Mostly Modern: A Worldview on Our Worldviews

Does a fish know it’s wet? When one is born in water, goes to school in water, marries in water and raises little fish in water before dying in water, despite its ever presence, the water just isn’t noticed. So it is with each of us. We come into a world that is the only world we’ve ever known. How we know it, its meaning and its message, is shaped by it. And it’s so hard to miss.

Since the work of Abraham Kuyper, and more recently Francis Schaeffer, the evangelical church has grown conscious of the importance of developing a Christian worldview. That’s a good thing, one I’m in favor of. It’s one of the reasons I wrote Tearing Down Strongholds. The devil understands the strategic importance of our little gray cells, and so invades our brains, intent on helping us think his thoughts after him. We must be conscious of the war, prepare for the war, and fight the war. But we must also beware the sleeper cells in our gray cells.

Consider this truth. Where does the Bible command us to develop a sound Christian worldview? It doesn’t. It commands us to seek after wisdom. It demands we not be conformed to this world but that we renew our minds. It insists that we tear down strongholds. All of which have overlap with developing a sound Christian worldview. But “developing a sound Christian worldview” also has overlap with modernism. It, in comparison to the Biblical command to pursue wisdom, is decidedly abstract, impersonal, even amoral. Just like modernism. It implicitly affirms that we are machines, and that ideologies are programs embedded on our hard drives.

Wisdom, on the other hand, is presented in our Bibles as a beautiful woman who is to be pursued. Her value is greater than gold. She is the paragon of virtue, a guider of earnest souls. Foolishness, in contrast, isn’t merely erroneous conclusions but a seductress and a killer of the simple. She isn’t passive (mis)information but aggressive assaults.

When we think that what is wrong with the world is bad information rather than wicked hearts we demonstrate that we have already given room to the world in our minds, and in our hearts. When we think that what is wrong with the church is bad information rather than wicked hearts we prove the point once again. When we think that what ails us will be cured by more and better education, we have adopted the sacrament of the moderns.

When we think the way to prepare our children for a good life is securing them credentials from the poshest educational institutions we have handed them over to the priests of the false religion of modernism. When we think the most powerful weapon to tear down the stronghold of postmodernism is a double dose of modernism we show ourselves to be all wet.

The real solution is the same as it ever was- to repent and believe the gospel. And to call on all others to do the same.

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New Study Begins Tonight- The Greatest Commandment

Tonight we begin a new study, exploring the greatest commandment. We will unpack both the command to love the Lord our God with all that we are and our neighbor as ourselves. 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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Where do we draw the line on Christian essentials?

“In essentials, unity. In doubtful matters, liberty. In all things, charity.”

This quote purports to tell us exactly where to draw these lines. And it does so rather well. What this famous quote doesn’t do is tell us which matters are essential, and which matters are doubtful. Nor does it tell us exactly what charity looks like. Perhaps most important, the quote does not define for us what liberty looks like.

We start with the ancient creeds of the church. One advantage of these ancient creeds is they were written, in large part, to answer, what are the essentials? They provide not my list of essentials, not your list, and not the other guy’s list. Instead they provide the list of the church through the ages. I am committed to the Reformed faith, a Calvinist to the core. I believe husbands are the heads of their homes. But, to join Sovereign Grace Fellowship you need only confess two truths. First, you must affirm your belief in the Apostles’ Creed. Second, you must affirm your dependence upon the finished work of Christ alone.

Here, on this second affirmation, Luther gave us much wisdom. He affirmed this is the article on which the church stands or falls. (I would affirm that the Protestant understanding of how we have peace with God is actually present in the creeds. It’s just not very clear. That is why Rome and Eastern Orthodoxy can “affirm” these creeds, even though they adhere to a false gospel.) We are unified along those essentials, and those alone.

This means, by the way, that we are not in union not only with Rome, but hard-core “Protestants” who, for instance, deny the resurrection of the body, or the future return of Christ. Full preterists, who believe there is no future prophecy yet to be fulfilled, deny the creed, and so we have no unity with them. This means that Oneness Pentecostals who could have a clear view of justification by faith alone, are not one with us because they deny the Trinity.

On the other hand, this also means that Baptists, dispensationalists, Lutherans, and any other evangelical body are in union with us, despite our disagreements over this issue or that. This is where both charity and liberty come in. While we disagree with our brothers on this issue and that, we disagree as brothers. We do not seek to bind the conscience on these matters, though we always seek to inform the conscience, even as they, in charity, seek to inform ours.

Charity also applies this way- it can help keep us from playing Six Degrees of Condemnation. That is to say, for instance, that while I am appalled that Dr. John Stott saw fit to suggest that the unredeemed do not suffer for eternity, that doesn’t mean I should judge with equal fervor someone else who believes in hell, but isn’t as unhappy with Dr. Stott as I am. In like manner, though I was rather seriously non-plussed and disappointed at several of the men who signed Evangelicals and Catholics Together more than thirty years ago, it is not my solemn duty to condemn loudly and publicly those who weren’t as troubled as I was.

The Bible gives us some interesting wisdom on these matters. Read through the New Testament epistles and you will see both patience with error within the church, and strong condemnation of certain errors that were plaguing the church. From these we seek to draw out principles such as those that inform this famous quote, and from these we in turn seek to fill in what we mean by essentials, and by doubtful matters.

This is the thirty-second 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 February 23 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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Holding the Center: Tyranny, Liberty and Covenant

We are a litigious people. We not only like to sue one another, we like to avoid being sued, and having to sue. That is, we hire lawyers not only to write up contracts, but to help enforce contracts. Handshakes and verbal agreements have gone the way of the nickel cup of coffee. (And be careful with that coffee now. It just might be hot, and you wouldn’t want anyone to sue.) As a culture we can barely even agree to disagree.

On the other hand, we are likewise a licentious people. We want our pleasures, and we want them now, and nothing, we seem to believe, ought to stand in our way. We have our rights, and by rights, we will have them. Contracts, the saying goes, are made to be broken.

It is a strange marriage in a given culture. The great English novelist, Anthony Burgess, in his great work, A Clockwork Orange, speculated that cultures are doomed to alternate between two extremes of the pendulum. Sometimes a culture embraces a Pelagian view of man, what Burgess called the “Pel phase.” Here man is seen as basically good, and all restraints are inherently bad. This romantic notion, however, soon loses its romance, as sinful men without restraint begin to, well, sin.

Their sin grows bolder and bolder until the culture reacts, and enters into the “Aug phase,” named for Augustine. Here man is looked at as fundamentally sinful, and restraints are all the rage. The state, in seeking to restrain sin, soon enters into sin, becoming ever more oppressive itself. Soon enough the people tire of a heavy handed state, and the pendulum swings back the other way.

His analysis, a case could be made, reflects similar thinking on the issue of the Trinity. Some cultures tend more toward the one, and exhibit a uniformitarianism, often manifested as totalitarianism. Other cultures tend toward the three, (or the many) and, as William Butler Yeats put it, the center cannot hold. Culture simply disintegrates in a fog of variety. The solution here is, of course, the Trinity, where the one and the many come together in peace. But what of the shift from a permissive culture to a repressive one and back again? The answer here is covenant.

Just as the Trinity brings together the one and the many, so covenant binds together (or marries, if you will) the legal and the familial. Covenant does not merely reduce down to contract, for such misses the inherent grace therein. God did not create Adam and Eve as tabulae rasae (blank slates), placing them in a neutral realm and then waiting to see which way they would go. Instead, He blessed them with life and a garden. He put them in a paradise they did not earn, and He walked with them in the cool of the evening.

This relationship, however, wasn’t some sort of anything-goes, if-it-feels-good-it-must-be-good relationship. Yes, God loved them. Yes, He blessed them. But He established that love and the boundaries by which it might be protected by making covenant. It is in this context, in the context of a loving father in relationship with His children, that God first establishes covenant with man.

Covenants, rightly understood, then, are not merely contracts, the legal forms of legal relationships. Neither are they formless sentimental feelings that bring people together as long as those feelings last. Instead, they are both. In covenant we have real obligation. Real promises are made, and real sanctions handed down when those promises are broken. But underlying all of that is grace, love, and relationship.

This is why Paul speaks of our heavenly Father this way, “It was to show His righteousness at the present time, so that He might be just and the justifier of the one who has faith in Jesus” (Rom. 3:26). God did not wink at our sin because He loved us. Instead, because He loved us, He punished our sin in His Son on the cross. He wanted to justify us because He loves us. He did it justly by punishing His only begotten Son.

Grasping covenant is not only necessary for understanding the Word of God, but it is our only hope, culturally speaking, to escape the pendulum of which Burgess wrote. It was in fact our understanding of covenant that birthed the freest nation the world has ever known. It is no accident that the British, during the time of the Revolutionary War, referred to it as “the Presbyterian war.” We are a nation founded on the principle of covenant, beginning even before the Revolution with the Mayflower Compact.

A nation built upon covenant recognizes the sinfulness of man. It seeks not only to restrain the sinful impulses of the individual but to restrain the sinfulness of men who wield state. As Lord Acton observed: “Power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.” To restrain the state we need checks and balances. We need covenant keepers in office. We will have these things only when we in the church learn to keep covenant among ourselves. We’ll have faithful politicians when we are faithful to our Shepherd. The nation will be free when God’s people are once again subject to their High King, and when God’s people rejoice in their Great Husband, even Jesus our Lord.

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Our Concluding Hosea Study; The Bride Wore Red

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What’s the best decision you made in the last ten years?

Responding to a message. No doubt about it. A person I had never met came to me online for counsel during a difficult time. I offered what counsel I could over the course of a few years. Then I brought scandal crashing down around me. That scandal prompted me to take a hiatus from all communication, private or public, on the internet. I explained to the person I had given counsel to that I would no longer respond. I was going radio silent, and I was sorry.

Over the course of the next months this person continued to send messages, updating me on everything from legal proceedings to the weather. I did not respond. I did, however, slowly creep back on to the inter-webs, ending my exile. Still, I did not respond. Then, this person sent me a message reading, “RC, have I done something to offend you, that you don’t reply to my messages?” And there I found myself at a crossroads.

If I don’t respond this person might carry an unnecessary burden, perhaps even some unwarranted guilt. If, on the other hand, I did reply, well, then she might come to know how much her messages had meant to me. I might begin to open up. I might end up risking actually getting to know her, and be known by her. Terror. Yet, I responded. And I began to open up. Still only typing, never talking, trying to keep what defenses I had in place, I responded. By His grace, and to His glory and for my good, I responded.

It was a difficult decision. What makes it the best decision, however, wasn’t that I chose rightly while tempted to choose wrongly. What makes it the best decision is the fruit that was born out of that decision. That person to whom I responded is now my wife, my best friend, my strength, my deepest blessing, my joy, my comfort, my one safe place, my partner, the love of my life, my soul-mate. She was used of God to lift me out of the grave I had dug for myself. She is used of God to inspire me.

Everything changed that day, all those years ago. We’ve faced plenty of hardships, and losses but we have faced them together. We have shared laughter and joy. And we look forward with confidence in the abiding grace of God.

I shudder to think where I would be, or even if I would be, had I chosen differently that day. I know this- I’d be without my beloved bride. Coming to saving faith creates the greatest eternal swing imaginable, moving from eternal torment to eternal bless. Short of that, no decision in the last ten years, or the last fifty-nine years has been a deeper blessing and created a greater change than this one. I, by His grace, answered. I, by His grace, opened up. And she, as His grace, has welcomed me, embraced me, loved me. I cherish her.

Posted in 10 Commandments, beauty, cyberspace, friends, grace, kingdom, Kingdom Notes, Lisa Sproul, Nostalgia, RC Sproul JR | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Sacred Marriage; Cultural Sea Change & The Church; Convicted

This week’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Meek and Mild? Smoldering Wicks and Cracking Whips

Jesus, like love, is something everyone wants to lay claim to. There is no organized coalition banded together by a hatred of love. So too there are precious few people who are willing to lay a charge at Jesus’ feet. In both cases we simply change the meaning of the term, into something we’re in favor of. Like Joshua outside the walls of Jericho, we want to get Jesus on our side. This is why Marxists have created their own Jesus. This is why theological liberals have their own Jesus. We come to the Bible wearing our own glasses, and Jesus comes out looking just like us.

We Reformed are well practiced at this art. Only we create a Jesus who is as cranky as we are. When our gentler, evangelical brothers chide us for our bitter sarcasm, we quickly point out some of Jesus’ most choice words for His enemies. “White washed tombs,” “Sons of the Devil” being just a few. When the happy, ecumenical feel-good neo-evangelicals fuss at us for fussing at them for being happy, ecumenical feel-good neo-evangelicals, we remind them that Jesus may not have extinguished a smoking wick, but He was known to pick up a cracking whip. He didn’t enter the Temple, and like the gentleman that He is, invite the moneychangers to take their business elsewhere.

In both cases we are caught in this tension. On the one hand, we are to imitate Christ. He is to be our model, and we are to walk in His footsteps. On the other hand, we are not at all like Him. We can never stand in His unique position of moral authority. I’d like to make a suggestion as to how we might deal with this dilemma. Perhaps we ought to be quick to pick up the cross of Christ, and slow to pick up His prophetic mantle. Or better still, we ought not to pick up the prophetic mantle until we pick up the cross.

Jesus performed what might be understood as His first destructive miracle during Passion Week. Up until then He’d made the blind see, and the lame walk. He had freed many from illness and demonic oppression. Then, the day after His triumphal entry, He cursed a fig tree for having no figs. That same week Jesus drove the moneychangers out of the Temple. One gets the sense that His sense of righteous indignation rose in proportion to the closeness of the coming of His suffering. We on the other hand ratchet down our rhetoric so as to avoid suffering, to avoid the cross.

If we enter into His suffering, if we are willing to lay down our lives, rest assured He will give us prophetic opportunities. If we are willing to go, silent as a lamb to the slaughter, He will not only raise us up, but will give us words to speak. If, on the other hand, we take it upon ourselves always to pronounce judgments of woe, woe may well become a close companion.

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Final Hosea Study Tonight: 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 eastern, and the study begins at 7:00. 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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Does God really decide, and care who wins a football game?

I began asking this question as a little boy, deeply committed to the Pittsburgh Steelers. I remember praying that we would beat the Oakland Raiders in an upcoming playoff game. When my prayer ended, fear set in- what if there were a little boy just like me, somewhere in Oakland, praying that the Raiders would beat the Steelers? My father comforted me by explaining that no real Christian would ever pray for the Raiders.

The truth is God does decide, and He does care. He not only decides who will win the Super Bowl, He decides who will win the game of Hearts our family plays together. He decides, or rather decided, everything. There are no places, let alone no playing fields, where God stays on the sidelines.

We need to remember that everything that happens must have a sufficient cause. And we must remember that every sufficient cause eventually traces its way back to God before time. This happens because that happened. That happened because this other thing happened. Eventually this takes us to “God said, ‘Let there be light, and there was light.’”
Of course God works in and through secondary means. He gives the gifts. He creates the weather. The one who numbers the hairs on our heads softens the ground where a defensive back slips, and a playoff game ends on an eighty yard touchdown pass. There is no thing, no cause, over which He is not sovereign.

Isn’t it, though, somehow beneath His dignity to be concerned with such things? Yes, of course it is. God has only one overarching concern- the manifestation of His glory. And that is how He determines what will happen in a football game, and what will happen in an election, and what will happen in an operating room. His goal isn’t ultimately to make little boys in Philadelphia happy, or little boys in Kansas City happy. His goal, which cannot be thwarted, is to show forth who He is.

Does that mean He played favorites for the likes of outspoken Christians like Reggie White or Tim Tebow? Of course. Because God loves those who are His, even as He loves His own Son, God is certain to favor them. That favor, however, isn’t a path to winning a football game, but is instead the path to true victory, becoming more like Jesus. God wasn’t glorified in giving Tim Tebow unlikely victories that somehow redound to God’s glory. No, God is glorified in making His children, including Tim Tebow, more like His Son. Sometimes that means leading them to the thrill of victory. Sometimes it means leading them through the agony of defeat.

The more difficult and pertinent question for me isn’t does God care, but should I? I don’t pray for Steeler victories. I do pray that I, along with my wife and my sons, will make memories together. And I pray that we would have grace to accept His providence, even when the Steelers lose, or worse, don’t even play.


I’m taking a week off our series of questions about the church to re-run this Ask RC as we concluded this year’s NFL season last night.

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