A Response to Jon Bloomās āCan I Follow My New Heart?ā
By Biblical Researcher, Psychologist, & Award-Winning Author, Eli Kittim
In an article entitled āCan I Follow My NewĀ Heart?ā (published July 1, 2021), which was posted on John Piperās desiringGod website, Jon Bloom, staff writer of https://www.desiringgod.org/ writes:
Find your joy in God with sermons, books, podcasts, video, and daily articles from the ministry of John Piper.
When Christians are born again, we enter
into a lifelong internal war where āthe
desires of the flesh are against the Spirit,
and the desires of the Spirit are against the
flesh, for these are opposed to each other,
to keep you from doing the things you want
to doā (Galatians 5:17).
That is incorrect, inaccurate, and misleading. When Paul talks about the war within, between the flesh and the Spirit, he is referring to a *pre-regenerative* rather than a āpost-regenerativeā state of mind. This battle or war between the flesh and the Spirit is waged BEFORE āChristians are born again,ā NOT after! After āChristians are born againā this battle ENDS! The War within ends, provided an *authentic-regeneration* has taken place (not simply a fake ārebirthā based on a profession of faith or an altar call) in which we have died to our selves in order to receive a new identity (Ephesians 4:22-24). There is no more internal struggle. Sin no longer reigns within. God is now on the throne of your heart and, instead of war, there is peace. Instead of bitterness and anger there is love and self-acceptance. Sin has not been completely eradicated. Itās still there. But it no longer dominates your mind and heart. So, the notion that we enter a battle or a war AFTER we are reborn is completely false. On the contrary, thatās when the battle, in a certain sense, ends for us and tranquility ensues.
Jon Bloom misinterprets both the authorial intent of the Biblical authors as well as the concept of authentic rebirth. He mistakenly employs certain Biblical quotes to suggest that they are referring to a condition AFTER rebirth, when in fact they are referring to a carnal mind PRIOR to regeneration. Thus, he misreads the following verses out-of-context:
their āpassions are at war withinā them
(James 4:1). Peter warns his readers (and
us), āDo not be conformed to the passions
of your former ignoranceā (1 Peter 1:14).
Paul describes this internal experience of
warring passions as āwretchedā (Romans
7:24).
Finally, the fact that heās been totally misreading and distorting the Biblical authors becomes apparent. He writes:
And he [Paul] admonishes the Colossian
Christians (and us) with strong language:
āPut to death therefore what is earthly in
you: sexual immorality, impurity, passion,
evil desire, and covetousness, which is
idolatryā (Colossians 3:5). Why did these
apostles feel the need to speak this way to
regenerated people? Because the hearts of
these regenerated people were not yet fully
free from the influence of their flesh, their
old selves.
Why would Paul say āput to deathā all these vices to regenerated Christians who have already done just that and have died to sin? And if reborn, recreated Christians are ānot yet fully free from the influence of their fleshā (i.e. ātheir old selvesā), then that implies that Christ either lied or was confused when he said āyou will know the truth, and the truth will set you freeā (John 8:32 NIV). No! It is Jon Bloom himself who is confused because in spite of what he writes, he nevertheless seems to acknowledge that after rebirth sin no longer dominates. He writes:
Paul lays the theological foundation of our
understanding by explaining āthat our old
self was crucified with [Christ] in order that
[our] body of sin might be brought to
nothing, so that we would no longer be
enslaved to sinā (Romans 6:6). Our new
selves were āraised with Christā (Colossians
3:1) so that āwe too might walk in newness
of lifeā (Romans 6:4). Therefore, we āmust
consider [ourselves] dead to sin and alive to
God in Christ Jesusā (Romans 6:11).
In sharp contrast to Jon Bloomās overall message, Paul declares a radical change that has ALREADY occurred in the personality as a result of the *NEW BIRTH,* as well as a new way of being that is no longer dominated by sin or the carnal mind (Romans 8:1-2 ESV):
There is therefore now no condemnation for
those who are in Christ Jesus. For the law of
the Spirit of life has set you free in Christ
Jesus from the law of sin and death.
I therefore take issue with the notion of *regeneration* as an āinternal warā between the flesh and the Spirit in which we āare not yet fully free.ā
For a comparative reading, see the undermentioned link:
āCan I Follow My NewĀ Heart?ā (Article by Jon Bloom, Staff writer, desiringGod website): https://www.desiringgod.org/articles/can-i-follow-my-new-heart?fbclid=IwAR0SjG4T6TVZN8TVuB0Sjt-10zS5UnRy05rxjPd00YiVWcixmVCR6dm3EW0
When facing difficult circumstances or decisions, should Christians just follow our hearts? The Bibleās answer may be more complicated than
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If we are to see things as they really are, not as we would wish them to be, we must free ourselves from ingrained religious systems of indoctrination, which always end up in some kind of a *confirmation bias* (i.e. the inclination to interpret new evidence as verification of one's preexisting presuppositions or beliefs). Thatās why this way of reading and interpreting scripture is not called āexegesisā (i.e. drawing out the meaning according to the authorial intent), but rather āeisegesisā (i.e. reading into the text). One such Biblical preconception is that past tenses *always* refer to past actions that occurred in history.
Any Bible *interpretation* of past tenses that lays primary emphasis on a historical orientation is partly due to a confusion of terms and context. Insofar as the New Testament (NT) is concerned, verbal aspect theory, which is at the cutting edge of Hellenistic Greek linguistics, demonstrates that *tense-forms* do not have any temporal implications. According to Stanley E. Porter, āIdioms of the Greek New Testamentā (2nd edn; Sheffield: Sheffield Academic, 1999), p. 25:
Temporal values (past, present, future) are
not established in Greek by use of the
verbal aspects (or tense-forms) alone. This
may come as a surprise to those who, like
most students of Greek, were taught at an
elementary level that certain tense-forms
automatically refer to certain times when an
action occurs.
In other words, we should never interpret Biblical tense-forms as if theyāre corresponding ipso facto to past, present, or future events (i.e. past tense doesnāt equal (=) past action; present tense doesnāt equal (=) present action; future tense doesnāt equal (=) future action). To further complicate matters, thereās another tense in grammar called the "historical present,ā which employs verb phrases in the present tense to refer to events that occurred in the past. In narrative accounts, the historical present is often used to evoke a dramatic effect of immediacy. Itās variously called theĀ "historic present, the narrative present, or the dramatic present.ā And there are also past tenses that refer to future events. For example, Revelation 7:4 uses the perfect-tense āthose who were sealedā to refer to an event that has not happened yet. Bottom line, tenses serve a literary function and should not be confused with the time when an action takes place. Koine Greek, especially, relates aspect rather than time!
Many of the Bibleās tenses suggest various events taking place without specifying the precise timing of their occurrence. Some of these verses are in the āconditional mood.ā The conditional mood is used in grammar to convey a statement or assertion whose validity is dependent on some specific condition, possibly a counterfactual one (e.g. what if?). The conditional mood may refer to a particular verb form that expresses a hypothetical state of affairs or an uncertain event that is contingent upon the independent clause. It is sometimes referred to as the "conditional tense.ā The following examples will show you that the Biblical statements are conditional or contingent on the happening of an event. In other words, if Christ truly died (condition), then the TIMEFRAME (result) would be mentioned in the Biblical verses. But since the TIMING is not given, in these particular examples, the premise remains conditional upon the happening of this event.
Proper exegesis does not ask us to fall back on personal opinions, private interpretations, presuppositions, or conjectures when we encounter biblical difficulties, but that we pay close attention to the EXACT words of a verse, always asking ourselves WHEN did this happen. Does this or that particular verse tell us? For example, 1 Peter 3.18 (NRSV) is in the conditional mood. It says:
For Christ also suffered for sins once for all,
the righteous for the unrighteous, in order to
bring you to God. He was put to death in the
flesh, but made alive in the spirit.
But Does 1 Peter 3.18 tell you precisely **WHEN** Christ died? No! All of the past tenses are still in the conditional mood. The timing is still hypothetical. In other words, itās as if the text were saying:
For Christ also suffered for sins once for all,
[at some point in history], the righteous for
the unrighteous, in order to bring you to
God. He was put to death in the flesh, but
made alive in the spirit [at some point in
human history].
Thatās why it is conditional. It doesnāt specify when or at what point in time this took place. And 1 Pet. 3.18 employs the exact same word that is used in Hebrews 9.26b, namely, āonce for allā (hapax). But Heb. 9.26b **DOES** tell you PRECISELY when he dies: āin the end of the worldā (KJV). A concordance study of the phrase į¼Ļį½¶ ĻĻ Ī½Ļελείᾳ Ļῶν αἰĻνĻν (āthe end of the ageā; Dan. 12.4 LXX; Mt. 13.39-40, 49; 24.3; 28.20; Heb. 9.26b) demonstrates that this particular time period, indicated by the aforesaid phrase, could not have possibly occurred 2,000 years ago. And 1 Peter 1.20 (NJB) confirms that Christ āwas revealed [initially] at the final point of timeā!
āā-
Proof that Passages Set in the Past Tense Can Actually Refer to Future Prophecies
Notice that we are not speculating, here. We are using the analogy of scripture, allowing the Bible to define and interpret itself. This hermeneutical method will not be questioned by any credible expositor who has a competent knowledge of exegesis!
The notion that past tenses are not necessarily referring to the past can be proven. It can be demonstrated. The undermentioned passage from Deutero-Isaiah dates from the 6th century bce (500ās). Thatās about 500 years BEFORE the purported coming of Christ. But a perfunctory reading of the Book of Isaiah would suggest that Christ ALREADY DIED in the 6th century bce. Notice that Isaiah 53.3-5 (NRSV) is saturated with *past tenses*:
He was despised and rejected by others; a
man of suffering and acquainted with
infirmity; and as one from whom others hide
their faces he was despised, and we held
him of no account. Surely he has borne our
infirmities and carried our diseases; yet we
accounted him stricken, struck down by
God, and afflicted. But he was wounded for
our transgressions, crushed for our
iniquities; upon him was the punishment
that made us whole, and by his bruises we
are healed.
Judging from the PAST TENSES that are used, it appears as if Christ already died in the 6th century bce, prior to Isaiahās written account. Thatās certainly what the past tenses imply.
What do you think? Did it happen? No! Of course not! Isaiah is not writing about a past event. Heās writing about a PROPHECY. But he sets the entire prophecy in the past tense as if it already happened. Thatās EXACTLY what the NT is doing. Itās writing about a prophecy, but setting it in the past tense as if it already happened. The author of Isaiah 53 composed this work 500+ years PRIOR to Paul and the NT writings. A cursory reading of Isa. 53 would suggest that Christ died in the 6th century *before Christ* (BC). We tend to read the NT in like manner. Isaiahās text therefore *proves* that prophecy can be set in the past tense!
Similarly, 1 Peter 2.22-24 (a NT passage) seems to be modeled on Isaiah 53, and is therefore very telling in that regard:
āHe [Christ] committed no sin, and no deceit
was found in his mouth.ā When he was
abused, he did not return abuse; when he
suffered, he did not threaten; but he
entrusted himself to the one who judges
justly. He himself bore our sins in his body
on the cross, so that, free from sins, we
might live for righteousness; by his wounds
you have been healed.
It is the same with Hebrews 1.3. It sounds as if this event already occurred. But, on closer inspection, notice that the text doesnāt explicitly say that this event took place in history. It just tells you that it took place at some unspecified time period. Therefore, it would not be incorrect to read it as follows:
When he had made purification for sins, [at
some point in human history] he sat down
at the right hand of the Majesty on high.
The text just gives you the outcome. It doesnāt tell you when this event actually took place. But there are certain passages that DO tell you when. And if you run a concordance study, youāll realize that they refer to the end of the world. Iām referring to verses like Hebrews 9.26b, 1 Peter 1.20, and all the passages that refer to the REVELATION of Jesus. Remember, if Jesus has already been manifested, he cannot be revealed again. Apokalupsis (revelation) refers to a first time disclosure. I have written extensively about these topics. They should be clear by now!
āā-
The Phrase āChrist Died for Our Sinsā is Almost Always Misinterpreted as Referring to a Past Event
Letās explore another popular verse, namely, 1 Cor. 15.3, which people love to quote as proof āthat Christ died for our sinsā:
All itās saying is āthat Christ died for our sins according to the Scripturesā (1 Cor. 15.3 NIV). Notice, this verse is not certifying that Christ in fact died in antiquity. Rather, itās saying that Christ died for our sins (at some unspecified time in human history, the timeframe of which is unknown and not given) according to the prophetic scriptures, or just as the Old Testament (OT) scriptures had predicted. In fact, it doesnāt say that Christ died according to the historical accounts, but rather according to the prophetic writings (γĻαĻάĻ). In short, Christ died to fulfill the scriptures. But the TIMING of this event is not specified.
Letās look at another passage that is often taken to mean that āChrist died for the ungodlyā (NRSV) 2,000 years ago. Observe what the verse says, but also what it doesnāt say. Romans 5.6 suggests that Christ ādiedā (į¼ĻĪθανεν) at some unspecified time of human history by using the phrase καĻį½° καιĻĻν, which means āat the right timeā (cf. 1 Tim. 2.6), or at āthe proper time,ā and does not necessarily warrant a reference to history:
So, although scripture once more reiterates that āChrist died for the ungodlyāāāand even though this is often uncritically assumed to refer to a past event that supposedly happened in antiquityāāthe text is NOT saying that this event already happened (cf. Rom. 5.8; 14.9; 1 Thess. 5.9-10). The problem is not with the text. The problem is with our *interpretation* of the text.
Similarly, in 2 Pet. 1.16ā21, the eyewitness testimony of Jesusā transfiguration in vv. 16-18 is not historical but rather a vision of the future. Thatās why verse 19 concludes: āSo we have the prophetic message more fully confirmed.ā The same goes for the apocalyptic passage in 1 Pet. 1.10-11 (see my article āFirst Peter 1.10-11 Suggests An Eschatological Soteriologyā: https://eli-kittim.tumblr.com/post/184378109027/by-author-eli-kittim-concerning-this-salvation).
By Author Eli Kittim
"Concerning this salvation, the prophets, who spoke of the grace that was to come to you, searched intently and with t
Therefore, the churchās dogma that Jesus died in Antiquity appears to be a proof-text fallacy that is out of touch with the *teaching* of the epistles. Case in point, there are numerous passages in the epistles that place the timeline of Jesusā life (i.e., his birth, death, and resurrection) in *eschatological* categories (e.g., 2 Thess. 2.1-3; Heb. 1.1-2; 9.26b; 1 Pet. 1.10-11, 20; Rev. 12.5; 19.10d). For example, 1 Cor. 15.22 puts Christās resurrection within an eschatological timetable.
āā-
Conclusion
If the canonical context demands that we coalesce the different Biblical texts as if weāre reading a single Book, then the overall āpropheticā message of Revelation must certainly play a significant exegetical role. Accordingly, the Book of Revelation places not only the timeline (12.5) but also the testimony to Jesus (19.10d) in āpropheticā categories.
The *apocalyptic theology* of the NT epistles is multiply attested in the OT canon, which confirms the earthy, *end-time Messiah* of the epistolary literature (cf. Job 19.25; Isa. 2.19; Dan. 12.1-2; Zeph. 1.7-9, 15-18; Zech. 12.9-10)!
A revelation by default means āa first-timeā occurrence. In other words, itās an event that is happening for the very first time. By definition, a ārevelationā is never disclosed twice. If we examine the NT verses, which mention the future revelation of Christ, we will find that they are not referring to a second coming, a coming back, or a return, as is commonly thought, but rather to an initial appearance (see e.g. 1 Cor. 1.7; 16.22; 1 Thess. 2.19; 4.15; 2 Thess. 1.10; 2.1; Heb. 10.37; Jas. 5.7; 1 Pet. 1.7; 2 Pet. 1.16; 3.4; 1 Jn 2.28; Rev. 2.16; 22.20). See my article āWhy does the New Testament Refer to Christās Future Coming as a āRevelationā?ā: https://eli-kittim.tumblr.com/post/187927555567/why-does-the-new-testament-refer-to-christs
By Goodreads Author Eli Kittim
Itās important to note the language thatās often used with regard to the future coming of Christ, namely, a
Due to time constraints, it is beyond the scope of this paper to illustrate either the āunhistoricalā nature of the gospel genre or the scant external evidence for the historicity of Jesus. Suffice it to say that the gospels appear to be written beforehand (or before the fact) through a kind of foreknowledge or prognósis (ĻĻογνĻĻει; cf. Acts 2.22ā23; 10.40ā41; Rom. 1.2). They are conveyed from a theological angle by way of a *proleptic narrative,* a means of *biographizing the eschaton* as if presently accomplished. For further details, see my article, ā8 Theses or Disputations on Modern Christianityās View of the Bibleā: https://eli-kittim.tumblr.com/post/638877875512262656/8-theses-or-disputations-on-modern-christianitys
By Author Eli Kittim
āā-
A Call For a *New Reformation*
A common bias of modern Christianity is expressed in this way:
āIf your doc
All in all, this paper has demonstrated that Biblical past tenses do not necessarily imply past history. In fact, it can be shown from various passages (e.g. Isaiah 53.3-5) that prophecies can also be set in the past tense!
In discussing Jesusā baptism in the Holy Spirit, Iām not referring to John the Baptistās water baptism. Rather, Iām referring to a Spirit baptism or a conversion experience where Jesus had a personal encounter with the power of God. Many Christian denominations emphasize that without such a āborn-againā experience no one can enter the kingdom of God (Jn 3.5). From the outset, scripture emphasizes the need for a baptism of the Spirit (Mt. 3.11 NRSV):
āHe will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and
fire.ā
In Mk. 16.16-17, itās not merely by faith alone but by spirit ābaptismā that salvation is accomplished! Given that the born-again Christians āwill speak with new tongues,ā itās clear that the text isnāt referring to a symbolic immersion in water but rather to a baptism of the Holy Spirit! And although Baptism is defined as a rite of admission into Christianityāāby immersing in waterāāthis ritual is *symbolic* of being cleansed from sin (1 Jn 1.7) by the death of the self. First Peter 3.21 (NIV) reads:
and this water symbolizes baptism that now
saves you alsoānot the removal of dirt from
the body but the pledge of a clear
conscience toward God.
In Rom. 6.3-4, Paul talks of a baptism Into Jesusā death! Itās a believerās participation in the death of Christ to allow them to āwalk in newness of life.ā Itās part of the same regeneration process which comprises the death of the old self & the rebirth of the new one (Eph. 4.22-24). The best example of Spirit baptism is in Acts 2.1-4! Colossians 2.12 (NIV) similarly says:
having been buried with him in baptism, in
which you were also raised with him through
your faith in the working of God.
Keep in mind that, in the gospel story, Jesus didnāt start his ministry prior to his regeneration. Nor was Jesus revealed prior to his rebirth. Mt. 3.16-17 (NRSV) suggests that Jesusā regeneration began with Johnās baptism and was followed thereafter by his encounter with the devil in the wilderness:
And when Jesus had been baptized, just as
he came up from the water, suddenly the
heavens were opened to him and he saw
the Spirit of God descending like a dove and
alighting on him. And a voice from heaven
said, āThis is my Son, the Beloved, with
whom I am well pleased.ā
This is a symbolic account of his rebirth. Notice that it was Jesus *alone* who saw (εἶΓεν), presumably for the first time, the Spirit of God (cf. Jn. 3.3) who would later indwell him. If Jesus already had the Holy Spirit, there would have been no need for a temptation in the desert. Jesus already had the fullness of the Deity within him in bodily form (Col. 2.9) but, being innocent, he still had to receive the Holy Spirit in order to energize it and be transformed. The next verse says (Mt. 4.1 NRSV):
Then Jesus was led up by the Spirit into the
wilderness to be tempted by the devil.
This is a continuation of the earlier baptism motif in the previous chapter. If ā āJohnās baptism was a baptism of repentanceā ā (Acts 19.4 NIV), as āPaul said,ā then Jesus would have had to necessarily confront his sin nature at some point. For those who object to the notion that Jesus had a sin nature, how could he have been ālike His brothers in every wayā (Heb. 2.17), fully human, if he were unable to be tempted? Not to mention that it would also render the temptation pericope ipso facto meaningless because how could the devil tempt someone who is unable to be tempted by sin? Thatās why scripture says that āGod made him who had no sin to be sin for usā (2 Cor. 5.21 NIV)!
So, as part of his rebirth experience, Jesus had to confront the devil. Thatās why the text emphasizes that he didnāt do it on his own. Rather, āhe was led up [į¼Ī½Ī®ĻĪøĪ·] by the Spirit.ā Jesus then confronts the devil head on. He is persistently tempted in order that he may prove his loyalty to God. He faces various temptations and is put to the test. He experiences what the German Protestant theologian Rudolf Otto (1869ā1937) calls the āmysterium tremendumā:
A great or profound mystery, especially the
mystery of God or of existence; the
overwhelming awe felt by a person
contemplating such a mystery (Oxford
English Dictionary).
The text shows that, by the end of his temptation experience, Jesus had been reborn in God by following the same principle as the one found in James 4.7 (NRSV):
Submit yourselves therefore to God. Resist
the devil, and he will flee from you.
Jesus does precisely that. Notice that the spirit of God and the angels did not minister to him prior to his rejection of Satan (Mt. 4.10-11 NIV):
Jesus said to him, āAway from me, Satan!
For it is written: āWorship the Lord your God,
and serve him only.ā āThen the devil left him,
and angels came and attended him.
This is a clear demonstration that even Jesus himself had to be reborn in order to both see & enter the kingdom of God (Jn. 3.3, 5). Given that heās fully human (Heb. 2.17), heās not exempt from the regeneration process, which is the necessary means by which a human being can become united with God.
This concept creates an obvious oxymoron. For example, if Christ was purportedly born-again, does this mean that Jesus got saved? Or that Jesus became a Christian? This is the kind of paradox that such an experience can suggest. In a certain sense, the answer is yes. Think about it. Being fully human, even Christ has to undergo a dangerous temptation in order to encounter God. But if thatās the case, then it means that there was a time when Jesus didnāt know God; a time when he didnāt have a personal and intimate relationship with him. Lk. 2.52 (NRSV) says:
Jesus increased in wisdom and in years,
and in divine and human favor.
If āJesus increased in wisdom,ā then this means that there was a time when he didnāt have much wisdom. The above verse also suggests that the divine favor towards him increased as Jesus got older. All these passages clearly show that Jesus grew up as a normal human being who underwent all of the spiritual experiences for regeneration and rebirth that we all encounter. He was not exempt from any of them, including that of regeneration & rebirth!
Conclusion
Scripture, then, shows that in being fully human, Jesus had to go through everything that we also face, including suffering, pain, depression, rejection, and so forth. Yet there are some pastors who teach that Jesus didnāt have a sin nature, never sinned, could not be tempted, was not reborn, and the like. Remember Isa. 53.3 (NLT)?:
He was despised and rejectedā a
man of sorrows, acquainted with deepest
grief.
Yet in response to a Christian talk-show host, a famous preacher who heads a megachurch in Redding, California argued that Christ āwasnāt born again the way weāre born again.ā Specifically, the Christian talk-show host posed the following question: So, āhe [Christ] wasnāt born again the way weāre born againā? To which Christian minister and evangelist, Bill Johnson, replied: āNo, goodness no, no. I have to be born again; heās already God, so, absolutely not.ā So much for pastoral care!