Would a Man Rob God? Would a Government Do the Same?

The question on its face seems rather insane. It demands not just a “no” but a “by no means.” If not a “why would you ask such a stupid question?”. I ask the question, however, because God Himself once asked it. God’s people were wondering why in their return from exile they weren’t enjoying the blessings God had promised. God sent the prophet Malachi to tell them. Among God’s complaints- men were robbing God by not paying their tithes.

Now it is not my intention here to argue over the tithe, one way or another. I desire instead to affirm the most basic, most fundamental economic reality there is- God owns everything. Unless we get this truth, from the top of our mousse shaped noggins to the bottom of our Bass Weejuns we’ll not rightly understand either economics, nor our calling in His world.

God put a man and a woman in His garden. He called them to dress and to keep that garden, to rule over the birds of the air, the fish of the sea, and every creeping thing that creeps upon the ground. God didn’t give them the world He had made, but He did put them in charge. He called them to be His stewards, and gave them a job to do.

If we understood this we’d understand the problem with bloated governments, mandates from Health and Human Services. The problem isn’t that the state steals from us, but that it steals from God. Because He is the Master, the Maker, and the light of the sun maker, He is the one who delegates His wealth to the butcher, the baker and the candlestick maker. When a petty thief, or a grasping state decides that it knows better how that wealth ought to be handled it is not merely stealing from men, but from God. And in so doing affirming that they know better than God.

In like manner when we by His grace manage to keep what He has given us, when we multiply it, when we invest it, we are being wise stewards of what is His. His mind you, not the church’s. If we are handling what is God’s as He would have us, caring for our families, serving our customers, giving to the church what we ought, can anyone find fault?

Yes, God could. For we have forgotten one thing. God also commanded His people this- that they should “spend the money for whatever your desire- oxen or sheep or wine or strong drink, whatever your appetite craves. And you shall eat there before the Lord your God and rejoice, you and your household” (Deuteronomy 14:26).

That God owns everything doesn’t mean we cannot enjoy what He has given. It means we must enjoy what He has given. We have obligations, but they are to Him, the Owner. God commands us to care for those under our care. He wants us to support the mission of the church. The Father wants us to invest in future productivity. He wants us to enjoy. All of these honor Him. All of these acknowledge Him as our Lord.

More wisdom on biblical economics is available here.

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Giving Thanks in Times Like These And All Others

I will not dispute that these are not the best of times. As a nation we are drowning in red ink. Around the globe, soldiers, civilians and believers are falling by the sword. Yet, the liturgy of our year, by which we devote times and seasons to specific emphases calls us to a day of thanksgiving, followed by weeks of feasting over the incarnation of our Lord and Savior. How do we manage the disparity?

By giving thanks and feasting over the incarnation of our Lord and Savior. Our Pilgrim forefathers rightly devoted time and energy to giving thanks to God for sustaining them in the new land. They went to that new land, however, that they might be free to worship their Savior. The winter before, when so many died agonizing deaths, they were still able to worship, and He was still their Savior. The hardships, like ours, were real. The unchanging reason for gratitude, however, was real also. The foundation of our thanksgiving isn’t comfort, health and prosperity but forgiveness, peace and adoption.

All of which came to us because Immanuel came to us. Is there anything in our contemporary and temporary hardships that should diminish our joy in His coming? Is there anything that suggests His promise to be with us always (Matt. 28:20) has been broken? Is there anything that frees us of our calling to be of good cheer (John 16:33) because He has already overcome the world? Will we, who profess to believe that three days after He was murdered our Lord walked out of the tomb alive, never to die again, believe that He has the whole world in His scarred hands?

Please do not misunderstand. It is not my intention to deny the reality of hardships. Jesus Himself wept over the death of Lazarus. We ought to weep over the scourge of the murder of the unborn. But we must also, like Martha, believe that those who have passed will be raised on the last day (John 11:24). Death and sickness are still with us, but they are passing.

Nor is it my intention to deny the sorrow of watching a culture become increasingly bloodthirsty and hostile to Jesus and His bride. I suspect that the same shepherds who were told of the birth of Jesus and rejoiced later learned of the murder of the infants of Bethlehem under Herod’s orders, and wept. The broader culture remains hostile toward us. Jesus, however, told us this was coming. Indeed, “Be of good cheer, for I have already overcome the world” is immediately preceded by this warning,

Jesus answered them, “Do you now believe? Indeed the hour is coming, yes, has now come, that you will be scattered, each to his own, and will leave Me alone. And yet I am not alone, because the Father is with Me. These things I have spoken to you, that in Me you may have peace. In the world you will have tribulation.”

We are to count it all joy. We are to give thanks in all things, to learn to live faithfully whether abased or abounding. How do we do it? We remember what we are due in ourselves, what we have been given in Christ and all that we have been promised. Give thanks. And rejoice.

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Apples of Gold in Settings of Silver; Illegal Orders & More

This week’s all new podcast features more of Lisa’s God honoring poetry, nuance on honoring military authority and more. Check it out, a true bounty of tasty podcast goodness.

This week’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Jesus Changes Almost Everything: A Qualification

I love Twitter. (And refuse to call it X). When I first heard about it I confess I was conflicted. The social commentator in me was appalled. My inner Neil Postman took the curmudgeon approach, bemoaning the dumbing down of our discourse to 140 characters. Has our attention span really dropped this far? The poet and the economist inside me, however, formed a strange alliance in embracing Twitter, the economist loving the streamlined nature, the poet adoring the challenge of cramming as much wonder, as many surprising moments of epiphany wrapped in beauty into 140 characters as possible. I almost begrudged the shift to 280 characters.

As a theologian my job involves making distinctions, often ones so subtle they are hard to see. Precision and nuance chisel the outcome of that trade. On Twitter all of these hats I wear often clash. The use of the most potent poetic image may mean, from time to time, that qualifiers are left off. On the other hand, using the qualifiers not only clouds the beauty of the image, but puts you over the character count.

Consider this glorious truth- Jesus changes everything. I admit that with the exception of Jesus, the words themselves are not startling. They’re pedestrian even. But the thought is supposed to be shocking. Everything? All of us face the temptation to divide our lives into the sacred and the secular, the holy and the mundane. Jesus is given charge over our prayers, our eternities, our deepest selves. But isn’t a peanut butter sandwich just a peanut butter sandwich? Isn’t such the same for the most devout believer and the most wretched and lost soul? No, it’s not.

The peanut butter sandwich is to the believer not just bread and peanut butter, but the answer to our prayer that He would give us this day our daily bread. It is a fulfillment of the dominion mandate, to rule over the creation. It is a foretaste of heaven, manna from on high. It is an occasion for worship, a gift, like all gifts through which we behold the glory of the Giver. Jesus changes everything.

Except, of course, that He doesn’t. It’s just not strictly true that Jesus changes everything. What we miss in such pithy shorthand is another sublime reality- that the God of heaven and earth, Father, Son and Holy Spirit, has never changed, will never change. Insofar as the Godhead is a thing (and more theological nuance could argue that while real, the Godhead is not, strictly speaking, a thing) it is one thing that stays the same.

Contra Einstein, the speed of light is not that fixed point by which all else is relativized, an ontological North Star, but God is. There is no shadow of turning in Him. He is the same yesterday, today and tomorrow. The Westminster Shorter Catechism describes the living God to us as a spirit, infinite, and eternal before adding this fourth attribute- unchangeable.

I, along with the whole of the created order, depend upon Jesus, the Alpha and the Omega. He is about the business of bringing all things under subjection- in less poetic language, changing everything, from Twitter to peanut butter sandwiches. But, to His everlasting glory He does not and will not change. Consider this piece then a footnote, the fine print. Jesus changes everything. Except Jesus.

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No Study Tonight. See You Next Week, God Willing

We will not meet for our weekly Monday night Bible study this evening.

We’d love to have you with us next Monday, in person if possible. Invite your friends. Our study considers God’s call that we be as children.

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Why are we so awful to people on social media?

First, because we are so awful to people. We are so awful to people because we are awful people. Technology does not create fresh wickedness in us. It can, however, invite our wickedness out to play. Social media that seems to encourage the worst in us.

Some suggest that it is the social distance. We say things about and to others that we would never say about and to their faces. Shame often serves as a blessing when we are actually in the presence of others. This is one reason why pornography consumption has skyrocketed since the advent of the internet. Now you can get to it without having to look in the face of the clerk who knows how you’ll be using it.

Some suggest that it is the lack of non-verbal communication that would otherwise help to soften our discourse. Emojis are not up to the task of filling in that gap. In addition, when you are limited to 280 characters it’s tough to wrap your criticism in encouraging words. That in turn can create a response not smothered in grace and the flame war begins.

Some suggest the issue is the ease of reply. When I was a younger man and I got angry with someone and wanted to communicate it to them I had to first find paper and a pen. I had to write. Then I had to find an envelope, a stamp, and the address to which to send it. By then my jets had usually cooled. Now we can send off our thoughts before they’re even formulated.

While these suggestions have something to do with the problem, they miss what may be the most important point. Social media, in contrast to email or discussion boards, come equipped with voting mechanisms. Shares, likes, re-tweets all feed us where we are often most hungry, in the ego. Every post transforms into a referendum not just on the issue we post about but on us.

It’s not enough that I tell those closest to me about my disappointment with someone. Now I have to tell the whole world. It’s not enough that I tell the whole world about my disappointment with someone. I have to get them to share my disappointment. Which means I have to paint that someone not just as someone who let me down, but as someone the whole world needs to be warned about. I have to make this person out as a monster so your need to virtue-signal meshes with my need for social media approval. Soon enough I see myself as the heroic crusader against this movement, that person, or this other sin.

Here’s the tweet-sized version. We’re awful to each other on social media because we’re awful. We’re awful because we’re prideful, and, like our first parents, are not satisfied in Him. The solution is humility and rejoicing in all that we have in Christ. Moral indignation, more often than not, is just the veneer under which we try to hide our pride. But it always shines right through.

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Talkin’ ‘Bout My G-g-g-generation: Who Are We?

I pursued a graduate degree at Ole Miss and taught two classes of Freshman English each semester. The two intersected when I took a graduate class on teaching the freshman class. The popular pop guru gave fresh nuggets of his wisdom. He taught us not to make comments in red ink because it damaged the students’ self-esteem. He told us to encourage collaborative processes, though I can’t recall why. And he instructed us that when it came to interpreting the writings of others, a key component in the class as a whole, there was no right or wrong answer.

Makes sense, doesn’t it? If I find in this story of Saul Bellow’s a metaphor for the industrial revolution, and you find in the same story a clever modernization of Chaucer’s Abbott’s Tale, who is to say who is right? Which is the question I raised in the class I was taking. “If,” I asked, “there is no right and wrong answer, “on what basis are we handing out grades?” My professor, who apparently never read Animal Farm, without a hint of irony replied, “There is no correct answer, but some are more correct than others.”

Hermeneutics, outside the Christian world, has now sunk this low. Deconstructionism suggests we rightly understand a text only insofar as we condemn the politically incorrect notions of the author. While leftist, mean-spirited, and silly, at least it had the courtesy of treating the text with some respect. To tear the text to shreds one had to at least recognize it as a text, and to find handles in it. Even this process, however, has proven far too difficult and demanding for our day.

Deconstructionism has slowly been pushed out to make way for sundry forms post-modern theories wherein the text, before it is ripped to shreds, is robbed of the dignity of being a text. It has become for us a mere mirror. We deny that there is any meaning inherent in the text, seeing it as a blank sheet. Meaning comes from the reader rather than the writer. Thus, one of my professors giddily explained to us neophytes- “A laundry list is as much literature as Shakespeare.”

Wow. I’m afraid I didn’t have the courage to ask him these two questions- first, why do we then have to read Shakespeare? It’s a great deal more work than reading laundry lists, or comic books, or Danielle Steel novels. And second, how do you sleep at night knowing you have given your life to the study of laundry lists? I know the professor’s life has a great deal going for it, but is it worth it if none of it means a thing?

These theories, by their own admission, do not actually help us to understand the texts we are reading. This hermeneutic is not helpful if our goal is to understand what we read. They instead serve another purpose that apparently is more important to us- they focus our attention on ourselves. They serve our narcissism.

How cool is this, that in our Melville seminar we actually get to take turns talking about ourselves? Who cares what Melville thought? What I think is far more important. My knowledge does not increase, but my ego does. My understanding does not grow, but my self-importance does. My mind is not expanded, but my appetite for self-indulgence is. And all I have to give up is the notion that there really is something out there to know.

We have this kind of nonsense in the world because we first studied and read our Bibles in the same way. Christians treat the Bible, a mirror showing us our sin, as a mirror whereby we see our own wisdom. We open God’s Word to find out what it “means to us.” We use it to justify our own weaknesses and sins. We then encourage each other to do the same when we gather together. We sit in our Bible study circle and ask each other, “What does this text mean to you?” with soothing tones that communicate that of course there is no wrong answer.

This is one reason the First Corollary to the RC Sproul Jr. Principle of Hermeneutics (whenever you see someone in the Bible doing something really stupid, do not say to yourself, ‘How can they be so stupid?’ Instead say to yourself, ‘How am I just as stupid?’) is so important. The corollary goes like this- when you want to know who you are in any given Bible story, you are the sinner. If there is more than one sinner in the story, you are both.

If we are going to be thinking about ourselves when reading the Bible, or any text, let’s think about the kinds of people we are. Let’s be eager to see our sins, rather than to justify them.

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The Stinking Lesson of the Stinking Garbage Can

Experience is overrated. We often learn its lessons too late. Though once it has aged it can pack a punch. My father, about the time I entered into junior high school, impressed upon me the lesson experience taught him too late, but in time for me. As was his wont, he playfully prefaced his counsel with pomposity.

“Son,” he said, “I am about to present to you what I call ‘Patriarchal Principle Number One.”
“OK,” I replied with a smile. “What is Patriarchal Principle Number One?”
“You don’t have to live in a garbage can to know it stinks.”

While I still fear its import didn’t warrant a number one ranking among all possible patriarchal principles, it was most assuredly wisdom. It pushes back against the common “wisdom” that says, “I’ll try anything once.” Really? Anything? One thing I’ll never try is moving into a garbage can. I know of a guy that did so, but he never seemed happy about it. Come to think of it, he was always a grouch. It stinks in there.

God has designed His world so that we can benefit from the experience of others. We are given warnings from those in authority over us. When we can trust them, rather than insisting only our own experience can teach us, we can avoid a whole world of hurt.

There is no authority over us with deeper knowledge, who is more trustworthy than God Himself. The trouble is that we don’t trust Him. Like our first parents we tend to think God’s law, His instruction on how to live life, is a test for us. He wants our loyalty. He’s done so much for us, and so He asks us to set aside sundry pleasures to demonstrate our gratitude.

Were God to do such, we’d have no room to complain. But that is not the nature of His law. His law is not a burden but a gift. Obedience is not a sacrifice but an invitation to joy. He knows. He always knows. Every sin, no matter how small, at its root says to the loving God either, “You are stingy” or “You are wrong” before it says, “You don’t get to decide.” And then, every time, every single time, despite a lifetime of experience of the very same thing, we stub our toe. We burn our hand on the stove. We stick our fork in the socket.

The experience I need to learn from, more than any other, is not the destruction that flows from my sins, but the grace that flows from His blood. The joy of His forgiveness, the removal of the stone of guilt from my back, the welcoming arms of my heavenly Father, these are ever present realities that I too often lose sight of. Yet they are the very font of my own well-being.

God is good, gracious and kind to all His own. He pours out blessing on us unendingly. Alleluia.

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This Week’s Study, Trusting Like Children

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Today’s JCE- More Poetry from Lisa, Generation Gaps and More

This week’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

Posted in assurance, beauty, creation, Education, grace, Jesus Changes Everything, Lisa Sproul, on writing well, poetry, RC Sproul JR, Sacred Marriage, wonder | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment