Receiving Messages from the Most High God

Does God still speak to us? Of course He does. I have noted before that I have walked through a change in my thinking with respect to charismatic gifts. I once described myself as a leaky cessationist. I meant by that that in principle I agreed with the cessationist position, but that of course I need to leave room for God to be God. My own father experienced multiple unusual experiences where God seemed to be communicating to him. I now describe myself as a cautious continuationist. That means that I agree in principle with the continuationist position but leave room for a healthy skepticism of the often tough to swallow claims of some charismatics.

What I find interesting, however, is where both groups agree with each other. Precious few cessationists are water, or Spirit tight in their thinking. When my father would recount hearing God tell him, when he was a young teenager, and before he was even a believer, that He was going to send him around the world teaching people about Him, and that he should take Vesta, I don’t think even John MacArthur would wince. At least enough so you could tell.

At the same time, happily there are precious few charismatics in the world who insist that we all append their revelations to the back of our Bibles. Apart from cult leaders, charismatics agree with cessationists that the canon of Scripture is closed, that whatever experiences they may be having, it is not the same thing as what happened to the Apostle John on the island of Patmos. Even continuationists believe that infallible canon revelation has ceased.

Which means, doesn’t it, that we’re really not too terribly far apart? We all agree that God can, in one way or another, communicate to us. Even the Bible itself says that the Spirit testifies to our spirit that we really are the children of God (Romans 8:16). Not that God has children. Not that we are called to be His children. That we, we whose literal names are not literally in the Bible, are literally His children. That is God speaking to us.

Even cessationists believe that God continues to speak to us. Some of us believe He reveals things through dreams and visions. All of us believe in testing the spirits. Some of us believe we can feel checks in our spirits. All of us believe in being Bereans. Some of us believe we have been given a message God wants us to give. All of us believe we have heard, even if spoken from a man, a message that God wanted us to receive.

I believe sometimes people try to rationalize their sins or bolster their opinions by suggesting God told them something God didn’t tell them. Sometimes people try to hide from a message from God for fear that it might mean they have to repent. Or might make them look weird. I believe we should show the same grace we would like to receive to both kinds of people. I believe we should be careful how we speak, especially when speaking of how we believe God spoke to us. I believe we should be careful how we judge, especially when speaking of how others believe God has spoken to them.

Circumstances, under God’s sovereign hand, can and do change. The shadows have passed away with the coming of Jesus. The canon has closed. God, however, is the same yesterday, today and forever. He is there, and He is not silent.

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New Study Begins Tonight- Issues Dividing The Church

We begin a new study exploring issues dividing the church. Tonight, God’s sovereignty and man’s free will. All are welcome at 6:15 eastern for dinner, and for the study itself at 7:00. We’ll live-stream on Facebook Live, RC-Lisa Sproul. We hope you were predestined to join us.

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How can I know if my church is preaching the gospel?

We who affirm the doctrine of total depravity often don’t believe we are totally depraved. It’s true enough that there are institutions and individuals who flat deny the doctrine. Then there are those who both affirm and deny. There is a yawning gap between these two concepts, “All men in their natural state are at enmity of God and are inclined only away from God, having all parts of their humanity impacted by sin” and “Lord, be merciful to me, a sinner.” The former is an accurate description of a sound and biblical doctrine. The latter is a needful cry from all of us.

This same disconnect, I fear, infects our understanding of the gospel. Again there are plenty of institutions and individuals who simply deny the gospel. Then there are those who both affirm and deny it. Because there is a yawning gap between these two concepts, “Jesus lived a perfect life and died an atoning death, both of which are imputed to those who, by the regenerating power of the Holy Spirit, rest in that finished work alone” and “Lord, be merciful to me, a sinner.” The former is an accurate description of a sound and biblical doctrine. The latter is a needful cry from all of us.

The sad thing is that so many churches make just that mistake. They are careful to be careful, even zealous to be zealous in defense of what the Bible teaches. That’s a good thing. Who could be opposed to that? That mindset, however, absent a heart broken by the reality of our personal sins, absent a joyful response to His victory over our sin and the grave, absent a living confidence that we are the beloved children of our heavenly Father, misses the heart of the gospel.

Without this one may have a church that teaches and defends the gospel, but not have one that preaches the gospel. One may have a church that is training lips to confess the truth but teaching hearts to trust in their superior understanding of His provision rather than in His provision. One may have a church with its guns aimed at the faulty teaching of those not present rather than at the faults and sins resident in the hearts and minds of the congregation.

Your church is preaching the gospel if you walk out the door each Lord’s Day rejoicing to have been redeemed, rescued. Your church is preaching the gospel if you walk out the door each Lord’s Day more eager to tell unbelievers the good news than you are to argue the finer points with other believers. You are in a gospel church when you walk in the door crying out, “Lord, be merciful to me a sinner” and go home justified and joyful.

Never trade secondary distinctives, music styles, preferred programs or demographics for the one thing that matters, the faithful preaching of the gospel of Jesus Christ.


This is the thirty-eighth installment of an ongoing series of pieces here on the nature and calling of the church. Stay tuned for more. Remember also that we at Sovereign Grace Fellowship meet this Sunday April 6 at 10:30 AM at our new location, at our beautiful farm at 112811 Garman Road, Spencerville, IN. Please come join us. Also note that tonight we begin a new Bible study on issues dividing the church, tonight considering sovereignty and free will.

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Kingdoms in Conflict, Enemies in Disguise

“Theological liberalism no longer announces itself with old men in big steeples but disguises itself in young men in skinny jeans and glasses.”

I tweeted the above some time ago. From all appearances, based on the responses I received, theological liberals were not offended. Old men were not offended. Big steeples were not offended. Young men in skinny jeans and glasses were offended. It was not, of course, my intention to put down either skinny jeans or glasses. The issue I am trying to address isn’t the nature of the disguise, but the existence of the disguise.

I have been blessed to live through the great migration out of the mainline churches. There was a time when millions of professing believers worshiped in local bodies where the pastor did not believe Jesus was raised from the dead. When the majority of seminary students were taught by professors who did not believe that Jesus was born of a virgin. Those seminaries and churches are moribund. In my lifetime the numbers, the vitality, the strength has shifted to evangelical churches. And so I face the temptation to think that the battle is over, to dance as we sing, “Ding, dong, the witch is dead.”

The devil, however, is not only crafty, but persistent. Craftiness and persistence join hands as I am coming to understand that reports of the death of theological liberalism are greatly exaggerated. Theological liberalism has learned how to hide, how to disguise itself. We once knew how to recognize it. Typically we’d find it in old, ornate church buildings. Typically we’d find it in old, established denominations. Typically we’d find it in old, respectable men.

These, of course, still do exist. Though the pews tend to be empty, the pulpits, sustained by bequests of the departed faithful, remain full. But more often liberalism in our day tends to be nuanced. Instead of angry denunciations of the unrespectable fundamentals we now have gentle, alternative narratives. Instead of vituperations against our obstinate know-nothingism we receive invitations to join the young, the uncertain and the post-evangelical.

For all the differences, however, what matters is the same- unbelief posing as belief. In both instances the Word of God is something we judge, rather than something we are judged by. In both instances, preaching flows out of the imagination of the preacher, rather than the unshakable, uncouth, unpopular Word. In both instances we are invited to belong to an exclusive club with all its rights and privileges. All we have to do is sell our souls. Gentle accommodation and embracing of the wisdom of the world is more alluring, more dangerous and therefore more wicked than angry accommodation.

The solution to either betrayal is the trustworthiness of our Lord. We must learn to love to tell that old, old story. We need to confess that Jesus, born of the Virgin Mary, came to save sinners, that there is no other name under heaven by which a man must be saved. That He came not to abolish the law but to fulfill. That He suffered the wrath of the Father that was due to us, and that all those who will not repent and turn to Him will suffer the wrath of the Father for eternity.

We need, in short, to continue that fight which began in Eden, and which will end when He returns again to judge the quick and the dead. We must fight for, and through the gospel of our Lord.


This Monday evening we begin a new Bible study considering issues currently dividing the church, issues of import. We’ll consider complementarianism vs. egalitarianism, continuationism vs. cessationism, biblical sexual ethics vs. worldly sexual ethics and more. Please join us at our home at 7:00 (or come early, 6:15 and we’ll give you dinner). Or, join us live on Facebook Live, RC-Lisa Sproul. We hope you’ll join us,

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Amazing Grace, Common Grace And What They Have in Common

It’s such a shame. We allow ourselves, when any blessing goes to eleven, to lose sight of the blessing it was at one. We are rightly amazed by His redeeming grace, that saved a wretch like me. We ought also be amazed by that grace that we dismissively call “common.” It is a good thing to distinguish these two kinds of grace. A bad thing to lose sight of that which they have in common, unmerited favor.

As I type I am chewing a bit of dried mango. I confess that, because it’s been coated with a bit of sugar, that it’s not a kale salad. Neither, however, is it a hot fudge sundae. It brings various nutrients into my body, fueling me for part of the day. But it is also delicious, delightful, divine. No it’s not God. But it is His gift, which I do not deserve. Unmerited favor, available for believers and unbelievers alike.

We not only could, but should, catalogue the innumerable such gifts we and our unbelieving neighbors enjoy. Sunshine, songbirds, and sweaters. Air conditioning, antibiotics and aluminum. Barbequed meats, boiled peanuts and baked brie. And like a jaded and sullen teenager we walk through this cornucopia of pleasures thinking nothing of it. We’re so busy grumbling about what we don’t have we miss out on what we do have.

What is heartbreaking is that we, recipients of His redeeming grace, are nearly as likely to miss His common grace as those who receive His common grace alone. Romans 1 reminds us we in our natural state do not acknowledge Him nor are we thankful (1:21). Despite being indwelt by His Spirit, we carry this sin into our new life in Him.

We are numb, dull of senses. We are dwarves in paradise who think themselves locked in a dark and stinking stable. The God we by nature flee from, hate, refuse to acknowledge, feeds us, cares for us, gives us life that we might heed His call to repent. He gives us snowflakes and raindrops, blue skies and cool breezes, sunrises and sunsets. He gives us sushi and ice cream, sausage and farm fresh eggs.

We who have received His redeeming grace have also received a profoundly potent invitation. He invites us to ask Him to bless us with wisdom, and gives to all liberally without finding fault (James 1:5). So let’s ask Him for the wisdom to see and give thanks for all that He has already blessed us with. For the wisdom to keep ever before us the shame of what we have earned, and the abundance of what we have been given. May our very faces, beaming with joyful gratitude, be the very light that draws in those who were chosen from before time.

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Final Great Commandment Study, Who Is My Neighbor?

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Power of the Tongue; Renewing Our Minds and More

From our home on the range, where seldom is heard a discouraging word. Saddle up and listen up. It might do you some good.

This week’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Rebels Without a Cause: Fighting the World With Its Weapons

It was Marx who argued that, rather than man shaping economic realities, it was the economic realities that shape man. Despite his manifold and manifest follies, he had something of a point here. Setting aside for a moment the chicken and the egg issue, wouldn’t hard times, for instance, give rise to strong willed and stiff backed men? Wouldn’t economic blessing tempt us to softness?

Might this be why Agur cries out in Proverbs 30 “Give me neither poverty nor riches; feed me with the food that is needful for me, lest I be full and deny you and say, ‘Who is the Lord? Or lest I be poor and steal and profane the name of my God” (verses 8-9). Doesn’t it make sense that the greatest generation, the one that made so many sacrifices during World War II, was likewise the generation raised in the heat of the Great Depression? Doesn’t it make sense that the post-war prosperity of the next generation would give rise to whining hippies?

Elbow Room

The nature of colonization and westward expansion in our early history would create or attract, a peculiar mindset. People content to collect a paycheck by pushing papers or stamping out widgets need not apply. American individualism didn’t arrive out of the American experience de nova. Nor from the writings of Horatio Alger. Rather it sprung from the hard scrabble of the frontier and the prairie. It was forged in the cold tundra of winters. Uncharted territory never opens wide before the effete, but challenges the hearts of men.

That economic reality in turn shaped the artistic reality, America as a nation of lone wolves. James Fennimore Cooper brought us the Leatherstocking Tales, a collection of novels about a frontier hero. Natty Bumpo was Daniel Boone before Daniel Boone. He lived off the land, did right by his neighbors, but aspired mostly to be left alone. That Daniel Boone was real enough doesn’t explain our country’s abiding interest in him. He was a hero to us because he went out on his own and built a life for himself.

Mark Twain continued the same pattern as Huck Finn only begins his adventures as he heads west, on his own, to make his mark. That Holden Caufield inhabits the city and spends his sophomoric days whining doesn’t change that he too is the lone wolf, alone, with no body to catch the body falling through the rye.

Whaddya Got?

Of course, truth be told, we have by now virtually run out of frontiers. In turn we aren’t exactly overrun with opportunities for vision quest, for soul-shaping heroism. But that doesn’t mean we have run out of rebels. Marlon Brando at one point virtually owned the franchise. Stanley Kowalski, of the torn t-shirt, may have been torn between two women in A Streetcar Named Desire, but he was yet a man on his own.

In The Wild Ones Brando played the leader of a motorcycle gang. They blow into a small town, where a waitress asks Brando’s character, “Johnny, what are you rebelling against?” With his trademark sneer Brando replies, “Whaddya got?” James Dean would later be but a pale imitation.

To Be is To Be on TV

The pattern is only now beginning to fade, but for all the wrong reasons. The modern world is regimented, a well-oiled machine. Naturally the hero longs to escape such a prison, to rebel not against nothing, but against everything. But in the postmodern world, the only answer we can give Johnny is, “Nothing.” The only prison the would-be rebel must escape is the inescapable reality that there are no prisons. There are no laws to break in a lawless culture, no taboos to transcend when the only taboo is to hold on to taboos. All we have left is the aching desire to be seen, to get on camera.

Breaking Free

In the Matrix movies, Neo, the new man, had to discover that he wasn’t in a postmodern world, but still just a cog in a machine, so that he could in turn set himself, and others free. He had to discover that there actually was a reality before he could break free of it. And once free, they would be right back where we’re starting from.

Fish Swimming Upstream

Which is why we must be careful. How easy it is to feed ourselves on these images from the world around us, as an inspiration to rebel against the world around us. We are rebels with a cause, but sadly we are more excited about being rebels than we are about the cause. We are Jesus Freaks who are more interested in being freaks than we are in Jesus.

How worldly we are when we boldly, like any hero from Bumpo to Neo, stand against the tide of the world, so that we can be heroes. When we do such we are not only not swimming upstream, but are being tossed to and fro by every wind of doctrine. When we boldly bring forth a new paradigm, or when we boldly fight for the old paradigm, I’m afraid we too often are looking at ourselves in the mirror to see how bold we look.

Our Hero

To be counter-cultural it isn’t enough to fight the culture with the culture’s tools. We must instead fight the culture as Jesus would have us do. We are called, though one can hardly expect to receive garlands and have folk songs written about those who do such, to live in peace and quietness with all men, as much as is possible. To be counter-cultural is to stop worrying about how we look, and to start worrying about Whom we obey. Our hero must be He who obeyed His Father, even to death on the cross.

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Study Concludes Tonight- The Greatest Commandment

Tonight we conclude exploring the greatest commandment, asking, “who is my neighbor.” All are welcome in our home at 6:15 eastern for dinner, and for the study itself at 7:00. The study will be live-streamed on Facebook Live, RC-Lisa Sproul. We hope you’ll join us.

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Is the church getting worse? Dreaming Dreams

Because we are given to complaining, we need to be reminded to give thanks. Complaining comes naturally to us. Giving thanks is a supernatural activity. Consider, for a moment, our propensity to complain about the state of the church. In Reformed circles we have far too many “whispering Calvinists,” men in the pulpits of Reformed churches who affirm the system of doctrine found in the Westminster Confession, but whose preaching seems unaffected by that system.

On the other side of the spectrum we have the cranky Reformed. These are men who preside over bitty little congregations of bitty little hearts. They spend their time and energy sifting through the subtle theological nuances of their enemies, other Reformed pastors. It’s not a pretty picture.

We would be wise, however, to remember that once, not too long ago, there was no Reformed world to complain about. Outside of Grand Rapids, the mecca of the Dutch Reformed, and the greater Philadelphia area, where a then very young Westminster Seminary sent its grads, seventy-five years ago the only Bible believing Presbyterians you could find were fundamentalists given to dispensational eschatology. And even they were hard to find. That we have big troubles in the Reformed world is the result of now having a big Reformed world. And that is something to give thanks for.

The same principle applies to the church at large. How hard is it to find something to complain about in the evangelical church? Turn on Christian television. Turn on Christian radio. Pick up your average evangelical magazine. Attend a conference. Chances are you will find a hodge-podge of squishy, feel-good goo-gah. You will find men in pulpits who not only don’t teach the Reformed faith, but won’t teach the plain teaching of the Bible. You are more likely to find the spirit of Madison Avenue at work than the Holy Spirit.

Once again, however, we need to remember that not long ago the evangelical church was a tiny backwater institution, dwarfed to insignificance by big churches overcrowded with parishioners who did not know or did not care that their pastor did not believe Jesus was raised from the dead. While there is great room for growth in the evangelical church, praise God we live in an age where it is the mainline churches that are insignificant shells.

Might we be still more grateful if we were to look back to that church which has so radically departed from the faith. We were once a part of the one true church known as Israel, the people of God. While our fathers may have worshipped in mainline mausoleums, our spiritual great-great grandfathers gave over the worship of the living God for the worship of the Baals- over and over again.

Read through our family story and we will find there repeated ad nauseum, “And King So and So did not fear God but established high places throughout the land… Then King So and So II, like his father before him, did not humble himself before the Lord, but welcomed the priests of Baal to his table.”

Apostasy wasn’t a surprise to the children of Israel; it was a way of life. Over and over God sent foreign lands to oppress His people, that they might turn to Him in repentance. Time and again God sent His prophets to call His bride back to fidelity. And then something amazing happened. God sent the prophet Joel. He too spoke against the sins of Israel. He too lamented the judgment of God. Famine would come. The Day of the Lord was at hand, a day of darkness and gloom. A nation would come in conquest like none that had come before:

“The earth quakes before them; the heavens tremble. The sun and the moon are darkened, and the stars withdraw their shining. The Lord utters his voice before his army, for his camp is exceedingly great; he who executes his word is powerful. For the day of the Lord is great and very awesome; who can endure it?” (Joel 2:10-11).

God calls His people to repentance, promising to forgive them, and to restore them. But then He makes this astonishing promise:

“And it shall come to pass afterward, that I will pour out my Spirit on all flesh; your sons and your daughters shall prophecy, your old men shall dream dreams, and your young men shall see visions. Even on the male and female servants in those days I will pour out my Spirit” (2:28-29).

This is a promise of a whole new world. For all our failures and weaknesses as the modern church, we are the church indwelt by the Holy Spirit. For all our infidelities, and flirtations with the world, we will remain as the bride. Institutions will come and go, but the bride of Christ will never turn away. She will be spotted and wrinkled, but she will have within her the living Spirit of God.

This promise was inaugurated at Pentecost, and is still coming to pass in our own day. We are the people of God, but with this difference. We are His people, indwelt and empowered by His Spirit. We dream dreams and we see visions.

The Spirit that indwells us is at work driving far from us the spirit of grumbling and complaining. He is teaching us to give thanks, and we would be wise to begin by giving thanks that He is teaching us. We should be dreaming this, a dream that, for all her weaknesses and failures, the church will grow ever more faithful. Our vision should be forward looking, driven by gratitude and hope. This is why the Father spoke these words through Joel. This is why the Son told us that it was better for us that He should ascend. This is why He sent His Spirit, that we would rejoice and give thanks.

We live in the new and improved. Our calling is to make the new newer still, and the improved still more improved. We march from victory to victory. And in the end we will dance, bride and Groom together, forever and ever.

This is the thirty-seventh installment of an ongoing series of pieces here on the nature and calling of the church. Stay tuned for more. Remember also that we at Sovereign Grace Fellowship meet this Sunday March 30 at 10:30 AM at our new location, at our beautiful farm at 112811 Garman Road, Spencerville, IN. Please come join us.

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