T.M. Moore
T. M. Moore is principal of The Fellowship of Ailbe, a spiritual fellowship in the Celtic Christian tradition. He and his wife, Susie, make their home in the Champlain Valley of Vermont.
Books by T. M. Moore
A Good Conscience
A Good Conscience--The third facet of sound doctrine is a good conscience. The conscience is that aspect of the soul that nurtures and houses our values and priorities. It is thus the seat of the will. If our values, priorities, and will are good, then it follows that our walk will express that which is pleasing to the Lord, Who is good.
Uses of the Law: To Engage God’s Spirit (6)
T. M. Moore
The aim of our charge is love that issues from a pure heart and a good conscience… 1 Timothy 1.5
The third facet of sound doctrine is a good conscience. The conscience is that aspect of the soul that nurtures and houses our values and priorities. It is thus the seat of the will. If our values, priorities, and will are good, then it follows that our walk will express that which is pleasing to the Lord, Who is good.
The Law of God, being holy and righteous and good (Rom. 7.12), is thus a valuable resource for the reformation and nurture of our consciences. By an abundance of examples, promises, and warnings, the Law teaches us to value what God values and to make obedience to His will the priority of our lives. We would not be able to know that God deplores coveting – or even what it is to covet – without the Law of God to instruct us (Rom. 7.7). The same is true with everything else that is necessary to foster sound doctrine in the form of love for God and neighbor.
We will not be likely to bring love to expression – no matter how well we understand it nor how pure our motives and desires may be – if our will is not shaped for goodness as God intends. Exposure to the Law of God, by which we learn the character of God and understand the magnitude of Christ’s mercy and grace, can help to ensure that our values will be the same as God’s, so that, mind, heart, and conscience working together, the fourth facet of the jewel of sound doctrine can be achieved, and we will be firmly established in the true teaching of our Lord.
That fourth facet is a sincere and unhypocritical walk of faith.
For a practical guide to the role of God’s Law in the life of faith, get The Ground for Christian Ethics by going to www.ailbe.org and click on our Book Store.
A Pure Heart
A Pure Heart--The first facet of the jewel of sound doctrine is right understanding of the Word of God. Knowing God’s Law is absolutely crucial to achieving this first facet. So also with the second: a pure heart. Since the Law of God both defines and exposes sin and is a primary resource of the Holy Spirit for reforming our hearts, we can readily understand that it is lawful to use the Law to aid in achieving this second facet of sound doctrine.
Aimed at Love
Aimed at Love--Jesus taught that all the Law and the Prophets found their proper expression in the two-fold commandment of love for God and neighbor (Matt. 22.34-30). Thus, is it inconceivable that we could study the Law of God, read it through the filter of the Prophets and our Lord Jesus Christ, and expect that the Apostles would come to any other applications of the Law than these. At the same time, we should also be able to see that it will not be possible to fulfill the “aim of our charge” apart from careful reading and study of the Law of God.
Uses of the Law: To Promote Sound Doctrine (4)
T. M. Moore
The aim of our charge is love… 1 Timothy 1.5
Jesus taught that all the Law and the Prophets found their proper expression in the two-fold commandment of love for God and neighbor (Matt. 22.34-30). Thus, is it inconceivable that we could study the Law of God, read it through the filter of the Prophets and our Lord Jesus Christ, and expect that the Apostles would come to any other applications of the Law than these. At the same time, we should also be able to see that it will not be possible to fulfill the “aim of our charge” apart from careful reading and study of the Law of God.
Sound doctrine is not just a matter of abstract theology reduced to arcane definitions and mind-boggling terms. Doctrine is only sound when it issues in love on the part of those who are learning it. And such doctrine, to be sound, must come to expression in the form of good works set forth in the Law of God. The Law thus contributes to our understanding of sound doctrine by providing an abundance of concrete examples to guide our thinking concerning how we should love God and our neighbor.
We shall return to this theme on Sunday. Sound doctrine is, as Paul explains it, is a jewel with four facets. The first facet consists of achieving a right understanding of the teaching of God’s Word, and we have been addressing this during the first four installments in this current series. We must have our minds rightly grounded in the Word of God if we are to be able to keep from swerving away from sound doctrine. The Law of God, as we have seen, provides the intellectual cornerstone for the rest of Scripture. We will not have a mind for sound doctrine if we neglect the study of God’s Law.
For a practical guide to the role of God’s Law in the life of faith, get The Ground for Christian Ethics by going to www.ailbe.org and click on our Book Store.
Guided by Faith
Guided by Faith--If we would be good stewards of God’s Word, able to understand and practice its teaching as God intends, we must be students of His Law, for the Law provides the cornerstone of all Scripture.
Stewarding the Word
Stewarding the Word--We need to enlarge on the subject broached yesterday, namely, that of understanding, teaching, and practicing sound doctrine according to the teaching of the Apostles. Paul told the elders at Ephesus that he had been careful among them to teach them everything that was useful, all the counsel of God in Scripture and its bearing on the task of seeking the Kingdom of God (Acts 20.20, 25, 26). In these brief comments lies a wealth of guidance in the practice of Biblical interpretation.
Uses of the Law: To Promote Sound Doctrine (2)
T. M. Moore
As I urged you when I was going to Macedonia, remain at Ephesus that you may charge certain persons not to teach any different doctrine, nor to devote themselves to myths and endless genealogies, which promote speculations rather than the stewardship from God that is by faith. 1 Timothy. 1.3, 4
We need to enlarge on the subject broached yesterday, namely, that of understanding, teaching, and practicing sound doctrine according to the teaching of the Apostles. Paul told the elders at Ephesus that he had been careful among them to teach them everything that was useful, all the counsel of God in Scripture and its bearing on the task of seeking the Kingdom of God (Acts 20.20, 25, 26). In these brief comments lies a wealth of guidance in the practice of Biblical interpretation.
The cornerstone of Scripture is the Law of God. That is, the shape of the Law – its content, purpose, themes, thrusts, and principles of interpretation – provide the shape of all the rest of Scripture. Trying to understand Scripture apart from a clear understanding of the law of God is like trying to build a house with setting a solid and reliable cornerstone in place.
What kind of interpretive guidance does the Law provide? It tells us many things concerning how we must understand the rest of Scripture and its doctrines. Primarily, as we have seen, the Law reveals God and His will. All of Scripture is about God, His will, and how we may glorify Him by knowing Him and obeying His will. Anything that swerves from this is not sound doctrine.
Second, the Law teaches our need for grace. We are sinners, as we have seen, and we are unable to please God apart from His gracious, redeeming work on our behalf. We do not look to ourselves for salvation and righteousness, but to God only, and to His Law.
Third, the Law points to the saving work of Jesus Christ and of the coming of His Kingdom. From the beginning of the Law, in the book of Genesis, through all its detailed outworking, in the laws concerning religious practices and those guiding us in how to love our neighbors, the character of Christ is revealed and the work of Christ is foreshadowed. All the Law, as all the Scriptures, point to Jesus, and must be read in this light (Jn. 5.39).
Finally, the Law establishes the path of good works – as we will see in a subsequent series. Without the Law, those “before ordained works of God,” we cannot fulfill the purpose of our redemption, for we will not be able to discern which works are truly good.
So we are being good stewards of the Word of God, and thus, less likely to swerve into unsound teaching, when, grounded in the Law of God, we allow its themes and content to guide us in understanding all the rest of the Scripture as the Apostles did, and as God intends.
For a practical guide to the role of God’s Law in the life of faith, get The Ground for Christian Ethics by going to www.ailbe.org and click on our Book Store.
Biblical and Apostolic
Biblical and Apostolic--We are continuing to examine the proper use of the Law of God in the life of faith. Paul says that “the law is good, if one uses it lawfully” (v. 8), and our desire is to consider just what such lawful uses of the Law might involve.
Much to Be Desired
Seeking the Kingdom is to be the driving force of everything we do.
A Framework for Faith/Spiritual Disciplines
We should strive then for the kingdom of heaven...It is a bright flower in its great purity, it is an open sea in its great beauty, it a heaven full of candles in its true brilliance, it is the eye's delight in its great loveliness and pleasantness, it is a flame in its fairness, it is a harp in its melodiousness, it is a feast in its abundance of wine, it is a true radiance.
- Anonymous, An Old Irish Homily (Irish, 9th century)
For the kingdom of God is not a matter of eating and drinking but of righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Spirit. Whoever thus serves Christ is acceptable to God and approved by men.
- Romans 14.17, 18
Doubtless every Christian knows that the Lord Jesus has assigned to us, as our highest priority, seeking the Kingdom of God and His righteousness (Matt. 6.33). We know this. But we are only blessed if we do it.
Seeking the Kingdom is not simply the first thing we should do each day, before we get on with all the other things we have to do. Seeking the Kingdom is to be the driving force, the goal, and the purpose of everything we do at every moment. We want the rule of Jesus Christ to become the dominant presence in all our relationships, roles, and responsibilities.
That's right, isn't it? We do want that? Or do we just know that this is what we're supposed to want?
We will not seek the Kingdom in this way - striving after it, laying hold of it with violence, as it were (Matt. 11.12) - until we see the Kingdom in all its magnificence, beauty, power, goodness, and uprightness and desire it as our highest goal. This is the way Celtic Christians saw the Kingdom, and it was this understanding, this vision, of the Kingdom that led them to strive by every means, often at great sacrifice, to attain it.
But I rather suspect that most of us don't really understand the Kingdom of God. And, if we don't understand it, it's going to be hard to make it the driving force of all our lives. We cannot seek what we do not know.
The parables of Jesus, together with the teaching of the Psalms and prophets, are rich resources for understanding the Kingdom of God. Meditate on what you see there. Believe it to be as Jesus says - a pearl of great price, a seed fraught with fruit-bearing potential - then go to serve Christ in every aspect of your life, that His Kingdom might prevail and He might reign there through you.
Seeking the Kingdom is the Lord's calling to us, every day, in everything we do. How will you strive to attain this glorious objective today?
T. M. Moore, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
The Best Bait
How shall we reach the lost in our generation?
Money and Power
The situation in Libya is a perfect illustration of the futility of a foreign policy based on money and power.
Cherish Devotion
A Framework for Faith/Spiritual Disciplines
Cherish every practice of devotion greatly.
- Anonymous, A Rule for Hermits (Irish, 9th century)
As a deer pants for flowing streams, so pants my soul for you, O God. My soul thirsts for God, for the living God.
- Psalm 42.1,2
Consider how much is bound up in that word, "cherish." What we cherish we delight in and enjoy. Things cherished are precious treasures, to be cared for diligently and shared proudly. Cherished things occupy our minds, thrill our hearts, and never fail to satisfy. We tend to spend a good deal of time and invest much in the way of attention in the things we cherish most.
Do we cherish prayer? Time in God's Word? Moments of solitude or of quiet reflection on the Lord's presence in created things? Does our heart yearn with the yearning of the psalmist, "When shall I come and appear before the Lord?"
Wouldn't that be wonderful? What can make it so? Well, it would help us to cherish our devotional practices if through them we actually engaged the Lord in His glory, partook of His presence, and knew His Spirit working within us to will and do of God's good pleasure. In the presence of the Lord, when we know we're there and we're seeing His beauty and experiencing His glory, then we know fullness of joy and pleasures forever more (Ps. 16.11). Whatever brings us to such a heightened sense of the knowledge of the Lord we will surely cherish, and resort there again and again.
But if our devotions are perfunctory, dutiful, or merely intellectual and academic, we will not cherish them much. We might continue to do them, but not with the kind of joy and intensity of focus that comes from actually meeting the Lord in prayer and in His Word.
In your times of devotions, seek the Lord.Wait patiently and expectantly on Him. Strive to know His presence and to engage His glory. Don't let Him go until He blesses you. If your disciplines and devotions don't yield this, then get some help revamping and retooling them. Because this is what they're for.
God longs for us to know Him and to experience His glory in transforming ways. Spiritual disciplines are the arena for this, and, when they yield that sweet and awesome encounter with the glory of God, we will know joy and pleasure, and we will cherish those times more and more.
Today at The Fellowship
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T. M. Moore, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
This Way to the Knowledge of God
God is speaking through the things He has made.