Saturday, March 14, 2026

Ethical Holiness

 We live in a time when questionable ethics pervade every aspect of our society.  The Bible has much to say about ethical conduct for those who consider themselves followers of God's laws.  The terms ethics and morals are virtual synonyms.  Ethics is what is normative and absolute.  It refers to a set of standards around which we organize our lives, and from which we define our duties and obligations.  Morality, or mores, is the shifting set of behavioral patterns within a society or culture.

The LORD was developing a nation that was based on the ethical holiness of GOD.  The moral laws in the 19th chapter were not just commands of conformity.  They called for just, humane, and sensitive treatment of others. The elderly, the handicapped, and people experiencing Poverty were all to receive consideration and courtesy.  The laborer was to be paid promptly.  The stranger was to be shown the same love given to fellow citizens.  The ethical treatment of people was not about overt behavior but about motive; vengefulness and bearing a grudge were condemned, as our society has changed from how the LORD intended for us to act.

Regarding the aged or elderly. I can remember when older people were respected.  People would hold doors for them, offer them a seat, and allow them to go first in line; they were respected.  Older adults were considered wise and insightful.  Here in the 19th chapter, we are given this command: Show honor to older adults, stand up when they enter the room.  We are to stand upon in the presence of the aged, show them respect, and by doing this, we show reverence to God.  Manners are not taught to children today.  When an older adult is speaking to you, stand up.  Don't walk in front of two older adults talking.  Don't interrupt older adults who are in conversation.

There was a time when people looked up to those who had been around the block a couple of times.  They had certain knowledge and skills that society considered useful.  I remember holding my teachers in high regard and having respect for most of them.  Sure, there were those you couldn't stand, but for the most part, you treated them with respect.  You would not even consider cussing out a teacher or calling them a name to their face or threatening them with violence.  When did we lose our respect for older people?  I am not trying to make this a generational issue, but it does seem that every generation has less respect for older people.  I am aware that some have been taught to respect their elders; I am speaking about those who don't.  What happened in their life that made them so disrespectful?

Our traditions are part of who we are, and many seem unimportant to the culture today, but they are the connection to the past.  Some of our traditions are like Grandma's quilt.  It is threadbare, hard to clean, and not very warm in the winter.  A newer quilt would be much better, warmer, easier to clean, and even fits the bed.  We don't throw out Grandma's quilt because we want to hold on to the past.  The same goes for the customs of honoring older people; they are our connection to the past and should be honored.

At the beginning of our country, there was no place for people with disabilities.  They were treated differently.  It wasn't until some people set out to change the way the handicapped were addressed that legislation was enacted in 1973 to change how they were treated.  In 1975, the Education for All Handicapped Children Act provided free education for children with disabilities.  In 1990, the Americans with Disabilities Act protected individuals from discrimination by employers.  Do these laws work to give a better life?

People with disabilities are four to ten times more likely to be victimized than people without disabilities.  Most crimes against the disabled are not reported.  Caregivers often do not believe them when they do report abuse.  Most programs for crime victims are not available to many disabled people because of accessibility issues. The FBI and the National Crime Victimization Survey, administered by the Department of Justice, do not include people with disabilities.  

Over the past few years, the number of people experiencing Poverty in our country has increased.  When President Johnson declared war on Poverty, it was a no-win situation. The War on Poverty has cost $22 trillion -- three times more than what the government has spent on all wars in American history. The federal and state governments spend $1 trillion in taxpayer dollars on America's 80 means-tested welfare programs each year.

Even though the war on Poverty has been a failure, the poor in this country are far better off than in other countries.

Eighty percent of poor households have air conditioning. By contrast, at the beginning of the War on Poverty, only about 12 percent of the U.S. population had air conditioning.

Nearly three-quarters have a car or truck; 31 percent have two or more. 

Nearly two-thirds have cable or satellite television.

Two-thirds have at least one DVD player, and a quarter have two or more.

Half have a personal computer; one in seven has two or more computers.

More than half of low-income families with children have a video game system such as an Xbox or PlayStation.

Forty-three percent have Internet access.

Forty percent have a wide-screen plasma or LCD TV.

A quarter have a digital video recorder, such as a TiVo.

Ninety-two percent of poor households have a microwave. TV newscasts about Poverty in America depict the poor as homeless or as residing in dilapidated living conditions. While some families do experience such severe conditions, they are far from typical of the Census Bureau's definition of low-income people. The actual living conditions of low-income families vary widely. 

Over the course of a year, only 4 percent of poor persons become temporarily homeless. At a single point in time, one in 70 poor persons is homeless. 

Only 9.5 percent of people with low incomes live in mobile homes or trailers; 49.5 percent live in separate single-family houses or townhouses, and 40 percent live in apartments.

42% of poor households own their own homes. The average home owned by persons classified as poor by the Census Bureau is a three-bedroom house with one-and-a-half baths, a garage, and a porch or patio.

Only 7 percent of poor households are overcrowded. More than two-thirds have more than two rooms per person.

The average poor American has more living space than the average individual living in Sweden, France, Germany, or the United Kingdom. (These comparisons are to the average citizens in foreign countries, not to those classified as poor.)  Could it be that our changing definition of poor has contributed to the problem? 

1.2 billion people live on $1.25 a day.  Poor people in developing countries spend 60-80% of their income on food.  3 million children die from malnutrition every year.

Imagine if every child under age 4 in Maryland, New Jersey, Virginia, New York, Connecticut, Delaware, and D.C. had died in 2026. It would be utter chaos.

Maybe the government needs to teach family responsibility and support the family unit instead of breaking it up.  Nearly two-thirds of those classed as living in Poverty are single-parent families.  It is easier to get government assistance when you are a single parent.  Jesus said that we would always have people with low incomes with us.  Does that mean we ignore them and treat them with disrespect? No.  We need to help free them from the bondage of Poverty.

I am about to wander into an area that has already offended some people.  I have been told I lacked love and was a poor example of a Christian.  That may be true, but what I believe is not based on my belief system but the word of God.  

So, let us tackle the subject of how we treat the stranger.  Countless Bible studies have been conducted in America using the passages of scripture about the "stranger" and the "aliens" in our country.  The 19th chapter of Leviticus is the foundation for some of this discussion.  

Let us read from the Bible, Leviticus 19:33-34.  Christians were supporting the "stranger and illegal alien" stop right there and decide they know all they need to know about their duty as Christians towards the illegal alien.  We are to treat them like one born among us, according to the Bible.  That means the benefits of citizenship.

But wait, they have developed some terrible theology- not to mention politics.  Liberals have taken a scripture out of context by failing to understand who is being addressed and what is being said.  The question is, how do we deal with the "strangers or foreigners"?  Before we start quoting scripture, we need to define the eight words that translate the word stranger, strangers, foreigner, sojourner, or alien, and how they are used.  Without this clarification, we have scriptures that appear contradictory and inconsistent.

These laws were given to distinguish the Hebrew people from non-Hebrews.  The strangers were not permitted to worship with the Hebrews.  They were not to come near the Tabernacle; if they did, they were to be put to death.  They could not participate in the Jewish Passover.  They were to stay separated from the Hebrew people.

The command is to treat the stranger well because they knew what it was like to be a stranger.  Here is a significant difference between the Hebrews and those coming illegally into our country.  At first, the Hebrew was the guest of the Egyptian Pharaoh.  Later, they would be oppressed by a ruler "who did not know Joseph."  They were not trespassers or lawbreakers; they were not there in Egypt illegally.  In fact, Genesis 46:28-34 states that they were not to offend their host in any way.  God loves the stranger, and so should we.  They are to be treated with respect and dignity.  They should not be mistreated.  They should be given food and clothing as they need.  That is the message of the Bible- treat the law-abiding foreigner and aliens with love and compassion.

Those who came into the land of the Hebrews were expected to obey Hebrew Law.  They were treated differently from the Hebrew citizens.  They could not own property; they could be bought and sold as enslaved people. Strangers were charged interest on loans, and strangers would be put to death if they violated the Law of worship.  

So, if we are to follow the teachings of the Bible, those who come to this country do so by invitation only.   Foreigners can never own property, they will be put to death if they disrupt our worship, are not to offend the citizens of this country, and they cannot celebrate our religious holidays.

We have an ethical obligation to follow the command of God regarding our fellow man.  We can always expect those who have no regard for the Law to disagree with us.  I find it difficult to understand why someone would take away from their family and give to someone who disrespects them.  I find it even harder to understand how someone can willingly give away the future of their children to criminals.  We have all witnessed on the news the stories of those in our country illegally who have taken the life of someone's son or daughter.  How is this justified?

As Christians, we have an ethical and moral obligation to treat people with respect, but we are not obligated to assist lawbreakers.  Let me say again: the moral laws in the 19th chapter were not just commands for conformity.  They called for just, humane, and sensitive treatment of others. The elderly, the handicapped, and people experiencing Poverty were all to receive consideration and courtesy.  The laborer was to be paid promptly.  The stranger was to be shown the same love given to fellow citizens.  The ethical treatment of people was not about overt behavior but about motive; vengefulness and bearing a grudge were condemned, as our society has changed from how the LORD intended for us to act.

When Jesus stated the next great commandment was to "Love your neighbor as yourself, He was saying an Old Testament command found in verse 18 of chapter 19.  This scripture is what has been called the "golden rule."  There are both negative and positive forms of this "rule," but all of them demand that we treat others with the same kind of treatment we want for ourselves.

At the beginning of chapter 19 of Leviticus, God gave this command: "Be holy because I, the Lord your God, am holy."  There is no doubt a great distance between the holiness of God and the holiness of man, yet God urges us to close that distance by keeping the commandments of God.  Jesus said, If ye love me, you will keep my commandments."  The Law of Holiness is not addressed to a selected group of individuals.  It is applied to the entire community of Believers.  The Law aims to create a holy people who live their lives in a display of consecration to God in their day-to-day relations and in all their affairs.

In chapter 18, verse 21, it states, "Do not give any of your children to be sacrificed to Molek, for you must not profane the name of your God. I am the Lord." In chapter 19, verse 12, the same expression is used,"  'Do not swear falsely by my name and so profane the name of your God. I am the Lord."  To profane the name of the LORD is to impair His reputation among the non-believers.

When Christians agree with, tolerate, or condone actions that the LORD has said are a violation of His commandments, they profane the name of the LORD.  During the time, these commands were given, people would sacrifice their children to the God Molek. Sacrificing to Molek is no different than those who sacrifice their children to the abortionist. Christians who agree with, tolerate, or condone abortion profane the name of the LORD.  Murdering an innocent child is to profane the name of the LORD.  How can the LORD bless a nation that both believers and non-believers support the killing of innocent children?

In the book of Ezekiel, when the people of Judah brought punishment upon themselves, they profaned the name of the LORD.  The Gentiles regarded the defeat of Judah as a defeat of Judah's God.  The reason the people of Judah were in exile was that their God was not powerful enough to protect them.  So, the reputation of God was profaned.  

How the non-believer views the LORD is not His worry; it is the responsibility of those who call themselves Christian.  Christians must live and act to win respect for Jesus Christ among non-believers.  Any behavior that brings public disgrace on Christians is taking the name of Jesus Christ in vain.  As a representative or witness of the LORD, any action that enhances the dignity and honor of Christianity is the sanctification of the Name of the LORD.

In conclusion, morality, or mores, is the shifting set of behavioral patterns within a society or culture.  We have been warned about living a "moral" life. The morality of the end times is given to us in Paul's second letter to Timothy, "But know this, that in the last days perilous times will come:  For men will be lovers of themselves, lovers of money, boasters, proud, blasphemers, disobedient to parents, unthankful, unholy, unloving, unforgiving, slanderers, without self-control, brutal, despisers of good, traitors, headstrong, haughty, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God, having a form of godliness but denying its power. And from such people turn away."  These are the behaviors that exemplify our society.

As Christians, we are to live holy lives in accordance with God's ethics. Ethics is what is normative and absolute.  It is the standards around which we organize our lives, and from which we define our duties and obligations.  The command to be a holy people is based on ethical living.  The ethical standard was given to us by the LORD for the normal life of the Christian.  The commands are absolute and not based on cultural morality.  The LORD says today, 'You shall be holy, for I, the Lord your God, am holy."

Friday, March 13, 2026

Why I Do Not Celebrate Easter

Every spring millions of Christians celebrate Easter with sunrise services, eggs, baskets, and the Easter bunny.

How did a pagan celebration become part of Christianity? Many believers have begun asking an important question: Is Easter the way the earliest Christians celebrated the resurrection of Jesus?

When we look carefully at Scripture and church history, a surprising story emerges.

The Resurrection Was Originally Celebrated as Passover

The death and resurrection of Jesus happened during the Jewish feast of Passover. The earliest Christians, therefore, connected the resurrection directly with Passover rather than with a separate spring holiday. The apostle Paul wrote: "For even Christ our passover is sacrificed for us." — 1 Corinthians 5:7 (KJV) In the earliest centuries of the church, the resurrection celebration was called "Pascha", the Greek word for Passover. Believers remembered Christ's death and resurrection during the Passover season because that was when the events actually occurred. This practice was common throughout the first and second centuries.

Early Christians Warned Against Pagan Religious Customs

Many early Christian leaders warned believers not to mix Christianity with pagan religious traditions. One of the earliest Christian writers, Tertullian (around 200 AD), warned: "What has Athens to do with Jerusalem?" "Prescription Against Heretics". His concern was that the church could gradually absorb the religious customs of surrounding cultures. For the first few centuries, Christian worship was very simple. Gatherings included prayer, Scripture reading, teaching, and communion. Seasonal symbols and elaborate religious festivals were largely absent.

The Date Was Changed in the Fourth Century

In 325 AD the Roman emperor Constantine called the Council of Nicaea. At this council, the church decided that the resurrection would always be held on a Sunday and would no longer be observed on the Jewish Passover calendar. Constantine even wrote that it seemed improper for Christians to rely on the Jewish calendar for determining the date. This decision separated the celebration of the resurrection from its original Passover timing. However, the celebration was still called "Pascha".

The Word "Easter" Came Much Later

The name "Easter" did not appear in the early church. The English historian Bede wrote in the 700s that the Anglo-Saxon month of April was called "Eosturmonath," named after a spring goddess called Eostre. When Christianity spread through England, the name of the month eventually came to be associated with the Christian celebration of the resurrection. In most other languages the original Passover name is still used today: Greek — Pascha SpanishPascua French — Pâques Italian — Pasqua Only English and a few Germanic languages use the word "Easter."

The Easter Bunny and Eggs Came from German Folk Traditions

Many familiar Easter customs appeared much later in European folklore. In the 1600s in Germany there was a tradition of an "Easter hare (Osterhase)" that brought colored eggs to children. German immigrants later brought this custom to America in the 1700s. Egg decorating also became popular in medieval Europe because eggs symbolized new life in spring. While these traditions are widely loved today, they did not originate in the New Testament or in the earliest Christian worship.

Why Some Christians Choose Not to Celebrate Easter Because of this history, some believers choose not to observe Easter as a religious holiday. Their reasons often include:

• The New Testament never commands Christians to celebrate Easter

• The earliest Christians connected the resurrection with Passover

• Many modern Easter traditions developed centuries later through culture and folklore

• The resurrection of Jesus is something Christians celebrate every day, not just once a year As Paul wrote: "If ye then be risen with Christ, seek those things which are above."— Colossians 3:1 (KJV)

Remembering the Resurrection

Whether one observes Easter or not, the central truth remains unchanged: "Jesus Christ rose from the dead." That message transformed the early church and continues to transform lives today. The question many believers are now reconsidering is not whether the resurrection matters—it certainly does—but "how the earliest followers of Christ remembered it."

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

The Long Road to Christian Zionism

 Lacunza, Prophecy Conferences, and the Politics of Restoration

In times of political upheaval, Christians often turn to the prophetic scriptures searching for signs of the times. Throughout history, such moments have sparked intense debates about the meaning of biblical prophecy. One of the most influential of these movements arose in the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries and eventually shaped modern Christian attitudes toward the modern state of Israel.

Few Christians today realize that the roots of these ideas stretch back to a little-known Jesuit writer, a fiery Scottish preacher, and a series of prophecy conferences held in England nearly two hundred years ago.

Understanding this history is important because it reminds us that interpretations of prophecy do not arise in a vacuum. They develop within particular historical circumstances and theological traditions.

A Jesuit Writer and a Future Kingdom

The story begins with Manuel de Lacunza (1731–1801), a Chilean Jesuit priest who spent much of his life in exile after the Jesuit order was expelled from Spanish territories.

While living in Italy, Lacunza wrote a lengthy prophetic work titled The Coming of the Messiah in Glory and Majesty. To avoid suspicion, he published the book under the Jewish pseudonym Juan Josafat Ben-Ezra.¹.

In this work, Lacunza argued that many Old Testament prophecies concerning Israel had not yet been fulfilled and would be fulfilled shortly before the return of Christ. He interpreted passages such as:

Isaiah 11:11–12 (KJV)

"And it shall come to pass in that day, that the Lord shall set his hand again the second time to recover the remnant of his people…"

Ezekiel 37:21 (KJV)

"Behold, I will take the children of Israel from among the heathen… and bring them into their own land."

Romans 11:26 (KJV)

"And so all Israel shall be saved…"

From these passages, Lacunza concluded that a large turning of the Jewish people to Christ would occur near the end of the age.

This idea was not entirely new. Some Protestant interpreters had previously entertained similar expectations. But Lacunza presented the concept in a comprehensive prophetic framework that captured the imagination of later readers.

Yet Lacunza himself did not advocate modern political Zionism, nor did he propose the creation of a Jewish state. His concern was primarily theological rather than political.

Still, his book would eventually spark a chain reaction that would shape Christian thought for generations.

Edward Irving and the English Translation

The next major figure in this story was Edward Irving (1792–1834), a Scottish Presbyterian preacher who became famous in London for his passionate sermons about the Second Coming of Christ.

In 1827, Irving translated Lacunza's book into English, bringing its prophetic interpretations into the English-speaking Protestant world.²

Irving's translation circulated widely among:

• evangelical clergy

• prophetic study groups

• members of Parliament interested in biblical prophecy

At the same time, Britain was experiencing intense interest in the prophetic books of Daniel and Revelation. The upheavals of the French Revolution, the wars of Napoleon Bonaparte, and the slow decline of the Ottoman Empire led many to believe that the world was entering the final stage of history.

Within this climate, discussions about the future of the Jewish people became increasingly common.

The Albury Prophecy Conferences

One of the most important centers of this prophetic revival was the Albury Conferences, held between 1826 and 1830 at the estate of banker and Member of Parliament Henry Drummond in Surrey, England.³

These meetings gathered:

• Anglican clergy

• evangelical theologians

• prophetic interpreters

• political leaders

The participants sought to examine biblical prophecy systematically. Their discussions focused on several questions:

• the identity of the Antichrist

• the fall of the Ottoman Empire

• the restoration of the Jews

• the Second Coming of Christ

At these conferences, the idea that the Jewish people would someday return to their ancient homeland began to circulate widely within influential Protestant circles.

This developing belief came to be known as Christian Restorationism.

Restorationism Before Political Zionism

Long before modern Jewish political Zionism emerged, several British Christians were already advocating the return of the Jews to Palestine.

Among the most prominent were:

Lewis Way

Edward Bickersteth

Anthony Ashley-Cooper, the 7th Earl of Shaftesbury

These men believed that biblical prophecy pointed toward a future restoration of the Jewish people.

For example, Edward Bickersteth wrote extensively about the restoration of Israel, arguing that prophecy predicted the Jews' return to their ancient homeland before Christ's reign.⁴

Lord Shaftesbury later became one of the most influential political advocates of Jewish restoration in Palestine. In the 1840s, he promoted the idea that Britain should support Jewish settlement in the area.

Remarkably, this was decades before the emergence of modern Zionism.

Darby and the Systematizing of Dispensationalism

While the restorationist movement was developing in Britain, a new theological system began to emerge through the work of John Nelson Darby (1800–1882).

Darby, one of the leaders of the Plymouth Brethren movement, developed a detailed interpretation of prophecy that later became known as dispensationalism.

His system emphasized several key ideas:

• a sharp distinction between Israel and the Church

• a future restoration of the nation of Israel

• a millennial kingdom centered in Jerusalem

Darby traveled widely through Britain and North America, teaching this system of prophecy.

According to historians, he became one of the most influential figures in shaping modern premillennial thought.⁵

The Scofield Reference Bible

Darby's ideas spread even more widely through the publication of the Scofield Reference Bible in 1909.

Edited by Cyrus I. Scofield, this study Bible placed interpretive notes directly alongside the King James text. These notes presented dispensational theology as the framework for understanding the Bible.

Because the Bible was so widely distributed, Scofield's notes shaped the prophetic expectations of millions of evangelical Christians in the twentieth century.⁶

The Intersection with Political Zionism

Modern Jewish political Zionism emerged later in the nineteenth century under leaders such as Theodor Herzl.

Herzl's movement was largely secular and motivated by the persecution of Jews in Europe and the desire for political self-determination.

Yet when Zionist proposals for a Jewish homeland began appearing in international diplomacy, they found support among many British Christians whose restorationist interpretations of prophecy had already influenced them.

In this sense, Christian restorationism and Jewish political Zionism developed independently but eventually converged.

From Theology to British Policy

These developments helped shape Britain's cultural and religious environment in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

By the time the British government issued the Balfour Declaration in 1917, expressing support for "the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people," the idea already had a long history within British religious thought.⁷

Political motivations, strategic interests, and humanitarian concerns all played roles in the decision. But the earlier theological tradition of restorationism helped make the idea culturally plausible within British society.

A Different Christian Interpretation

Not all Christians accepted this restorationist interpretation of prophecy.

Many Wesleyan and Quaker theologians believed that the New Testament teaches that the promises to Israel are fulfilled in Christ and in the Church composed of both Jews and Gentiles.

They pointed to passages such as:

Galatians 3:28–29 (KJV)

"There is neither Jew nor Greek… for ye are all one in Christ Jesus.

And if ye be Christ's, then are ye Abraham's seed, and heirs according to the promise."

Ephesians 2:14–16 (KJV)

"For he is our peace, who hath made both one… having abolished in his flesh the enmity…"

Hebrews 12:22 (KJV)

"But ye are come unto mount Sion, and unto the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem."

From this perspective, the kingdom of God is not defined by national boundaries but by the reign of Christ in the hearts of believers.

Jesus himself declared:

John 18:36 (KJV)

"My kingdom is not of this world…"

For many early Christians and later Quaker theologians, the central promise of Scripture is not the restoration of an earthly nation but the gathering of a redeemed people from every tribe and tongue.

Conclusion

The story of Lacunza, Irving, the British prophecy conferences, and the rise of dispensational theology shows how theological ideas can travel through history in surprising ways.

The chain of influence looks roughly like this:

• Lacunza revived premillennial interpretations of prophecy in the late 1700s.

• Edward Irving spread these ideas in Britain through his translation.

• British prophecy conferences popularized restorationist expectations.

• John Nelson Darby systematized dispensational theology.

• The Scofield Reference Bible spread these interpretations worldwide.

• Christian restorationism later intersected with modern Zionism and British policy.

Understanding this history helps us remember an important truth: Christians throughout the centuries have interpreted prophecy in different ways.

But the central message of the New Testament remains the same.

The kingdom of God is not built through political power or national restoration.

It is built through the reign of Christ.

And as the apostle Paul reminds us:

Romans 14:17 (KJV)

"For the kingdom of God is not meat and drink; but righteousness, and peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost."

Footnotes

  1. Manuel de Lacunza, The Coming of the Messiah in Glory and Majesty (Spanish ed., 1812).
  2. Edward Irving, trans. The Coming of the Messiah in Glory and Majesty (London, 1827).
  3. Timothy P. Weber, Living in the Shadow of the Second Coming (Oxford University Press, 1979).
  4. Edward Bickersteth, The Restoration of the Jews to Their Own Land (London, 1841).
  5. "John Nelson Darby," Encyclopaedia Britannica.
  6. Cyrus I. Scofield, ed. The Scofield Reference Bible (Oxford University Press, 1909).
  7. The Balfour Declaration, British Foreign Office, November 2, 1917.