Wednesday, January 20, 2021

A Response to L. Ray Smith’s Criticism of “Concordant Teachings” (Part Two)

As demonstrated in the previous installment of my response to L. Ray Smith’s criticism of certain “Concordant teachings,” the measure of divine grace that Paul variously described as “super-exceeding,” “super-abounding” and “super-abundant” was not being manifested or bestowed prior to Christ’s ascension. At no point did Christ, during his earthly ministry (when our Lord was “confirming the patriarchal promises”), make known or dispense this grace.


This fact notwithstanding, Mr. Smith went on to express his bewilderment that anyone could possibly believe that the Lord’s teaching concerning grace during his earthly ministry was different than (and should be kept separate from) what the Lord revealed to and through the apostle Paul:


UNBELIEVABLE! And that is not a slip of typewriter keys, this author and thousands who believe in the salvation of all firmly believe this to be true. Where on God's earth do they think "grace" came from in the first place? Was Paul the "inventor of grace?"


"For the law was given by Moses, but GRACE AND TRUTH came by JESUS CHRIST" (John 1:17).


Not Paul!!


I highly doubt that the “Concordant” believer to whom Mr. Smith was responding believed that Paul was the “inventor of grace,” or that grace was something exclusive to the administration given to Paul or to the body of Christ. In any event, this is certainly not something I’ve ever believed or claimed to be the case. God’s grace has always been present and operative in human history. In Gen. 6:8, for example, we’re told that Noah – who is described as “a righteous man” who “became flawless in his generations” and walked with God – “found grace in the eyes of Yahweh.” And we’ve already noted how James and Peter both quoted a verse from the Hebrew Scriptures in which God is said to give grace to the humble. What changed with the beginning of the administration of the grace of God was not the fact that divine grace began to be bestowed; rather, what changed was the extent to which (and the kind of people to whom) it began to be bestowed.


Since John didn’t mean that grace and truth had no existence before Christ came into the world (or that humanity had no prior experiential contact with grace and truth before Christ’s earthly ministry began), what, exactly, did John mean when he wrote that “grace and truth came through Jesus Christ?” Significantly, besides its three occurrences in the prologue (John 1:14, 16, 17), the term “grace” is not found anywhere else in John’s account (in contrast, the word “truth” occurs 25 times). However, the two terms “grace and truth” (charitos kai aletheias) can be understood as echoing the Hebrew pairing of “benignity” and “truth” (Heb. hesed, emet), which are central in the covenantal self-disclosure of God in the Hebrew Scriptures. Concerning this self-revelation of God, we read the following in Exodus 34:6-7:


“Now Yahweh passed by before [Moses’] face and proclaimed: Yahweh, Yahweh El, Who is compassionate and gracious, slow to anger and abundant with benignity and truth, preserving benignity to thousands, bearing with depravity, transgression and sin…”[1]


Yahweh declared these words to Moses shortly after Moses asked Yahweh to show him His glory (Ex. 33:18). Keeping this fact in mind, let’s now compare Ex. 34:6 with the following from John 1:14: “And the Word became flesh and tabernacles among us, and we gaze at His glory, a glory as of an only-begotten from the Father, full of grace and truth.” Just as Yahweh revealed himself to Moses as a God who is “abundant with benignity and truth,” so Yahweh’s only-begotten Son – who, we’re told in John 1:18, “unfolds” the Father” – is said to be “full of grace and truth” (with the expression “full of grace and truth” corresponding to the Hebrew expression translated “abundant with benignity and truth” in Ex. 34:6). We can therefore understand John to have been presenting Jesus as the fulfillment of God’s previous revelation to Israel (which Christ himself affirmed when, in John 14:9, he declared, “He who has seen Me has seen the Father…”).


Concerning what John meant when he wrote that he and his fellow believing Jews had obtained “grace for grace” (John 1:16), I think it’s significant that the “benignity” with which God said he is “abundant” is associated with his “bearing with depravity, transgression and sin” (Ex. 34:7). The words translated “bearing with” in this verse communicate the idea of God’s not reckoning sins against those with whose sins he’s “bearing” (see Ex. 34:9; cf. Num. 14:17-20 and Ps. 32:1, 5; 85:2; Mic. 7:18). Moreover, those to whom we’re told God is “preserving benignity” in Ex. 34:7 are clearly members of God’s covenant people, Israel (for it was on behalf of Israel alone that Moses had been interceding; see Ex. 32:11-14; 33:12-16; 34:8-9).


In light of this fact, I think it’s reasonable to conclude that the expression of divine grace to which John was referring in John 1:16 is that of which he later wrote in 1 John 1:7, 9:


“Yet if we should be walking in the light as He is in the light, we are having fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus, His Son, is cleansing us from every sin…if we should be avowing our sins, He is faithful and just that He may be pardoning us our sins and should be cleansing us from all injustice.”


As is the case with the letters written by James, Peter, Jude and the author of the letter to the Hebrews, the letters of John were not written to believers among the nations (of whom the ecclesias to which Paul wrote were primarily comprised). Rather, John ministered to (and thus wrote to) believers among God’s covenant people, Israel. Paul affirmed this divinely-made arrangement when he wrote that he and Barnabas would be “for the nations” while James, Peter and John would be “for the Circumcision” (Gal. 2:9). And John implied as much when, in his third letter, he referred to “the nations” as a company of believers who were distinct from the saints on whose behalf he ministered (3 John 1:7).[2]


With this fact kept in mind, notice the conditional “if” used in the above verses. For the believing Jews to whom John wrote his letters, the obtaining of God’s sin-pardoning grace was conditional, and required “walking in the light as He is in the light” and “avowing” one’s sins. Thus, the fact that we’re told “grace and truth” came through Jesus Christ does not contradict the fact that, with regard to the bestowing of his grace, God deals differently with the believers among his covenant people (the “Israel of God”) than he does with the body of Christ.


Mr. Smith went on to write that a certain believer presented him with the following two options regarding the gospel heralded by Paul among the nations:


1. Either we work, keep laws, do good deeds, apply human will and human effort as part of our salvation, or


2. Salvation is accomplished without ANY good works or ideal acts, without ANY human will, choices, or effort (which is considered PURE GRACE).


According to the first option provided, our salvation involves and requires some obedient action/volitional effort on our part. In contrast, the second option affirms the exact opposite. So far, so good. Either our eonian salvation as members of the body of Christ requires some kind of volitional effort/obedient action(s) on our part, or it doesn't. However, Mr. Smith then responds to these mutually exclusive options as follows:


“Nothing could be further from the truth--BOTH of these options are wrong.”


Mr. Smith claimed to have rejected both options. But what other option is there? By rejecting the second option, Mr. Smith must have affirmed that the accomplishment of our eonian salvation involves at least some good works/ideal acts/volitional effort on our part (and that our salvation cannot and will not occur apart from this). But that’s precisely what the first option affirms. Either our salvation as believers is at least partly based on (and partly accomplished by) our own works/volitional effort, or it isn't. Either doing something (i.e., obeying what Mr. Smith referred to later as certain “spiritual laws commands”) is part of our salvation, or it’s not. There’s no middle ground here.


As we’ll see, it’s clear that Mr. Smith firmly rejected the second option while (perhaps inadvertently) affirming the first. This being the case, the only way that I can make any sense at all of Mr. Smith’s claim to reject the first premise is that he misunderstood it to be affirming that our salvation is solely based on good deeds/obedience/volitional effort on our part, and that it depends entirely on something we must do. However, that’s not what’s being affirmed in the first option (at least, insofar as I understand it). We're not told in this option that our salvation is solely dependent on our own effort and obedience here (hence the words, “as part of our salvation”).


In any case (and despite Mr. Smith’s claim to reject both options), Mr. Smith’s rejection of the second premise can only mean that he believed that our eonian salvation as believers is accomplished with some good works/ideal acts, and with some volitional effort and contribution on our part. And regardless of whether or not Mr. Smith correctly understood what’s being affirmed in the first option, it seems clear from what he went on to write that he affirmed that the believer must live a righteous and godly life to some degree in order to be saved before the rest of humanity, and denied that we could receive this eonian salvation apart from doing what Smith later referred to as “…OBEYING all the spiritual laws commands that are far far superior to the law of Moses and its administration of death.”


Mr. Smith continued:


Jesus Christ is coming to put down His enemies when He returns, but not because they didn't "BELIEVE" the gospel, but because they didn't "OBEY" the gospel. And just who would ever propose such a thing? Let's try The Apostle Paul: 


II Thes. 1:8--"In flaming fire taking vengeance on them that know not God, and that OBEY NOT THE GOSPEL OF OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST."


Or, let me quote it from their own Version:


"...in flaming fire, dealing out vengeance to those who are not acquainted with God and those who are NOT OBEYING THE EVANGEL [gospel] OF OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST..." (Concordant Literal New Testament).


The problem with Mr. Smith’s use of this verse to support his position (which is that obedience to what he referred to as “the Seven Spiritual Laws in the New Covenant” is essential to the eonian salvation of the believer) is that the evangel/gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ to which Paul was referring is not a law, precept or command. Rather, it’s a message that’s constituted by certain truth-claims. This message – which Paul elsewhere referred to as “the word of truth, the evangel of [our] salvation” (Eph. 1:13) – concerns what Christ did for sinners (he died for our sins) and what God did for Christ (he roused him from among the dead). So how does one obey this message?


The Greek word translated “obey” in 2 Thess. 1:8 is hupakouō, and means “to hear and to heed” (according to the CLNT’s Greek-English Keyword Concordance, the translated elements of which this word consists are “UNDER-HEAR”). When one obeys (“hears and heeds”) a certain precept, one does what is commanded in the precept. For example, one obeys the precept “you shall love your associate as yourself” by loving one’s associate as oneself. However, when a message is in view (as is the case in 2 Thess. 1:8), obedience to the message necessarily consists in believing the message. Thus, one obeys (“hears and heeds”) the evangel of our Lord Jesus Christ simply by believing the evangel of our Lord Jesus Christ.


Smith goes on to appeal to a certain definition of “obey” in an attempt to support his position that “obeying the evangel” necessarily involves obeying what he calls “all the spiritual laws in the New Covenant”:


And let's not misunderstand the meaning of that word "obey" from the Greek word "hupakouo" which means "to HEED or CONFORM to a command" (Strong's #5219, p. 256). 


Although one can certainly “heed” the evangel (by believing it), the evangel is not a “command” to which one must “conform.” So the very definition of “obey” to which Mr. Smith appealed actually serves to undermine his understanding of 2 Thess. 1:8. Since the evangel of our Lord Jesus Christ is not a command (or a set of “spiritual laws”), it’s clear that obeying it does not involve carrying out a command or keeping a precept. In contrast with (for example) the command to love your neighbor as yourself, one does not obey the evangel by doing good works (or by refraining from doing bad works). Again, the sense in which one obeys the evangel is simply that one responds to it with faith. But what, then, is the connection between obeying the evangel (i.e., believing it) and doing good works?


Answer: In Eph. 2:8-10 we read the following concerning those who had obeyed the evangel (and who had thus become members of the body of Christ):


“For in grace, through faith, are you saved, and this is not out of you; it is God's approach present, not of works, lest anyone should be boasting. For His achievement are we, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God makes ready beforehand, that we should be walking in them.”


When Paul wrote, “for His achievement are we, created in Christ Jesus for good works,” he was referring to members of the body of Christ. That is, Paul was referring to that company of saints whose eonian salvation has never been dependent on works of any kind. Since our salvation is “not of works,” it necessarily follows that any works done after we’ve been justified by faith have no effect whatsoever on whether or not we will receive life eonian. Thus, although good works should characterize the “walk” of those who believe/obey the evangel, doing the good works that God “makes ready beforehand” is not how we believe/obey the evangel. Although good works should follow from one’s obedience to the evangel, such works do not constitute one’s obedience to the evangel (and with regard to those who hear the evangel of the grace of God but don’t believe it, any good works subsequently performed by them will be works done by those who have not obeyed the evangel).


The only obedient response to the evangel is to believe it. Those who have believed it “should be walking in [good works],” but the eonian salvation of the believer is not dependent on such works (it’s dependent on God’s grace). Although a believer should do good works, a believer does not need to do good works – or live a life that’s characterized by good works – in order to receive the salvation that Paul had in view in Eph. 2:8.


Continuing in his attempt to defend the position that the salvation of those in the body of Christ involves a process of precept-keeping obedience/godly living, Mr. Smith went on to write the following:


“Notice how this same Greek word is used in Acts 6:7—"And the word of God grows, and the number of disciples in Jerusalem multiplied tremendously, Besides, a vast throng of the priests OBEYED THE FAITH" (Concordant Version).


Wow! Imagine that: The collective teachings of Jesus which are classified as "THE faith" is something that can and MUST BE, OBEYED!”


However, even in Acts 6:7, the obedience that is in view likely involved simply hearing and heeding the “word of God” referred to in this verse (i.e., the evangel that was being heralded by the apostles, and which is constituted by the truth that Jesus is the Christ; cf. Acts 2:36). It is this heralded message that is likely being referred to in this verse (by the figure of speech “Association” or “Metonymy”) as “the faith.”


After stating that one is not likely to ever hear it quoted “at a Concordant meeting,” Mr. Smith goes on to quote (and comment on) Titus 2:11-12 as follows:


”For the GRACE of God that brings salvation has appeared to all men, TEACHING US [image that, 'grace' is a VERB THAT DOES SOMETHING--IT TEACHES US SOMETHING. What?...] ...TEACHING US that, denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, RIGHTEOUSLY, AND GODLY, in this present world" (That again would be, The Apostle Paul to Titus, Titus 2:11-12).”


I seriously doubt that anyone teaching at a “Concordant meeting” would shy away from what Paul wrote in Titus 2:11-12. In any case, I have no problem whatsoever with what Paul wrote in these verses. Everything I believe concerning how members of the body of Christ are saved is perfectly consistent with the fact that the saving grace of God is “training us that, disowning irreverence and worldly desires, we should be living sanely and justly and devoutly in the current eon” (as Paul’s words are translated in the CLNT). Apparently, Mr. Smith thought that being taught/trained by the saving grace of God is equivalent to being saved by grace. However, the salvation of the believer and the teaching/training of the believer are not the same.


As important as Paul’s words in Titus 2:11-12 are, Paul was not talking about how members of the body of Christ are saved/qualify for eonian life, or explaining what the believer must do in order to receive immortality before the rest of humanity. That is, Paul was not saying that if a believer doesn’t live “righteously and godly in this present world” then he or she won’t receive eonian life. Paul makes clear in Titus 3:3-7 that our salvation – which, in the immediate context, Paul equates with “being justified in [Christ’s] grace” (and which qualifies the believer for the allotment of life eonian) – is something that’s unrelated to “works wrought in righteousness which we do.”


After quoting Paul in Titus 2:11-12, Mr. Smith went on to say,


”And, so what I have said does not contradict salvation by faith for all humanity, but it certainly does add to it the teachings of Jesus and Paul and all the apostles, that there certainly is something to do, to obey, to live out. Failure to OBEY the Gospel will culminate in such an one not even being in the first resurrection or given eonian life ahead of the rest of humanity! There are hundreds and hundreds of commands by none other than Paul himself, clearly stating what a believe must obey. And you can take that to the bank, and you can take that to your grave.” 


Based on what Mr. Smith wrote here, it’s clear that he believed that the eonian salvation of those in the body of Christ was conditioned on doing/obeying/living out certain commands, and that a failure to do/obey/live out these commands would result in a person not being saved “ahead of the rest of humanity.” Thus, when Mr. Smith wrote that there are “hundreds and hundreds of commands” that clearly state “what a believer must obey” (emphasis mine), the implication is that the believer will not be saved before the rest of humanity unless he or she obeys these commands. And this conditional salvation that involves obeying certain commands was understood by Mr. Smith as being in accord with the salvation that Paul wrote was “in grace, through faith.”


I believe that Mr. Smith was greatly mistaken here. Although Paul’s letters are filled with exhortations for believers regarding how we should live and conduct ourselves during this wicked eon, our being saved before the rest of humanity in no way depends on anything we must do, obey and live out. According to Paul, every member of the body of Christ was foreknown and designated beforehand by God (Rom. 8:29-30), chosen in Christ “before the disruption of the world” (Eph. 1:4-5) and “preferred from the beginning for salvation” (2 Thess. 2:13). Those chosen beforehand by God are subsequently “called” by God through the evangel (2 Thess. 2:14). The sort of “calling” that Paul had in mind here is not a general “calling” that one can choose to ignore or fail to respond to. It is, instead, a calling from God that involves being graciously granted a measure of faith to believe the evangel (Rom. 12:3; Phil. 1:29), and which inevitably results in the justification of those who are called. This is evident from Romans 8:29-30, where we read the following:


”…whom He foreknew, He designates beforehand, also, to be conformed to the image of His Son, for Him to be Firstborn among many brethren. Now whom He designates beforehand, these He calls also, and whom He calls, these He justifies also; now whom He justifies, these He glorifies also.”


Although Mr. Smith was undoubtedly very familiar with these verses, I don’t think he fully understood or appreciated the implications of what Paul wrote here. The same individuals who are called by God are also justified and glorified by God (with the glorification in view involving an eonian salvation that those designated beforehand by God will enjoy before the rest of humanity is saved; cf. Rom. 8:15-25). And since everyone who has been justified will be glorified, it follows that the eonian salvation of everyone in the body of Christ has nothing whatsoever to do with our conduct. Those who have been called through the evangel heralded by Paul (and, having been given the faith to believe the evangel, have been justified by God) do not need to obey or live out any commands in order to be saved before the rest of humanity. Although Paul exhorted believers to “walk worthily of the calling with which [we] were called,” a failure to do so will not jeopardize or have any effect at all on our eonian salvation. Our salvation before the rest of humanity is as certain to take place as our justification was certain to occur when we were called by God. And just as our justification occurred apart from anything we did (or didn’t do) before we were called by God, so our glorification will occur apart from anything we’ve done (or haven’t done) since being justified.


Upon being given the faith to believe “the word of truth, the evangel of [our] salvation,” those called by God are then sealed with the holy spirit of promise,” which is “an earnest of the enjoyment of our allotment, to the deliverance of that which has been procured (Eph. 1:13-14). No precept-keeping obedience/ works/godly living is required for any member of the body of Christ to receive the “deliverance” of which Paul wrote in the above verses. This salvation – which will occur for all who have been justified by faith in Paul’s evangel – is as certain to occur as anything else God has promised to do.


Moreover, the future glorification of all who have been (or will be) justified through faith in the evangel of the grace of God is not an event that’s going to take place at different times (i.e., with some members of the body of Christ being glorified before the rest of humanity and others being glorified later). Rather, everyone in the body of Christ is going to be delivered from mortality/death and glorified together at the same time (Rom. 8:15-25; 1 Cor. 15:50-57; Phil. 3:20-21; Col. 3:1-4; 1 Thess. 4:14-18; 5:9-11; 2 Thess. 2:13-14). And this, once again, means that the eonian salvation of every member of the body of Christ is not something that is based on our conduct, or on our keeping certain precepts or “spiritual laws.” There is nothing that anyone in the body of Christ must do in order to receive immortality before the rest of humanity, and there is nothing we could do (or fail to do) that could possibly result in our failing to receive this salvation.



[1] For similar uses of the Hebrew expression translated here as “benignity and truth” here, see Gen. 24:27, 49; 32:10; 47:29; Josh. 2:14; Ps. 40:10-11; 61:7; Prov. 20:28.

[2] Some have suggested that “the nations” to whom John made reference here were unbelievers. But there’s no good reason to think that John – or any of the Jewish believers to whom he wrote – would’ve expected unbelieving Gentiles to provide financial assistance to the Jewish ecclesias to which Peter, James and John ministered. On the other hand, we know for a fact that, in accord with the agreement referred to by Paul in Gal. 2:10, the ecclesias to which Paul wrote had been doing just this (Rom. 15:25-31; 1 Cor. 16:1-4; 2 Cor. 8:1-9:15).

A Response to L. Ray Smith’s Criticism of “Concordant Teachings” (Part One)

In this article I’m going to be responding to some critical remarks made by the late L. Ray Smith concerning a doctrinal position associated with the Concordant Publishing Concern (and which Mr. Smith referred to as “foolish,” “deceitful” and a “damnable doctrine of demons”). Although I don’t agree with every distinctive teaching associated with the Concordant ministry (and this includes certain views that could be considered “dispensational” or “administrational” in nature), I am in general agreement with the doctrinal position against which Mr. Smith has written, and therefore view his criticism of it as being criticism of what I believe as well. Thus, after Mr. Smith’s critical remarks were shared in a Facebook post earlier this month by another believer, I felt compelled to write a response to them.


Mr. Smith began his critical remarks as follows:


“I came to understand a doctrine held by most people connected with the Concordant Publishing Concern (which includes Jeff and many of his Biblical teacher friends), with which I absolutely could not disagree more. It is the teaching that there are TWO administrations, and almost two of everything:


• Two ADMINISTRATIONS


• Two CALLINGS


• Two GOSPELS [Peter vs. Paul]


• Two RACIAL distinctions [the circumcision Jews and the uncircumcision Gentiles]


• Two RETURNS of Christ for His TWO sets of saints


• Two RESURRECTIONS [one at a co-called Rapture, and the other for the National lineage of Israel]


• Two REWARDS [again, one for Paul's group and one for Peter's]


• Two area of RULERSHIP [one for Israel on this earth, the other in the Heavens for the believers following Paul's gospel]


• Two DIFFERENT BODIES [one physical, terrestrial for earth-bound saints and one spiritual for those ruling in outer space--yes, they believe heaven is outer space], etc.


Among the doctrinal subjects listed above, the one referred to by Mr. Smith as “two racial distinctions” is, arguably, the most fundamental, and can be understood as supporting (and being presupposed by) each of the other truths mentioned. For this reason, I’ll be addressing this point first (after which I’ll address the remainder of the points in the order in which they’re listed, and in a more cursory manner).


Although Mr. Smith referred to “Two RACIAL distinctions,” I prefer to refer to the distinction that God makes between Israel and the nations as being both racial/ethnic and covenantal in nature (since Israel’s covenantal identity is just as much a distinguishing factor as their racial/ethnic identity). But regardless of the exact terminology one wants to use or emphasize, I believe that the distinction God makes between his people Israel and the rest of the nations is one of the clearest truths we find affirmed in Scripture. For example, shortly after the birth of Christ, Simeon referred to Jesus in his prayer to God as “a Light for the revelation of nations, and the Glory of Thy people Israel (Luke 2:32; cf. Zechariah’s prophecy in 1:67-79).


Christ himself affirmed this divinely-created distinction between Israel and the nations when he instructed his disciples as follows: “Into a road of the nations you may not pass forth, and into a city of the Samaritans you may not be entering. Yet be going rather to the lost sheep of the house of Israel (Matt. 10:5-6). In accord with these instructions (where it’s clear that Christ understood God’s covenant people to have precedence over the nations), Christ later declared, “I was not commissioned except for the lost sheep of the house of Israel (Matt. 15:24; cf. Mark 7:27). Hence, we’re told by Paul that Christ – during his earthly ministry – was “the Servant of the Circumcision, for the sake of the truth of God, to confirm the patriarchal promises” (Rom. 15:8).


Given that Peter’s apostolic ministry to Israel was simply a continuation of our Lord’s when he was confirming the patriarchal promises, it should come as no surprise that Peter would conclude his second recorded evangelistic message to Israel as follows: 


“You are the sons of the prophets and of the covenant which God covenanted with your fathers, saying to Abraham: And in your seed all the kindreds of the earth shall be blessed. To you first, God, raising His Boy, commissions Him to bless you by turning away each of you from your wickedness(Acts 3:25-26).


In the words of God to Abraham quoted by Peter, “your seed” refers to the ethnic descendants of Abraham with whom God established a covenant relationship when he gave Abraham “the covenant of circumcision” (Acts 7:8). Conversely, the words “all the kindreds of the earth” refer to the nations (who do not share the covenant relationship with God that Israel enjoys). Moreover, Peter’s words “to you first” (which clearly refer to the members of God’s covenant people to whom he was speaking) are in accord with the words of Christ as quoted above (where “the lost sheep of the house of Israel” are given precedence over the nations).


Many examples from unfulfilled Hebrew prophecy could also be provided in which a distinction between Israel and the nations is clearly made by God. For example, in Joel 2:27 and 3:1-3 we read that God declared the following concerning Israel’s future:


“You shall know that I am in the midst of Israel, and that I am the Lord your God and there is none else. And my people shall never again be put to shame…For behold, in those days and at that time, when I restore the fortunes of Judah and Jerusalem, I will gather all the nations and bring them down to the Valley of Jehoshaphat. And I will enter into judgment with them there, on behalf of my people and my heritage Israel, because they have scattered them among the nations and have divided up my land, and have cast lots for my people…”


The importance of these and other prophetic passages with regard to the present subject cannot be overstated, for they prove that the divinely-created distinction between Israel and the nations is not just a past state of affairs. Rather, it’s a state of affairs that will continue to exist in the future. For as Paul made clear in Romans 11:1-2, God has not “thrust away His people.” “His people” refers, of course, to Israel – i.e., the ethnically distinct people whose very identity is based on the covenants that God has made with them (Rom. 9:3-4). That is, Israel – as an ethnically distinct people in covenant with God – still has a future and expectation that is in accord with what we find prophesied in the Hebrew Scriptures. According to Romans 11:25-27, the “callousness, in part” that is presently on Israel will be removed after “the complement of the nations” has entered in, and “all Israel” will thus be saved. For, despite the fact that the majority of God’s covenant people are, “as to the evangel…enemies because of [us],” they remain, “as to choice…beloved because of the fathers” (v. 28). The “fathers” to whom Paul referred are, of course, the patriarchs with whom Peter said God “covenanted” in Acts 3:25.


With regard to the “two administrations” doctrine with which Mr. Smith disagreed, the first point that can be made (and with which I’m sure Mr. Smith would’ve agreed) is simply that Paul was, in fact, entrusted with an administration (1 Cor. 9:17). But was this administration with which Paul was entrusted the same administration as that which was in existence before Paul’s ministry among the nations began? No. In Ephesians 3:1-9, Paul referred to the administration given to him as “the administration of the grace of God” and “the administration of the secret.” It’s evident that this administration is inseparably connected with and based on the truths referred to in Eph. 3:6. Notice, also, that every element of the “secret” referred to by Paul in v. 6 is said to have been be “through the evangel of which [Paul] became the dispenser.” Since the truths that Paul referred to as “the secret of the Christ” were not made known to “the sons of humanity” prior to their being made known to Paul (and prior to the time when the evangel of which Paul “became the dispenser” was entrusted to him), it follows that the administration that is based on these truths was not in existence before Paul’s apostolic ministry among the nations began.


It’s further evident that the truths associated with the administration of the grace of God do not belong to Israel’s prophesied program (according to which Peter and the other eleven apostles were ministering prior to Paul’s calling and ministry among the nations began). Although ethnic/covenant-based distinctions are irrelevant within the body of Christ (as Paul makes clear), the same cannot be said for humanity outside of the body of Christ. For, as has been demonstrated above, God himself makes (and will make, in the future) a distinction between the nations and his covenant people, Israel. And this means that the administration of the grace of God that was given to Paul is necessarily distinct from Israel’s prophetic program (of which the divinely-created distinction between Israel and the nations is an essential element).


Moreover, since the administration of Peter and the other eleven apostles was in accord with Israel’s prophetic program, it follows that their administration (which involved heralding the evangel of the kingdom to both Israelites/proselytes and to righteous-acting, God-fearing Gentiles like Cornelius and his house) was distinct from the administration of the grace of God that was entrusted to Paul. The former administration of the twelve apostles pertained to the calling and covenant-based expectation of Israel (which we find prophesied in the Hebrew Scriptures), while the administration given to Paul – the apostle of the nations – pertains to the calling and expectation of the body of Christ (which was not made known to “the sons of humanity” until after Paul’s apostolic ministry to the nations began).


With regard to the second and third doctrinal subjects referred to by Mr. Smith, the existence of two gospels presupposes the existence of two callings (for it is through a certain gospel that one is called by God to a certain expectation). Thus, any scriptural evidence that there were two gospels being heralded in Paul’s day will support the related position that there were also two callings. And since (as I’ve argued elsewhere) there is scriptural evidence that there were two gospels being heralded in Paul’s day, we can conclude that there were/are two callings as well (for a defense of the truth that there were, in fact, two evangels being heralded in Paul’s day – and a response to some other objections by Mr. Smith – click the following link: revisiting-two-evangels-controversy). Concerning the positions that Mr. Smith referred to as “two returns of Christ for His two sets of saints” and “two resurrections,” the reader can find a defense of this position in my five-part study on 1 Thess. 4:13-18 (a-commentary-on-1-thessalonians-413-18). As far as the truth of the position referred to by Mr. Smith as “two rewards,” this truth is implied by the fact that there are “two areas of rulership” (for a defense of the truth that the kingdom of God will be present in two realms during the eons to come, see the following two-part study: https://thathappyexpectation.blogspot.com/2020/03/clearing-up-some-confusion-concerning.html).


With regard to the last point mentioned by Mr. Smith (“two bodies”), I think it’s reasonable to believe that, during the eons to come, the bodies of the saints will be perfectly suited for whatever realm in which they’ll be enjoying their eonian life. Those saints who are destined to enjoy eonian life in the kingdom that’s going to be restored to Israel – and who, we’re told, “shall be reigning on the earth” (Rev. 5:10; 20:4-9) – will have bodies that are suited for this location. On the other hand, those saints whose realm is said to be “inherent in the heavens” (Phil. 3:20) and who will be enjoying their eonian allotment “among the celestials” (Eph. 1:14; 2:6-7) will have bodies suited for this realm (and, I should add, I have never believed – and am unaware of any “Concordant” teacher who has ever claimed – that the realm referred to by Paul in Phil. 3:10 as “the heavens” is merely “outer space,” or is limited to this region).


Mr. Smith went on to write:


Here is just enough to acquaint you with this teaching from a 56-page paper sent to me by the author entitled: 'APPREHENDING THE EONS TO ADJUST TO A DECLARATION OF GOD.' (Don't let that title throw you, as I also prove this very title to be UNSCRIPTURAL). In it we read: 


"...there was/is/will always be, a difference in the teaching of Paul and the teaching of not only Peter, but our Lord, as well."


And this absurd statement:


"Without keeping the administration of grace clearly separate in our understanding, when we attempt to incorporate the Lord's teaching and that of Cephas, Peter, we can and do contradict proper reasoning."


This statement COMPLETELY OVERWHELMS ME! Notice that the "administration of GRACE" must be kept "SEPARATE" from the "Lord's teaching"!


As argued earlier, I think we have good reason to believe that the administration of the grace of God did not begin until Paul’s ministry among the nations began (Mr. Smith’s apparent astonishment at this teaching notwithstanding). And in accord with this fact, I think we also have good reason to believe that the Lord’s teaching during his earthly ministry did not involve revealing the grace of God that Paul had in mind when he referred to the administration given to him as “the administration of the grace of God.”


As I’ve argued in greater depth elsewhere (link), the salvation of those to whom Christ ministered prior to his ascension to heaven was not a salvation that depended on “faith only.” Rather, the faith of those to whom Christ was commissioned had to find expression in righteous conduct in order for them to be saved. In fact, the Israelites of Jesus’ day still had just as much of a covenant-based obligation to keep the precepts of the law as did those to whom the following exhortation was originally given: “Remember the law of my servant Moses, the decrees and laws I gave him at Horeb for all Israel” (Mal. 4:4; cf. Luke 1:5-6, where we read that Zechariah and Elizabeth were “both just in front of God, going in all the precepts and just statutes of the Lord, blameless”). Only in doing these precepts as an expression of their faith in God and Christ would a member of God’s covenant people possess a righteousness that was “super-abounding more than that of the scribes and Pharisees,” and thereby qualify for entrance into the kingdom that’s going to be restored to Israel (Matt. 5:17-20; cf. Matt. 19:16-19; 23:1-3; Rev. 14:12). Otherwise, an Israelite risked finding himself (or herself) among those “workers of lawlessness” to whom Christ will be declaring, “I never knew you” (Matt. 7:22-23), and who will be deserving of the judgment associated with Gehenna (Matt. 5:27-30; Mark 9:42-48).  


Does this mean that grace was completely absent from the Lord’s teaching during his earthly ministry? No. However, it is worth noting that we don’t have a single example of Christ having actually used the word “grace” at any time during his earthly ministry. This, of course, doesn’t mean that God’s grace wasn’t an implied element in Christ’s teaching. But any expression of God’s grace that was implied in Christ’s teaching was, I submit, consistent with the expression of God’s grace that James referred to in his letter as follows: “Yet greater is the grace He is giving. Wherefore He is saying, God the proud is resisting, yet to the humble He is giving grace” (James 4:5-6). James was quoting Proverbs 3:34 in this verse (significantly, Peter quotes the same exact verse in 1 Pet. 5:5). And based on the fact that it is “the humble” (rather than “the proud”) to whom we’re told God is “giving grace,” we can conclude that the divine grace on which those to whom James wrote depended is conditionally received. Moreover, this particular manifestation of the grace of God is perfectly consistent with the fact that the salvation of those among “the twelve tribes in the dispersion” to whom James wrote required both faith and works (James 2:14-26).


So what, exactly, distinguishes the divine grace manifested in accord with Israel’s prophetic program from the divine grace manifested in accord with the administration with which Paul was entrusted? Simply put, the differences involve (1) the kind of people to whom God’s grace is being given and (2) the measure of the grace that is being given. These two differences that characterize the administration of the grace of God are actually inseparably related (with the former depending on and presupposing the latter).


With regard to the change in the recipients of God’s grace, we know that those to whom God was giving grace before the start of Paul’s ministry among the nations were either members of God’s covenant people, Israel, or God-fearing, righteous-acting Gentiles (such as Cornelius and his household, who comprised “the nations” to whom Peter and James referred in Acts 15:7, 14). After Paul’s administration began, however, God’s grace began to be given to those among the nations who, when the evangel of the grace of God was heralded to them, were stumbling about in the darkness of paganism, and had no prior understanding of, or regard for, the one true God (Acts 14:6-18). In Eph. 4:17-19, Paul described the former condition of those among the nations to whom he wrote as follows:


This, then, I am saying and attesting in the Lord: By no means are you still to be walking according as those of the nations also are walking, in the vanity of their mind, their comprehension being darkened, being estranged from the life of God because of the ignorance that is in them, because of the callousness of their hearts, who, being past feeling, in greed give themselves up with wantonness to all uncleanness as a vocation.”


In other words, those among the nations to whom God had opened “a door of faith” through the apostolic ministry of Paul and his co-laborers (Acts 14:27) were not the sort of Gentiles that Peter had in mind when, in Acts 10:34-35, he shared his new understanding of what kind of Gentiles were eligible to obtain a pardon of sins and thereby qualify for eonian life in the kingdom that’s going to be restored to Israel (for a more in-depth defense of the view that “the nations” for whom Paul labored belonged to a different category of Gentiles than the God-fearing, righteous-acting Gentiles evangelized by Peter in Acts 10:34-48, see the following article: Acts 28 Dispensationalism Revisited).


With this change in the recipients of God’s grace, we find a corresponding change in the measure of the grace that’s being given as well. Paul referred to this greater manifestation and operation of the grace of God several times in Romans 5:15-17:


But not as the offense, thus also the grace. For if, by the offense of the one, the many died, much rather the grace of God and the gratuity in grace, which is of the One Man, Jesus Christ, to the many super-abounds.


And not as through one act of sinning is the gratuity. For, indeed, the judgment is out of one into condemnation, yet the grace is out of many offenses into a just award. For if, by the offense of the one, death reigns through the one, much rather, those obtaining the superabundance of grace and the gratuity of righteousness shall be reigning in life through the One, Jesus Christ.


It must be emphasized that the bestowing of the superabundant measure of divine grace referred to in these verses is inseparably connected with, and the result of, Christ’s death (which Paul referred to in v. 19 as “the obedience of the One”; cf. Rom. 5:6-11). Not only was this measure of grace not revealed by Christ during his earthly ministry, but it couldn’t even begin to be bestowed by God until after Christ died for our sins. Thus, Paul was not just using terminology that differed from what Christ used during his earthly ministry; rather, he was referring to a manifestation and operation of divine grace that had previously not been made known.


According to Paul, the measure of grace procured by Christ’s death is ultimately going to superabound to all mankind (and thus result in all mankind being “constituted just”). At this present time, however, this superabundant measure of grace is only being enjoyed by those whom God has called through the evangel of the grace of God to become members of the body of Christ. Concerning this super-abounding grace and how it relates to the sins of the believer, Paul went on to write the following in Rom. 5:20-21:


“Yet law came in by the way, that the offense should be increasing. Yet where sin increases, grace superexceeds, that, even as Sin reigns in death, thus Grace also should be reigning through righteousness, for life eonian, through Jesus Christ, our Lord.”


The “righteousness” to which Paul was referring in v. 21 was previously referred to as the “gratuity of righteousness” in v. 17. This righteousness is the “righteousness of God” that is “through Jesus Christ’s faith,” and which is “for all, and on all who are believing” (Rom. 3:22). It is this righteousness that has been reckoned to every member of the body of Christ, and it is through this righteousness that grace is “reigning…for life eonian, through Jesus Christ, our Lord.” Thus, God’s grace “reigns” over every believer. The believer cannot “out-sin” God’s grace; the more that we sin, the more God’s grace “superexceeds” for us. For – as we’re told in Romans 6:23 – the life eonian that every member of the body of Christ is destined to enjoy is “the gracious gift of God…in Christ Jesus, our Lord.” In accord with this truth, we’re told in 2 Thess. 2:16 that “God, our Father, Who loves us” isgiving us an eonian consolation and a good expectation in grace.”


The measure of divine grace that’s being given to those called to be members of the body of Christ is referred to in Eph. 1:7 as “the riches of [God’s] grace, which He lavishes on us,” and is such that works/acts have no part whatsoever in our salvation. For example, in 2 Tim. 1:8-11 we read that the salvation and calling of those to whom Paul heralded the evangel of the grace of God is ”…not in accord with our acts, but in accord with His own purpose and the grace which is given to us in Christ Jesus before times eonian...”


Similarly, in Titus 3:3-7 we read the following:


”For, we also were once foolish, stubborn, deceived, slaves of various desires and gratifications, leading a life in malice and envy, detestable, hating one another. Yet when the kindness and fondness for humanity of our Saviour, God, made its advent, not for works which are wrought in righteousness which we do, but according to His mercy, He saves us, through the bath of renascence and renewal of holy spirit, which He pours out on us richly through Jesus Christ, our Saviour, that, being justified in that One's grace, we may be becoming enjoyers, in expectation, of the allotment of life eonian.


And in Romans 3:22 and 4:4 we read that the justification of those to whom Paul wrote is “by faith apart from works of law” (cf. Rom. 4:4-5). By “works of the law” Paul did not have in mind only those works that we would classify as “ceremonial.” He would’ve understood the works of the law to include, for example, the “Ten Commandments” as well. It should also be kept in mind that the precept in which Paul said the “entire law” is fulfilled – i.e., “You shall love your neighbor as yourself” (Gal. 5:14; cf. Rom. 13:8-10) – is also among the precepts of the law given to Israel (Lev. 19:18; cf. Matt. 22:39-40). Thus, Paul would’ve included this precept as being among the “works of the law” apart from which we in the body of Christ have been justified.


Since it is our “being justified in that One’s grace” that makes it possible for us to be “enjoyers, in expectation, of the allotment of life eonian” – and since we cannot undo our justification by anything we do or fail to do – it follows that that our being saved before the rest of humanity has nothing to do with anything we do or fail to do before our life eonian begins. In accord with this fact, we read the following in Eph. 2:4-9:


“…God, being rich in mercy, because of His vast love with which He loves us (we also being dead to the offenses and the lusts), vivifies us together in Christ (in grace are you saved!) and rouses us together and seats us together among the celestials, in Christ Jesus, that, in the oncoming eons, He should be displaying the transcendent riches of His grace in His kindness to us in Christ Jesus. For in grace, through faith, are you saved, and this is not out of you; it is God's approach present, not of works, lest anyone should be boasting.”


According to what Paul wrote in these verses, the salvation that every believer in the body of Christ will be enjoying (and which will involve God’s “displaying the transcendent riches of His grace in His kindness to us in Christ Jesus”) is not “out of” us. It is in no way dependent on or conditioned upon our will or effort. Rather, this salvation is “in grace.” It is “God’s approach present” (or “gift”), and is thus “not of works, lest anyone should be boasting.”


Part two: http://thathappyexpectation.blogspot.com/2021/01/a-response-to-l-ray-smiths-criticism-of_20.html