Plentiful Harvest, Path of Peace

“Then Jesus said to His disciples, “The harvest is plentiful, but the workers are few. Ask the Lord of the harvest, therefore, to send out workers into His harvest field.” (Matthew 9:37-38)

That was my life verse, confirmed in many ways, when I made the choice to obey God and endure seminary though I really didn’t want to go.  As a woman, I was not entirely welcome by many men who questioned my motives and caused me to question my call.  It was painful and discouraging.

God sent me for a time out in Minnesota and then sent me right back, this time with a somewhat better attitude and far greater confidence that He was behind my studying there for reasons that are still unclear to me today.

Women go to seminary for a variety of reasons, just like men do.  Some are young, show up looking for a godly husband, though their odds are just as good (or bad) in a church.  Some show up secretly seeking redemption for a life that included events such as abortion, divorce, etc. for which they still carry a stain of unreconciled guilt.  Some are single and destined to remain that way, viewing seminary as the Protestant version of a Catholic’s Convent.  Some are more at home with the LGBTQ movement…and some are simply power-hungry or sinful disruptors, not unlike some men who go to seminary.

But some are Biblical Chads in the making and have that “faith seeking understanding” of the nature and character of God so we may love Him more completely. It’s important to have that Line in the Sand to foster Biblical Chads.

However, when a Line in the Sand becomes a wall of division,
do we risk denying the very workers
God has sent for the sake of His harvest? 

Back to the SBC vote regarding women in the pastorate (as one of 3 societal events happening concurrently in the Prism of Manhood), Rick Warren’s Saddleback Church was appealing the SBC’s decision to expel them.  They had ordained three women to be pastors in title, office, and/or function.

I think a lot about this issue because it’s personal to me, but I also respect The Line in the Sand.  Perhaps the SBC was rash to expel them (rather than suspend them), but sensible to hold the line because the truth is…

there are godly and ungodly ways to do this. 

“Do what you know is against the rules and apologize later” isn’t in the Bible or answer the WWJD?  Neither is forcing your way based upon your power, size, or self-aggrandized influence.  Nor is to treat God’s Word as anything less than enduring for all times reflected in Fern Creek Baptist rainbow stole-clad pastor Linda Barnes Popham’s “we just interpret it differently.”  Yeah, that’s what they always say.

One question for today:

Read that last 2 paragraphs and these Scriptures and ask God to reveal Himself.  What would God’s approach be?

“Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit. Rather, in humility value others above yourselves, not looking to your own interests but each of you to the interests of the others.” (Philippians 2:3-4)

“If it is possible, as far as it depends on you, live at peace with everyone.” (Romans 12:18)

“Then Jesus said to His disciples, “The harvest is plentiful, but the workers are few. Ask the Lord of the harvest, therefore, to send out workers into His harvest field.” (Matthew 9:37-38)

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The “Prism of Manhood” series includes:

http://seminarygal.com/a-prism-of-manhood/
http://seminarygal.com/andrew-tate-dangerous-masquerade/
http://seminarygal.com/andrew-tate-positive-instruction-silent-conquest/
http://seminarygal.com/tim-ballard-sound-of-freedom/
http://seminarygal.com/misguided-manhood-and-the-church/
http://seminarygal.com/reviving-muscular-christianity/
http://seminarygal.com/biblical-chads/
http://seminarygal.com/riptide-and-a-line-in-the-sand/

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Riptide and a Line in the Sand

In what might seem to be a case of FAFO or “play stupid games, win stupid prizes,” more than a few churches have neglected sound doctrine and inched a bit too close into the riptide of WOKE culture wars—only to get sucked under, destroying everything– their legacy, their present witness, and their future.  It does not escape my attention that many of the people leading those churches in various denominations are women.

Those women are the bane of my existence, the stumbling block to God’s call on my life.

I do not blame godly men for looking at churches being led astray by women and fearing the astray part.  The Line in the Sand says, “Don’t go there.” 

But there’s a discernment problem here and a true failure of men to be Biblical Chads.  Here’s why I believe we have more of a manhood problem than a womanhood problem.  Churches have been led astray by men far longer than led astray by women.  Astray can happen irrespective of the sex of the one titled “pastor”. 

Have male pastors abused their Authority by engaging in sin that destroys people and churches?  Sure, they have.  Often more criminally.

Read that question and answer again.

I respect the Line in the Sand, and like many of my male counterparts, desire to steer safely from the riptide of WOKE doctrine.

I’m going to get personal on you again. 

At one point, I was lamenting to a prominent evangelical leader with some familiarity to Trinity Evangelical Divinity School where I received my education that the institution was drifting toward socialism.  It disturbed me to see my beloved evangelicalism subsumed under the riptide of those (and predominantly women) whose love for WOKE causes…when distilled down… revealed that it superseded their love for the Gospel.  They would see themselves more as Social Justice Warriors than Contenders for the Faith.  Some acted more like a beast from the abyss, enraged to devour if someone were to say something like “All Lives Matter.”

You know what this prominent man’s reply was to me?
“Well, what do you want me to do about it?!”

In a sheer act of will, I choked back my full pantheon of angry replies, all of which could take the form of “Be the F-ing man and leader you won’t let me be!”  And instead, I repented of my rage and simply said, “I just thought that a person of your influence could maybe make a difference.” He said, “It’s always been socialist. I have bigger fish to fry.”  End of conversation, I guess.

Questions for further thought:

How is discernment imperative to the Line in the Sand?  “But you, dear friends, by building yourselves up in your most holy faith and praying in the Holy Spirit, keep yourselves in God’s love as you wait for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ to bring you to eternal life. Be merciful to those who doubt; save others by snatching them from the fire; to others show mercy, mixed with fear– hating even the clothing stained by corrupted flesh.” (Jude 1:20-23)?

Without a Line in the Sand, protecting God’s people from the riptide of WOKE culture, how does this Scripture apply?

“My people have been lost sheep; their shepherds have led them astray and caused them to roam on the mountains. They wandered over mountain and hill and forgot their own resting place. Whoever found them devoured them; their enemies said, ‘We are not guilty, for they sinned against the LORD, their verdant pasture, the LORD, the hope of their ancestors.’ (Jeremiah 50:6-7)

Are there any “bigger fish to fry” than standing up as a Biblical Chad to preserve the teaching institutions training tomorrow’s pastors?

“When Jesus landed and saw a large crowd, he had compassion on them, because they were like sheep without a shepherd. So he began teaching them many things.” (Mark 6:34)

How do WOKE shepherds result in lost sheep?  What is the response of a Biblical Chad?  What did Jesus do?

These are important questions for the Biblical Chad respecting the Line in the Sand.

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The “Prism of Manhood” series includes:

http://seminarygal.com/a-prism-of-manhood/
http://seminarygal.com/andrew-tate-dangerous-masquerade/
http://seminarygal.com/andrew-tate-positive-instruction-silent-conquest/
http://seminarygal.com/tim-ballard-sound-of-freedom/
http://seminarygal.com/misguided-manhood-and-the-church/
http://seminarygal.com/reviving-muscular-christianity/
 http://seminarygal.com/biblical-chads

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Biblical Chads

Not all “muscular Christians” are muscular.  Some are just Biblical Chads…buff in their theology, exercising strong principles, working out their doctrine with actions, and full of the Accountability, Authority, and Action that form the 3 sides of the Prism of Manhood.

This brings me to the third of three societal events in this Prism of Manhood series that have been happening simultaneously and have been working through their courses and consequences regarding manhood in America.  Since I first began this short series, Muslim “lifestyle evangelists” Andrew Tate and his brother Tristan have now been released from house arrest pending their trials.  The Sound of Freedom is smashing all kinds of records and is being viewed by more people than just those on one side of the political aisle.  Tim Ballard is reportedly considering another installment even as mixed reports say he is stepping away from Operation Rescue so their work can be unhindered by celebrity.

The third societal event was the vote by the Southern Baptist Convention to limit the terminology and work of pastors to men.  Churches have left, been expelled, and are under investigation including Saddleback Church with megachurch pastor Rick Warren.  I have not previously sent you anywhere to read or learn about it for the simple reason that almost every blog, article, or exposé has been so steeped in traditional battle lines of egalitarian (men and women full equals and partners) vs. complementarian (men in authority, women’s equality/partnership is reflected through submission to authority–first to God, then to the Church).  I hate the division.  To me, that’s just political.

But the truth is, there’s a profoundly insidious blurring of issues of women in ministry and the path of many mainline denominations in their adoption of LGBTQ-friendly interpretations of doctrine. Almost every photo of expelled Fern Creek Baptist Church pastor Linda Barnes Popham shows her with a rainbow stole which communicates without words. Is something more at play than meets the eye for the Biblical Chad?

I like Biblical Chads. 
There’s nothing so powerful as strong godly women
partnering with strong godly men in leadership
to advance the Gospel. 

But the full glory of that is lost when people bicker over “authority” as if it’s nothing more significant than power.  As if what they want is all the Authority without any of the Accountability or Action.

I’m going to get personal.  One time, I was given the privilege by the man who was our senior pastor of organizing and scheduling a 7-part mid-week special series for Lent.  Believing that I am a woman in submission to authority but given the privilege of serving (and leading in a sense), I offered every speaking/teaching opportunity up to a qualified man in that church.  It was like pulling teeth to get anyone to do it.  They loved to claim the Authority, tell me I didn’t have it, but then they didn’t use what they claimed as their ownership to further the Church.  Action and Accountability were missing.  I finally found 7 men of the Word to step forward after significant pleading, highlighting my self-limited biblical inability to substitute myself for men’s lack of action.  But the ordeal sucked the joy out of what could have been better–and more God-honoring– for partnering together.

Questions for further thought:

Who-if any-among the men listed was a Biblical Chad?

What does it say about men who love the Authority but don’t use it for Action and Accountability?

Might I have felt justified in just doing it myself…like Deborah dealing with the cowardice, unbelief, and failure of Barak? 

“Now Deborah, a prophet, the wife of Lappidoth, was leading Israel at that time. She held court under the Palm of Deborah between Ramah and Bethel in the hill country of Ephraim, and the Israelites went up to her to have their disputes decided. She sent for Barak son of Abinoam from Kedesh in Naphtali and said to him, ‘The LORD, the God of Israel, commands you: “Go, take with you ten thousand men of Naphtali and Zebulun and lead them up to Mount Tabor. I will lead Sisera, the commander of Jabin’s army, with his chariots and his troops to the Kishon River and give him into your hands.”‘ 

Barak said to her, ‘If you go with me, I will go; but if you don’t go with me, I won’t go.’

‘Certainly I will go with you,’ said Deborah. ‘But because of the course you are taking, the honor will not be yours, for the LORD will deliver Sisera into the hands of a woman. So ‘Deborah went with Barak to Kedesh.” (Judges 4:4-9)

How do you think I felt as a woman qualified by education, most importantly knowing I have been called by God to lead, teach, preach, and encourage men and women alike…as man after man refused to do what they believe only men are qualified to do?

Is how I felt reason enough for me to refuse to offer it first to men, after devotedly praying, weeping, and pleading for any reasonably qualified biological male to help me?  Was I justified in saying, “I’ll do it myself since you won’t do it”? How did my persistence in the Word honor God and fulfill the instruction to Timothy, “Watch your life and doctrine closely. Persevere in them, because if you do, you will save both yourself and your hearers.” (1 Timothy 4:16)

Can a woman be a Biblical Chad?

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The “Prism of Manhood” series includes:

http://seminarygal.com/a-prism-of-manhood/
http://seminarygal.com/andrew-tate-dangerous-masquerade/
http://seminarygal.com/andrew-tate-positive-instruction-silent-conquest/
http://seminarygal.com/tim-ballard-sound-of-freedom/
http://seminarygal.com/misguided-manhood-and-the-church/
http://seminarygal.com/reviving-muscular-christianity/

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Reviving Muscular Christianity

Still thinking about the Prism of Manhood and the “Sound of Freedom“, if Indiana Jones is the manhood of Hollywood, fictional adventure, leather jacket, good-guy wins, and you were to contrast that withSound of Freedom with its godly manhood of true heroes rescuing actual children, it’s clear which of these show authentic acts of bravery and accountability before God.

Disney can cry all they want over their woke failure movies of late, reduce the price of Indiana Jones tickets, and have their media surrogates trash true heroism, finding fault with Go Fund Me donors ofSound of Freedom, all in a vain attempt to rescue a Disney movie.  But it doesn’t make fictional Indiana Jones a man whom any real man should want to emulate.  Seriously, what noble humanity does Indiana Jones represent as the finest, or even an archetype?

The concept of the “muscular Christian” was popular at the turn of the Twentieth Century and depicted nowhere more powerfully than in the 1981 movie “Chariots of Fire” when trainer Sandy McGrath is pressing for Eric Liddell’s participation in the 1924 Olympic Games.  Eric’s brother Robert agrees saying, “What we need now is a muscular Christian to make folks sit up and notice.” This idea, having been co-produced into the movie by Egyptian Muslim Dodi Fayed, is notable. 

In 1982, Christianity Today (before the magazine capitulated to culture) reviewed the film:

“The British Chariots of Fire is a work of restraint and intensity that offers the Christian moviegoer a variety of admirable cinematic and real-life achievements. The main characters were plucked out of history, not the imagination of a screenwriter, …[and] it is rare that a feature film accurately portrays one of its main characters as a committed Christian.

Eric Liddell … runs to bring glory to God, but in his time and family, the dichotomy between world and soul is more finely drawn than it is today. It is not always an easy task for Liddell—balancing his faith’s service with his body’s speed. He is a man who serves God first.”

“Whatever happens, conduct yourselves in a manner worthy of the gospel of Christ. Then, whether I come and see you or only hear about you in my absence, I will know that you stand firm in the one Spirit, striving together as one for the faith of the gospel without being frightened in any way by those who oppose you. This is a sign to them that they will be destroyed, but that you will be saved– and that by God.” Philippians 1:27-28

Questions for further thought:

How many “muscular Christians” can you name?

Do “muscular Christians” have to be muscular? In what way is it a good metaphor?

Why might “muscular Christians” gain the attention of men, young and old?  What other types of Christian men appeal to young men?

Why are young men imperative to the spread of Christianity?

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The “Prism of Manhood” series includes:

http://seminarygal.com/a-prism-of-manhood/
http://seminarygal.com/andrew-tate-dangerous-masquerade/
http://seminarygal.com/andrew-tate-positive-instruction-silent-conquest/
http://seminarygal.com/tim-ballard-sound-of-freedom/
http://seminarygal.com/misguided-manhood-and-the-church/

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Misguided Manhood and the Church

Jake Meador writes about the decline of Christianity in America in a recent Atlantic article saying,
“Nearly everyone I grew up with in my childhood church in Lincoln, Nebraska, is no longer Christian. That’s not unusual. Forty million Americans have stopped attending church in the past 25 years. That’s something like 12 percent of the population, and it represents the largest concentrated change in church attendance in American history.”

He summarizes what he sees as, “The defining problem driving people out is … just how American life works in the 21st century.” 

No offense to Jake, but the defining problem is not work. It’s misguided manhood throughout society, nowhere more evident than in the Church in America.  Looking for simple manhood to have as a role model? You won’t find it in the Church.

And, it’s nothing new. In a 1993 compilation of sermons by A.W. Tozer (April 21, 1897 – May 12, 1963), I was struck by how Titus 2:15 “These, then, are the things you should teach. Encourage and rebuke with all authority” is reflected in this comment,

“When the man of God stands to speak he ought to have the authority of God on him so that he makes the people responsible to listen to him…Let me tell you that I was converted from hearing a fellow who preached on the street corner I was a young working man, and I joined the nearest church—I didn’t know any better. The first time I shook hands with the pastor was like shaking hands with a baby—he had not done a lick of work since he was eighteen, I am sure, because his hands were so soft.  I remember he preached one Sunday about a harp, using the subject, ‘A Harp of a Thousand Strings.’ He didn’t say much, but he said it beautifully, and it ended like this, ‘So I’m sure that the soul of a man is the harp of thousand strings.’ I went home and didn’t hear any harp. I didn’t hear any authority. I believe in the authority of God, and if a man doesn’t have it, he should go away and pray until he gets the authority and then stand up to speak even if he has to begin by preaching on a soapbox on a street corner.”

What began in the post-Christian heyday of the 1950s, took root in the 1960s silent Christian acquiescence to loud social protest. The Great Society Replacement Theology (government as father, women as leadership) took root because of men’s silence in the destruction of the family.  Did they not see themselves edged out? Is it any wonder the raw feminist movement has had such horrible consequences for men and women … and the Church?

Today’s megachurches are too often led by baby-hand, Vans-wearing metrosexual dandies in American pulpits.  They lack two sides of the Prism of Manhood.  They have words, words, words … corporate Christianity, and seminary education, but exhibit no Authority and are not men of Action.  Where is the accountability, the responsibility Tozer talked about?

That is why people don’t go to church.  It doesn’t mean they’re not Christians anymore to counter Jake from the Atlantic’s assertion.  It’s just they don’t see the point of Church anymore.

Questions for further thought:

When people in the pews don’t see the point in going to Church, why would they value church attendance (in-person or online) as a priority for 90 minutes on a Sunday?

How have social media, online presence, and COVID changed people’s views of how to have community and “do church?”

When a vibe of manhood departs the Church, what is left behind?  How does that resultant vibe seem to men outside the church who are searching for male role models?

How did the Great Society contribute to fatherless homes, particularly in the Black community, which was at one time the strongest Christian powerhouse in the nation?

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Tim Ballard, Sound of Freedom

Tim Ballard is a Christian man who exemplifies the protective manhood qualities of Accountability, Action, and Authority in A Prism of Manhood. His mission is to help the least of these: children who have been kidnapped and sold into situations of slavery, abuse, torture, and organ harvesting. He’s a true hero who continues to make his life’s work rescuing children from international “high-traffic areas” (war-torn nations like Ukraine) where “harvesters” are taking advantage of displaced and traumatized children.

Sound of Freedom is the real-life story of this man, and after the rescue forming the storyline for the film, major networks wanted to show footage (since they film during the rescues) and they lauded his efforts. 

But now that Sound of Freedom out-performed Indiana Jones (and others) at the box office, suddenly those same networks are disparaging his story and downplaying child trafficking as some fringe notion when in fact, it’s pervasive—6 million children, many under the age of 5.  It’s beyond what nearly every adult is comfortable acknowledging.  Many avert their eyes so as not to see.

Manly men with the authority of truth and goodness on a mission of doing right by the most vulnerable will always win in the hearts of people.  They are the type of heroes God wants us all to be in our own ways. And we do it, by command, in His Authority.

At the 27-minute mark in the interview Tim Ballard did at the Bedminster Golf Club in New Jersey’s showing of Sound of Freedom, he pointed out that “No change happens without getting loud.”  We cannot sit, be complacent consumers of education–even Christian education–and instruction without Accountability, Action, and doing what we can with the Authority Christ gave to us. 

In a longer interview by Jordan Peterson with Tim Ballard and Jim Caviezel (which unjustifiably, Twitter may refuse to send you to YouTube which is the first link), Caviezel spoke about learning to authentically present the role of Ballard (and his manly “innocence”) and the preparation he took. He watched what these special agents do and said, “At one point that’s how I chose to go at this. I had no choice but to go, and I hear the screams in my heart, I hear the screams because of the agents that I got to work with [showed] me things.  [And] one particular time, he says, “Are you sure you want to go further?” But I was weeping so hard, and I said this is what Tim goes through. This is what I’ve got to see in there to take people to a level of “Will you do something”? 

“You see that a person is considered righteous by what they do and not by faith alone. As the body without the spirit is dead, so faith without deeds is dead.” (James 2:24,26)

Ballard gives God the glory for the movie’s success. Releasing it by God’s timing into our current culture were God’s perfect plan.  Ballard says, “There’s a whole movement now, targeting children.” 

Our culture has been relentlessly pursuing children to influence their minds and craft new values in man’s image.  Turning children against Christian values. Even recently to the point of turning children against their parents. 

Questions for further thought:

What kind of action can you take?  What kind of accountability will you pursue and live?  As a Christian, on Whose Authority will you serve? 

Jesus said, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Therefore, go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.” (Matthew 28:18-20)

These, then, are the things you should teach. Encourage and rebuke with all authority. Do not let anyone despise you. (Titus 2:15)

If Tate’s message was strong body/strong mind (Might makes right), in what ways is Christ’s message strong heart/strong faith (Right makes Might)?  Who has greater authority man or God?

What Kingdom work are we doing–with the gifts given us–in light of Christ’s return?

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The Prism of Manhood series includes:

http://seminarygal.com/a-prism-of-manhood/

http://seminarygal.com/andrew-tate-dangerous-masquerade/

http://seminarygal.com/andrew-tate-positive-instruction-silent-conquest/

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Andrew Tate, Positive Instruction, Silent Conquest

Andrew Tate isn’t all bad. He preaches a positive message of manhood which is magnetic to men and women alike. Contrary to what popular culture would have us believe, many women (in addition to men) would prefer a culture with strong men and strong women who appreciate strong (and I’d add biological) men.  The West is a mess.

In his interview with Tucker Carlson, Tate pointed out that the Western world has allowed men to shrink from their manhood into a world of what might be called beta-males.  At the same time, he indicates that Paris is burning as migrants with high testosterone are flooding the Western world and what do we expect?  He questions that.  But instead of using his influence among his fellow Muslims (those burning Paris), telling the migrant men just stay in your home countries, use your manhood to fight your home wars, lift your home economies, stand up for what you believe in your home culture and in your domicile, there is no call for peace. He’s silent.

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Islam knows that infiltration is just conquest in another form. 

Saying “Be the men at home that your culture admires instead of infiltrating other nations and instigating unrest” would be a helpful personal application of manhood in his personal faith.  But Islam knows migrant infiltration is a path to victory. Bloodless war. Silent conquest.

With Tate, it’s what he doesn’t say that is more problematic since he’s vocal with positive messages of Accountability, Authority, and Action while suspiciously silent on the religious aspects that frame it.

To the Christian world, personal accountability for one’s actions, authority in leadership in society, the Church, and the home, and putting actions to your proclamations sound remarkably biblical.  Be discerning, folks. The times call for it.

Questions for further thought:

Identify Accountability, Authority, and Action in the following passage. Compare with Tate’s version of manhood (strong body/strong mind).  What does the Bible talk about that Tate does not?

Ephesians 5:1 Follow God’s example, therefore, as dearly loved children and walk in the way of love, just as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us as a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God. But among you there must not be even a hint of sexual immorality, or of any kind of impurity, or of greed, because these are improper for God’s holy people. Nor should there be obscenity, foolish talk or coarse joking, which are out of place, but rather thanksgiving. For of this you can be sure: No immoral, impure or greedy person– such a person is an idolater– has any inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and of God.

Let no one deceive you with empty words, for because of such things God’s wrath comes on those who are disobedient. Therefore, do not be partners with them.

… Have nothing to do with the fruitless deeds of darkness, but rather expose them.  It is shameful even to mention what the disobedient do in secret.  But everything exposed by the light becomes visible– and everything that is illuminated becomes a light.

…Be very careful, then, how you live– not as unwise but as wise, making the most of every opportunity, because the days are evil.  Therefore do not be foolish, but understand what the Lord’s will is.  Submit to one another out of reverence for Christ. (from Ephesians 5:1-21)

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The Prism of Manhood series includes:

http://seminarygal.com/a-prism-of-manhood/

http://seminarygal.com/andrew-tate-dangerous-masquerade/

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Andrew Tate, Dangerous Masquerade

Andrew Tate is dangerous, but not for the same reasons as he is experiencing house arrest in Romania.  He is charged with human-trafficking of women through social media using the “lover boy method.”

No, Andrew Tate is dangerous—even more so than Mike Tyson, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Cassius Clay/Muhammad Ali, and Shaquille O’Neal before him.  He’s more dangerous than Hip hop singer K’naan, boy band-pop singer Zayn Malik, comedian Dave Chappelle, rap singer Ice Cube, Cat Stevens, and others.

Andrew Tate is dangerous because his interview with Tucker Carlson highlights his high degree of street-smarts.  Crafty.  Savvy.  He knows his audience in a nuanced fashion and plays the compartmentalized role to seduce the audience. Using, if you will, the “lover boy method” –a masquerade–to present a captivating version of himself. The people in the above paragraph are all Muslim, but don’t necessarily make a big deal of it.  They are personally Muslim but not proselytizers for Islam.  Tate is different.  Very different.

Dangerous for the minds of young men searching for purpose, for meaning, for success, Tate preaches the strong body/strong mind, self-made man success that appeals to young men who grew up without fathers in their homes because Tate models that.  He grew up without a father in his home, but has become successful (as he phrases it, the most Googled man on earth).  He knows young men seek him out by the millions, revere him and his ideas, and he makes the most of it. Women, too, are seduced by his message of manhood, having grown up without father figures in their homes, too.

It’s not his manhood message that is the danger.
It’s the bait.

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If you watched his interview—as a Christian with a discerning ear—you’ll notice that in prison, he said “he did pushups and read the Quran.” He doesn’t like to mention it (but did) that he is incredibly charitable toward those malnourished in Islamic countries.  And toward the end of the interview, he specified clearly, “I am Muslim.”

Questions for further thought:

How do generic references to “was atheist” but “found God”, the importance of suffering, and other unspecified God references appeal to Christians? The Apostle Paul understood this very danger, writing:

“I will keep on doing what I am doing in order to cut the ground from under those who want an opportunity to be considered equal with us in the things they boast about. For such people are false apostles, deceitful workers, masquerading as apostles of Christ. And no wonder, for Satan himself masquerades as an angel of light. It is not surprising, then, if his servants also masquerade as servants of righteousness. Their end will be what their actions deserve.” (2 Corinthians 11:12-15)

Think for a moment about “lifestyle evangelism”. If you were the devil, would you pick someone savvy, articulate, well-dressed, living in a mansion, successful by world standards, a self-made man, a celebrity to talk about “God” in a way to bring people in and then seduce them to be followers of another faith tradition by their wanting to emulate the celebrity?

Islam is not opposed to lying to achieve its ends, it’s not only permissible but lauded. How might a nuanced message (lying) deception for an undiscerning ear be dangerous?

Look over the list of Muslims in the second paragraph.  It’s clear: Islam knows how to pick them, keep them, and use them.  Celebrities, success stories, athletes.  How might these appeal to young men and seduce them away from Christianity at a time in our culture when Christianity and manhood are waning?

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The Prism of Manhood series includes:

A Prism of Manhood | Seminary Gal A Prism of Manhood | Making the Theological Understandable

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A Prism of Manhood

The Andrew Tate interview by Tucker Carlson. The Sound of Freedom movie. 
The SBC vote on clarifying the pastorate. 
What do these 3 recent societal events have in common?

They form a prism of manhood that discerning people (men and women alike) cannot help but notice.  Three perspectives on the manhood problem facing modern culture.  I believe we have more of a manhood problem than a womanhood problem which is why both men and women have long noticed the foundational issues (decades in the making in the West).  Fix the root of a manhood problem and the fruit of a womanhood problem in large measure goes away. 

This prism’s three lenses of manhood might be labeled:
Accountability, Action, and Authority.

Titus 2:2 Teach the older men to be temperate, worthy of respect, self-controlled, and sound in faith, in love and in endurance… 6 Similarly, encourage the young men to be self-controlled. 7 In everything set them an example by doing what is good. In your teaching show integrity, seriousness 8 and soundness of speech that cannot be condemned, so that those who oppose you may be ashamed because they have nothing bad to say about us.

If you’re interested in these aspects of manhood and want to see the Andrew Tate interview, you can watch it here.  Irrespective of what you think of him, his Muslim background, and accusations against him, the interview is worth every bit of the 2 hours and 30 minutes.  Over the next few installments on this topic, you’ll see what I mean.

If you haven’t yet heard of The Sound of Freedom, the story of Tim Ballard’s efforts as Operation Underground Railroad, rescuing human-trafficked children, you can buy movie tickets and view the trailer of the Angel Films movie starring Jim Caviezel here

And the SBC had its own input to the culture through an amendment to the SBC constitution clarifying that women cannot serve as pastors.  It passed on a vote of around 80% of attendees at the SBC’s Annual Meeting. The amendment will become permanent if it gains majority support at the SBC annual meeting in 2024.  I won’t send you anywhere to read this because most sites take a side on women in the church and I don’t want to go there because, again, I believe the Church has long had more of manhood problem than a womanhood problem.

Questions for further thought:

Why are young men critical to the spread of Christianity?

One out of every 3 young men is being raised in a fatherless home.  When young men have no role models at home or in the Church, where do they find acceptance?

What is the Church doing to inspire young men to manhood as Titus admonishes us?

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A Royal Priesthood

We’re not just a holy priesthood. We’re also a royal priesthood.  This is a particularly important phrase.  Back in the days of Genesis, there was a first royal priest, the king of Salem, Melchizedek. A king (of peace, the meaning of Salem), but he was also a priest.

Genesis 14:18 Then Melchizedek king of Salem brought out bread and wine. He was priest of God Most High, 19 and he blessed Abram, saying, “Blessed be Abram by God Most High, Creator of heaven and earth.“

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It was interesting for Christians because kings and priests in the Jewish world came from different lines, particularly after Abraham’s grandkids through Jacob: Judah (king/royal line) and later through Moses and his brother Aaron following God’s command establishing the Levites as the priestly line.  Note also the significance of Melchizedek bringing out bread and wine, well before the Passover meal and the Last Supper with bread and wine of true significance.

But don’t miss the importance of Melchizedek. 
He was before Abraham had children and yet he pointed forward
to a “king of righteousness” (the meaning of his name)
who would be both King and Priest of God: Jesus Christ.
Jesus, whom Scripture says is a priest forever in the order of Melchizedek.

But there’s more to the royal priesthood for men after God’s selection of the Levites. Aaron (a Levite) married Elisheba whose brother was Nahshon. In this way, Elisheba herself a descendant of Judah (since Nahshon also was) merges the royal clan with the Levite clan. But Nahshon (of Judah) is the one who finds his way into Jesus’ genealogy. The royal priesthood theme runs uninterrupted from Genesis to Revelation.

So, like the namesake of Christians (Christ Jesus, our Great High Priest) we are to be a priesthood, and we receive royalty on account of Jesus’ calling us family.  Because Jesus is King and we are His earthly brothers and sisters, we “are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, God’s special possession, that you may declare the praises of Him who called you out of darkness into His wonderful light. Once you were not a people, but now you are the people of God; once you had not received mercy, but now you have received mercy.” (1 Peter 2:9-10). Hallelujah!

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