Study Tonight, Truth You Can Count On: What Is Truth?

We continue our Truth You Can Count On study. Tonight, 7:00, we confront Pilate’s cynical question- what is truth?. We stream it on Facebook Live (at the account Lisa and I share, RC-Lisa) for those who attend online. You can usually also find a link to the week’s study a day or two later right here in this space. We welcome conversation from all in attendance, whatever form it takes. The atmosphere is casual, though the study itself is serious.

Local friends are welcome to come early for dinner at 6:15. Do please let us know if you plan to attend in person. Hope to see you there.

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What are some key idols in the evangelical church?

What sin did God’s people in the Old Testament most struggle with? You be surprised. We tend to focus on various sins of the flesh in our concerns about ourselves. And to be sure, our fathers in the faith fought those battles. But the most common problem was idolatry. We tend to think we have that sin pretty well licked. We’re moderns, not given to bowing down before statues. The devil, after all, is more crafty than any beasts of the field.

A closer look at Israel’s idolatry reveals that most of the time it was more subtle than what we imagine. Your typical Israelite didn’t go to bed saying his prayers to Adonai, wake up the next morning and blithely transfer his allegiance to Baal. Rather the idolatry took the form of syncretism, the blending together the worship of the living God and the worship of the gods of the broader culture. That is precisely our problem.

Looking at the problem ideologically, it seems our propensity is to embrace our own confession, while also embracing the highest creed of the broader culture- the idea that there is no true truth, only true for me and true for you, epistemological relativism.

Thirty years ago a poll was taken that demonstrated that more than half of all professing evangelicals agree with this statement- “There is no such thing as objective truth.” Strange I know, given that the defining quality of an evangelical is the conviction that the evangel, the good news of Jesus Christ is objectively true. But it should not surprise us- syncretism makes for strange bedfellows.

We embrace that ideological idol, however, because of the more practical idol we embrace- the god of personal peace and affluence. It was Francis Schaeffer who coined this term to describe the god of our age. We evangelicals share in our love for this idol, seeing the function and purpose of our lives as its pursuit. Living in a relativistic age, we find our peace is challenged if we challenge the relativistic creed. Believing relativism will at least give us leeway to hold on to our truth. If we confess it is merely our truth, and not the truth, we go along to get along.

What we think sets us apart from the world is that they are pursuing the god of personal peace and affluence. On the other hand, we are pursuing the same anemic god while tipping our hat at God’s law. We want, we hunger for the idol, but at least we’d never do this, or refuse to do that, to get her. After all, we have standards. Relativistic standards, to be sure, but at least they are our standards.

Joshua enjoined us to choose this day whom we would serve. To put away the gods of our fathers. Gideon tore down the high places. Elijah told us to no longer sway between two opinions. May He give us the grace, the strength, the courage to walk the via dolorosa. Let us take up our cross and follow the One who alone has the words of eternal life.

We will be exploring the confluence of true truth and relativistic “truth” during this evening’s Truth You Can Count On Bible Study. Join us live, or on Facebook Live (RC-Lisa Sproul) at 7:00 eastern.

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Bigger on the Inside than It Is on the Outside

The Bible is a book that is bigger on the inside than it is on the outside. Look at it from one perspective, and it’s rather a small book. It occupies less space on a shelf than a dictionary. Some versions, actual paper ones, you can even carry in your pocket. Yet when we consider all that is within it, it’s a rather large book. It equips us for every good work (2 Tim. 3:16). Its riches can and will occupy our meditations into eternity.

Many, if not all, of the Bible’s parts have much the same quality. Jesus gives the most famous, most significant, most far-reaching sermon in all of history, and yet it covers just three chapters, Matthew 5–7. In those short chapters, Jesus tells us how we may receive the blessing of God. He speaks to how His people are to relate to the broader world, calling us to be salt and light.

He explains how His Sermon on the Mount relates to the first “sermon on the mount,” the giving of the law at Sinai. Jesus expands our understanding of the Mosaic law, tells us how to love those within the kingdom, and shows us how to serve those without. He teaches us how to pray, and how to fast, then reminds us that our treasure is in heaven.

All of this fits nicely into such a significant sermon. These are matters of the first importance, fitting themes for this cosmic exposition. But then, Jesus does something most of us wouldn’t expect — He tells us to stop worrying. Why this, and why here? Sure, avoiding anxiety is important and valuable. But couldn’t this have waited for another sermon, for a less auspicious occasion? Precious few freshly minted seminary graduates would include such an admonition in their first sermon. Not many pastoral candidates would choose this application to conclude their candidating sermon. But Jesus includes it. Why?

Our first clue is this — Jesus doesn’t merely tell us to not worry. Instead, He tells us what we should not be worrying about: “Therefore I tell you, do not be anxious about your life, what you will eat or what you will drink, nor about your body, what you will put on” (6:25). Stranger still, in this brief sermon, Jesus reiterates this point: “Therefore do not be anxious, saying ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’ For the Gentiles seek after all these things” (vv. 31–32a).

Jesus, in the Sermon on the Mount, is, before He tells us to seek the kingdom, telling us what life looks like inside the kingdom. This is how you love; this how you pray; this is how you obey. And this, He tells us, is what you don’t do — be anxious about what you will eat, what you will drink, what you will wear.

This mindset defines the people of the kingdom; it sets us apart from the Gentiles. This is the mark of Christians. You will be recognized, Jesus tells us, not because you have no food, drink, or clothes. Your Father in heaven knows you, like the Gentiles, need these things. What will set you apart from the world around you, what will separate you, is that you will not worry. You will be at peace. You will have but one priority — to seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness.

We should be encouraged to remember that Jesus preached this sermon to the choir. That is, Jesus isn’t here castigating the scribes and Pharisees. He is talking to His own. The same is true with that first sermon on a mount (Ex. 20). While all men everywhere must not worship false gods or construct idols, while all men must honor God’s name and His Sabbath, while all men must respect those in authority, keep covenant, and so on, God is speaking to His own people here.

He is saying, “I rescued you from Egypt, because you are Mine. It is I who carries you on eagles’ wings, because you are My people. I will establish you in a land flowing with milk and honey, because you are My beloved. When you get there, be sure not to murder each other. Don’t steal the property of your neighbor. Keep covenant with your wife.” In like manner, Jesus is telling us not to worry not because we are never tempted to do so, but precisely because we are so tempted. He is preaching to the choir because we aren’t choirboys. We do fret and fear. We do follow the patterns of the Gentiles.

Our calling, then, is twofold. First, we need to learn to believe that our Father in heaven cares for us. Jesus in this sermon makes this abundantly clear. God provides for the sparrows, for the lilies of the field. He knows what we need, and He will provide.

Second, though, we must repent of our fears. In the end, this is what marks the Christian, not that we are sinless but that by His grace we repent when we fall. When we repent, we have been promised that “He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness” (1 John 1:9). When peace passes, when it slips from our grasping hands, we rest here, and thus rest in that peace that passes understanding.

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Feed Me: War and the Singular Rise of Algorithms

Whatever its etymology may reveal, it remains revealing that what flows through my social media apps is called my “feed.” From the constant sight of all of us looking down at our phones, at our sites, it seems we’re all plenty hungry. We gorge ourselves on, what? While the internet as a whole might seem like an endless buffet, we don’t really choose what comes into our feeds. That’s been decided for us.

By whom? For what purposes? I’m ashamed to admit I’ve never asked those questions before. I’ve noticed of late a rather thin band of themes. News and opinions about the Pittsburgh Steelers is listed first in my feed’s ingredient list. Next is angry screeds against the doctrines of grace. Finally, various backs and forths among Christian nationalists who only want white people in their family photos and those who welcome color.

On the one hand it all makes sense. I am, year-round, deeply interested in all things Steelers. Likewise I’m deeply committed to the doctrines of grace. The last one, I suspect, is the fruit of the reality that I believe Jesus reigns over all things, and have an interest in politics. On the other hand, perhaps even more than my interest, what these things all have in common is that they are things people argue about vociferously. While the algorithm may have limited power to make me think what it wants me to think, it has great power to make me think what I think about.

The algorithm isn’t merely providing things I’m interested in. It provides things people curse each other over, that I’m interested in. And that part, frankly, I have little interest in. It’s what annoys me about my feed, the ingredient in my diet that gives me heartburn.
Is there a way, I wonder, to feed on my feed and find my heart warmed?

I used to get regular insights from CS Lewis. In days past I got gentle humor from the Church Curmudgeon. I used to get biblical nuggets of wisdom from Matt Smethhurst. My feed fed me with insight from my friend, David Murray. I used to get updates from people I actually know and care about. You know- friends. Can I find my way back there?

I don’t know if the algorithm responded to me, or if it is trying to get me to respond. Did I click on these arguments in the past, and now it thinks it’s what I want? Or, did it just assume, because there is so much arguing on social media that that’s what we all want? Controversy breeds clicks. Hot takes make for hot follows. None of which is healthy for us. If we are what we eat, I need to feed on something better.

Perhaps the goal ought not be healthier feeds. Maybe such is thinking a diet soda can make up for the double cheeseburger and fries. Perhaps instead what I need to do is live on every word that comes from the mouth of God (Matt. 4:4). Maybe I ought to be engaging more with the Word.

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Sacred Marriage; Epstein, Unease and Peace and More

This week’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Truth You Can Count On, Study Four The Word on the Word

This week we considered how Jesus looked at the authority of the Bible, both the Old and New Testaments. We seek, like Him, to live not on bread alone but by every Word that proceeds from the Father. So check it out, and get caught up.

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Truth You Can Count On, Study 3 No-et Alls

In this, our third study from Truth You Can Count On we consider the impact of sin on our capacity to know things. We affirm both that we err often, a lot, and for foolish reasons. We deny that sin makes us unable to know the truth. I’m thinking you might find this helpful. Why not give a listen?

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Truth You Can Count On, Study 2 Made in His Image

In our second study from our series, Truth You Can Count On we consider how God’s knowing relates to our own. We remember both that God is higher than us, and that we are made in His image. He knows all truly, we know some truly. Check it out.

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Truth You Can Count On, 1st Study- God Knows

A few weeks ago we began a new study Monday nights titled Truth You Can Count On. Below is the first of these studies, recorded January 19. This one explores the nature of God’s knowing. I think you’ll find it helpful.

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Two Cheers for Doubt: When And Where to not Be Sure

Do we not tend to see doubt as something negative? Something to avoid or overcome? Doubt is what we writers and editors, when we hang out together and tell stories about the rest of you, call a “transitive” verb. These are verbs not that suffer from gender dysphoria, but that require an object. You can run, or hum without an object. But you cannot throw, or love or hate without an object. Everybody, as the saying goes, needs someone to love.

Doubt too requires an object. You can’t just doubt; you have to doubt something. Some things we ought to doubt, others not so much. If you receive an email from the Namibian oil minister’s widow offering to give you millions if you help her, that you should doubt. We should never, on the other hand, doubt God’s Word.

When we doubt ourselves, we are likely in a good spot. We tend toward overconfidence in ourselves, in terms of our knowledge, our character and our calling. GK Chesterton put it this way:

What we suffer from today is humility in the wrong place. Modesty has moved from the organ of ambition and settled upon the organ of conviction, where it was never meant to be. A man was meant to be doubtful about himself, but undoubting about the truth; this has been exactly reversed.

Mark Twain demonstrated his own insight when he wrote, “What you don’t know can’t hurt you. It’s what you do know that just isn’t so.” We are a credulous people, believing anything and often its opposite. Consider how swiftly the polls change. I can see how 55% of those polled approve of the President. On the other hand I can see how 45% disapprove. What I can’t see is how those two numbers can flop with the same President in the space of a week. Who are the 10% who cheer on the President one day and turn on him the next?

Real truth exists, truth we can actually know. We should not doubt that. On the other hand we should be fearless in acknowledging we don’t know all of it. We should not race like Richard Petty on our way to a conclusion. Nor should we allow peer pressure to push us into embracing the party line. We should never convict others when we know we don’t know the whole story. Each of us should, at one and the same time, cherish and spread abroad far and wide these three words, “I don’t know.”

You may upset your friends. If, however, they get too upset, get new friends. The ones you have now are looking for allies and yes men, not friends. At least, that’s what I think you should do. I can’t say for sure.

The great thing about truth truth is that a. it is knowable and b. doesn’t require us to believe it in order for it to be true. It remains unfazed when we are certain and wrong, but also not insulted when we are unsure. This much I do know- my heart, like everyone else’s is deceitful and wicked. My Redeemer is not. We are not to doubt Him. He loves me.

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