The Problems of Evil and the Problem of Pleasure

There is a great divide between the city of God and the city of man. We all, however, have this much in common — we’re all sinners. One source of the gap may be found in how we look at sin. If we were to poll those outside the kingdom of God on the question of evil, most would begin thinking through their pet answers to this common question: why do bad things happen to good people? For the world, the problem of “evil” is more about the problem of human suffering. “Evil” is defined in their minds by things like hurricanes, or what we call “acts of God.”

Were the same polling to come before God’s people, we would see that we are hearing a different question. What puzzles us isn’t hurricanes and famines. We don’t wonder why bad things happen to good people because fundamental to our confession is this truth, that the only time a bad thing ever happened to a good person was when He volunteered for it.

To us, the “problem of evil” isn’t destructive acts of God, but the primordial destructive act of man. The question is, how did good people become bad? How did Adam and Eve, created righteous and upright, come to rebel against their Maker? Once we have established that they have, there not only are no more good people, but there are no more bad things. Where there is pain, we who have been redeemed look to our faults. Those outside the camp point their fingers at God.

This explains perhaps why we tend to do better at weathering the storms. When sorrows like sea billows roll we may feel pain, but our universe isn’t turned upside down. Instead, we are at peace, for we know the promise of our God, that all things work together for God for those who love Him, who have been called according to His purpose. We know that for us, in short, that not only are there no good people, but there are no bad things. And we know that for them, even the bad things redound to the glory of our God.

The problem of evil, in short, is the problem of us. And the answer to the problem is the answer to every problem: repent and believe the Gospel. We who have done so, if we have learned anything, must have learned that we must continue to do so all the days of our lives. Martin Luther was right when he affirmed this as the first of his 95 theses: “When our Lord and Master, Jesus Christ, said ‘Repent,’ He called for the entire life of believers to be one of repentance.” We repent all our lives because repentance is life. But we do not stop there.

We are to believe. We are to believe not only that if we confess our sins that He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, but that He will indeed cleanse us from all unrighteousness (1 John 1:8–9). This is His promise. And it has the power to overcome all the evil in the world. The bottom line, then, is this. While every calamity that comes our way does indeed come from the hand of God (see Isa. 45:7), the problem of evil is our problem. And Jesus is the solution.

As we trust in Him to rescue us from the wrath to come, so we trust in Him that what we experience in the here and now isn’t wrath at all. He merely wishes our dross to remove and our gold to refine. There too we find the answer to our evil. Suffering and hardship exist for His glory. Just like sin. He will be glorified in the judgment of the wicked. As well as the cleansing of the other wicked — we who have been called according to His purpose.

Posted in apologetics, assurance, Biblical Doctrines, creation, kingdom, Kingdom Notes, RC Sproul JR, sovereignty, theology, wisdom | Tagged , , , , , , | 2 Comments

NIMBY Nonsense- Your Neighborhood Fascists

NIMBY is an older acronym, born well before the dawn of texting and the internet. It means Not In My Back Yard. It describes an attitude people take where they want this service or that, but they don’t want it close to them. Everyone loves bacon. No one wants a pig farm right next door. Everyone squeals when their property values go down because of something happening next door. No one writes his neighbor a check when their property values go up because of something happening next door.

It is true enough that no man is an island. We do not and cannot live hermetically sealed lives. If my pigs poop in the stream that is upstream from your property, that’s a problem. What NIMBY often fails to understand, however, is that my property is not your property. We can and should object all day long when someone who doesn’t own our back yard impacts our back yard. My back yard, however, doesn’t extend to your property. I have no rights over what you do on your property, nor do you have any rights over mine.

It is bad enough that the state seems to believe that every inch of ground is its back yard. The practical truth is that we don’t actually own our property. We rent it. Only our landlord calls rent “property taxes.” Fail to pay your rent and you will be evicted. The good news, you can see these thugs coming. What’s worse is when they invite the neighbors into the fray.

It’s been said that good fences make for good neighbors. Trouble is, these days you can’t get approval for the fence until the neighbors have the opportunity, at public hearings, to voice their objections. These gripe fests inevitably pit neighbor against neighbor. The “neighborhood coalition” shows up demanding democracy, that they the people get to decide what you do on your property. Remember, democracy is two wolves and one lamb deciding what is for dinner.

I confess that I would much rather look out my window at a neighbor’s rose garden than at her container box. I’d rather listen to buzzing bees than a buzzing chainsaw. But it is wrong to seek the power of the state to get my way with your land. It is a failure to love one’s neighbor when you seek to control what they do with what is theirs. Christians would be wise to learn the boundaries of our back yards. Conservatives would be wise to conserve property rights rather than their own preferences.

What is not ours is neither ours to give nor to take. Nor is it ours to control. You can read how Davy Crockett learned that lesson here. Or, check out this brief introduction to how the Bible and economics intersect here.

Posted in 10 Commandments, Biblical Doctrines, Economics in This Lesson, ethics, kingdom, Kingdom Notes, philosophy, politics, RC Sproul JR | Tagged , , , , , , | 2 Comments

NEW! Sacred Marriage, New Things; Trump’s Flaws & More

This week’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

Posted in 10 Commandments, abortion, assurance, Biblical Doctrines, covid-19, grace, Jesus Changes Everything, Lisa Sproul, Month of Sundays, politics, RC Sproul JR, Sacred Marriage | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Blessed Are Those Who Mourn: Facing Sin’s Horror

Jesus, just as His Father did before on Mount Sinai, is not, in pronouncing law in His Sermon on the Mount, laying burdens on us. He is instead instructing us in how we can lead a good life. He is telling us the pathway to blessing. Who, though, would ever think of suggesting that the way to have a good life is to mourn? Jesus would, and did.

We are a woefully woe-less people. That is, we are set on walking not the via dolorosa, the way of sorrow but the via media, the middle way, on staying steady, on avoiding looking too deeply into that which causes sorrow. This, however, will not lead us to the good life. It will instead lead us to a banal life, a useless life, a life that suffers from the unbearable lightness of being. Instead we are called to enter into mourning.

For what should we mourn? Not that our March Madness bracket has turned to rubble. Not that our name is being dragged through the mud. Not that our outgo is outpacing our income. Instead we ought to mourn over two hard truths. First, we ought to mourn over our own sin. We ought to enter into our sin, facing it squarely.

When Jesus told us that a man loves more who has been forgiven more He wasn’t giving an invitation to sin more. Instead He gave an invitation to see our sin more. We need to know our sin. We can rest assured that however far we chase it, we will never catch up. No matter how deeply we enter into our repentance, we will never hit bottom. Nor will we ever outrun His grace.

The second thing we ought to mourn over is the collective power of our sin. That is, not only am I a sinner, but I live in a planet full of sinners. Not only am I destructive to the Eden God created for us, but so is everyone else. Here is my proof that we do not mourn as we ought. Today, in strip malls and offices on tree-lined streets across this land, more than 2000 mothers and fathers will hire doctors to murder their babies. Today more than 2000 hundred babies will be intentionally burned, vacuumed or torn to pieces.

Each of us will go about our business, measuring our happiness for the day on the basis of whether we like the weather, whether our work is rewarding, whether our spouse speaks kindly to us, whether our side plays well in some twitter war, whether the traffic is light. All is not right with the world.

The end result of entering into this woe, Jesus promises, isn’t a life of misery. Instead He promises that we will be comforted. It is fair to suggest that a corollary to this promise is this- cursed are the blasé, for they shall be afflicted. Ignoring the evil, whether it be in the world, or in our own hearts, won’t make it go away. It won’t allow us to live in a fool’s paradise. Instead it drives us into a fool’s hell. Only entering into the mourning will bring us toward dancing. God forgives the contrite. God humbles the proud. Look away, and be scourged. Enter in, and be comforted.

Posted in 10 Commandments, abortion, Biblical Doctrines, grace, kingdom, Kingdom Notes, RC Sproul JR, repentance | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Continuing Study Tonight: Hosea- The Bride Wore Red

Tonight we continue our study exploring God’s book of Hosea. As always, all are welcome in our home for dinner at 6:15, and the study begins at 7:00 eastern. In addition, we will livestream on Facebook Live, RC-Lisa Sproul, and eventually post said livestream right in this cyber space. One way or the other, we hope you’ll join us, as we will feed upon the Word of God.

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How can professed believers not go or belong to a church?

Sin. The book of Hebrews commands of us both that we not neglect the gathering together of the saints (10:25) and that we remember those who rule over us in the church (13:7). If you don’t go to church, you are forsaking the gathering of the saints. If you are not a member of a church, then you are not ruled over in the church. Thus ends my defense of church attendance and membership. What though are the sins that lead so many fail in these two spots?

1. Laziness.
Though we live in an age of immeasurable conveniences that would make our forefathers green with envy, it does take some effort to get to church. While you’ll be looked down on if you dress up, you do have to get dressed. You have to drive, park, walk. It’s exhausting.

Can’t we get some rest on Sunday? Weird though, isn’t it, that getting dressed, driving, parking and walking don’t seem to wear us out the other six days of the week? If we think the hard work we do six days a week allows us to be lazy on the Lord’s Day, we have admitted what matters most to us.

2. Fear.
It may be social fear, not wanting to interact with others. It may be a fear of judgment. It may be, though I hesitate to use an overused buzzword, PTSD. Maybe someone did us wrong in church in the past. If no one has done you wrong in church in the past, however, that can only mean you haven’t been going.

Everyone in the church has been wronged in the church. Everyone in the church has wronged others in the church. We are, after all, a gathering of sinners. That we have been sinned against is never a license for us to sin. God doesn’t say, “Do not forsake the gathering together of the saints, unless the saints have in the past have done you dirty.”

3. Pride.
None of us likes being told what to do. We especially don’t like being told what to do by other people. To be under the authority of the leadership of a local church means acknowledging that we need such leadership. Just who do these church “leaders” think they are anyway? I hope they think they are precisely what Hebrews 13 says they are, those who will have to give an account for our souls.

It’s easy, and a pretty clear sign that we are likely wrong, to think we are spiritually superior to those who lead in our churches. Our church leaders are indeed terrible sinners, dragging around the stench of their old man everywhere they go. Just like us. When we think ourselves better than those who lead us, we are not only likely wrong, but demonstrate our need for biblical teaching and discipline. Which brings us to…

4. Ignorance.
Many folks haven’t learned enough about all that God requires of us to know He requires of us that we not forsake the gathering together of the saints, that we be under authority. Which is one reason why I’m trying to help, by writing this piece. All believers have a duty first to be in submission to His Word, all of it. It, in turn, reveals the duties we have to gather with the saints, in submission to our leaders.

This is the twenty-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 January 19 at 10:30 AM at our new location, at our beautiful farm at 112811 Garman Road, Spencerville, IN. Please come join us.

Posted in 10 Commandments, Apostles' Creed, Ask RC, Biblical Doctrines, church, communion, Devil's Arsenal, RC Sproul JR, repentance, wisdom | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

What if God Were One of Us? A Bible Conspiracy

It is an old temptation, to construct images of Jesus out of celluloid. Christians have fought for and against it, and will likely do so for generations to come, until the next medium seeks to supplant the Word. We have not only debated whether such images should be made, but have argued over whether such images are true to life. Long before The Chosen became a cultural phenomenon, one that many Christians cheered on, there was The Last Temptation of Christ.

This film became a financial success, albeit a minor one, precisely because of the furor of Christians over the film. When we charged the film company with producing blasphemy, the resulting hub-bub put the film on the map. We marched, we protested, and the evening news sold tickets. Hollywood has always known that controversy is on their side.

At the time of the movie’s release, however, the studio put up an actual defense of their film. The film suggested that Jesus, at some point in His ministry, among other hardships, struggled with the sin of lust. The defense of this was rather clear, and expected. The producer, Martin Scorsese, affirmed that while he believed in the divinity of Christ, he simply wanted the film to affirm with that His humanity. He actually claimed he was honoring Jesus in making the film.

The doctrine of the incarnation, from the beginning, has suffered from the weakness of the pendulum. The great christological creeds came to pass because one side or the other was missing the other side of the coin. The trouble was never the affirmation of the deity of Christ, but the denial of the humanity. Or, from the other direction, the trouble wasn’t the affirmation of the humanity of Christ, but the denial of the deity. In our age, with the secular world all-too-willing to deny that Jesus could be God, sometimes we fall into the trap of denying His humanity.

Like The Last Temptation, much of the uproar over The Da Vinci Code centers not around the sundry plot twists, but the suggestion that Jesus married and had children. While the Bible teaches no such thing, as such, our reaction may have more in common with Islam than with Christianity. Islam refuses to embrace the doctrine of the Trinity because they believe it beneath God’s dignity that He should have a son. And we think Jesus marrying and having children somehow besmirches His purity. In a strange sort of irony, a novel steeped in gnostic notions and ancient Gnostic texts has brought to the surface the gnostic notions that still lurk in our own hearts.

The truth of the matter is that Jesus did take a bride. Better still, Jesus and His bride have begotten children. And I might as well admit— I am one of those children. So are my father and my mother. My sister and her husband are from the same line, as are their children. My wife too is a part of this family. I know it’s shocking, but it’s true. And this is the good news. You are one of us too.

Well, truth be told, the shocking thing is that it is not so shocking. We have grown accustomed to His grace. We are appalled by the notion of a few powerful men and women who are descended from Jesus’ line, who strive to rule over all the world. But that is not only what we are, but what we are called to do. Jesus, the second Adam, took as His bride, the second Eve, the church. Husband and wife have, ever since, been busy being fruitful and multiplying. They are, together, in fulfillment of the dominion mandate, filling the earth and subduing it. They are bringing all things into subjection for the glory of the Father.

The conspiracy is that we didn’t even know we were part of a conspiracy. We have forgotten that our endgame is total world domination. Indeed, we have been promised that we not only will judge the world, but the angels themselves.

The problem, then, isn’t that Christians have sullied themselves by reading Dan Brown’s silly fiction. The trouble isn’t Christians have been tempted to believe it. The problem is we haven’t believed God’s outrageous facts, given to us in His Word. We haven’t believed the good news, that our heavenly Father loves us so much that He allows us to be called His children. He has seated us in the heavenly places with Christ Jesus. We won’t believe that God took on flesh and dwelt among us, precisely so that He could win a bride. That He might be given a kingdom. Our problem is that we have missed that in Him we too are more than conquerors.

I haven’t read The Da Vinci Code. I don’t intend to. I wouldn’t encourage anyone to do so. Instead, what I need is the courage to read the Bible as it is written. We will seek first the kingdom of God only when we realize that His kingdom has come. That His kingdom is forever. That we reign with Him, kings and queens now and forever. May our Husband be pleased to purify us such that we believe in the prodigality of His love, and the fullness of His promises.

Posted in Biblical Doctrines, Biblical theology, church, creation, eschatology, kingdom, Kingdom Notes, RC Sproul JR, sovereignty | Tagged , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Our First Hosea Study- The Bride Wore Red

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Order Hunger: Understanding The Rise of Christian Fascism

We all, to our shame, are prone to embracing ideas and behaviors on the basis of what we’ve been through. Trouble is, we usually don’t know we’re doing it. Our experience neither proves nor disproves, makes wise or foolish whatever idea/behavior we’ve come to embrace. It can, however, in the absence of a carefully reasoned argument, suggest a reason why. The stern mistress who heads the Womyn’s Studies department at the local university didn’t start worshipping Osiris because she’d done the apologetic spadework and was compelled to believe.

I have, for the past year or so, tried to understand the rise of Christian fascism. I’ve seen more and more ninja groypers on the interwebs. These angry young men insist, usually anonymously, that my failure too long for a new Franco is gay, ghey and not at all based. I cannot believe these gents opened their Bibles, applied their Logos tools and came away thinking God wants fascism.

So where does this silliness come from? Bots designed to discredit actual Christians and conservatives? Trolls and engagement farmers laughing their way to the bank? Could it be the loons have always been there but are now equipped with anonymity? The truth is I don’t pretend to know. It baffles me.

My best guess, and such is all it is, a guess, is that it’s all reactionary. After living in a nutty world where meritocracy has been washed away in a tsunami of identity politics, after decades of being painted as the Great Satan on account of being white males, they just couldn’t stand it. They’re mad as hell and aren’t going to take it any more.

It was not, however, a world governed by post-war consensus, or natural law theory that once gave us an ideology of freedom, and then found its center could not hold. No, the notions that economic transactions should be engaged in freely, that all men are equal in dignity and value, these are biblical notions. It is not believing these notions that has led us to the collapse of western civilization, but the failure to hold on to these notions that have brought us here.

As is usually the case, the problem with reactionaries isn’t that they react, but that they react against the wrong thing. They react in a wrong way. And more often than not, their reactions grow out of the very seed of what they are reacting against. Thus we have the Woke Right insisting they are the King of the Valley, the bottom rung of victim status, who will rise from the ashes like the Third Reich.

These young men insist that aging boomers like me need to learn what time it is. I concur. We all need to learn what time it is. The answer, however, is found in the mirror, not the headlines. Now is the time to submit ourselves to the Lordship of Christ. It’s always time to manifest His reign, to love justice, do mercy, walk humbly with our God. Our calling now is to love our neighbor as ourselves. He commands we live in peace and quietness with all men, as much as it depends on us.

Posted in "race", 10 Commandments, Devil's Arsenal, ethics, kingdom, Kingdom Notes, persecution, politics, post-modernism, RC Sproul JR | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Encore Podcast- Elisha and the Bears; Shannon Sproul, Hero

This week’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

Posted in apologetics, Ask RC, beauty, Biblical Doctrines, church, communion, grace, Heroes, Jesus Changes Everything, RC Sproul, RC Sproul JR, resurrection, wonder, worship | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments