JudeSýnishorn

Jude

DAY 6 OF 12

Expressions of Gnosticism

Gnosticism is a form of religion that puts individualism, reason and rationalism at the center. It's not Who you know, but what you know and how you feel about it.     

Jude was very concerned about this false faith that threatened to infiltrate the church. He warns that this is nothing new; it has been around since the beginning.

Here are Jude's three examples of where self-centred and self-rationalising gnostic religion takes shape::

  1. The Israelites who had been freed by God's mighty hand from Egypt, now hardened their hearts, longed back towards "Egypt days" and did not believe in God's future promise of a Promised Land. Many who are tempted by Gnostic faith tendencies, tend to reject future hope as "pie in the sky" and choose to focus on the "Steak on your plate while you wait for your fate." They failed to believe in God's future for them, settling for what they could know in the here and now or trying to return to the past.
  2. The angels who rebelled against God. This hints at the rebellion of Satan and one third of heaven's angels. Scripture does not document this in detail, but what we do have indicates Satan's rebellion against God and that there were angels who joined that rebellion. The point Jude is making is that they rebelled against the structure, authority and roles that God had given them.
  3. The residents of Sodom and Gomorrah had adopted all kinds of sexual excess. They replaced commitment to God with sensuality. This insistence on the pleasure of self is an expression of the self-centric focus of the gnostic movement.

Jude is clear: 

Lack of faith, rebellion against God's purposes and selfish sensuality have consequences. The faithless did not enter the promised land, the rebellious are awaiting judgement and the sensual were destroyed.

Self-centered and self-rationalising religion is not harmless - but very dangerous.

When we see a diminishing of hope in a God-ordained future, when we see a rebellion against God's structures and norms; and when we see an increase in sensuality and we when see all this in those who call themselves Christians, then Jude would have been very concerned and so should we.

Ritningin

Dag 5Dag 7

About this Plan

Jude

This series is based on the second to the last book in the New Testament - the letter of Jude. The writer cares about the church and is worried enough to write a letter when he sees trouble. Jude uses a rich grounding in the Old Testament to warn and encourage his readers. (Written during a "hard lockdown" during during the CoronaVirus pandemic)

More