The Care and Feeding of Shepherds: A How To Guide

I have not one, but multiple machines in my house that I love. It’s the kind of machine that makes me give thanks for the days we live in. Little more than a century ago even kings and titans of industry had no such machine. These machines serve a dual purpose. They give a kind of invigorating massage, perfect for waking me up in the wee hours or soothing sore muscles after cutting the grass. They also do an excellent job of cleaning me, washing away the sweat and stink.

These machines are so cheap to operate I can pay those costs each month with the change I find in the couch. Yet if I had to go a week without these amazing machines, not only would I be miserable, but the whole family would. Chances are exceedingly high, by the way, that you have at least one of these machines as well. We call ours, “the shower.”

What does a shower have to do with caring for pastors? Both are astonishing gifts from the hand of God that we take for granted. The difference is this. If you shower your shower with gratitude and praise, it will do quite a bit for you and absolutely nothing for it. If you shower your pastor with gratitude and praise it will bless you and him. Do we even acknowledge that, whatever beefs we might have with him, our pastor is a gift from Jesus?

And He Himself gave some to be apostles, some prophets, some evangelists, and some pastors and teachers, for the equipping of the saints for the work of ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ, (Ephesians 4:11, 12).

Like all of His good gifts, however, we grow weary in our gratitude. Whether it’s our shower, our new car, our pastor or our new job, we start out excited and surprised, move swiftly to not noticing at all and then soon into grumbling and complaining. The children of Israel complained bitterly in their slavery. They went out of Egypt heavy laden with gold and silver and jewels, praising God, having witnessed His great power to deliver. Soon they are pining away for the good old days back in Egypt, and then bitter that God had brought them out to die. Do you know why they were like that? Because we are like that. It’s sinful ingratitude and it’s got us all in its grip.

So what do we do? We give thanks. We remember not only to pray prayers of supplication on behalf of our pastors, but prayers of thanksgiving. Then we let him know. Remind him of the ways he has blessed you in the past. Let him know how he continues to bless you. Let him know you are confident he will continue to bless you. And one more thing. If you are a part of budgetary considerations in the church, stretch a bit to bless him and his family. Wait. Are you worried it might go to his head? Worried that such might turn him into a man-pleaser? That this might make him motivated by filthy lucre? Better to keep your praise and his pay to a minimum lest he lose his humility?

Recognizing that there are important distinctions between a job and a calling to gospel ministry, but also recognizing that men fill both roles, imagine how you would feel if your boss came to you and said, “We think you’ve done well, but don’t want to talk to you too much about it, you know, to help you fight against pride. And no, no raise this year. We wouldn’t want our customers to think you’re motivated by money. But hey, great talk.” Imagine if your customers said to you, “Your product is just what we need. But we don’t want to write up a good review, you know, so you won’t rest on your laurels. And, to help be sure you’re not motivated by money, we’re going to pay 10 percent less next time.”

Your pastor is a man. And it is exceedingly likely that he is daily assaulted by discouragement at a level you can only imagine. It’s a good thing to pray he not grow weary. It’s also wise to give him genuine and honest encouragement. Honor the gift, and you honor the Giver.

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Tonight’s Study: Dispensationalism & Covenant Theology

We continue exploring issues dividing the church. Tonight we consider New Age and Psychology. All are welcome at 6:15 for dinner, and for the study at 7:00. We live-stream on Facebook Live, RC-Lisa Sproul. We hope you’ll join us.

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How can the church grow closer? Chewing on Community

Community and the Christian have something of a love-hate relationship. Most of us long to be part of a vibrant, immersive, community of love built around Jesus and the gospel. We also, however, want to be left alone. We don’t want to be bothered with the needs of others, nor do we want our failures to be known. Believers want relationship, and to save face. We want vulnerability and invulnerability. Christians complain about loneliness then commit ourselves to a church where we are unknown. We have a hunger that needs to be satisfied inexorably tied to a fear that needs to be exorcised.

Casting Out Fear

Which means we need to get over it. Once we acknowledge the reality of our fears, and look them in the eye, equipped with the gospel, we can move past them. After that, well, that’s when it gets complicated. Whether you embrace an understanding of the Bible that drives a wedge between the Old and New Testaments or affirm the organic unity of the whole, one tool that God has given us to bring us together as a people is… now don’t freak out on me, remember we truly have nothing to fear in Christ… shared meals.

Old Covenant Meals

In the Old Covenant, the great bulk of the ceremonial law is devoted to two things- the sacrificial system and God’s mandated holy days. What do they have in common? Shared meals. Sacrifices did not end with the death of the animal. They did not end with the burning of the animal on the altar. They ended with the priest sitting down with the family to eat. The holy days were called neither holy days nor holidays. Rather they were called feasts. God’s people were commanded to come together to feast several times each year.

New Covenant Meals

In the New Covenant Jesus gave us as a sacred memorial of His death for us, a meal. Nothing complex or elaborate. Bread, and wine. He called us to eat together. Consider as well how many of the parables of Jesus had to do with feasting, and those who would refuse to come. Even the climax of human history is, ironically, not merely the glorious wedding of the Groom and His bride, the church. No, it is the wedding FEAST that we look forward to, that we receive a foretaste of at the Lord’s Table.

Finally, in the New Covenant, the sign of being cut off from the community was to be excommunicated, to be removed from that table. Remember as well that a man not given to hospitality is not a man who should be an elder.

Shared Meals, Shared Lives

Do you think maybe there might be something powerful, important, fruitful, unifying, edifying about sharing a meal together? Do you think we’ve lost much in first relegating the Lord’s Supper to a few times a year, and growing churches beyond our capacity to know each other?

We don’t need another program, another para-church ministry with a mission to create community. We need to invite people into our homes and to our tables and to joyfully accept such invitations from others. Shared lives mean sharing the stuff of live, the meals He sets before us. Now if you’ll excuse me, I have a lunch with a new brother to get to. Community, friends, isn’t something you find. It’s something you build, and invite others to.

This is the forty-fifth 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 May 18 at 10:30 AM at our new location, our beautiful farm at 11281 Garman Road, Spencerville, IN. Please come join us. Also note that tonight we conclude our Bible study on issues dividing the church, tonight considering dispensationalism and covenant theology.

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Our Greatest Weapon: War Through Repentance

It was a wise man who first noted that there is nothing new under the sun. Sadly, Solomon seemed to sigh his way through this observation, wistfully longing for something new. We, if we were wise, would rejoice in this truth. That there is nothing new under the sun is a critically important principle of sound biblical interpretation.

Evangelical modernists here struggle with competing allegiances. As evangelicals we believe that the Bible is the Word of God. We reject the liberal view that suggests that the Bible is man’s word about God. We reject the neo-liberal view that affirms that the Bible contains, somewhere in there, the Word of God. No, we affirm it is all the Word of God and therefore all true in all that it teaches. That’s all good.

As modernists, however, we think we live in completely different from the world into which God spoke His Word. God spoke truth, but He spoke it to a primitive people who lacked our sophistication, our understanding, our wisdom.

When we come, then, to the words of the prophets, we experience a profound disconnect. We think that because we don’t worship in the temple, with the blood of goats and bulls, that we have escaped the problem of idolatry. We believe that because we feel poor rather than rich, that we have escaped the problem of greed. We conclude that because we lift our arms and sway along with the praise band that we have escaped the problem of hearts far from God. These problems, the ones addressed by the prophets, are not for us.

This approach is, of course, far older than the modern era. It has been taught to us from the beginning by the anti-prophet, the Serpent. When he approached Eve in the garden his goal was simple enough — he wanted to be certain that Eve would not believe the word from God. There is nothing new under the sun. And so still the Serpent seeks to seduce the church, the second Eve, the bride of the second Adam, not to believe the Word of God.

If he can persuade us that the Bible, however true it might be, does not speak to us, we are left trying to figure out what to do on our own. We lean on our own understanding. If our circumstances are so different from their circumstances, then while God may have been speaking to our spiritual fathers, He isn’t speaking to us.

It may well be that the reason there is nothing new under the sun is simply this: that in whatever era, in whatever circumstance, we will find sinful people. In order to understand how the ancient prophets apply to us, all we need to do is realize our part in the story — we’re the sinners. When the prophet begins to speak and you find yourself wondering how it is relevant to you, remember that simple principle — we are the sinners.

Having discovered our role in the story, what are we called to do? John the Baptist, the last and greatest of the old covenant prophets proclaimed the good news that the kingdom of God was at hand. In our circumstance the kingdom of God has come. That shift, however, does not change our calling. Our response to the coming of the kingdom is fitting. Because we are the sinners, we do what sinners are called to do, we repent.

If we read the prophets we get a glimpse of the scope of the kingdom of God. The prophets warned against false worship, thundered against political abuses. They chastened God’s people for their worldliness. In like manner we must recognize the scope of God’s kingdom. The kingdom of God includes political and economic issues. It encompasses our labors and the arts. The kingdom of God is profoundly concerned that we think rightly about every issue. It is that place where Jesus reigns, especially where that reign is recognized and honored.

To be outward-looking citizens and soldiers of God’s kingdom, to be about the business of making known the glory of the reign of Christ, we begin by repenting. Before we strategize how to take back Washington, before we plan how to scale the ivy walls of Ivy League universities, before we seize the engines of entertainment in Hollywood, we have something far more important to do. Something far more powerful, far more world-changing to do. We must heed the call of the prophets, get on our knees and cry out to He who reigns over all things, “God, be merciful to me, a sinner!” (Luke 18:13).

God’s people were sinners then, and now. The joy in the unchanging nature of reality is this: then and now, those who confess their sins, He is faithful and just to forgive their sins. These same He promises to cleanse of all their unrighteousness. This is how the kingdom comes. God calls us to repent. God blesses us with repentance. God forgives our sins. God gives us life abundant. God equips us to be His prophets, to call the world to repent. He moves from faith to faith, victory to victory, until all His enemies are made a footstool.

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Come and Go With Me: Finding Grace in the Gutter

Dwarves, as a rule, are a rather recalcitrant lot. It was their stubborn refusal to follow directions that caused some of them to suffer the indignity of being turned into dufflepuds, in C.S. Lewis’ The Voyage of the Dawn Treader. No doubt some distant cousins of the duffers were found in the stable at the end of the chronicles, in The Last Battle. You remember what happens there. History has drawn to a close. Aslan, the great king, and son of the Emperor Beyond the Sea has consummated all things.

Through the fuzzy and disheartening ecumenism of Lewis, we find living in paradise not only a servant of the false god Tash, but some mule-headed dwarves who, to the end of the age, refused to be taken in by any religious hornswaggle, including faith in Aslan. The Tash-ite, once Aslan explains Lewis’ ecumenism, goes on his merry way up into the high lands. The dwarves, on the other hand, insist that time has not ended, that they are in fact still locked in an old stable. When the redeemed seek to awaken them by offering them food from Aslan’s table, they insist that they have been offered dung from the stable floor.

While I deny with great vigor that the lost in hell suffer only because they don’t know they are in heaven, there is a lesson to be learned here. Lewis makes the same point in The Weight of Glory when he says, “When infinite joy is offered us, [we are] like an ignorant child who wants to go on making mud pies in the slums because he cannot imagine what is meant by the offer of a holiday at the sea. We are far too easily pleased.” Which is exactly how we like it.

Lewis, however, I think, missed something here. I don’t think he was quite nice enough to us. Isn’t it possible that the reason we have such a hard time believing that the King’s banquet is indeed a feast is because we are already feasting in the gutter with our mud pies? That is, the reason we are satisfied with so little is not because we are all pig-headed philistines, but because even a tidbit of the grace of God overpowers us. There is a beauty and a power in His grace, in whatever form it takes. Like Lucy’s bottle of healing cordial, it only takes a drop.

The grace and the beauty of God is omnipresent, and so we find it hard to take our eyes off the beauty of this thing which reflects His glory to look through a glass that is somewhat less dim.

But Lewis is right in this; there really is a banquet, and it really is far more grand than the mud pies. Let’s follow a few different versions of the invitation/encounter in the gutter, and see what we shall see. Here am I, a servant of the king. I have been sent out into the highways and byways to be sure that my Master’s feast is full. I find you in the gutter with your mud pie. Each of us has an opportunity to sin here, and each an opportunity to do the right thing.

Suppose, for instance, that I look at you, see your filthy little fingers, see the moronic delight you are taking in the mud and conclude, “Forget it. He’s happy where he is. Leave him be. Anyone that foolish just can’t be worth the trouble.” Have I been nice? I could walk away with a smile, and you could watch me walk away thinking, “What a nice, smiley man. I wonder why he was looking at me,” and then get back to your mud. That’s one option in which I sin, and you don’t.

Now let’s try another. I’ve come to fetch you. I see you in the mud, and I say, “Hey you blamed fool! What’s the matter with you? Haven’t you any more sense than a pig? The Master, I’ll never understand why, has sent me for you. Now get out of that muck, and get a move on. That stuff is nasty. Let’s go.”

On the one hand, in this scenario I was nicer to you in a sense. I didn’t leave you where I found you. I told you about the good news of the great feast. On the other hand, I wasn’t as nice as I should have been. I didn’t exhibit much of the Master’s grace. In fact I showed a degree of pride, forgetting that I only became the servant of the Master because He used His grace and power to get me to see that I was in the gutter.

Stick with the second scenario for a moment. Now let’s look at how you could respond. You could conclude that if the servant is anything like the master, you just can’t believe that His feast would be better than your mud pie. While such a response would be understandable, it would also cause you to miss the feast. The hard truth is that the Master doesn’t perfect us before He calls us to send out the word about the feast. Knowing full well that we will probably stink up the joint serving as His ambassadors. The Master, after all, isn’t a tame lion.

Consider though this third scenario. You are still there in the gutter. I approach you and say, “The King has invited you to come to His feast. You will find there delights and joys far surpassing what you have here in your gutter-“ “See here,” you say, “who invited you to come here and begin knocking what I have going on? You certainly are an arrogant cuss, aren’t you? It’s not terribly nice of you to come along bragging about how your feast is better than mine.”

“I’m sorry,” I suggest, “did I say the feast was mine? How clumsy of me. No, it is the King’s feast. He is the source of all its delights. (And, by the way, He is even the source of that pie you have there.) I add nothing to the feast. But it is indeed far greater than what you have here. I know because I once also played with mud pies in the gutter.”

“Go away you mean-spirited, arrogant old coot. God gave me these mud pies, and you should be ashamed of yourself for knocking them.”

Now who is in sin?

We do have some not so nice faces that are, in some circumstances, appropriate to wear. For in our meeting-in-the-gutter scenarios, we often find a third group there, the sons of Sanballat. You remember this sweet fellow. He shows up at Nehemiah’s building project and asks, “What are these feeble Jews doing? Will they fortify themselves? Will they offer sacrifices? Will they complete it in a day? Will they revive the stones from the heaps of rubbish—stones that are burned?” (Nehemiah 4:2).

The true enemy is not the one in the gutter, but the one who insists that there is no feast, the one who calls any invitation to the feast an act of unkindness. These are they who not only deny the feast, but argue that we’re trying to coax you into a prison, that we’re trying to make the gutter dwellers give up their mud pies, and give them only drudgery in return. This group gets from us not the smiley face, but the prophetic voice.

We ought to appreciate the mud pies, to see in them the grace of God, reflections of His glory. But we mustn’t be too easily satisfied. We seek to distinguish, and never to confuse the gift and the Giver, the creation and the Creator. We should remember the wisdom of John Piper who tells us that “God is most glorified in us when we are most satisfied in Him.”

We ought also to remember the wisdom of Tony Campolo, who rightly reminds us that the kingdom of God is a party. We are both building and reveling in that kingdom when we come to that feast because we are making manifest, and drinking in the glory of God. This is blessing and not burden.

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Issues Dividing the Church: Psychology/New Age

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Job’s Wife; Off Anon, G3; Land of Goshen! and more…

This week’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

Posted in 10 Commandments, Bible Study, Biblical Doctrines, Biblical theology, church, cyberspace, Devil's Arsenal, ethics, In the Beginning, Jesus Changes Everything, Lisa Sproul, Month of Sundays, music, RC Sproul JR, Sacred Marriage, scandal, wisdom, worship | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Sunday Sermon, Sovereign Grace Fellowship: Conquering Kings

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Three Economic Truisms that Just Aren’t So

A little knowledge may be dangerous, but not nearly so dangerous as a great deal of ignorance. Too often, when it comes to economics, we carry around just enough foolishness to make ourselves dangerous, believing “truths” that have no truth to them. Here are just a few:

War- What is it good for?

1. War is good for the economy. The principle invoked here (and it works just as well with looting or natural disasters) goes like this- when things are broken that creates demand for new things. Demand for new things stimulates the economy. That’s a good thing. There is a long list of things wrong with this reasoning, and it is simply and thoroughly debunked in one of the greatest economics books ever, Economics in One Lesson by Henry Hazlitt.

Here’s my shorter version- wealth is stuff. Destroying stuff reduces wealth. Demand, in addition, is infinite. There is no need whatever to stimulate demand. It is constant, and as immeasurable as the sands in the sea. The problem is meeting demand, scarcity, not plenty. Breaking stuff that meets the demand makes us poorer, not richer.

Tax Man

2. Taxes on businesses are simply passed on to the consumer. Some argue that this means taxes on business are good things because they don’t hurt the businesses. Some argue that this means taxes on business are bad things because they don’t hurt the businesses. And they’re both wrong. Taxes on businesses hurt businesses, and those they do business with. Businesses cannot simply pass on the added cost of taxes for the simple reason that prices are determined by supply and demand, not by the cost of going to market.

Suppose the car companies sell cars in the US for an average of $20,000. At that price there is neither a large unsold surplus, nor a great scarcity. Now comes Washington DC with a $10,000 car tax. Now do all cars sell for $30,000? No, because there isn’t the same demand for cars at $30,000 as there is at $20,000. If, however, the car manufacturers keep their prices at $20,000 then a. they haven’t passed along the tax to the consumer and b. they are selling cars at a loss and will go out of business, reducing the supply of cars and creating scarcity.

It’s What I Want

3. Businesses charge whatever they want, and make obscene profits. Remember all the grumbling when gas was $4.00 a gallon? How everyone insisted that those greedy oil companies ruthlessly jack up their prices, just because they can? Where are all those armchair economists now, and how would they explain the drop in the price of gasoline? Businesses do not set prices. Markets do.

Every free trade requires two parties to come to agreement. Which means in turn, by the way, that in every transaction both parties are buyers and sellers. When you go to your boss and tell him, “I will not work here for $5 an hour” you are seller, and your employer the buyer. When you go to the mall and refuse to buy the $100 tennis shoes you are the buyer, refusing to do business with the shoe store.

Which means first there is no reason to call the cops. That is, when we go to the state and demand that they force Company X to sell product Y for less than a certain amount, or that they force Company X to pay employee Z more than a certain amount we are, in point of fact, trying to rob our neighbor. We’re the bully.

This also means, second, that there is no reason to get bent out of shape when an agreement on a trade can’t be reached. I don’t think to denounce lobstermen as greedy and evil because I don’t want to buy their product at $20 a pound. I just don’t buy lobster. I don’t curse Hollywood for $12.00 movie tickets. I just don’t go to the movies. And I don’t curse the selfish, greedy people of the world who won’t allow me to make a living wage as a writer. I just try harder.

Economics isn’t rocket science. Our confusion is born more of our selfishness than our innate ignorance. It reveals the darkness of our hearts. Perhaps we’d do better were our minds just a bit more clear. Trading where and when and how we’d like, that’s not just freedom, but being a good neighbor.

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Tonight: Issues Dividing the Church- New Age and Psychology

Tonight’s Study: Dispensationalism & Covenant Theology

We conclude our series exploring issues dividing the church. Tonight- dispensationalism and covenant theology. All are welcome at 6:15 for dinner, and for the study at 7:00. We live-stream on FB Live, RC-Lisa Sproul. Join us.

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