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The Christmas Conspiracy
FAQ
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A Vine & Fig Tree FAQ
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Q.1: What is the "Christmas Conspiracy"?
A. A movement of Christians dedicated to fulfilling the promises of Christmas. The Christmas Conspiracy Gospel is the
"Good News" of "peace on earth"; the "Good News" that all
Empires which oppose the Kingdom of Christ will be destroyed, and all the families of the
earth will be blessed. On the
destruction of the Empires, see Daniel 2:34-35,44. On the Blessing of Families, see
Galatians 3:8.
For a full Scriptural discussion of the overthrow of political systems and a return to
Biblical Patriarchy, see 95
Theses on Patriarchy. |
Q.1: What is "Vine & Fig Tree"?
A. A movement of Christians dedicated to fulfilling the promises of Christmas. The
Gospel is the "Good News" of "peace on earth"; the "Good
News" that all Empires which oppose the Kingdom of Christ will be destroyed, and all
the families of the earth will be blessed. On the
destruction of the Empires, see Daniel 2:34-35,44. On the Blessing of Families, see
Galatians 3:8.
For a full Scriptural discussion of the overthrow of political systems and a return to
Biblical Patriarchy, see 95
Theses on Patriarchy. |
Q.2: Excuse me . . . Did you say "Patriarchy"?
A. Sorry. How else would you describe a Biblical Society? Think about the Gospel as
described in Galatians 3:8.
And the Scripture, foreseeing that God would justify the Gentiles by faith, preached
the gospel to Abraham beforehand, saying, "In you all the nations shall be
blessed."
What does this mean? Go back to Genesis 12, which is quoted by the Apostle.
And in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed.
This is a wonderful promise, and it's too bad that it's not "politically
correct" to speak of "Patriarchy." Those who attack "patriarchy"
defend military socialism, relativism, and -- ultimately -- all the things we put at the
top of our home page:
Secularism, Humanism, Anti-Family Sex, Hedonism, Autonomy,
Totalitarianism, and Mass Death
Don't read the Bible through 20th century eyes; look at the 20th century through the
eyes of the Patriarch Abraham. The 20th century
will not go down in history as a particularly great century.
We are "conspiring" to live out the Gospel of Christmas, which means that by
the Blood of Christ we have been restored to our original mandate in the Garden of Eden.
In the Garden there was no State, and no "church." There was a Family in the
Presence of God. Not politics, not religion: the Family is the most important institution in society.
The Second Adam has rejected the Tempter's slogans: "You can be as gods!"
"Your vote is your voice!" "The vote of the People is the Voice of
God!" (Genesis 3:5) We are the "seed of the woman," and we smash the seed
of the serpent, pulling down their political myths (2 Corinthians 10:2-5). |
Q.2: Excuse me . . . Did you say "Patriarchy"?
A. Sorry. How else would you describe a Biblical Society? Think about the Gospel as
described in Galatians 3:8.
And the Scripture, foreseeing that God would justify the Gentiles by faith, preached
the gospel to Abraham beforehand, saying, "In you all the nations shall be
blessed."
What does this mean? Go back to Genesis 12, which is quoted by the Apostle.
And in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed.
This is a wonderful promise, and it's too bad that it's not "politically
correct" to speak of "Patriarchy." Those who attack "patriarchy"
defend military socialism, relativism, and -- ultimately -- all the things we put at the
top of our home page:
Secularism, Humanism, Anti-Family Sex, Hedonism, Autonomy,
Totalitarianism, and Mass Death
Don't read the Bible through 20th century eyes; look at the 20th century through the
eyes of the Patriarch Abraham.
The 20th century will not go down in history as a particularly great century.
We propose living consistently in terms of the whole of Hebrew-Christian Scripture,
which means that by the Blood of Christ we have been restored to our original mandate in
the Garden of Eden. In the Garden there was no State, and no "church." There was
a Family in the Presence of God. Not politics, not religion: the Family is the most important institution in society.
The Second Adam has rejected the Tempter's slogans: "You can be as gods!"
"Your vote is your voice!" "The vote of the People is the Voice of
God!" (Genesis 3:5) We are the "seed of the woman," and we smash the seed
of the serpent, pulling down their political myths (2 Corinthians 10:2-5). |
Q.3: How do you propose to eliminate the State?
A. Demythologize it. The Myth of State Legitimacy must be
destroyed. People everywhere believe that they are so incompetent -- or even evil -- that
other people have the right to make decisions for them, take their money from them and
spend it the "best" way. Others are more conniving, thinking they can use the
State to keep from experiencing harmful consequences to their stupidity or evil, or even
to get rich by confiscating the wealth of others. Both groups believe that other people
have the right to call themselves "the State" and kill, steal, or kidnap. There
are thus two strategies to the Christmas Conspiracy:
- Politicians must be taught to seek and obtain gainful employment. Politicians must be
taught to stop taking from others. "Let him who stole steal no longer, but rather let
him labor, working with his hands what is good, that he may have something to give him who
has need." (Ephesians 4:28) Politicians must be taught to stop trying to obtain what
they want by threatening to bomb entire populations "back to the stone age."
Politicians must be taught to stop insulting Hebrew-Christian morality.
- That, of course, means that citizens must purge their own lives of the techniques and
values of the politicians. Ordinary people must be convinced to stop supporting the
organized murder, theft, and kidnapping which is institutionalized in the State. No more
voting. No more campaigning. People must be taught to react with moral horror at anyone
who says,
"I'm running for political office. Please give me your permission to steal from
your neighbor and give some to you. Give me your permission to kill in your name. Give me
your permission to impose my moral (or immoral) views on others (at others'
expense)."
People must be taught to react to this "campaigning" with the same disgust
that they would have for someone who says, "Give me some money and I will have
adulterous sex with you."
Obviously this is an uphill battle. |
Q.3: How do you propose to eliminate the State?
A. Demythologize it. The Myth of State Legitimacy must be
destroyed. People everywhere believe that they are so incompetent -- or even evil -- that
other people have the right to make decisions for them, take their money from them and
spend it the "best" way. Others are more conniving, thinking they can use the
State to keep from experiencing harmful consequences to their stupidity or evil, or even
to get rich by confiscating the wealth of others. Both groups believe that other people
have the right to call themselves "the State" and kill, steal, or kidnap. There
are thus two strategies to the Vine & Fig Tree
"revolution":
- Politicians must be taught to seek and obtain gainful employment. Politicians must be
taught to stop taking from others. "Let him who stole steal no longer, but rather let
him labor, working with his hands what is good, that he may have something to give him who
has need." (Ephesians 4:28) Politicians must be taught to stop trying to obtain what
they want by threatening to bomb entire populations "back to the stone age."
Politicians must be taught to stop insulting Hebrew-Christian morality.
- That, of course, means that people must purge their own lives of the techniques and
values of the politicians. Ordinary people must be convinced to stop supporting the
organized murder, theft, and kidnapping which is institutionalized in the State. No more
voting. No more campaigning. People must be taught to react with moral horror at anyone
who says,
"I'm running for political office. Please give me your permission to steal from
your neighbor and give some to you. Give me your permission to kill in your name. Give me
your permission to impose my moral (or immoral) views on others (at others'
expense)."
People must be taught to react to this "campaigning" with the same disgust
that they would have for someone who says, "Give me some money and I will have
adulterous sex with you."
Obviously this is an uphill battle. |
Q.4: Do you plan on engaging in illegal or
unconstitutional acts?
A. In all likelihood, yes. It is apparently illegal and unconstitutional to be a Christian
or to hold non-conforming views. Waco
and Ruby Ridge indicate that these "crimes" are punishable by death. Q.5:
Do you plan on storing or selling arms like those at Waco and Ruby Ridge?
A. No. Information is posted
elsewhere describing a civil action now being decided by the Ninth Circuit Court of
Appeals. Depositions and Interrogatories from the Federal District Court show that members of the Christmas Conspiracy
reject violence. It is hoped that this will ultimately spare conspirators from the
sentence of death. Psychologically, agents of the FBI and ATF probably react in fear to
those who practice their 2nd Amendment rights to bear arms. This was the stated purpose of
the Amendment: to keep the government in check by threat of violent revolution. Members of
the Christmas Conspiracy reject
the Communist and Americanist strategy of violent revolution. |
Q.4: Do you plan on engaging in illegal or
unconstitutional acts?
A. In all likelihood, yes. It is apparently illegal and unconstitutional to be a Christian
or to hold non-conforming views. Waco
and Ruby Ridge indicate that these "crimes" are punishable by death. Q.5:
Do you plan on storing or selling arms like those at Waco and Ruby Ridge?
A. No. Information is posted
elsewhere describing a civil action now being decided by the Ninth Circuit Court of
Appeals. Depositions and Interrogatories from the Federal District Court show that Vine & Fig Tree members reject violence. It is
hoped that this will ultimately spare Vine & Fig Tree
"conspirators" from the sentence of death: Psychologically, agents of the FBI
and ATF probably react in fear to those who practice their 2nd Amendment rights to bear
arms. This was the stated purpose of the Amendment: to keep the government in check by
threat of violent revolution. Members of Vine & Fig Tree
reject the Communist and
Americanist strategy of violent revolution. |
Q.6: In your writings, you emphasize the phrase "Vine & Fig Tree." What
does this mean?
A. Our name, "Vine & Fig Tree,"
comes from the Old Testament Prophet Micah. Below is the prophecy,
from the 4th chapter. Click on the word or phrase that interests you.
And it will come about in the last
days
That the mountain of the House of the LORD
Will be established as the chief of the mountains
And it will be raised above the hills
And the peoples will stream to it.
And many nations will come and say,
"Come, let us go up to the mountain of the LORD
And to the House of the God of Jacob,
That He may teach us about His ways
And that we may walk in His paths."
For from Zion will go forth the Law
Even the Word of the LORD from Jerusalem.
And He will judge between many peoples
And render decisions for mighty, distant nations.
Then they will hammer their swords into plowshares
And their spears into pruning hooks;
Nation will not lift up sword against nation
And never again will they train for war.
And each of them will sit under his
Vine and under his fig tree,
With no one to make them afraid.
For the LORD of hosts has spoken.
Though all the peoples walk
Each in the name of his god,
As for us, we will walk
In the Name of the LORD our God
forever and ever.
In that day, saith the LORD, will I assemble her that halteth,
and I will gather her that is driven out,
and her that I have afflicted;
And I will make her that halted a remnant,
and her that was cast far off a strong nation:
and the LORD shall reign over them in mount Zion
from henceforth, even for ever.
|
Q.6: In your writings, you emphasize the phrase "Vine & Fig Tree." What
does this mean?
A. Our name, "Vine & Fig Tree,"
comes from the Old Testament Prophet Micah. Below is the prophecy,
from the 4th chapter. Click on the word or phrase that interests you.
And it will come about in the last
days
That the mountain of the House of the LORD
Will be established as the chief of the mountains
And it will be raised above the hills
And the peoples will stream to it.
And many nations will come and say,
"Come, let us go up to the mountain of the LORD
And to the House of the God of Jacob,
That He may teach us about His ways
And that we may walk in His paths."
For from Zion will go forth the Law
Even the Word of the LORD from Jerusalem.
And He will judge between many peoples
And render decisions for mighty, distant nations.
Then they will hammer their swords into plowshares
And their spears into pruning hooks;
Nation will not lift up sword against nation
And never again will they train for war.
And each of them will sit under his
Vine and under his fig tree,
With no one to make them afraid.
For the LORD of hosts has spoken.
Though all the peoples walk
Each in the name of his god,
As for us, we will walk
In the Name of the LORD our God
forever and ever.
In that day, saith the LORD, will I assemble her that halteth,
and I will gather her that is driven out,
and her that I have afflicted;
And I will make her that halted a remnant,
and her that was cast far off a strong nation:
and the LORD shall reign over them in mount Zion
from henceforth, even for ever.
|
Q.7: Why bother with the Bible? Why
bother trying to understand the Bible and some peasant religious nut who lived three
thousand years ago? I am "modern" and "scientific" and I have no
interest in church or religion. Please don't give me the Bible. What do I need with
the Bible?
A. Vine & Fig Tree is not about
religion. The author of this FAQ does not "go to church" and hasn't been
a member of any church for over 10 years. The New Testament is the record of Jesus' war on
"religion." "Religion" enlisted the service of "the modern
world" to execute Jesus. "Modern Science" has been destroying hope and
humanity ever since. Vine & Fig Tree opposes
"modern science." "Modern science" means nuclear destruction, mass
death, and cultural fragmentation. Jump to What do I need with the Bible?
and find out more. |
Q.7: Why bother with the Bible? Why
bother trying to understand the Bible and some peasant religious nut who lived three
thousand years ago? I am "modern" and "scientific" and I have no
interest in church or religion. Please don't give me the Bible. What do I need with
the Bible?
A. Vine & Fig Tree is not about
religion. The author of this FAQ does not "go to church" and hasn't been
a member of any church for over 10 years. The New Testament is the record of Jesus' war on
"religion." "Religion" enlisted the service of "the modern
world" to execute Jesus. "Modern Science" has been destroying hope and
humanity ever since. Vine & Fig Tree opposes
"modern science." "Modern science" means nuclear destruction, mass
death, and cultural fragmentation. Jump to What do I need with the Bible?
and find out more. |
Key Concepts in Micah's Prophecy
Q.8: Do you believe in Predestination?
A. Predestination is an inescapable concept. Everyone believes in it. God
predestines everything, and everyone has a god; either himself, the State, impersonal
evolutionary forces, or the God of the Bible.
You did not create yourself, so you must ask yourself, What is the nature of that
external force which brought me into being? Is it a cold, impersonal
"time+chance," or is it a loving and personal God such as described in the
Bible?
The central issue of life is Sovereignty. Who is God? Is reality determined by
what the God of the Bible decrees, or by blind impersonal force? (Of course, only the
"experts" of the State -- its universities, its military, its priesthood -- are
able to guide the "family of nations" through the impersonal forces of
"nature." If we put our faith in their theories, we should be prepared to put
our tax dollars in their pockets.) |
Key Concepts in Micah's Prophecy
Q.8: Do you believe in Predestination?
A. Predestination is an inescapable concept. Everyone believes in it. God
predestines everything, and everyone has a god; either himself, the State, impersonal
evolutionary forces, or the God of the Bible.
You did not create yourself, so you must ask yourself, What is the nature of that
external force which brought me into being? Is it a cold, impersonal
"time+chance," or is it a loving and personal God such as described in the
Bible?
The central issue of life is Sovereignty. Who is God? Is reality determined by
what the God of the Bible decrees, or by blind impersonal force? (Of course, only the
"experts" of the State -- its universities, its military, its priesthood -- are
able to guide the "family of nations" through the impersonal forces of
"nature." If we put our faith in their theories, we should be prepared to put
our tax dollars in their pockets.) |
Q.9: Yeah, OK, conspiracy stuff aside: doesn't
predestination by the God of Moses violate man's free will?
A. Let me ask you a question: What do you mean by "free will"?
- Do you mean the ability to gather data, reflect on past experience and tradition, ask
questions of your trusted counselors (and expect those questions to be understood), think
through your choices rationally, and then take decisive action?
- Do you mean the ability to decide which poem to read or music to listen to, and then to
let the artist speak to your soul? Do you mean the ability to love your spouse and your
children, and to experience tears of joy?
- Do you mean the struggle of conscience you endure when the State orders you to pull the
trigger and execute a Fundamentalist, or run their children over with a tank, or burn down
their "compound" [home]?
All of these things are things human beings engage in, and animals do not. This is
because we human beings are created in the Image of God, as the Bible says.
The evolutionist says we are no different from animals; that we are a randomly-mutated
conglomeration of chemicals, brought about by the cold, impersonal forces of time +
chance.
- A plant does not choose to be born, uses chlorophyll to
convert the sun's energy into a flower, which withers in the fall, and dies.
- A dog does not choose to be born, converts sunlight into energy, barks at the moon, and
dies.
- A human being does not choose to be born, converts sunlight into Vitamin D, barks at the
driver who cuts in front of him, and dies.
If evolution is true, neither you, nor a cockroach, nor a rock have what you think of
as "free will."
The plant has "chlorophyll," you have "free will." Big Deal. There's
no difference between the two.
The whole concept of a "will" is an illusion.
But . . . If you were created by the Loving, Sovereign Lord God of
the Bible, and bear His Image, then you do have what you call "free will." The
fact that this God predestines all that comes to pass does not "violate" your
pre-existing "free will," it creates all meaningful human attributes.
I choose to believe the Bible, not Darwin and Hitler.
And yet I confess with Christ, "Ye have not chosen me, but I have chosen you, and
ordained you, that ye should go and bring forth fruit."
Q.10: Predestination is so controversial. Why make a big deal out of it?
A. Evolution teaches that man is not qualitatively different from a snail darter or
other "endangered species," and evolutionists like Hitler will exterminate any
species they feel is a threat to their "national security." Denying Biblical
Predestination results in genocide.
Everybody who believes in God believes in predestination. Christians who deny
predestination still seem to believe that the world is predestined to get "worse and
worse" until Jesus comes. "Vine & Fig Tree"
is the Bible's vision of a loving, saving predestination.
If the vision of "Vine & Fig Tree"
is not God's plan, all of our efforts will not bring it about. If it is God's plan,
we can work for it with the calm repose of faith. [Back to Micah
4.] |
Q.9: Yeah, OK, conspiracy stuff aside: doesn't
predestination by the God of Moses violate man's free will?
A. Let me ask you a question: What do you mean by "free will"?
- Do you mean the ability to gather data, reflect on past experience and tradition, ask
questions of your trusted counselors (and expect those questions to be understood), think
through your choices rationally, and then take decisive action?
- Do you mean the ability to decide which poem to read or music to listen to, and then to
let the artist speak to your soul? Do you mean the ability to love your spouse and your
children, and to experience tears of joy?
- Do you mean the struggle of conscience you endure when the State orders you to pull the
trigger and execute a Fundamentalist, or run their children over with a tank, or burn down
their "compound" [home]?
All of these things are things human beings engage in, and animals do not. This is
because we human beings are created in the Image of God, as the Bible says.
The evolutionist says we are no different from animals; that we are a randomly-mutated
conglomeration of chemicals, brought about by the cold, impersonal forces of time +
chance.
- A plant does not choose to be born, uses chlorophyll to
convert the sun's energy into a flower, which withers in the fall, and dies.
- A dog does not choose to be born, converts sunlight into energy, barks at the moon, and
dies.
- A human being does not choose to be born, converts sunlight into Vitamin D, barks at the
driver who cuts in front of him, and dies.
If evolution is true, neither you, nor a cockroach, nor a rock have what you think of
as "free will."
The plant has "chlorophyll," you have "free will." Big Deal. There's
no difference between the two.
The whole concept of a "will" is an illusion.
But . . . If you were created by the Loving, Sovereign Lord God of
the Bible, and bear His Image, then you do have what you call "free will." The
fact that this God predestines all that comes to pass does not "violate" your
pre-existing "free will," it creates all meaningful human attributes.
I choose to believe the Bible, not Darwin and Hitler.
And yet I confess with Christ, "Ye have not chosen me, but I have chosen you, and
ordained you, that ye should go and bring forth fruit."
Q.10: Predestination is so controversial. Why make a big deal out of it?
A. Evolution teaches that man is not qualitatively different from a snail darter or
other "endangered species," and evolutionists like Hitler will exterminate any
species they feel is a threat to their "national security." Denying Biblical
Predestination results in genocide.
Everybody who believes in God believes in predestination. Christians who deny
predestination still seem to believe that the world is predestined to get "worse and
worse" until Jesus comes. "Vine & Fig Tree"
is the Bible's vision of a loving, saving predestination.
If the vision of "Vine & Fig Tree"
is not God's plan, all of our efforts will not bring it about. If it is God's plan,
we can work for it with the calm repose of faith. [Back to Micah
4.] |
Q.11: I've looked at some of the pages on your site and you never once say "we are
in the last days," and "Jesus is coming soon." Why are you unclear on this?
A. Let me be perfectly clear: Jesus is not coming soon. We are not in
"the last days."
Q.12: But doesn't the Bible say we are in "the last days?"
A. The Apostles were living in the last days of the Old Covenant and
the first days of the New Covenant. That's why they wrote "We (the Apostles and their
readers) are in the last days."
Q.13: But didn't Jesus say He was coming soon?
A. Yes, He did. He did not say that there would be a 2000 year wait for His coming.
In fact, He said "Truly, I say to you, there are some standing here who shall not
taste death till they see the Son of Man coming in His Kingdom." (Matthew 16:28) What
does He mean by that?
Q.14: I'm asking the questions here.
A. Sorry. |
Q.11: I've looked at some of the pages on your site and you never once say "we are
in the last days," and "Jesus is coming soon." Why are you unclear on this?
A. Let me be perfectly clear: Jesus is not coming soon. We are not in
"the last days."
Q.12: But doesn't the Bible say we are in "the last days?"
A. The Apostles were living in the last days of the Old Covenant and
the first days of the New Covenant. That's why they wrote "We (the Apostles and their
readers) are in the last days."
Q.13: But didn't Jesus say He was coming soon?
A. Yes, He did. He did not say that there would be a 2000 year wait for His coming.
In fact, He said "Truly, I say to you, there are some standing here who shall not
taste death till they see the Son of Man coming in His Kingdom." (Matthew 16:28) What
does He mean by that?
Q.14: I'm asking the questions here.
A. Sorry. |
Q.15: What did He mean by that?
A. I think He meant that "this wicked generation" -- or as one popular
writer phrased it, "the terminal generation" -- was about to be terminated. They
oppressed the poor, they misled people, they were unloving hypocrites, and they executed
the Messiah. Jesus said they were the most unGodly generation in history (Matthew 23), and
for this they would be destroyed by Roman armies (Luke 21:20). They saw the Son of Man
exercising His Kingdom Sovereignty, and then they tasted death.Q.16: So you don't
believe in "the premillennial return of Christ."
A. The Old Testament Prophets were "pre-millennial." They said the
Messiah must come before ("pre") the world could experience radical
"shalom" (called "the millennium" because of a symbolic reference to a
"thousand years" in the Book of Revelation). The New Testament is clear: Jesus
is the Messiah, and at His Resurrection and Ascension He was seated on the "throne of
David" at the Right Hand of God. As priests and kings in His Kingdom, our task is to
extend His Kingdom.
For this reason, a growing number of Christians are "post-millennial," and
anticipate the return of Christ after ("post") this "millennial" age.
Jesus came two centuries ago to inaugurate a New Covenant. Micah is talking about the
"last days" of the Old Covenant. The Apostles unmistakably and repeatedly assert
that they were then living in the "last days" of the Old
Covenant.[3] What was necessary to begin fulfilling Micah's Vine & Fig Tree vision was not a 2,000-year wait for
nuclear war and the "great tribulation," but the end of Old Covenant blood
sacrifices and the pouring out of the Holy Spirit. It happened in the "last
days" of the Old Covenant and the beginning of the New. Progress is possible. |
Q.15: What did He mean by that?
A. I think He meant that "this wicked generation" -- or as one popular
writer phrased it, "the terminal generation" -- was about to be terminated. They
oppressed the poor, they misled people, they were unloving hypocrites, and they executed
the Messiah. Jesus said they were the most unGodly generation in history (Matthew 23), and
for this they would be destroyed by Roman armies (Luke 21:20). They saw the Son of Man
exercising His Kingdom Sovereignty, and then they tasted death.Q.16: So you don't
believe in "the premillennial return of Christ."
A. The Old Testament Prophets were "pre-millennial." They said the
Messiah must come before ("pre") the world could experience radical
"shalom" (called "the millennium" because of a symbolic reference to a
"thousand years" in the Book of Revelation). The New Testament is clear: Jesus
is the Messiah, and at His Resurrection and Ascension He was seated on the "throne of
David" at the Right Hand of God. As priests and kings in His Kingdom, our task is to
extend His Kingdom.
For this reason, a growing number of Christians are "post-millennial," and
anticipate the return of Christ after ("post") this "millennial" age.
Jesus came two centuries ago to inaugurate a New Covenant. Micah is talking about the
"last days" of the Old Covenant. The Apostles unmistakably and repeatedly assert
that they were then living in the "last days" of the Old
Covenant.[3] What was necessary to begin fulfilling Micah's Vine & Fig Tree vision was not a 2,000-year wait for
nuclear war and the "great tribulation," but the end of Old Covenant blood
sacrifices and the pouring out of the Holy Spirit. It happened in the "last
days" of the Old Covenant and the beginning of the New. Progress is possible. |
Q.17: Don't the majority of theologians believe that
the Bible teaches that Jesus can come at any moment?
A. In the last century there were two theological movements which are still
important. One was German liberalism. Liberal scholars said that the Apostles taught that
Jesus would return at any moment and set up a hierarchical kingdom in Jerusalem,
militarily overthrowing the Roman Empire. Clearly (the liberals taught), the Apostles were
wrong, Jesus did not come again, and the Bible cannot be trusted.
Another movement was the so-called Darbyites, who popularized the
"premillennial" return preceded by the "pretribulational rapture of the
church." This view gained widespread acceptance through The Scofield Bible.
Both the liberals and the pre-mills are mistaken. The Bible does not teach the imminent
coming of a physical, military, hierarchical kingdom. (At one time the Apostles may have
believed that Christ was to be a military king, not a Suffering Servant, but they also at
one time believed that the execution of Christ was a disruption of God's plan. They simply
didn't get it.) The Bible as a whole sets before us the vision of a decentralized
Kingdom in which government stems from self-sacrificing service, not a police state, and
the Messiah-King rules not with a physical rod of iron, but through the Holy Spirit, Who
changes people's hearts.
Q.18: But if Jesus is isn't coming "any moment now," what incentive is
there for holy living?
A. Millions of "Christians" believe that we are in "the last
days" of planetary history, that things are prophesied (predestined?)
in the Book of Revelation to get worse and worse, until Jesus returns again (after a
nuclear war) to rule the world for a thousand years from a throne in Jerusalem. Has this
belief made Christians more holy?
Not even close. It makes them lazy. Everyone is waiting, not working. This
belief strips the salt of its savor (Mt. 5:13). These Christians believe He could come
"at any moment," and they are culturally and socially useless. Why work for
peace or justice if war and "tribulation" are the keys to bringing Jesus back?
Such a belief should be "thrown out and trodden under foot by men." [Back to Micah 4.]
|
Q.17: Don't the majority of theologians believe that
the Bible teaches that Jesus can come at any moment?
A. In the last century there were two theological movements which are still
important. One was German liberalism. Liberal scholars said that the Apostles taught that
Jesus would return at any moment and set up a hierarchical kingdom in Jerusalem,
militarily overthrowing the Roman Empire. Clearly (the liberals taught), the Apostles were
wrong, Jesus did not come again, and the Bible cannot be trusted.
Another movement was the so-called Darbyites, who popularized the
"premillennial" return preceded by the "pretribulational rapture of the
church." This view gained widespread acceptance through The Scofield Bible.
Both the liberals and the pre-mills are mistaken. The Bible does not teach the imminent
coming of a physical, military, hierarchical kingdom. (At one time the Apostles may have
believed that Christ was to be a military king, not a Suffering Servant, but they also at
one time believed that the execution of Christ was a disruption of God's plan. They simply
didn't get it.) The Bible as a whole sets before us the vision of a decentralized
Kingdom in which government stems from self-sacrificing service, not a police state, and
the Messiah-King rules not with a physical rod of iron, but through the Holy Spirit, Who
changes people's hearts.
Q.18: But if Jesus is isn't coming "any moment now," what incentive is
there for holy living?
A. Millions of "Christians" believe that we are in "the last
days" of planetary history, that things are prophesied (predestined?)
in the Book of Revelation to get worse and worse, until Jesus returns again (after a
nuclear war) to rule the world for a thousand years from a throne in Jerusalem. Has this
belief made Christians more holy?
Not even close. It makes them lazy. Everyone is waiting, not working. This
belief strips the salt of its savor (Mt. 5:13). These Christians believe He could come
"at any moment," and they are culturally and socially useless. Why work for
peace or justice if war and "tribulation" are the keys to bringing Jesus back?
Such a belief should be "thrown out and trodden under foot by men." [Back to Micah 4.]
|
Q.19: Micah speaks of "the Mountain of the Lord." What does that mean?
A. The Book of Genesis states that the Garden of Eden was on a mountain, and
"the Mountain of the Lord" is a symbol for the Garden. It is used throughout the
Bible to refer to God's blessings in the Garden, and calls us to work for the global
restoration of Edenic conditions, not to wait for a "Rapture." Vine & Fig Tree is about a decentralized world
restored to its original Edenic beauty and growing in harmony.
Q.20: You're wildly post-millennial aren't you?
A. Got that right. [Back to Micah 4.]
|
Q.19: Micah speaks of "the Mountain of the Lord." What does that mean?
A. The Book of Genesis states that the Garden of Eden was on a mountain, and
"the Mountain of the Lord" is a symbol for the Garden. It is used throughout the
Bible to refer to God's blessings in the Garden, and calls us to work for the global
restoration of Edenic conditions, not to wait for a "Rapture." Vine & Fig Tree is about a decentralized world
restored to its original Edenic beauty and growing in harmony.
Q.20: You're wildly post-millennial aren't you?
A. Got that right. [Back to Micah 4.]
|
Q.21: Is the Mountain related to "the House of the Lord?"
A. Exactly. The Temple (which was a symbolic re-creation of the Garden of Eden) was
centrally-located in Jerusalem. The goal of Micah and the Prophets was for true worship to
be decentralized and world-wide (John 4:21,23).
Q.22: So you are against churches?
A. Many wonderful people attend churches. But the world would be a better place if
all churches were eliminated and Christians turned their homes into community centers. Ecclesiocentrism is unBiblical:
Christ's execution was the last liturgy (Heb. 10); we are all priests in the bloodless
liturgy of life-reconstruction (1 Peter 2:9) [Back to Micah 4.]
|
Q.21: Is the Mountain related to "the House of the Lord?"
A. Exactly. The Temple (which was a symbolic re-creation of the Garden of Eden) was
centrally-located in Jerusalem. The goal of Micah and the Prophets was for true worship to
be decentralized and world-wide (John 4:21,23).
Q.22: So you are against churches?
A. Many wonderful people attend churches. But the world would be a better place if
all churches were eliminated and Christians turned their homes into community centers. Ecclesiocentrism is unBiblical:
Christ's execution was the last liturgy (Heb. 10); we are all priests in the bloodless
liturgy of life-reconstruction (1 Peter 2:9) [Back to Micah 4.]
|
Q.23: So we are already in "the millennium"? We're already in "the
Kingdom?"
A. Jesus was the Messiah foretold by the Prophets, including Micah. In A.D. 70 He
destroyed the temple in Jerusalem and created a New Temple in His Body. This marks the
establishment of His Kingdom. We shouldn't be waiting for a "Second Coming."
Q.24: I always thought "the millennium" would be a sinless paradise, like
on the cover of the little magazine the Jehovah's Witness gave me the other day.
A. Paradise, yes. Sinless, no.
The "paradise" described in the Bible is not sinless. The "New Heavens and
the New Earth" described by Isaiah (65:17-25) still has sin and death in it, just
less sin and longer lifespans before death. The key to successful living and victory over
sin is not to have all challenges removed from life, but to experience Christ's victory
over them.
But as Milton wrote, "Better to rule in hell than to serve in heaven." We
have the choice to live in Eden or live in hell, and we always choose hell. We have the
choice to love our enemy or to destroy him. We could spend a billion dollars on food,
medical supplies, and Bibles, and ship it to our enemy with "Made in the USA --
Believe in Jesus" on the box. Instead, we spend a billion dollars on land mines and
fuel bombs and leave half a million Iraqi peasants crippled and burned.
We have the choice to live in Edenic conditions, or to destroy ourselves and the creation.
Most Christians would rather be raptured than work for paradise. [Back
to Micah 4.]
|
Q.23: So we are already in "the millennium"? We're already in "the
Kingdom?"
A. Jesus was the Messiah foretold by the Prophets, including Micah. In A.D. 70 He
destroyed the temple in Jerusalem and created a New Temple in His Body. This marks the
establishment of His Kingdom. We shouldn't be waiting for a "Second Coming."
Q.24: I always thought "the millennium" would be a sinless paradise, like
on the cover of the little magazine the Jehovah's Witness gave me the other day.
A. Paradise, yes. Sinless, no.
The "paradise" described in the Bible is not sinless. The "New Heavens and
the New Earth" described by Isaiah (65:17-25) still has sin and death in it, just
less sin and longer lifespans before death. The key to successful living and victory over
sin is not to have all challenges removed from life, but to experience Christ's victory
over them.
But as Milton wrote, "Better to rule in hell than to serve in heaven." We
have the choice to live in Eden or live in hell, and we always choose hell. We have the
choice to love our enemy or to destroy him. We could spend a billion dollars on food,
medical supplies, and Bibles, and ship it to our enemy with "Made in the USA --
Believe in Jesus" on the box. Instead, we spend a billion dollars on land mines and
fuel bombs and leave half a million Iraqi peasants crippled and burned.
We have the choice to live in Edenic conditions, or to destroy ourselves and the creation.
Most Christians would rather be raptured than work for paradise. [Back
to Micah 4.]
|
Q.25: What are the "hills" Micah describes?
A. In Biblical prophecy, pagan governments are described as rival hills or
mountains, and Biblical history reveals that pagan empires had always imitated the true
Kingdom by building their own temples and their own gardens on hills. These were places
where the creation (rather than the Creator) was worshipped, often through ritual sexual
lawlessness (rather than obedient service). "Baalism" is the religion of the
modern world. We call it "Secular Humanism." [Back to
Micah 4.]
|
Q.25: What are the "hills" Micah describes?
A. In Biblical prophecy, pagan governments are described as rival hills or
mountains, and Biblical history reveals that pagan empires had always imitated the true
Kingdom by building their own temples and their own gardens on hills. These were places
where the creation (rather than the Creator) was worshipped, often through ritual sexual
lawlessness (rather than obedient service). "Baalism" is the religion of the
modern world. We call it "Secular Humanism." [Back to
Micah 4.]
|
Q.26: Are you part of the "Identity" movement?
A. The "Identity" movement seems to have raised an important point. It
seems that most people who call themselves Jews are neither genetically nor spiritually
related to the Patriarch Abraham. It turns out that most of the charges of
"anti-Semitism" are really charges of "anti-liberal Secular Humanism."
This means that hate-crimes against Jews are particularly repugnant. Not just because all acts of violence are wrong, but because the
objects of the crimes are not usually descendants of Abraham anyway.
The Bible says all races will become Christians. Even people from Africa will be a part
of the New Israel (Psalm 87).
Christianity is not a strictly Anglo-Saxon religion. The Patriarch Abraham was Semitic,
but his religion was not limited to his physical descendants. The Bible is an Oriental,
not Occidental, text, but all the different kinds of human beings will one day become
Christians, followers of the Word. Vine & Fig Tree
is a universalist (or "Catholic") perspective.
If the "Identity" movement teaches acts of violence against non-caucasian
races, the movement is an ignorant pawn of the Old World Order, not a faithful servant of
the New. [Back to Micah 4.]
|
Q.26: Are you part of the "Identity" movement?
A. The "Identity" movement seems to have raised an important point. It
seems that most people who call themselves Jews are neither genetically nor spiritually
related to the Patriarch Abraham. It turns out that most of the charges of
"anti-Semitism" are really charges of "anti-liberal Secular Humanism."
This means that hate-crimes against Jews are particularly repugnant. Not just because all acts of violence are wrong, but because the
objects of the crimes are not usually descendants of Abraham anyway.
The Bible says all races will become Christians. Even people from Africa will be a part
of the New Israel (Psalm 87).
Christianity is not a strictly Anglo-Saxon religion. The Patriarch Abraham was Semitic,
but his religion was not limited to his physical descendants. The Bible is an Oriental,
not Occidental, text, but all the different kinds of human beings will one day become
Christians, followers of the Word. Vine & Fig Tree
is a universalist (or "Catholic") perspective.
If the "Identity" movement teaches acts of violence against non-caucasian
races, the movement is an ignorant pawn of the Old World Order, not a faithful servant of
the New. [Back to Micah 4.]
|
Q.27: Nobody seems to be "streaming" to the Gospel these days. Are you sure
things aren't getting worse and worse?
A. Name one person you know who has rejected the Gospel described by Micah:
solidarity with "the least of these," swords into plowshares, Edenic restoration
of the earth. Most people have not heard this "good news." The
"gospel" you hear on television is a gospel of self-centered mediocrity and
escape. When the ideas of "Vine & Fig Tree"
are preached, people will "stream" to it.
God is sovereign over the hearts and minds of human beings. Micah says people from
every background will delight in God's Word from the heart, and will move with radical
dedication and fervor toward the things of God, and away from the things of secular
humanist empires. The work of the Holy Spirit is people who are not "normal" and
lukewarm. [Back to Micah 4.]
|
Q.27: Nobody seems to be "streaming" to the Gospel these days. Are you sure
things aren't getting worse and worse?
A. Name one person you know who has rejected the Gospel described by Micah:
solidarity with "the least of these," swords into plowshares, Edenic restoration
of the earth. Most people have not heard this "good news." The
"gospel" you hear on television is a gospel of self-centered mediocrity and
escape. When the ideas of "Vine & Fig Tree"
are preached, people will "stream" to it.
God is sovereign over the hearts and minds of human beings. Micah says people from
every background will delight in God's Word from the heart, and will move with radical
dedication and fervor toward the things of God, and away from the things of secular
humanist empires. The work of the Holy Spirit is people who are not "normal" and
lukewarm. [Back to Micah 4.]
|
Q.28: You claim to be anarchist, but Micah speaks of "nations." Jesus said we
are to "make disciples of all nations." Aren't you missing something?
A. The word translated by the King James Version as "nation" is the word
from which the English word "ethnic" is derived. All human beings are descended
from the original 70 families, or nations, recorded in Genesis 10. People of different
languages and cultures are often coercively collectivized by the State into political
units called "nations," or "nation-states." Although the Bible does
not recognize the moral legitimacy of these arbitrary political
divisions, it can certainly be said that these political forces will not deter the Holy
Spirit from converting every ethnic group in the world and bringing all people under a New
Authority.
Q.29: Oh, so you're one of those United Nations types?
A. Hardly. The UN is a collection of Harvard-educated dictators and torturers. They exploit
the concept of the nation-state as a tool to Global Dictatorship. They talk about a
"New World Order," but the Bush/Clinton regime is really the "Old World
Order," from which we are to remain "unspotted" (James
1:27; 4:4) [5]
The Old World Order lies to us. The words of Micah's prophecy concerning "swords
into plowshares" is carved into the concrete of the United Nations building in New
York. That organization ordered the carpet bombing of Iraq and the murder of over 250,000 men, women, and children.
Many voices pay lipservice to the Prophets, and to the Messiah they foretold. But
"Not everyone who says to Me, 'Lord, Lord,' shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he
who does the will of My Father in heaven." (Matthew 7:21) [Back to Micah 4.]
|
Q.28: You claim to be anarchist, but Micah speaks of "nations." Jesus said we
are to "make disciples of all nations." Aren't you missing something?
A. The word translated by the King James Version as "nation" is the word
from which the English word "ethnic" is derived. All human beings are descended
from the original 70 families, or nations, recorded in Genesis 10. People of different
languages and cultures are often coercively collectivized by the State into political
units called "nations," or "nation-states." Although the Bible does
not recognize the moral legitimacy of these arbitrary political
divisions, it can certainly be said that these political forces will not deter the Holy
Spirit from converting every ethnic group in the world and bringing all people under a New
Authority.
Q.29: Oh, so you're one of those United Nations types?
A. Hardly. The UN is a collection of Harvard-educated dictators and torturers. They exploit
the concept of the nation-state as a tool to Global Dictatorship. They talk about a
"New World Order," but the Bush/Clinton regime is really the "Old World
Order," from which we are to remain "unspotted" (James
1:27; 4:4) [5]
The Old World Order lies to us. The words of Micah's prophecy concerning "swords
into plowshares" is carved into the concrete of the United Nations building in New
York. That organization ordered the carpet bombing of Iraq and the murder of over 250,000 men, women, and children.
Many voices pay lipservice to the Prophets, and to the Messiah they foretold. But
"Not everyone who says to Me, 'Lord, Lord,' shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he
who does the will of My Father in heaven." (Matthew 7:21) [Back to Micah 4.]
|
Q.30: You claim to be anarchist, but you defend "God's Law." Didn't Jesus
take us out from under the law?
A. "Law" (Authority) is a tremendously important concept. As human beings
created in the Image of God, the very structures of law are impressed in the fabric of our
being, and then in the fabric of our society. But like man himself, man's law is fallen.
If our society is to be redeemed, man's law must be "put to death," and Christ's
Law allowed to live. Micah expresses the importance of hearing God's Law and patterning
our own law (behavior, social structures) after His. Micah speaks of law as
"Ways" -- patterns which should become habits in our lives;
"Paths" -- which show us the direction in which we must move;
"Law" -- which is holistic and personalist, not like that of the
lawyers and the Pharisees who executed Jesus.
"Word" -- every
Word spoken by our Creator is Law for us.
Jesus came to put God's Law into force (Matthew 5:17-20). Man's law leads to death;
God's Law brings salvation and life. [Back to Micah 4.]
|
Q.30: You claim to be anarchist, but you defend "God's Law." Didn't Jesus
take us out from under the law?
A. "Law" (Authority) is a tremendously important concept. As human beings
created in the Image of God, the very structures of law are impressed in the fabric of our
being, and then in the fabric of our society. But like man himself, man's law is fallen.
If our society is to be redeemed, man's law must be "put to death," and Christ's
Law allowed to live. Micah expresses the importance of hearing God's Law and patterning
our own law (behavior, social structures) after His. Micah speaks of law as
"Ways" -- patterns which should become habits in our lives;
"Paths" -- which show us the direction in which we must move;
"Law" -- which is holistic and personalist, not like that of the
lawyers and the Pharisees who executed Jesus.
"Word" -- every
Word spoken by our Creator is Law for us.
Jesus came to put God's Law into force (Matthew 5:17-20). Man's law leads to death;
God's Law brings salvation and life. [Back to Micah 4.]
|
Q.31: "Judge" seems like such an unloving, Old Testamentish concept. Didn't
the New Testament do away with all this?
A. The New Testament commands
us to judge. Millions of people who say we are not supposed to judge stand silently by
while Hitler, Stalin, Mao, and Bush commit genocide against the "enemy." We must
speak out. We must judge. Before God does.
Violation of God's Law is not only an offensive assault on the legitimate Authority of
God, illegitimate (Lawless) human authority destroys life and the creation. The Creator will step in to judge these abuses and instruct the humble
in the Ways of Life. Jesus returned to destroy those who killed Him and to put an end to
their religious hypocrisy. His saints apply His Word to their lives and societies as
priests and kings. [Back to Micah 4.]
|
Q.31: "Judge" seems like such an unloving, Old Testamentish concept. Didn't
the New Testament do away with all this?
A. The New Testament commands
us to judge. Millions of people who say we are not supposed to judge stand silently by
while Hitler, Stalin, Mao, and Bush commit genocide against the "enemy." We must
speak out. We must judge. Before God does.
Violation of God's Law is not only an offensive assault on the legitimate Authority of
God, illegitimate (Lawless) human authority destroys life and the creation. The Creator will step in to judge these abuses and instruct the humble
in the Ways of Life. Jesus returned to destroy those who killed Him and to put an end to
their religious hypocrisy. His saints apply His Word to their lives and societies as
priests and kings. [Back to Micah 4.]
|
Q.32: Are you anti-technology?
A. Not in theory. We are thankful to God for the creative engineering and
inventions which make our lives safer and more efficient. But in practice, this
industrialism has been financed by debased currency
and other abominable practices which oppress the poor.
Q.33: Do you advocate agrarianism?
A. The dependence of human beings upon the land is inescapable; agriculture unites
people of all nations. God has promised to provide for us, as with the sparrows, but
Humanistic Man seeks the provisions of life through autonomous violence, rather than
obedient work. The City vs. The Country represents the struggle
between lazy paper-pushing covetousness and contented manual labor.
Q.34: Don't "plowshares"
groups advocate violent civil disobedience?
A. Some "plowshares" groups pour blood on nuclear warheads. This seems
like a silly Jewish ritual. Other plowshares groups disarm nuclear weapons so that they
cannot kill and maim innocent people. They are thus opposed to violence.
As for civil disobedience, if all the guards at a Nazi Concentration Camp suddenly fell
asleep, would you sneak in and let the prisoners free? Even if there were a sign saying,
"No Trespassing -- Authorized Personnel Only"?
Jesus and Micah agree: the meek will convert instruments of death and lawless authority
into tools of productivity and service. By so doing, they will inherit an Edenic earth.
[Back to Micah 4.]
|
Q.32: Are you anti-technology?
A. Not in theory. We are thankful to God for the creative engineering and
inventions which make our lives safer and more efficient. But in practice, this
industrialism has been financed by debased currency
and other abominable practices which oppress the poor.
Q.33: Do you advocate agrarianism?
A. The dependence of human beings upon the land is inescapable; agriculture unites
people of all nations. God has promised to provide for us, as with the sparrows, but
Humanistic Man seeks the provisions of life through autonomous violence, rather than
obedient work. The City vs. The Country represents the struggle
between lazy paper-pushing covetousness and contented manual labor.
Q.34: Don't "plowshares"
groups advocate violent civil disobedience?
A. Some "plowshares" groups pour blood on nuclear warheads. This seems
like a silly Jewish ritual. Other plowshares groups disarm nuclear weapons so that they
cannot kill and main innocent people. They are thus opposed to violence.
As for civil disobedience, if all the guards at a Nazi Concentration Camp suddenly fell
asleep, would you sneak in and let the prisoners free? Even if there were a sign saying,
"No Trespassing -- Authorized Personnel Only"?
Jesus and Micah agree: the meek will convert instruments of death and lawless authority
into tools of productivity and service. By so doing, they will inherit an Edenic earth.
[Back to Micah 4.]
|
Q.35: You claim to be pacifist. Didn't God ordain the Sword (Romans 13)?
A. God predestines the use of the Sword, as well as other evils. Use of the Sword
is evil. God
predestines evil.
God, the Potter, commands man, the clay, not to kill. Man asserts his own divinity by
taking life. War, capital punishment, and population planning are euphemisms for murder.
We think they will make us more "secure." Use of "the sword" brings
the judgment of God (Matthew 26:52). [Back
to Micah 4.]
|
Q.35: You claim to be pacifist. Didn't God ordain the Sword (Romans 13)?
A. God predestines the use of the Sword, as well as other evils. Use of the Sword
is evil. God
predestines evil.
God, the Potter, commands man, the clay, not to kill. Man asserts his own divinity by
taking life. War, capital punishment, and population planning are euphemisms for murder.
We think they will make us more "secure." Use of "the sword" brings
the judgment of God (Matthew 26:52). [Back
to Micah 4.]
|
Q.36. Don't we need to train for national defense?
A. Education reflects our hopes -- or our fears. It expresses
our vision for a just society; or it expresses Man's aspiration to "be as god."
Militarism educates in terms of conflict, implicitly declaring that God is not abundant in
mercy and goodness, and that we must fight and kill to obtain the necessities of life.
Militaristic education is a self-fulfilling prophecy: we are taught that existence is
meaningless unless we forcefully impose our own meaning upon it. War is the result. We
must visualize an Edenic society built upon God's Law and train in terms of that hope.
Micah might say today, "Read my lips: No more war." [Back
to Micah 4.]
|
Q.36. Don't we need to train for national defense?
A. Education reflects our hopes -- or our fears. It expresses
our vision for a just society; or it expresses Man's aspiration to "be as god."
Militarism educates in terms of conflict, implicitly declaring that God is not abundant in
mercy and goodness, and that we must fight and kill to obtain the necessities of life.
Militaristic education is a self-fulfilling prophecy: we are taught that existence is
meaningless unless we forcefully impose our own meaning upon it. War is the result. We
must visualize an Edenic society built upon God's Law and train in terms of that hope.
Micah might say today, "Read my lips: No more war." [Back
to Micah 4.]
|
Q.37: I thought anarchists were against private property.
A. "Thou shalt not steal" is the foundation of peace. It establishes
private property as a Godly stewardship. The French anarchist Pierre-Joseph Proudhon is
often quoted as saying "Property is Theft." But Proudhon also believed in
patriarchy, and saw that much of what passes as "private property" is really
State-defended property. It is property backed by violence. God's Law is personalist.
Biblical Property does not mean, (1) "I will elect politicians to kill you if you
step foot on my land." It means, (2) "I will obey God, conquer covetousness, and
respect your stewardship and your efforts at dominion." A society dominated by the
first kind of "property" is a warlord society. Those in the second kind of
society are willing to follow Jesus to the Cross, to lose all their property rather than
resort to violence, and they possess more property as a result (Mark 10:30; Genesis 13:2).
Property is more secure in a Godly anarchist society than in a Secular Humanist military
dictatorship. [Back to Micah 4.]
|
Q.37: I thought anarchists were against private property.
A. "Thou shalt not steal" is the foundation of peace. It establishes
private property as a Godly stewardship. The French anarchist Pierre-Joseph Proudhon is
often quoted as saying "Property is Theft." But Proudhon also believed in
patriarchy, and saw that much of what passes as "private property" is really
State-defended property. It is property backed by violence. God's Law is personalist.
Biblical Property does not mean, (1) "I will elect politicians to kill you if you
step foot on my land." It means, (2) "I will obey God, conquer covetousness, and
respect your stewardship and your efforts at dominion." A society dominated by the
first kind of "property" is a warlord society. Those in the second kind of
society are willing to follow Jesus to the Cross, to lose all their property rather than
resort to violence, and they possess more property as a result (Mark 10:30; Genesis 13:2).
Property is more secure in a Godly anarchist society than in a Secular Humanist military
dictatorship. [Back to Micah 4.]
|
Q.38: You say you don't advocate agrarianism, but
doesn't "Vine & Fig Tree" lead to something like that?
A. Would you rather live in well-watered garden, or die of thirst in a parched
desert? The Garden of Vine & Fig Tree
is a human archetype. But Vine &
Fig Tree cannot be legislated by Congress or Parliament. Each of us must
"put to death" the old autonomous man and be resurrected to obedience in Christ,
each day, in every area of life. God is merciful and abundant in goodness, and the earth
will pour out its fruit if we will obey God's Law, dismantle our Military-Industrial
Complex, and live lives of contentment and service. [Back to Micah
4.]
|
Q.38: You say you don't advocate agrarianism, but
doesn't "Vine & Fig Tree" lead to something like that?
A. Would you rather live in well-watered garden, or die of thirst in a parched
desert? The Garden of Vine & Fig Tree
is a human archetype. But Vine &
Fig Tree cannot be legislated by Congress or Parliament. Each of us must
"put to death" the old autonomous man and be resurrected to obedience in Christ,
each day, in every area of life. God is merciful and abundant in goodness, and the earth
will pour out its fruit if we will obey God's Law, dismantle our Military-Industrial
Complex, and live lives of contentment and service. [Back to Micah
4.]
|
"His"
-- Patriarchy / Family-owned Property
Q.39: What do you mean by "patriarchy."
A. Human society without Church or State. Human beings are created in families; we
are patriarchal beings, not political beings. Institutions such as "church" and
State are rebellious rejections of patriarchal responsibilities, according to the Bible.
Biblical property is patriarchal property. Modern Humanistic economics is political,
granting all property to the State -- that is, to the powerful -- and embodies theft and
violence as legitimate policy. Every form of politics is a form of socialist dictatorship
and a denial of true property.
Q.40: When you say "Patriarchy," do you mean polygamy?
A. No.
Q.41: Do you mean men can beat their wives?
A. Don't you get it? Men who beat up
Iraqi peasants and put pathetic, depressed drug addicts in prison for 25 years might beat their wives,
but "Vine & Fig Tree"
anarcho-pacifists who follow Christ to the Cross do nothing of the kind. [Back to Micah 4.]
|
"His"
-- Patriarchy / Family-owned Property
Q.39: What do you mean by "patriarchy."
A. Human society without Church or State. Human beings are created in families; we
are patriarchal beings, not political beings. Institutions such as "church" and
State are rebellious rejections of patriarchal responsibilities, according to the Bible.
Biblical property is patriarchal property. Modern Humanistic economics is political,
granting all property to the State -- that is, to the powerful -- and embodies theft and
violence as legitimate policy. Every form of politics is a form of socialist dictatorship
and a denial of true property.
Q.40: When you say "Patriarchy," do you mean polygamy?
A. No.
Q.41: Do you mean men can beat their wives?
A. Don't you get it? Men who beat up
Iraqi peasants and put pathetic, depressed drug addicts in prison for 25 years might beat their wives,
but "Vine & Fig Tree"
anarcho-pacifists who follow Christ to the Cross do nothing of the kind. [Back to Micah 4.]
|
Q.42: Shouldn't we have a healthy fear of the Russians, or terrorists? Don't we need a
State, at least a small one, to protect us from criminals?
A. No. God is bigger than the Russians, bigger than terrorists, bigger than
criminals. My security is in God.
If you cannot trust God like this, I'm sorry, but the Bible nowhere gives you the right to
confiscate money from me to fund your own personal body guards.
-- National Security:
Because our allegiance is to a nation-state rather than the transnational Kingdom of
God, we take up arms against our "enemies," those of rival nation-states, even
though they might profess the same Christianity we do. Trillions of dollars have been
spent in this century in order to kill hundreds of millions of people. Western arms
manufacturers have been paid by western governments to put billions of dollars of arms in
the hands of pagans of low moral character in the interests of "detente" or
"western interests" or "national security." Yet we still feel
radically insecure. Duh.
-- Crime in the Streets
Because our allegiance is to ourselves rather than to other members of the Body of
Christ, we board ourselves up in our homes to keep safe from those who, like us, are loyal
to no one but themselves. The U.S. Supreme Court, committed to a philosophy of human
autonomy, has declared it "unconstitutional" to teach children the Ten
Commandments, including commands against stealing, raping, and killing. We demand prisons,
not preachers. We harvest the bitter fruit.
A "little state" is like a "little murder," and a "little
theft." The overwhelming majority of murders in this century have been committed by
"governments." The overwhelming majority of theft has occurred when a
"government" "nationalized" private property at gunpoint. No
"organized crime syndicate" commits as much evil as the "government."
And all criminals -- from the time they are children -- learn a valuable lesson from the
State: If your goals are frustrated, resort to violence. [Back to
Micah 4.]
|
Q.42: Shouldn't we have a healthy fear of the Russians, or terrorists? Don't we need a
State, at least a small one, to protect us from criminals?
A. No. God is bigger than the Russians, bigger than terrorists, bigger than
criminals. My security is in God.
If you cannot trust God like this, I'm sorry, but the Bible nowhere gives you the right to
confiscate money from me to fund your own personal body guards.
-- National Security:
Because our allegiance is to a nation-state rather than the transnational Kingdom of
God, we take up arms against our "enemies," those of rival nation-states, even
though they might profess the same Christianity we do. Trillions of dollars have been
spent in this century in order to kill hundreds of millions of people. Western arms
manufacturers have been paid by western governments to put billions of dollars of arms in
the hands of pagans of low moral character in the interests of "detente" or
"western interests" or "national security." Yet we still feel
radically insecure. Duh.
-- Crime in the Streets
Because our allegiance is to ourselves rather than to other members of the Body of
Christ, we board ourselves up in our homes to keep safe from those who, like us, are loyal
to no one but themselves. The U.S. Supreme Court, committed to a philosophy of human
autonomy, has declared it "unconstitutional" to teach children the Ten
Commandments, including commands against stealing, raping, and killing. We demand prisons,
not preachers. We harvest the bitter fruit.
A "little state" is like a "little murder," and a "little
theft." The overwhelming majority of murders in this century have been committed by
"governments." The overwhelming majority of theft has occurred when a
"government" "nationalized" private property at gunpoint. No
"organized crime syndicate" commits as much evil as the "government."
And all criminals -- from the time they are children -- learn a valuable lesson from the
State: If your goals are frustrated, resort to violence. [Back to
Micah 4.]
|
Q.43: You sound like the Amish. Are you withdrawing from society?
A. The Humanistic structures in "the modern world" make it more difficult
to live peacefully and righteously. We are surrounded by propaganda which tells us it is
not "sensible," "practical," or "businesslike" to follow
Jesus. We must not be "radical," "idealistic," or "fanatic,"
we are told. Micah says the more our society obeys God's Law, the easier it becomes to
obey even more. Peter Maurin spoke of a
society where it is "easier to be good." [Back to Micah
4.]
|
Q.43: You sound like the Amish. Are you withdrawing from society?
A. The Humanistic structures in "the modern world" make it more difficult
to live peacefully and righteously. We are surrounded by propaganda which tells us it is
not "sensible," "practical," or "businesslike" to follow
Jesus. We must not be "radical," "idealistic," or "fanatic,"
we are told. Micah says the more our society obeys God's Law, the easier it becomes to
obey even more. Peter Maurin spoke of a
society where it is "easier to be good." [Back to Micah
4.]
|
Q.44: Do you believe in "family values?"
A. Yes and no. The vision of "Vine & Fig Tree" is essentially conservative, but
also radical. Micah's vision of "family" is that of the Patriarch Abraham, who
adopted into his household literally hundreds of the dispossessed victims of the Autonomous Humanistic
Empires around him. The vision of "family" espoused by the Christian
Coalition and the "Religious Right" is that of Ozzie and Harriet.
V&FT goes back to the roots; the "Religious Right" is "modern" in
comparison.
Modernists want the poor and imperfect to be taken care of by the State: out of sight,
out of mind. They do not want to be burdened by them. They do not want to take up the
Cross. They are "rugged individualists" who want to be left alone to pursue
"personal peace and affluence." The "nuclear family is spiritually and
culturally sub-Biblical.
"Patriarchy" means social government is provided by families. Adoption and
domestic apprenticeship are God's answers to statist "welfare." "God sets
the solitary in families" (Psalm 68:6). If we believe God's Word, open our homes, and
train our households to follow Biblical Law, we find our lives are enriched and have
meaning. We serve and we are served. Faith is a product of community. [Back to Micah 4.]
|
Q.44: Do you believe in "family values?"
A. Yes and no. The vision of "Vine & Fig Tree" is essentially conservative, but
also radical. Micah's vision of "family" is that of the Patriarch Abraham, who
adopted into his household literally hundreds of the dispossessed victims of the Autonomous Humanistic
Empires around him. The vision of "family" espoused by the Christian
Coalition and the "Religious Right" is that of Ozzie and Harriet.
V&FT goes back to the roots; the "Religious Right" is "modern" in
comparison.
Modernists want the poor and imperfect to be taken care of by the State: out of sight,
out of mind. They do not want to be burdened by them. They do not want to take up the
Cross. They are "rugged individualists" who want to be left alone to pursue
"personal peace and affluence." The "nuclear family is spiritually and
culturally sub-Biblical.
"Patriarchy" means social government is provided by families. Adoption and
domestic apprenticeship are God's answers to statist "welfare." "God sets
the solitary in families" (Psalm 68:6). If we believe God's Word, open our homes, and
train our households to follow Biblical Law, we find our lives are enriched and have
meaning. We serve and we are served. Faith is a product of community. [Back to Micah 4.]
|
"Name"
-- Authority
Q.45: Why do you call yourselves "anarchist" and still bring in all this
religious and Biblical stuff?
A. We are anarchists because Jesus commanded us not to be "archists."
(Mark 10:42-45.) We deny the moral legitimacy of the State and similar human institutions.
Christians reflect the Name of Christ, the Prince of Peace. Secular Humanists carry the
name of man, the autonomous rebel.
Authority creates direction, purpose, and meaning in life. Theonomy directs us
toward life, love, and harmony. Autonomy creates class war, mass death, and
nihilism. [Back to Micah 4.]
|
"Name"
-- Authority
Q.45: Why do you call yourselves "anarchist" and still bring in all this
religious and Biblical stuff?
A. We are anarchists because Jesus commanded us not to be "archists."
(Mark 10:42-45.) We deny the moral legitimacy of the State and similar human institutions.
Christians reflect the Name of Christ, the Prince of Peace. Secular Humanists carry the
name of man, the autonomous rebel.
Authority creates direction, purpose, and meaning in life. Theonomy directs us
toward life, love, and harmony. Autonomy creates class war, mass death, and
nihilism. [Back to Micah 4.]
|
Q.46: You seem to downplay "heaven" and "eternal life."
A. The Bible does not speak of "heaven" one-tenth as much as modern
evangelists. The Bible devotes far more space to discuss the evils of kings and princes.
And even where "heaven" is mentioned, the focus is on the glory of God and not
the eternal self-indulgence of the "saved." The modern focus on
"heaven" is actually quite selfish and individualistic. It is
"ME-centered." It also tends toward pessimism and retreatism in this life. We
must develop a God-centered eternal perspective, which transcends the temporal and
selfish agenda of Hollywood, New York, and Washington, D.C. Jesus says we must seek first
the Kingdom of God and His Righteousness -- in this life. [Back to
Micah 4.]
|
Q.46: You seem to downplay "heaven" and "eternal life."
A. The Bible does not speak of "heaven" one-tenth as much as modern
evangelists. The Bible devotes far more space to discuss the evils of kings and princes.
And even where "heaven" is mentioned, the focus is on the glory of God and not
the eternal self-indulgence of the "saved." The modern focus on
"heaven" is actually quite selfish and individualistic. It is
"ME-centered." It also tends toward pessimism and retreatism in this life. We
must develop a God-centered eternal perspective, which transcends the temporal and
selfish agenda of Hollywood, New York, and Washington, D.C. Jesus says we must seek first
the Kingdom of God and His Righteousness -- in this life. [Back to
Micah 4.]
|
Q.47: Why do you emphasize Houses of Hospitality rather than political coalitions?
A. Because James 1:27 says,
Pure religion and undefiled before God and the Father is this,
To visit the fatherless and widows in their affliction, and
to keep himself unspotted from the world.
I desire with my whole heart to be a person of "pure religion." I want to be
the kind of person who spontaneously, and from the heart, has the compassion of Jesus, and
visits the weak and afflicted. For this reason, it is absolutely vital that I remain
"unspotted" by the agenda, mythology, and weltänschauüng of the world.
The world-and-life view of our culture is summed up in the phrases "survival of the
fittest," "looking out for number one," "Im not going to let him
get away with that," and "take this job and shove it." It is an impure
religion of the worship of self, and the denial of God. It is the refusal to love even our
enemy, and to follow Jesus to the Cross. It is the religion of Secular Humanism. I must
get these ideas out of my head if I am to live a life characterized by the "works of
mercy" which Jesus said are necessary if I wanted to be at Christs right hand
(Matthew 25:34). The emphasis in Scripture is on our relationship with the weak and
abandoned, the crippled and those who cannot repay us. [Back to
Micah 4.]
|
Q.47: Why do you emphasize Houses of Hospitality rather than political coalitions?
A. Because James 1:27 says,
Pure religion and undefiled before God and the Father is this,
To visit the fatherless and widows in their affliction, and
to keep himself unspotted from the world.
I desire with my whole heart to be a person of "pure religion." I want to be
the kind of person who spontaneously, and from the heart, has the compassion of Jesus, and
visits the weak and afflicted. For this reason, it is absolutely vital that I remain
"unspotted" by the agenda, mythology, and weltänschauüng of the world.
The world-and-life view of our culture is summed up in the phrases "survival of the
fittest," "looking out for number one," "Im not going to let him
get away with that," and "take this job and shove it." It is an impure
religion of the worship of self, and the denial of God. It is the refusal to love even our
enemy, and to follow Jesus to the Cross. It is the religion of Secular Humanism. I must
get these ideas out of my head if I am to live a life characterized by the "works of
mercy" which Jesus said are necessary if I wanted to be at Christs right hand
(Matthew 25:34). The emphasis in Scripture is on our relationship with the weak and
abandoned, the crippled and those who cannot repay us. [Back to
Micah 4.]
|
Q.48: That's fine; I'm all for helping the poor. But why do you help illegal aliens and
those in prison?
A. It appears to be God's way to resist the State: render aid to its enemies.
American Nazism begins when it rejects Biblical Creationism and sees the weak as threats
to its "National Security." "Peace through Strength" means "Peace
through the elimination of the weak." "Survival of the Fittest" means
national survival through genocide of the undesirable. Yet Christ died for the weak and
undesirable, not for those who think they have no need of The Physician. When the practice
of the "works of mercy" (Matthew 25:35-36) is legally defined as "rendering
aid to the enemies of the State," then being a Christian is defined as
"treason," and is punishable by death.
The Bible says we who were once aliens should treat foreigners with grace and an open
hand. Our nation's zenophobic scapegoating is reflected in laws which are polar opposites
of God's Law. Repeatedly, God commands us to treat aliens as we would our own countrymen:
"You shall have the same law for the stranger and for one from your own country; for
I am the LORD your God." (Leviticus 24:22) But we deny aid to aliens by law. Further,
our judicial system lets mass murderers and drug dealers (a.k.a. "politicians")
go free, while pathetic, depressed, penny-ante addicts are given 25 years in prison. The spiritual roots of
America's "naked nomads"
is ignored. Enemies of the State need to hear God's "Good News" as much as the
political butchers who mete out the punishments.
[Back to Micah 4.]
|
Q.48: That's fine; I'm all for helping the poor. But why do you help illegal aliens and
those in prison?
A. It appears to be God's way to resist the State: render aid to its enemies.
American Nazism begins when it rejects Biblical Creationism and sees the weak as threats
to its "National Security." "Peace through Strength" means "Peace
through the elimination of the weak." "Survival of the Fittest" means
national survival through genocide of the undesirable. Yet Christ died for the weak and
undesirable, not for those who think they have no need of The Physician. When the practice
of the "works of mercy" (Matthew 25:35-36) is legally defined as "rendering
aid to the enemies of the State," then being a Christian is defined as
"treason," and is punishable by death.
The Bible says we who were once aliens should treat foreigners with grace and an open
hand. Our nation's zenophobic scapegoating is reflected in laws which are polar opposites
of God's Law. Repeatedly, God commands us to treat aliens as we would our own countrymen:
"You shall have the same law for the stranger and for one from your own country; for
I am the LORD your God." (Leviticus 24:22) But we deny aid to aliens by law. Further,
our judicial system lets mass murderers and drug dealers (a.k.a. "politicians")
go free, while pathetic, depressed, penny-ante addicts are given 25 years in prison. The spiritual roots of
America's "naked nomads"
is ignored. Enemies of the State need to hear God's "Good News" as much as the
political butchers who mete out the punishments.
[Back to Micah 4.]
|
Q.49: Don't you believe evil-doers should be punished?
A. There is no way you can read the Bible and fail to see that God punishes evil.
Many people refuse to accept that, but the Bible clearly teaches it.
But the Bible also teaches that we (human beings) are not to punish. "'Vengeance is
MINE; I will repay,' saith the LORD." (Romans 12:19). Example: A Libyan terrorist
sets off a bomb in Washington D.C. Do we leave vengeance to God? No, we bomb Tripoli and
kill Khadaffi's son.
It seems that those who are willing to believe that God punishes are not willing to
believe that God reserves that right for Himself and withholds it from us. Vine & Fig Tree seeks as much as possible to minister
to the weak, the illegal, and the chastised. While the majority are satisfied with their
political power, their MTV, and their personal peace and affluence, there is a remnant
which is open to the alternative vision of Micah. [Back to Micah
4.]
|
Q.49: Don't you believe evil-doers should be punished?
A. There is no way you can read the Bible and fail to see that God punishes evil.
Many people refuse to accept that, but the Bible clearly teaches it.
But the Bible also teaches that we (human beings) are not to punish. "'Vengeance is
MINE; I will repay,' saith the LORD." (Romans 12:19). Example: A Libyan terrorist
sets off a bomb in Washington D.C. Do we leave vengeance to God? No, we bomb Tripoli and
kill Khadaffi's son.
It seems that those who are willing to believe that God punishes are not willing to
believe that God reserves that right for Himself and withholds it from us. Vine & Fig Tree seeks as much as possible to minister
to the weak, the illegal, and the chastised. While the majority are satisfied with their
political power, their MTV, and their personal peace and affluence, there is a remnant
which is open to the alternative vision of Micah. [Back to Micah
4.]
|
Q.50: Your own passage shows that you are wrong. You are against strong nations, but
someday -- maybe soon, maybe in a long time -- God is going to give Christians a homeland,
their own State, with the political power they need to execute God's enemies under God's
Law.
A. The Bible does not say "someday" we will be a strong nation, it says
we are a strong nation:
But ye are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, an holy nation, a
peculiar people; that ye should show forth the praises of him who hath called you out of
darkness into his marvellous light:
I Peter 2:9
But the weapons of our "national defense" are not built by Rockwell:
[4] (For the weapons of our warfare are not carnal, but mighty through
God to the pulling down of strong holds;)
[5] Casting down imaginations, and every high thing that exalteth itself against the
knowledge of God, and bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ;
2 Corinthians 10:4-5
Why do so many Christians believe that the power to reform and reconstruct lies in guns
and gas chambers, rather than the powerful two-edged sword of Scripture? The desire for a
Christian police state is a movement away from light and a return to darkness. [Back to Micah 4.]
|
Q.50: Your own passage shows that you are wrong. You are against strong nations, but
someday -- maybe soon, maybe in a long time -- God is going to give Christians a homeland,
their own State, with the political power they need to execute God's enemies under God's
Law.
A. The Bible does not say "someday" we will be a strong nation, it says
we are a strong nation:
But ye are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, an holy nation, a
peculiar people; that ye should show forth the praises of him who hath called you out of
darkness into his marvellous light:
I Peter 2:9
But the weapons of our "national defense" are not built by Rockwell:
[4] (For the weapons of our warfare are not carnal, but mighty through
God to the pulling down of strong holds;)
[5] Casting down imaginations, and every high thing that exalteth itself against the
knowledge of God, and bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ;
2 Corinthians 10:4-5
Why do so many Christians believe that the power to reform and reconstruct lies in guns
and gas chambers, rather than the powerful two-edged sword of Scripture? The desire for a
Christian police state is a movement away from light and a return to darkness. [Back to Micah 4.]
|
These concepts, repeated throughout
the Bible, can be grouped into seven Archetypes. These themes are the foundation for
"The Christmas Conspiracy" and Vine & Fig Tree publications:1.
The Garden
The Bible says man was created in a Garden. If we would worship God, He would provide
for us. But we chose to "be as gods" (Gen. 3:5), and substituted a wilderness of
scarcity and disease for the beauty and abundance of God's Garden. Contentment and a
harmonious relationship with the land was replaced with dog-eat-dog militaristic
industrialism. In our poverty and fear, we called out to the demonic slave-traders of the Polis
for protection, and became their slaves.
2. Redemption
Jesus paid the price necessary to "redeem" us (buy us back) from the
slave-traders of the Polis. By destroying this slavery, Christ established His
Kingdom at His First Advent. He is not "coming soon." In history, the
slave-traders, not the Christians, are "raptured."
3. Catholicism
Christ promises victory: that His Kingdom will spread across the globe, and will
include all nations, all peoples, all races. Humanistic divisions along lines of class,
politics, or genetics are destroyed.
4. Law
This growth will be in terms of obedience to Biblical Law, which is Christ's Standard
of Love, Justice, and Holiness. All authority and power are God's.
5. Peace
The Law of God requires attitudes of virtue and service; when mature, these
qualities beat "swords into plowshares."
6. Family
The root and center of this growth will be the Family -- not the violence of the State,
nor the sycophancy of ecclesiasticism. Vine & Fig Tree
means a return to Biblical Patriarchy -- and then new growth in terms of this
paradigm.
7. Community
"God setteth the solitary in families: he bringeth out those which are bound with
chains: but the rebellious dwell in a dry land." (Psalm 68:6) The Patriarch Abraham
extended his family to include hundreds of homeless. Christians live in extended families
of community, resisting the myths of the pre-Christian "principalities and
powers."
This is the Gospel which the Scripture preaches from cover to cover (Galatians 3:8).
"Vine & Fig Tree" is a vision of
trust and obedience to God and His Law; a return to the peaceful, agrarian Patriarchal
society of the Bible. God promises to bless this repentance with a restoration of Edenic
conditions. It is a vision which is "unrealistic," "utopian,"
"impractical," and "idealistic," and therefore can only be
accomplished through the power of the Holy Spirit, and thus God, not man, and not the
United Nations, will get all the glory.[7]
Q.51: So how many people are members of "Vine & Fig Tree?"
A. I sometimes speak of Vine & Fig Tree
as a "movement." We may laugh at this presumption -- at least for now. No
viewpoint is more of a minority viewpoint that this one; it is certainly not the
dominant world-and-life-view. But I believe that the vision of Vine
& Fig Tree will become a world-wide, culture-shaping mass movement,
although possibly not until the generation of my great-grandchildren (or beyond). But in
God's time, the Vine & Fig Tree vision as I
have set it out here, presently an overwhelmingly isolated and fringe viewpoint, will
become the dominant cultural perspective. Sometime thereafter, the weaknesses,
shortsightedness, and egotism of these writings (or an apostasy from
this vision[9]) will become evident to people who will be a tiny
minority. They will then begin, as I am now, to critique the dominant culture. We must not
"despise the day of small beginnings" (Zechariah 4:10) The prophet Micah says
that Vine & Fig Tree is the winning side.
Q.52: You're a cult of one, aren't you.
A. Sure seems like it. (1 Kings 19:14,18)
Q.53: So what is your goal?
A. The goal of Vine & Fig Tree is to
publish writings which will motivate people to follow the Hebrew-Christian Bible and make
its vision a reality. Our
projects are described at our home page.
If I have not answered your question, please write
to me and I will include it in a future update. Kevin4VFT@aol.com
|
These concepts, repeated throughout
the Bible, can be grouped into seven Archetypes. These themes are the foundation for Vine
& Fig Tree publications:1. The Garden
The Bible says man was created in a Garden. If we would worship God, He would provide
for us. But we chose to "be as gods" (Gen. 3:5), and substituted a wilderness of
scarcity and disease for the beauty and abundance of God's Garden. Contentment and a
harmonious relationship with the land was replaced with dog-eat-dog militaristic
industrialism. In our poverty and fear, we called out to the demonic slave-traders of the Polis
for protection, and became their slaves.
2. Redemption
Jesus paid the price necessary to "redeem" us (buy us back) from the
slave-traders of the Polis. By destroying this slavery, Christ established His
Kingdom at His First Advent. He is not "coming soon." In history, the
slave-traders, not the Christians, are "raptured."
3. Catholicism
Christ promises victory: that His Kingdom will spread across the globe, and will
include all nations, all peoples, all races. Humanistic divisions along lines of class,
politics, or genetics are destroyed.
4. Law
This growth will be in terms of obedience to Biblical Law, which is Christ's Standard
of Love, Justice, and Holiness. All authority and power are God's.
5. Peace
The Law of God requires attitudes of virtue and service; when mature, these
qualities beat "swords into plowshares."
6. Family
The root and center of this growth will be the Family -- not the violence of the State,
nor the sycophancy of ecclesiasticism. Vine & Fig Tree
means a return to Biblical Patriarchy -- and then new growth in terms of this
paradigm.
7. Community
"God setteth the solitary in families: he bringeth out those which are bound with
chains: but the rebellious dwell in a dry land." (Psalm 68:6) The Patriarch Abraham
extended his family to include hundreds of homeless. Christians live in extended families
of community, resisting the myths of the pre-Christian "principalities and
powers."
This is the Gospel which the Scripture preaches from cover to cover (Galatians 3:8).
"Vine & Fig Tree" is a vision of
trust and obedience to God and His Law; a return to the peaceful, agrarian Patriarchal
society of the Bible. God promises to bless this repentance with a restoration of Edenic
conditions. It is a vision which is "unrealistic," "utopian,"
"impractical," and "idealistic," and therefore can only be
accomplished through the power of the Holy Spirit, and thus God, not man, and not the
United Nations, will get all the glory.[7]
Q.51: So how many people are members of "Vine & Fig Tree?"
A. I sometimes speak of Vine & Fig Tree
as a "movement." We may laugh at this presumption -- at least for now. No
viewpoint is more of a minority viewpoint that this one; it is certainly not the
dominant world-and-life-view. But I believe that the vision of Vine
& Fig Tree will become a world-wide, culture-shaping mass movement,
although possibly not until the generation of my great-grandchildren (or beyond). But in
God's time, the Vine & Fig Tree vision as I
have set it out here, presently an overwhelmingly isolated and fringe viewpoint, will
become the dominant cultural perspective. Sometime thereafter, the weaknesses,
shortsightedness, and egotism of these writings (or an apostasy from
this vision[9]) will become evident to people who will be a tiny
minority. They will then begin, as I am now, to critique the dominant culture. We must not
"despise the day of small beginnings" (Zechariah 4:10) The prophet Micah says
that Vine & Fig Tree is the winning side.
Q.52: You're a cult of one, aren't you.
A. Sure seems like it. (1 Kings 19:14,18)
Q.53: So what is your goal?
A. The goal of Vine & Fig Tree is to
publish writings which will motivate people to follow the Hebrew-Christian Bible and make
its vision a reality. Our
projects are described at our home page.
If I have not answered your question, please write
to me and I will include it in a future update. Kevin4VFT@aol.com
|
NOTES
(1) Not quite true; I often believe the "left-right"
dichotomy is false and misleading. I am uncomfortable with both "left" and
"right." But since everyone else identifies themselves in these terms, you will
find me associated with both. [Back to text.]
(2) Shades of Stanley Vishniewski! [Back
to text.]
(3) Hebrews 1:2; 9:26; 1 Peter 1:20; 4:7; 1 John 2:18; Acts
2:16-17. [Back to text.]
(5) Along with churches which buttress the power of Empire, and
simultaneously provide "escape" through non-Biblical theological and liturgical
amusements. [Back to text.]
(7) The Westminster Shorter Catechism says "Man's chief end
is to glorify God and enjoy Him forever." To the extent man seeks to "be as
god" (Gen. 3:5), life is unenjoyable. [Back to text.]
(9) Just as our nation has apostatized from the theology and
cultural vision of the Puritans. [Back to text.] |
NOTES
(1) Not quite true; I often believe the "left-right"
dichotomy is false and misleading. I am uncomfortable with both "left" and
"right." But since everyone else identifies themselves in these terms, you will
find me associated with both. [Back to text.]
(2) Shades of Stanley Vishniewski! [Back
to text.]
(3) Hebrews 1:2; 9:26; 1 Peter 1:20; 4:7; 1 John 2:18; Acts
2:16-17. [Back to text.]
(5) Along with churches which buttress the power of Empire, and
simultaneously provide "escape" through non-Biblical theological and liturgical
amusements. [Back to text.]
(7) The Westminster Shorter Catechism says "Man's chief end
is to glorify God and enjoy Him forever." To the extent man seeks to "be as
god" (Gen. 3:5), life is unenjoyable. [Back to text.]
(9) Just as our nation has apostatized from the theology and
cultural vision of the Puritans. [Back to text.] |