In
my local church service this morning (11/15/15) I had a vision. In it I saw multitudes falling off a flat
plain, and somehow I knew that that flat plain was the flat earth reality of
those who were tumbling over the cliffs all along the edge of this delusional
reality. The thought that struck me
while watching this horrific scene, was “How could they believe such medieval
and/or dark ages science?”—especially in light of the advanced science of
today. At the back of the dark ages was
the absence of Scriptural light and book learning, but at the back of today’s
ignorance is the absence of a proper exegesis of Scripture and too much
dependence on the light of science.
There
is an ignorance which means lack of knowledge, and an ignorance born of willful
disregard of truth that is actually more akin to foolish stupidity than simple
ignorance. Sometime back I encountered
the writings of James Sire and T. Austin-Sparks. Both of them, in different but complimentary
ways, wrote of phantom ghosts and horizonless horizons. In response to their inspiration I wrote the
following article:
The Vanished Jesus
“Who gave us the sponge to
wipe away the entire horizon?”—Friedrich Nietzsche
“When the foundations [ a stable society] collapse, what can good [righteous] people
do?”—Psalm
11:3
Our period of time in history, roughly from about the
mid-1950s to today, has been labeled the postmodern era; it is that period of
time immediately following the modern era which roughly spanned from the end of
the Romantic era (late 1800s) to the mid-1950s.
In sequence, western society philosophy began in the flames of humanism
and is today ending in ashes as charred remains in the holocaust-like ovens of
atheism. God is now really dead.
The optimism which followed the Dark Ages was all
moonshine, light without heat, and it manifested itself as human ingenuity,
autonomous thinking, unrestrained and uprooted imagination, and breaks from
established ideas and traditions. James
W. Sire, in his book about worldviews, called postmodernism “The Vanished
Horizon.”
Sire got his idea about a vanished horizon from
Nietzsche, who in his parable “The Madman” spoke of how modern humans killed
God, and by so doing, eliminated the horizon.
Nietzsche wrote this more than 100 years ago, and he said then that it
had not yet occurred (at least not yet within the “ears of man”). But now, according to Sire (and I agree) it has occurred. Indeed, Sire said this:
The acknowledgement of the death of God is the
beginning of postmodern wisdom. It is
also the end of postmodern wisdom. For,
in the final analysis, postmodernism is not “post” anything; it is the last
move of the modern.
The horizon defining the limits of our world has been
wiped away. The center holding us in
place has vanished. Our age…postmodern,
finds itself afloat in a pluralism of perspectives, a plethora of philosophical
possibilities, but with no dominant notion of where to go or how to get
there. A near future of cultural anarchy
seems inevitable. (The Universe Next Door, 2004, pp. 211-212).
Scripture agrees.
The beginning of wisdom is the fear of God, and of course, the fool who
says there is no God cannot then fear Him nor begin to have wisdom. There is no past, present—and especially
within the context of this writing—a future, when God is removed from our
reality. The horizon, which suggests a
future ground upon which to build hopes and dreams, when removed (as it must be
when God is removed) leaves us at least anarchy, and at most, an utter
emptiness of purpose and annihilation of being.
Also, postmodernism is implicitly about another
concept called deconstruction; its
obvious meaning, to “un-construct something, to dismantle or destroy a constructed
thing” is applicable. For our purposes,
it is about destroying today what was established yesterday (and especially in
the moral, spiritual and cultural realms).
Long ago the psalmist asked, “If the foundations are destroyed, what can
the righteous do?” (Psalm 11: 3). The
idea of deconstructing convention is based on a withering skepticism expressed
as an overwrought scrutiny, and motivated by less than an honest search for
truth. To question convention,
authority, or any established fact is not wrong except when done excessively
and for reasons in support of impure motives couched in rebellion.
If we throw away established definitions—if we throw
away absolute truth—we devolve or degenerate into chaos; if everyone is a truth
unto themselves and all that matters are our own little private interpretations
and/or narratives, we cannot communicate—and therefore—we cannot commune. And if we cannot commune, we will cease to be
a community, a society, and ultimately, we will cease to be a nation. If the vanishing family unit and the
breakdown from there outward into the classroom and then outward into work
environments and neighborhoods, and reaching even further outward into cities
and states and finally all the way outward into our multi-divided nation hasn’t
convinced us yet about how utterly wrong we are to the core, how systemically
wrong our assumptions and presuppositions are about what it takes to establish
and grow a healthy society and nation, then we are stupid and foolish and blind
beyond belief.
Ah,
but there is hope! As the late Paul
Harvey used to say, “Now for the rest of the story!”
Of course, the real
Jesus is not even remotely a vanished entity as though he were a mere
breath, a mortal man; no, our everlasting King remains everlasting—and solidly
so. He could never be defined by the
psalmist, for instance, as “nothing in [God’s] sight” (Psalm 39:5). Though 100% man, He is also 100% God; He is
an altogether other entity than those of us born of the first Adam. He cannot be defined like us: “Surely every
man at his best is a mere breath…Surely every man walks about as a phantom”
(Psalm 39:5-6). He “is the same yesterday and today and forever,” perfectly defined,
clearly presented, and without even so much as a degree of shadowing or shading
expressed at the margins of His being (Hebrews 13: 8). In fact, there are no margins of being with
Him whatsoever; He is infinite, and infinitely centered (inside and outside all
boxes); and guess what? He IS our
horizon, God’s horizon.
T. Austin Sparks wrote a small book entitled “The
Horizon of Christ.” In it he explained
how the Greek word for our English word “horizon” is used twice in Scripture,
in two verses out of the book of Acts (10:42; 17:31). But no English version actually uses the word
horizon. All the top or most popular
versions use either “ordained” or “appointed.”
After establishing the validity of calling Christ “The Horizon,” Sparks
went on to say this:
Therefore, we are going to be occupied with Christ as
God’s Horizon, where everything is horizoned
by Christ. And everybody knows what
the horizon is. The horizon is the
farthest limit of vision. It is the
ultimate range of things. Wherever we
may go in this world, on any of its sides, we are still confronted with the
horizon which limits everything to itself and within which everything
obtains. And here we are told in precise
language that what the horizon is to this earth as the ultimate limit and range
and content of everything, God has made His Son in His eternal counsels. Christ is God’s full range and ultimate limit
and complete content of everything. And
although that word “ordained,” [or “appointed”], ‘horizo’ actually occurs only twice in the New Testament, what it
means, what it conveys, is found everywhere.
One very inclusive and impressive fragment alone would indicate that to
us from the Letter to the Colossians, chapter 1: 16 and 17, “For in Him were all things created, in the
heavens and upon the earth, things visible and invisible, whether thrones or
dominions or principalities or powers; all things have been created through
Him, and unto Him; and He is before all things, and in Him all things
consist—are held together” (A.S.V.; Amp.).
There is the horizon, the range, the scope, the sphere, and the fullness;
and that is Christ. (1961, pp. 5-6).
“Behold,
is it not by appointment of the Lord of hosts that the nations toil only to
satisfy the fire [that will consume their work], and the peoples weary
themselves only for emptiness, falsity, and futility?” (Habakkuk 2:13,
Amp.).
Yes indeed, in the end, all iron, clay, bronze,
silver, and even gold (representing the different governing models of mankind)
will be crushed, pulverized, and made like chaff to be blown away by the breath
of the Almighty, as Jesus Christ, that stone which did all that crushing and
pulverizing, becomes a mountain and fills the whole earth with a majestic and
high government. It is upon us, “the
final removal and transformation of all [that can be] shaken—that is, of
that which has been created—in order that what cannot be shaken may remain and
continue. Let us therefore, receiving a
kingdom that is firm and stable and cannot be shaken” (Hebrews
12:27-28, Amp.).
“The
seventh angel then blew [his] trumpet, and there were mighty voices in heaven,
shouting, The dominion (kingdom,
sovereignty, rule) of the world
has now come into the possession and become the kingdom of our Lord and of His
Christ (the Messiah), and He shall reign forever and ever (for the eternities of the eternities)!” (Revelation
11:15, Amp.).
Our nation and our times is increasingly proving
themselves as vaporous as what man is within himself without Christ; he and
everything he conceives of and makes with his hands is ultimately
horizonless. But the good news is that
Jesus Christ is not only on the horizon for all who cling to Him, but is
Himself THE HORIZON. “Therefore thus
says the Lord God, Behold, I am laying in Zion for a foundation a Stone, a tested Stone, a precious Cornerstone of sure foundation; he who believes (trusts in, relies on, and adheres to
that Stone) will not be ashamed or give way or hasten away [in
sudden panic]” (Isaiah 28:16, Amp.).
Do not fear what is coming upon the earth, and do not fear the
fact that Jesus Christ and God have been removed from our nation; God is
greater than our nation, and He can never fade away except in delusional minds
and hearts. Place your future on solid
ground; its good and righteous fulfillment is on the horizon, the HORIZON OF
CHRIST. To avoid the cliff at the edge
of the flat earth you must first get off of linear (one-dimensional) thinking;
there is no edge nor cliff to fall off of on spherical (multi-dimensional)
thinking. God is greater than your
heart/mind and knows all things! Trust
Him and walk on solid ground from here to eternity.
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