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5 Love Languages of Leviticus

Leviticus 19:9-18 commands that we love our neighbor as ourself. What does it mean to love your neighbor as yourself?

In What is the Mission of the Church?, Kevin DeYoung and Greg Gilbert explain what they call the five love languages of Leviticus:

This passage applies love to five different areas of life, marked off into five sections by the concluding phrase “I am the Lord” (vv. 9–10, 11–12, 13–14, 15–16, 17–18). You might think of these verses as giving five love languages that every Christian must speak. We must love with our possessions, by our words, in our actions, by our judgments, and with our attitudes.

  1. Loving Others with Our Possessions (vv. 9–10): The main lesson to be learned is that God’s people are to be generous. The principle for us is this: We must deliberately plan our financial lives so that we have extra left over to give to those in need.
  2. Loving Others with Our Words (vv. 11–12): God’s people love others by telling the truth in their transactions. No cheating scales, weights, or measurements (vv. 35–36).
  3. Loving Others by Our Actions (vv. 13–14): God’s people must not take advantage of the weak.
  4. Loving Others in Our Judgments (vv. 15–16): Justice means there should be one standard, one law, for anyone and everyone, not different rules for different kinds of people.
  5. Loving Others in Our Attitude (vv. 17–18): Love is concrete, but it is also affective. “You shall not hate your brother in your heart.” It’s not enough to be polite on the outside and full of rage on the inside. If we are angry with our brother we should “reason frankly” with him and try to work things out. The bottom line is that you are to love as you would want to be loved.

So in the end this great commandment to love your neighbor as yourself—this commandment quoted in the New Testament more than any other—boils down to five very elementary, everyday, ordinary commands: share, tell the truth, don’t take advantage of the weak, be fair, talk it out. Simpler than you might think. But still easier said than done.

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November 25, 2011 | Posted in: Justice,Loving Others | Author: Angie Cheatham @ 8:06 am | 1 Comment »

October Offer to Crossway Impact Members

One of the benefits of Crossway Impact—our “Rewards with a Mission” program—is the exclusive monthly offer.

This month, with the release of John Piper’s new book, Bloodlines: Race, Cross, and the Christian, we’re offering Crossway Impact members a free book on the life of William Wilberforce, the great Christian abolitionist.

When you purchase either the hardcover or eBook version of Bloodlines, you’ll receive a free paperback or eBook copy of Amazing Grace in the Life of William Wilberforce, also by John Piper.

Sign-up or Login to your Impact account, add either version of Bloodlines to your cart, enter the corresponding promotion code at checkout (AMGR for hardcopy books or EAMGR for eBooks) and the free Wilberforce book will be added to your order.

Please note that you can redeem each promotional code only once and have until the last day of October.

You may also be interested in the related video documentary featuring Pastor John as he walks through his personal story of growing up in the racist South. His story boldly champions the transforming power of the gospel and the beauty of racial diversity and harmony in Christ. You can watch the full documentary here.

This special offer will only work for Impact members, so if you share this to your friends, make sure they know to sign-up for Crossway Impact.

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October 13, 2011 | Posted in: Crossway Impact,Giveaways,Justice,Race,Social Issues | Author: Lindsay Tully @ 3:03 pm | 1 Comment »

What is the Mission of the Church? DG Live with Kevin DeYoung & Greg Gilbert

Clear your calendar on 9/7/11 from 7-8:30pm EDT for DG Live with Kevin DeYoung and Greg Gilbert. They will be discussing and taking questions on the topic of “the mission of the church.” Have you or your church been wrestling through what your role should be in your community? The world? Social justice? How do you balance that with evangelism and discipleship?

Desiring God invites you to join the conversation by tweeting your questions in to #dglive. In the meantime, learn more about or read an excerpt from DeYoung and Gilbert’s forthcoming book What is the Mission of the Church: Making Sense of Social Justice, Shalom, and the Great Commission.

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September 6, 2011 | Posted in: Church and Ministry,Event,Interviews,Justice,Missions | Author: Angie Cheatham @ 9:56 am | 1 Comment »

Ethics for a Brave New World (New Revised Edition)

How do we discern whether an action is moral or immoral? Without a clear answer, some deceived by sin may believe they are living moral lives and saints may live plagued by guilt and uncertainty. In the second edition of Ethics for a Brave New World, John and Paul Feinberg help us think through heated ethical issues of our day:

  • Abortion
  • Euthanasia
  • Capital Punishment
  • Sexuality and Birth Control
  • Homosexuality
  • Divorce
  • War in a Nuclear Age

With culture and technology changing at breakneck pace, it would have been impossible for the authors of Scripture to specifically address the unique moral questions of each generation. For this reason, some think it’s impossible to decipher biblical positions for these issues. “Though Scripture never addresses directly many of the topics covered in his book, it sets forth enough principles about life and death, human sexuality and a citizen’s relation to government that it is possible to evaluates contemporary practices in light of biblical teaching—it is mandatory to do so,” John and Paul Feinberg explain.

Learn more about the new edition of their book, Ethics for a Brave New World.

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November 12, 2010 | Posted in: Abortion,Books,Ethics,Homosexuality,Justice,Social Issues | Author: Crossway Staff @ 11:36 am | 1 Comment »

Immigrants: Legal, Illegal and the Old Testament Law

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Guest Post by James K. Hoffmeier
Professor of Old Testament & Near Eastern Arcaheology
Trinity Evangelical Divinity School

The national debate on the plight of illegal immigrants has been simmering for years. On April 24, 2010 a contentious bill (SB 1070) was signed into law in Arizona that permits state authorities to apprehend illegal immigrants. This bill, though not scheduled to take effect until July, has blown the lid off the pressure cooker, resulting in marches, boycotts and lawsuits. The burning issue is, what should be done with illegal immigrants (estimates vary from 12-20 million)?

Christian organizations, churches and individuals have been wresting with this question. Understandably, Evangelical Christians want to know if the Bible offers some guidance on the agonizing problems surrounding the debate. As a matter of fact the Old Testament has a lot to say about aliens or sojourners, after all Abraham, Isaac and Jacob were aliens or immigrants in Canaan, and the Children of Israel sojourned in Egypt for centuries. In order to come to an understanding of the relevant biblical terms, what they mean and how they might be applied to the current crisis, I carefully investigated the Scriptures, studying the Hebrew terms contextually. The results of my work was published by Crossway in a book The Immigration Crisis: Immigration, Immigrants and the Bible (2009).

For over thirty years I have been a professor of Old Testament, and have read through the Bible many, many times. Nevertheless, I was surprised by what I learned. Here I offer just two salient conclusions, but invite the readers to examine the book to follow the arguments and the data that lead to these observations.

First, the Hebrew word ger has been variously translated as “stranger” (KJV, NAS), “sojourner” (ESV, RSV), “alien” (NIV, NRSV), and even “foreigner” (TNIV, NLT). The latter is misleading and inaccurate as there are two other Hebrew terms that mean “foreigner,” namely zar and nekhar. From the Abraham and Isaac narratives in Genesis we learn that the Patriarchs had to negotiate treaties and agreements to sojourn in the territory of and obtain water rights from the local Canaanite and Philistine kings (cf. Gen. 20, 21 & 26). Pharaoh gave Joseph permission for his family to “sojourn” in Egypt (Gen. 45:17-18), and when the family arrived in Egypt the brothers asked Pharaoh for permission to “sojourn” in Egypt with their flocks (Gen. 47:5-6). From these and other references, I conclude that a ger was a foreigner who comes to live in another land with the permission of a host or the proper authority.

Second, the Old Testament law insists that once a foreigner attained ger status in Israel, he was to be treated like a native born Hebrew (Exod. 14:49; Lev. 18:26), enjoying legal protection, social benefits and religious inclusion. The Law, however, does not offer the same protections and benefits to the “foreigner” (nekhar and zar). For example, an Israelite was not allowed to charge interest to a ger, but could to a nekhar (Lev. 25:35-37; Deut. 15:3). Similarly, the ger could participate in Passover observances while the nekhar was prohibited (Exod. 12:43-49).

These distinctions demonstrate that the “foreigner” and the “alien” did not have the same standing in biblical law. Applying the foregoing observations to the current immigration dilemma, I propose a correlation between the ger of the OT and the legal immigrant today, and the “foreigner” and the illegal immigrant. In the current debate about the status of the illegal immigrants, some have cited OT passages about the ger arguing that illegal immigrants be treated accordingly. If my analysis is correct, this is a faulty application of these biblical laws to the illegal immigrant of today. On the other hand, the biblical laws urge us to help and incorporate foreigners who are legally among us, especially because they are easily exploited (Deut. 24:14-15).

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June 4, 2010 | Posted in: Author,Books,Justice,Social Issues | Author: Crossway Staff @ 6:21 am | (8) Comments »