give birth to a son, and will call him <a href="http://christianity.about.com/od/glossary/qt/JZ-Immanuel.htm">Immanuel</a>.&#8221; <a href="http://christianity.about.com/od/faqhelpdesk/p/newinternationa.htm">(NIV)</a></p>
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<div>
<h3>The Birth of Jesus:</h3>
<p>While Mary was still engaged to Joseph, she miraculously became pregnant through the Holy Spirit, as foretold to her by the angel. When Mary told Joseph she was pregnant, he had every right to feel disgraced. He knew the child was not his own, and Mary&#8217;s apparent unfaithfulness carried a grave social stigma. Joseph not only had the right to divorce Mary, under Jewish law she could be put to death by stoning.</p>
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<div>
<p>Although Joseph&#8217;s initial reaction was to break the engagement, the appropriate thing for a righteous man to do, he treated Mary with extreme kindness. He did not want to cause her further shame, so he decided to act quietly. But God sent an angel to Joseph in a dream to verify Mary&#8217;s story and reassure him that his marriage to her was God&#8217;s will. The angel explained that the child within Mary was conceived by the Holy Spirit, that his name would be Jesus and that he was the Messiah, God with us.</p>
</div>
<div>
<p>When Joseph woke from his dream, he willingly obeyed God and took Mary home to be his wife, in spite of the public humiliation he would face. Perhaps this noble quality is one of the reasons God chose him to be the Messiah&#8217;s earthly father.</p>
<p>Joseph too must have wondered in awe as he remembered the words found in Isaiah 7:14, &#8220;Therefore the Lord himself will give you a sign: The virgin will be with child and will give birth to a son, and will call him Immanuel.&#8221; <a href="http://christianity.about.com/od/faqhelpdesk/p/newinternationa.htm">(NIV)</a></p>
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<div>
<p>At that time, <a href="http://christianity.about.com/od/newtestamentpeople/a/JZ-Caesar-Augustus.htm">Caesar Augustus</a> decreed that a <a href="http://christianity.about.com/od/glossary/qt/Census-Definition.htm">census</a> be taken, and every person in the entire Roman world had to go to his own town to register. Joseph, being of the line of <a href="http://christianity.about.com/od/oldtestamentpeople/a/King-David.htm">David</a>, was required to go to <a href="http://christianity.about.com/od/glossary/a/Bethlehem.htm">Bethlehem</a> to register with Mary. While in Bethlehem, Mary gave birth to Jesus. Probably due to the census, the inn was too crowded, and Mary <a href="http://christianity.about.com/od/glossary/qt/JZ-Nativity-Of-Jesus.htm">gave birth</a> in a crude stable. She wrapped the baby in cloths and placed him in a manger.</p>
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<div>
<h3>The Shepherd&#8217;s Worship the Savior:</h3>
<p>Out in the fields, an angel of the Lord appeared to the shepherds who were tending their flocks of sheep by night. The angel announced that the Savior had been born in the town of David. Suddenly a great host of heavenly beings appeared with the angels and began singing praises to God. As the angelic beings departed, the shepherds decided to travel to Bethlehem and see the Christ-child.</p>
</div>
<div>
<p>There they found Mary, Joseph and the baby, in the stable. After their visit, they began to spread the word about this amazing child and everything the angel had said about him. They went on their way still praising and glorifying God. But Mary kept quiet, treasuring their words and pondering them in her heart. It must have been beyond her ability to grasp, that sleeping in her arms—the tender child she had just borne—was the Savior of the world.<span style="text-align:center; display: block;"><a href="http://rudyvrodriguez.wordpress.com/2011/12/29/the-christmas-story-of-the-birth-of-jesus-by-mary-fairchild/"><img src="http://img.youtube.com/vi/KuDXORaBRTc/2.jpg" alt="" /></a></span></p>
<h3>The Magi Bring Gifts:</h3>
<p>After Jesus&#8217; birth, Herod was king of Judea. At this time <a href="http://christianity.about.com/od/newtestamentpeople/a/Three-Kings.htm">wise men</a> (Magi) from the east saw a star, they came in search, knowing <a href="http://christianity.about.com/od/symbolspictures/ig/Christian-Symbols-Glossary/Christian-Stars.htm">the star</a> signified the birth of the king of the Jews. The wise men came to the Jewish rulers in Jerusalem and asked where the Christ was to be born. The rulers explained, &#8220;In <a href="http://christianity.about.com/od/glossary/a/Bethlehem.htm">Bethlehem</a> in Judea,&#8221; referring to <a href="http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Micah%205:2&amp;version=31" target="_blank">Micah 5:2</a>. <a href="http://christianity.about.com/od/newtestamentpeople/a/JZ-Herod-The-Great.htm">Herod</a>secretly met with the Magi and asked them to report back after they had found the child. Herod told the Magi that he too wanted to go and worship the babe. But secretly Herod was plotting to kill the child.</p>
<p>So the wise men continued to follow the star in search of the new born king and found Jesus with his mother in Bethlehem. (Most likely Jesus was already two years of age by this time.) They bowed and worshipped him, offering treasures of gold, incense, and <a href="http://christianity.about.com/od/glossary/a/Myrrh.htm">myrrh</a>. When they left, they did not return to Herod. They had been warned in a dream of his plot to destroy the child.</p>
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		<title>LINDALE CHURCH ROYAL RANGERS OUTPOST # 6 CHRISTMAS PARTY DEC. 14, 2011</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 29 Dec 2011 20:32:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>rudyvrodriguez</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Fellowship]]></category>

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		<title>Charles Escobar is a Friend of Mine!! by Rudy V. Rodriguez</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Nov 2011 20:24:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>rudyvrodriguez</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Fellowship]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Humor]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Charles Escobar is my co worker at HPD. His constant encouragement and humor makes time at work go by faster. Everyone &#8230;<p><a href="http://rudyvrodriguez.wordpress.com/2011/11/02/charles-escobar-is-a-friend-mine-by-rudy-v-rodriguez/">Continue reading &#187;</a></p><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=rudyvrodriguez.wordpress.com&amp;blog=6228862&amp;post=2336&amp;subd=rudyvrodriguez&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_2337" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 510px"><a href="http://rudyvrodriguez.wordpress.com/2011/11/02/charles-escobar-is-a-friend-mine-by-rudy-v-rodriguez/img_2977/" rel="attachment wp-att-2337"><img class="size-medium wp-image-2337" title="IMG_2977" src="http://rudyvrodriguez.files.wordpress.com/2011/11/img_2977.jpg?w=500&#038;h=375" alt="" width="500" height="375" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Charles Escobar having lunch with Rudy at work!</p></div>
<div>
<p><strong>Charles Escobar is my co worker at HPD. His constant encouragement and humor makes time at work go by faster. Everyone should have a friend like Charles!</strong></p>
<p><strong>Colossians 3:12-14 &#8220;</strong><em>Put on then, as God’s chosen ones, holy and beloved, compassionate hearts, kindness, humility, meekness, and patience, bearing with one another and, if one has a complaint against another, forgiving each other; as the Lord has forgiven you, so you also must forgive. And above all these put on love, which binds everything together in perfect harmony.&#8221;</em></p>
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		<title>Treasures in Heaven By Bruce D. Marshall</title>
		<link>http://rudyvrodriguez.wordpress.com/2011/10/24/treasures-in-heaven-by-bruce-d-marshall/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 24 Oct 2011 20:30:29 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Bible Teaching]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Devotional]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Inspirational]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Go, sell what you have, and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven” (Mark 10:21). How &#8230;<p><a href="http://rudyvrodriguez.wordpress.com/2011/10/24/treasures-in-heaven-by-bruce-d-marshall/">Continue reading &#187;</a></p><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=rudyvrodriguez.wordpress.com&amp;blog=6228862&amp;post=2323&amp;subd=rudyvrodriguez&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
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<p>Go, sell what you have, and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven” (Mark 10:21). How shall we take these words of Jesus? Most readers will recognize Jesus’ injunction to self-sacrifice for the poor, but what shall we make of the thought that our gifts yield “treasure in heaven”? Jesus concludes his mandate to care for the poor by injecting a mercantile note into our relationship with God: We give to the poor, and God rewards us with a deposit in our heavenly bank account.</p>
<p>Disconcerted by the suggestion of a kind of financial arrangement between us and God, most modern interpreters ask us not to take this passage literally. We should give what we can to the poor, of course, but Jesus is only using figuratively the idea of alms as a source of credits good for the world to come. Yet Jesus goes on to insist that those who have given up everything to follow him will be rewarded for what they have done, and the repayment will come not only in the next life but in this one—at an astonishing rate of interest: “a hundredfold now in this time . . . and in the age to come eternal life” (Mark 10:30).</p>
<p>There are, no doubt, several ways to take all this as a rhetorical figure for a spiritual state that, in reality, involves no exchange. But in <em>Sin: A History</em>, Gary Anderson points out Jesus’ commercial language is not a mere passing thought in the Bible. In both early Christianity and rabbinic Judaism, sin is overwhelmingly described as a debt owed to God, while the forgiveness of sin is understood as a repayment of that debt.<a href="http://rudyvrodriguez.wordpress.com/2011/10/24/treasures-in-heaven-by-bruce-d-marshall/original-sin/" rel="attachment wp-att-2327"><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-2327" title="original-sin" src="http://rudyvrodriguez.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/original-sin.jpg?w=258&#038;h=375" alt="" width="258" height="375" /></a></p>
<p>The earlier biblical texts were different. Before the Babylonian exile in 587 B.C., sin was sometimes described as a defiling stain but mainly as a burden to be borne. Sins produced a weight that was loaded onto the back of the sinner and eventually would crush him. Thus, for example, the Day of Atonement in Leviticus 16: Once a year, the most serious of Israel’s sins, those too grave to be removed by the regular provisions for ritual purification, were ceremonially loaded by the high priest onto the head of a goat. The animal then was led out into the wilderness, never to return. From this we derive the term <em>scapegoat</em>, but the term is misleading: The goat is not an object of punishment but a beast of burden. He carries the sins of Israel off into the desert, where they no longer burden the people.</p>
<p>Part of the reason all this changed after the Babylonian exile was linguistic. Aramaic became the primary tongue of the Persian Empire in which the Jewish people lived during the Second Temple period, and in Aramaic the language for religious transgression comes directly from the world of commerce. The word for a debt owed to a lender is the same as the word for a sin. Over time, the idea of a debt demanding payment became pervasive in Jewish discourse about sin and forgiveness: in Second Isaiah and Daniel, at Qumran, in rabbinic Judaism, and throughout the New Testament. “The identification of sins with debts was not the unique heritage of a single Jewish sect or two,” Anderson concludes. “It was shared by all Jews of that time,” and it shaped the way the rabbis and early Christians interpreted their biblical heritage.</p>
<p>Communal and individual suffering is clearly a basic biblical currency by which the debt of sin can be paid off. Isaiah 40, for example, tells us that Israel has paid God back in suffering “double for all her sins” (Isaiah 40:2). As Anderson observes, “For the author of Second Isaiah, Israel’s sins at the close of the First Temple period had put her over her head in debt. Decades of penal service in Babylon would be required to satisfy its terms.”</p>
<p>Suffering, however, is not the only currency. As the Second Temple period drew to a close, almsgiving came to be seen as the supremely effective way to pay down one’s debt. Thus, in Daniel 4:27, King Nebuchadnezzar is advised, “Redeem your sins by almsgiving” (not merely by “practicing righteousness,” or something of the sort), “and your iniquity by generosity to the poor.” At root, <em>to redeem</em> means to buy out of slavery. Generosity to the poor is so valuable to God that even proud Nebuchadnezzar can, with extravagant giving of alms, buy his way out of the impending servitude due his sin.</p>
<p><a href="http://rudyvrodriguez.wordpress.com/2011/10/24/treasures-in-heaven-by-bruce-d-marshall/sedekah11/" rel="attachment wp-att-2329"><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-2329" title="sedekah11" src="http://rudyvrodriguez.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/sedekah11.jpg?w=279&#038;h=375" alt="" width="279" height="375" /></a></p>
<p>Unlike other good works, giving to the poor establishes a treasury of credits in heaven that future sins cannot draw down. God, in fact, treats each gift as a loan that he multiplies far beyond its initial worth. It is as if God were a peerless investment manager to whom we entrusted our savings. This is the logic of Jesus’ answer to the rich man who asks what he must do to gain eternal life (Matt. 19:16).</p>
<p>Not all debts end up being paid. Sometimes a creditor remits a debt, turning the sum owed by his debtor into an unmerited gift. It is for this that Jesus teaches his disciples to pray. In the Lord’s Prayer, the underlying Semitic idiom for sin and forgiveness is precisely that of Second Temple Judaism: “Forgive us our debts as we forgive those who hold debts against us.”</p>
<p>Seeking an explanation for God’s generosity, rabbinic Judaism looks to God’s special love for Israel. A midrash on Psalms 32:1 depicts God on the Day of Atonement. Moved by love and pity for Israel, he hides all her sins under his royal robes while Satan is off looking for further debts with which to burden God’s people. David, looking on, says “Happy the one whose sins are covered.”</p>
<p>In early Christianity, the Cross of Jesus motivates God to remit our debt. The most important text for the Church Fathers’ reflection on atonement is probably Colossians 2:14: “Christ erased the bond of indebtedness that stood against us, nailing it to the cross.” The author of Colossians here uses the standard Greek term for a debt instrument— <em>cheirographon</em>, a note of hand that was destroyed when the debt was repaid. In one patristical account, Jesus lures Satan into reaching beyond his rights. Innocent of sin, Jesus is not subject to the bond, so when Satan kills him, the bond is destroyed. In another account, Jesus by his Passion and death makes full payment on the bond, thus canceling humanity’s debt forever. Either way, patristic thinking on the atonement is shaped above all by the idea of sin as a debt to God that is voided by the Cross.</p>
<p><a href="http://rudyvrodriguez.wordpress.com/2011/10/24/treasures-in-heaven-by-bruce-d-marshall/crucifixion-jesus-christ-mormon1/" rel="attachment wp-att-2330"><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-2330" title="Crucifixion-Jesus-Christ-mormon1" src="http://rudyvrodriguez.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/crucifixion-jesus-christ-mormon1.jpg?w=298&#038;h=375" alt="" width="298" height="375" /></a></p>
<p>One effect of Anderson’s argument, of which he is well aware, is to make a number of traditional Catholic practices and beliefs—almsgiving as a source of great merit; a heavenly treasury of merit available by way of indulgences; Anselm’s theology of the atonement (the subject of Anderson’s final chapter)—look much more biblical than even Catholics, at least in modern times, have generally supposed. Daniel 4:27 in particular was the focus of vehement controversy during the Reformation and after, with Protestant interpreters arguing that this text does not, appearances to the contrary, serve as biblical warrant for the idea that we can pay down our debt of sin by giving alms.</p>
<p>Anderson has no wish to ignite confessional controversy. Instead he suggests—rightly, I think—that traditional Protestant misgivings about matters such as the merit of almsgiving are largely misplaced when the nature of the debt we owe to God and the manner in which we have a hand in its repayment are rightly understood. Almsgiving, like any good work, presupposes faith. The person who seeks to follow the advice of Daniel or the command of Jesus to lay up treasure in heaven must <em>credit</em> God with his or her own life and destiny. It is not by accident that words for religious faith in many languages are the same as those for financial relationships; indeed, the word <em>credit</em>, loaned to English by Latin, simply means that one believes or trusts another. True faith, which trusts God and not ourselves for salvation, is necessarily “active in love,” as Galatians 5:6 puts it. As long as faith and love are not pried apart, there is no need to fear that the person who hearkens to Jesus’ words and stores up treasure in heaven is seeking salvation by works.</p>
<p>Where Protestants and Catholics historically differ is on the question of whether believers can share in Christ’s all-sufficient payment of our debt or only admire it in gratitude. The traditional argument is not over whether the concepts of debt and payment apply to humanity’s relationship with God but over the extent of that application—whether it belongs only to Christ or also, in Christ, to us.</p>
<p>For some contemporary theologians, however, the idea that we could incur a debt to God, or that our relationship with God could involve repayment of that debt, is misguided—if not perverse and demonic. Theologians who incline this way worry that the ideas of debt and payment belong to an economy of exchange or barter. In this sort of arrangement, one party bestows goods on another precisely to make the recipient incur a debt. This debt constitutes an obligation on the part of the recipient, an obligation from which the giver intends to benefit.</p>
<p>The giver may be quite open about his intention, as when a bank gives us a mortgage. But as the anthropologist Marcel Mauss first argued in the 1920s, giver and receiver often will deny that any obligation has been created, thus concealing from themselves the self-interest at work on both sides. More recently, such scholars as Pierre Bourdieu and Mary Douglas have made the slogan “no free gifts” something of a commonplace among anthropologists and sociologists. For the philosopher Jacques Derrida, the idea of a gift, given wholly for the benefit of the receiver with no strings attached, is unhappily self-contradictory: When I convey some good—food, money, love—I do so with the expectation, and often the demand, for return.</p>
<p><a href="http://rudyvrodriguez.wordpress.com/2011/10/24/treasures-in-heaven-by-bruce-d-marshall/relationship_with_god/" rel="attachment wp-att-2331"><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-2331" title="Relationship_with_God" src="http://rudyvrodriguez.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/relationship_with_god.jpg?w=368&#038;h=375" alt="" width="368" height="375" /></a></p>
<p>When debt and payment are understood in this way, it is not hard to see why a theologian might reject the thought that such ideas can have any place in humanity’s relationship with God. If Christ’s saving work involves the repayment of a debt to God, then God seems to be a selfish tyrant who demands that his abject, suffering creatures pay back with interest the loan of life and love he has made to them. Without this monstrous balloon payment, God will not forgive the sins of his creatures and so will not give them any of the other goods for which forgiveness is the prerequisite.</p>
<p>The solution to this problem, so the argument goes, is to drop the idea that the saving work of Christ, especially his Passion and Cross, are in any way a payment or even a gift made to God. Christ’s suffering is simply what human malice does to the innocent and in no sense an action on which any gift of God—especially forgiveness—might depend. Protestant theology had argued that sinners can merit nothing for themselves before God, but some theologians now maintain that the sinless Christ cannot merit anything for us, either.</p>
<p>The theological motives for taking this line vary. Some theologians see traditional notions of atonement as glorifications of violence and the passive acceptance of suffering, and view a commitment to nonviolence as basic to theology: Surely a good and loving God needs no payment or other inducement, least of all the bloody suffering and death of an innocent person, to forgive us. The standard target here is St. Anselm, although this is a bit bizarre, since no thinker in the tradition is clearer than Anselm that the satisfaction that Christ offers to God on the cross is an <em>alternative</em> to punishment: a perfect act of self offering to which the violence that accompanies it is quite accidental.</p>
<p>The objection to debt and payment is sometimes put in more comprehensive terms by opposing the economy of giving to an economy of gift. The Catholic philosopher Jean-Luc Marion develops this alternative in one way, and the Protestant theologians Kathryn Tanner and John Milbank develop it in others. The pivotal step in the alternative economy that these authors propose is the claim that nothing is genuinely a <em>gift</em> unless it is given without any expectation or desire for repayment. In a genuine economy of gift, the giver may hope the receiver accepts the gift, to benefit from it. But the giving is in no way conditional on the subsequent acceptance of the gift or the expectation of its acceptance.</p>
<p>In the economy of the gift, the impossibility of repayment applies most of all to the good God gives us in Jesus Christ. His Passion and death are God’s sheer unowed gift of forgiveness and new life; they are in no sense a human return of gift to God, let alone a recompense demanded by and offered to God. As Tanner succinctly puts it, “In Christ debts are forgiven rather than paid.”</p>
<p>Gary Anderson argues in <em>Sin: A History</em> that debt and payment belong to the deep grammar of sin and salvation in the Bible: an utterly basic scriptural element in Jewish and Christian liturgy, devotion, and tradition. If he’s right, then several strands of recent theology are out of touch with Scripture.</p>
<p>One might simply write this off as pretty much the norm for theologians, who often exhibit a remarkable carelessness about what the Bible actually says. But the deeper issue is the character of the divine economy of salvation and, in particular, the difference between a debt owed to God and any debt we could owe in a worldly economy of self-interested exchange. Anderson pursues this point by drawing on rabbinic Jewish and Syrian Christian literature, especially Narsai and St. Ephrem. He rightly aims to make sense of the deep Christian and Jewish intuition that we <em>owe</em> God everything, and not—as theologians of “the gift” suppose—that while we receive everything from God, we owe God nothing.</p>
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<p>To think about this, recall the medieval commonplace, in discussions of Christ’s Passion and its saving power, that God could have remitted humanity’s sins, forgiven and redeemed us, without the Incarnation and death of his Son. Like many commonplaces of medieval theology, this one stems from Augustine, in this case from his <em>De Trinitate</em>. God certainly had the ability to deliver us from evil in some other way than he has, although he chose, Augustine suggests, the most beautifully suitable way of all: “God, to whose power all things are equally subject, did not lack another possible way of healing our misery, but there was no more appropriate way, nor did there need to be.”</p>
<p>Picking up this line of thought, Thomas Aquinas argues that God would not have acted against justice if he had simply remitted our sins by fiat, without any satisfaction—any offering or payment—on our part. In fact, though, God has decided to save us through the satisfaction offered in Christ’s Passion. This way of salvation, Thomas strikingly observes, is <em>more </em>merciful than salvation by mere divine fiat would be and so is a more beautiful and suitable way for God, who is mercy itself, to act. “God gave us his own Son to make satisfaction for the sin of all human nature, as Scripture teaches: ‘We are justified by his grace, as a gift, through the redemption which is in Christ Jesus, whom God put forward as our propitiator through faith in his blood’ (Rom. 3:24–25).” And this, Thomas continues, “was a greater mercy than it would have been had God forgiven sins without any recompense.”</p>
<p>We are apt to find this puzzling, since it may seem obvious to us that requiring satisfaction is less merciful and more demanding than sheer forgiveness would be. Why does God save by payment of a debt, when he doesn’t need to act this way and doesn’t get anything out of the exchange?</p>
<p>Thomas Aquinas and others answer that God redeems us this way precisely for our benefit, for the good of those whom he generously treats as debtors owing him satisfaction. By treating us as debtors even though he has no need of our payment, the good God gives us a share in the salvation he brings about for us: a human, creaturely part in God’s own victory over human sin.</p>
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<p>If God had remitted our sins by sheer forgiveness—sent them away or simply declared them nonexistent—then our sins indeed would be gone, and we no longer would be sinners. We would, however, be mere spectators to our own salvation: observers who simply noted this fact about ourselves, without any involvement of our hearts and wills. By treating our sins as a debt for which he will accept payment, God gives humanity a genuine share in its own salvation. As any child knows whose father has given him or her money to buy him a Christmas gift, there is joy in this that can come in no other way, even though—or, better, precisely because—we know well that we are simply giving back what we have freely received.</p>
<p>This happens first of all in Jesus Christ, who, in the upper room and on the cross, makes to God that offering than which a greater cannot be conceived. Jesus’ offering to the Father in love is a more-than-sufficient, superabundant satisfaction or payment for the entire debt owed by all human beings on account of their sin. More than that: Jesus’ total gift of himself to the Father on the cross is also the creature’s perfect glorification of the creator. “I glorified you on earth,” Jesus says, “having accomplished the work which you gave me to do” (John 17:4). Jesus makes the definitive thank-offering of the creature to God for all his gifts, an offering whose value reaches even beyond satisfaction for sin.</p>
<p>But this return of gift is our doing, too. In Christ’s Church and through his sacraments—not least through the giving of alms as a penitential satisfaction—we come to share in our own small way in the one great redemptive act accomplished by Jesus Christ. When he joins our modest efforts to his own supreme gift, he graciously allows the salvation he has accomplished for us to come, in some small way, from us as well. United to him, our salvation is not simply an event that happens to us but includes our own grateful gift of self—our merit.</p>
<p>In Christ, then, none of us is a spectator to our salvation; we are all, painfully and joyfully, full participants in it. Far from lowering God to an unworthy economy of self-interested exchange, Thomas Aquinas and others argue that God’s willingness to accept payment for our sins is a sheer gift from God to us, an act of greater mercy and generosity than any forgiveness by fiat would be, because God allows each of us to claim nothing less than a place in his salvation of the world in Christ. And for this the appropriate creaturely response, as to all God’s gifts, is not a sense of burdened obligation but an ever-greater gratitude.</p>
<p>Bruce D. Marshall <em>is professor of historical theology at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas.</em></p>
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