Victory By Death: The Way of the Cross, The Way of the Way

The Devil delights in false dichotomies. When he persuades us that our choices are between this foolishness and that weakness — heads, he wins; tails, the kingdom loses. When we are lukewarm in our commitment, when we think the kingdom of God is just some ethereal thing that no one can see, the Devil encourages us in just this direction. We see the kingdom as only future, and so sit on our hands waiting. Such is not, of course, a passionate seeking of His kingdom or His righteousness.

The Devil does not, however, fear kingdom zealots. He offers those whose passion burns to make known the reign of Christ a whole different temptation. The Devil encourages these to take up arms, to bear the sword. He seduces them into thinking they can make the kingdom come by force.

The first option denies we are at war. The second option denies that our weapons are not carnal. We, the Bible tells us, are at war and our armory is stocked with potent, spiritual weapons.

Consider first the reality of the war. God promised in Genesis 3: 14-15 that He would put enmity between the Serpent and the woman, between their respective seeds. Thus, we have an identifiable enemy — all those who are yet outside the kingdom of God. This enemy, of course, actively fights its war against us and our King. Thus, we are at war. The Lord calls us to tear down strongholds, to destroy every lofty thing that exalts itself against the knowledge of God. We are commanded not to be conformed to this world, but to be transformed.

We also have an objective. Believers long to see the reign of our Captain made manifest the world over. We are seeking His kingdom. His promise is that a day is coming when every knee will bow and every tongue will confess that He is Lord. Indeed, He will come from His throne, we are told, when all His enemies are made a footstool. The language of warfare fills the Word, from beginning to end, despite our crafty Enemy’s attempt to cry “peace, peace,” when there is no peace.

Our Enemy, under no self-constraint, uses carnal weapons. Indeed, everything about his warfare is carnal. His spear pierced the side of our Lord. He hurled the stones at Stephen. The serpent worked through sundry caesars, leading the early Christians to the Colosseum for sport, lining the Appian Way with hundreds of crucified disciples of our crucified Lord. He animated the lies of Islam, whose scimitar first seized Jerusalem and later reached even into Europe.

The Devil, however, rejoiced more over the counterattack on Jerusalem than he did the seizure of it. That is, the greater victory wasn’t the success of the sword on his side of the battle but the taking up of the sword on our side. He wins lesss by fighting with carnal weapons but by seducing us into fighting with carnal weapons.

The Bible, of course, leaves room for legitimate use of force. The use of the sword in defense of our land or of our families is not only permissible but mandatory. But we do not build the kingdom with the sword. Our weapons are not carnal. The kingdom advanced far more potently through the humble martyrs’ deaths than it did through the fighting of the valiant soldiers of the Crusades. We don’t kill for the kingdom but die for it.

Barbarians are also at our gates. Our walls crumble, and it seems in the West that a new dark age is here. We find the evidence less in the rhetoric of the radical left, the cultural degradation pouring from New York and Hollywood, and the sexually confused marching in our streets, and more in the church that has lost sight of its God-given weapons. Believers move from defeat to defeat because we fight with coalitions, with media campaigns, with slick marketing, with compromise. We have washed away all our saltiness because we’ve forgotten how the kingdom comes.

We seek His kingdom as we seek His righteousness. The world is preserved, and the boundaries of the kingdom expand when we live as His children in simple, trusting obedience. The world is changed by changing diapers, by hugging wives, by doing chores diligently, and by singing joyfully. War is fought by peaceful countenances. Loyalty makes walls come tumbling down.

We do not, as the crusaders did, leave our hearths and homes, our wives and children, cross land and sea, and hack and poke with sword and spear. Instead we cross the room, pray blessing on our children, and dance with our wives. We sit at the table, eating the fat of the land, talking about the glory of His provision in all our days. Practicing true religion, we visit the orphan and the widow. We preach the Word in season and out. As we gather we break bread and we drink the cup. And the Serpent trembles in his bunker.

As little children, we know it is the little things that change everything. The Serpent’s kingdom is brought low when the servants of the King are lifted on high, in worship. Praise Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, and the gates of hell come tumbling down.

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The Parables of Jesus- A Man Went Out to Sow

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Our First of Our New Study- The Parables of Jesus

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Our Last Study on Truths You Can Count On: Last Word

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What Every Christian Man Should Long to Hear

I want you to read this. Not because it reflects well on me, but because it reflects well on my beloved wife. She posted this on social media, at our shared Facebook account, RC-Lisa, accompanied by video of me preaching at our small church here in Fort Wayne, Sovereign Grace Fellowship.

As most of you know I do not have the reach I once had. Much of that is the understandable fruit of some grievous sins of mine. What I still have is a commitment to God’s Word, and the doctrines of grace. What I have even more than I had in my younger years is a passion to help us all understand more deeply the depth of our sin, the saving power of our Redeemer and the unshakeable love of our heavenly Father. When the audience shrinks, the message grows more personal and powerful.

Which is part of the reason why this means so much to me:

I have watched my husband be cut down by those who once claimed to love him. Watched him stand faithful to a calling God has never revoked. I have watched people who think they know the story pour out accusations, speculation, and careless words over a man they never truly understood. They accuse him, while all along the guilt belongs to the very ones casting stones.

And still, I have watched my husband remain faithful day after day. I have watched him rise, steady and unwavering, take my hand, and lead us forward even with a broken heart. This is what faithfulness looks like, what it means to endure without giving up. This is what it means to keep climbing with a heavenly perspective, rising above the Sanballats God has sovereignly allowed on a hard and holy road.

I am an eyewitness to the grace of God poured out over his life. I have seen mercy sustain him, truth preserve him, and strength come to him again and again from the hand of God. And through that same grace, I too have been sheltered, strengthened, and blessed.

His life is a testimony that God keeps His own. God sustains the man He has called. And no opposition from earth can overturn what heaven has ordained.

This, friends, is what a man longs to hear. Not that he has this gift or that. Nor that he provides so well. Not that he looks so good, or is so handy. What a Christian man wants is to know that the one person who knows him best, his wife, believes him to be faithful. Not just to her, but to the Lord who bought us. He wants to know that she sees his effort, along with his failures. A man of God wants to believe that his wife can see that he is a man of God.

Perhaps most of all, however, a man of God wants to know that those under his care know that they are under His care. Thank you my love for filling my sails, and for travelling with me through this journey.

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Ruth and Naomi; Jayden Ivey; Chisanbop; Introducing Paul

Check out this week’s podcast. It has a little bit of everything. Quality ingredients, combined with love and technology. This week’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Hear O Israel, The Lord Our God, The Lord Is One

The doctrine of the simplicity of God provides a rather useful fence. The perfections of God are, of course, worthy of our excitement. Their infinity is staggering. In God’s simplicity His infinite perfections show themselves to be one, the glorious colors coming together in a blinding white. Whatever else we delightfully affirm about God, we must affirm that He is one.

It is the very point of the doctrine of simplicity, however, that we don’t diminish one attribute when we remember another. We don’t wax rhapsodic over God’s love, then throw a wet blanket by remembering, “He’s also a God of wrath.” God’s wrath doesn’t restrain the love of God, nor does the love of God restrain His wrath. Rather, in a profound way, they are one and the same thing.

There are some fairly obvious ways that we see this. Psalm 2 shows us the wrath of God coming for a specific reason. The kings of the earth will not kiss the Son. The love of the Son is what provokes the wrath of the Father. We see much the same on the Damascus road, as Jesus accuses Saul, “Why dost thou persecute Me?” Christ’s loving union with the Bride brings wrath on Saul. And in turn, that wrath brings forth love as Saul becomes Paul, a part of the Bride.

Love is universally loved. We who belong to the King rightly celebrate His love for us. But those outside the camp do not stay outside the camp because of a self-conscious rejection of love. Those who think the lost are lost because they have trouble accepting love have been accepting too many foolish bromides from pop psychologists.

The very “gods” the lost create, in their rejection of the Creator, are characterized by “love.” One can safely finish the idolater’s sentence, when he begins, “Well, my god is a god of … .” It’s love, every time. Have you ever heard someone object, when called to repent, “Well, I’m repulsed by your God that forgives the repentant. My god is a god of raging, irrational fury.” No. Everyone loves “love.”

But while love is not diminished by wrath, a love that excludes wrath is not a biblical love. The love clamored for by the lost is a wrathless love. But the love they crave is just unknown. While there is, rightly understood, a universal love of God that includes even those who will be damned, this love is a simple love, one that includes all that God is. There is no wrathless love that comes from God.

The Bible tells us that God causes the rain to fall on the just and the unjust. We find there what some theologians call “common grace.” God acts kindly to all men living. We all need to remember this. When we, or others, in trying to describe their anguish say their situation is “a living hell,” they misunderstand God’s patient love.

Any suffering on earth, save for His passion, is mitigated by His love, less severe than what is due, hell. But even the most wicked among us do not live their earthly lives exclusively in agony. Some unbelieving mothers genuinely rejoice when blessed with a child. Sometimes unbelievers win the Super Bowl and are genuinely happy about it. Even the heathen sometimes sit down to a favorite meal and feel real joy in eating it. Common love is common, love, and real.

Common love, or the universal love of God cannot be separated from common wrath. Because God is one you cannot wrap your arms around His love and miss His wrath.Though the lost will receive the loving gifts of God, they will neither honor Him nor thank Him, and so they earn His eternal wrath.

God’s love is not only inseparable from His wrath, but it is equally bound together with His sovereignty. That is, when God sends the rain to the unjust, He does so knowing that the unjust will not honor Him. But this doesn’t frustrate God. First, He planned it that way. And second, He planned it that way because of one more connection between love and wrath — God loves His wrath. He delights to manifest the infinite perfection of His wrath just as much as His love, because they are one thing.

This, in turn, must inform how we look at the world around us. The problem with the broader culture, that place where they love love, isn’t that they’ve embraced part of the truth, and that our job as sound Christians is to teach them the hard parts. Rather we have to understand that the love they love is no more love than the god they worship is God. Unless they embrace the true and living God, the God of love that is wrath, of wrath that is love, of both that are manifest sovereignly, they will perish. Biblical love requires that we tell the world that their love of their love will earn them only His wrath.

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New Study Continues Tonight- The Parables, The Sower

Tonight we continue a new study exploring the parables of Jesus. Last week was our introduction, and look at the lost sheep and lost coin. Tonight, the Sower. We serve dinner at 6:15, and begin the study at 7:00. We also livestream on Facebook Live, on the account I share with Lisa, RC-Lisa Sproul. We also, a day or so later, post the study right here. We’d love to host you in our home, or out in cyberspace.

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What is the Lord’s Day Worship For? What is its Purpose?

No, in a manner of speaking. The Lord’s Day isn’t for anything, but is that which everything else is for. The Lutheran theologian Marva Dawn wisely called worship “a royal waste of time.” That provocative phrase wasn’t a denial of the importance of worship, but a denial that worship could ever be a means to something else. It is a ROYAL waste because we meet with the King. It is a WASTE of time because it serves no purpose. Rather it is the purpose that everything else serves.

Sadly, in our day, both those planning worship services and those attending worship services are prone to forgetting this. Too many worship services are designed to give the attendee a “worship experience.” “Come here,” many churches seem to say, “and we will make you feel like you’ve had a powerful experience.” Such is wildly transactional, and leaves the Risen Lord out of the transaction.

Other, often more austere, churches and congregants see the Lord’s Day worship as an educational opportunity. We hurry through our singing, praying, giving, in order to get to the center of the service, the preaching. Here the pastor downloads the fruits of his study into the brains of his students, ahem, I mean congregants. Those in the pew have a good Lord’s Day is when their orderly theology is buttressed, when they’re blessed with perhaps a dash of new information.

Other churches subconsciously see Lord’s Day worship as a sort of spiritual time clock. You punch in when you arrive, punch out at the end of your shift. This information is sent to spiritual payroll which you hope will pay you with a ticket to heaven. It’s ridiculous on its face, of course, but then so are we.

Lord’s Day worship is an earthly positioned shadow of what we will do in eternity. It is what we did in the beginning, what we will do in the end. It harkens to Eden and points to the New Jerusalem. Worship is grounded in the perfect wedding of the first Adam and the first Eve and in the glorious wedding of the Last Adam and His bride, the church. We will live and be welcomed into the unveiled presence of the living God. Worship is a foretaste of this reality. How could it possibly serve something greater?

Like Elisha’s servant that feared the hostile army around them, we need to have the scales removed from our eyes, to see the Lord’s Hosts as they cover their feet, cover their eyes and fly before Him crying “Holy, holy, holy is the Lord God almighty. All the world is full of His glory.” Every Lord’s Day we who are in ourselves a people of unclean lips, gather to proclaim His praise. Dressed in His righteousness, washed by His blood.

This is not just the reality, but is ultimate reality. May God grant us the grace to walk by faith and enter weekly into such a sublime royal waste of time.

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Pride Before the Fall: Adam, Eve and Mephistopheles

God is true and every man a liar. Liars, however, dress like their father. That is, just as the devil appears as an angel of light, so he, and his minions, appear as tellers, indeed lovers of the truth. As such we wrongly tend to attach that word “liar” to a specific kind of liar. We think liars are dishonest lawyers, cheating used car salesmen and drug addicts. They are instead pastors, news commentators and doctors of philosophy.

Liars can also be silent. That is, what defines the liar is not just the speaking of lies, but the loving of lies. To believe the lie is at the very least to lie to oneself. Enter Dr. Faustus. Christopher Marlowe’s tale, itself based on earlier folk tales, tells of the man who sold his soul to the devil. It has been retold over the years in sundry forms, including Goethe’s poetic version.

What intrigues us about the story, however, isn’t the form in which it is told. Our interest in the story, what captures our attention is the folly of the trade. Jesus, the Truth, wisely asked what it profits a man if he gains the whole world but loses his soul. Faustus wanted the whole world, and traded his soul to get it.

The truth is, however, that the deal Faustus made was not selling his soul for the world, but trading the truth for lies. Not content with what he had learned in his theological studies, he wanted a different truth. Faustus leaves behind a medieval world of revelation for a renaissance world of science. In doing so he comes to symbolize the whole of western culture. His story is our story, and his end is our end.

Things are not going well for us. The kingdom of God, in the west, in our day, is less visible than it once was. We are, culturally speaking, in full retreat. We have “evangelical” leaders denying the reality of hell. Bible believers are broadly speaking perceived to be backward, throwbacks at best, unhinged jihadists at worst. What went wrong? Does Dr. Faustus have anything to teach us? It is certainly the case that moving from truth to lies is the beginning of the end. But where did that begin? Did our cultural decline begin with the advent of the Renaissance?

That particular epochal shift, however, the renaissance’s rejection of God’s revelation in favor of our own wisdom, is small potatoes compared to the original epochal shift. If we really want to understand the horror of someone selling their soul to the devil, we need to look to history rather than fiction. When Solomon sought the wind, he reaped the whirlwind of vanity. Earlier still, however, our mother and father set the pattern.

If we want to understand how we got where we are, if we want to understand how a learned man like Faustus could play such a fool, we have to go back to the garden. There a man and a woman did far worse than Dr. Faustus. They didn’t merely sell their own souls to the devil. They sold the souls of their children, their children’s children and all who would follow.

Unlike Dr. Faustus, Eve was not looking to cut a deal. Faustus called for the devil, whereas Eve merely conversed with him. One could argue that the root of the first sin, if not the first sin itself is found here. When the serpent first offered up his lies beginning his seduction with these deadly words, “Has God indeed said…” the wise thing, the prudent thing, would have been to end the conversation.

To even begin to consider that perhaps the Word we have been given isn’t really God’s Word is just how we come to believe the lie that God lies. Eve, however, corrected the serpent. No, God had not in fact said they could not eat of any of the trees in the garden. He had in fact said, she said, that they could eat of any tree in the garden, save one. That fruit, she explained, they had been forbidden to eat. Indeed, they were forbidden to touch it.

At this point I suspect the serpent was encouraged. Yes, Eve has stood firm on the generosity and grace of God. But she had taken the first step to believing something other than the truth. She did not take away from what God said; she added to it. God had not said they could not touch the fruit of that tree. Eve is adding her own wisdom to God’s, and making the two equal. Her words become God’s words. Like every Pelagian that would one day call Eve mother, she wanted to contribute. She wanted to give rather than receive. And all it took was to “correct” God, to add to His Word.

It was not long, of course, before this one small step for woman became a giant leap for mankind. The devil offered up a different truth. God had said that Eve would die if she ate of the tree. The Serpent said, “You shall not die.” Eve believed the devil, as have all her children since then.

Imagine the folly of this woman. The devil had to offer an explanation for God’s lie. Eve was living in a paradise that God had created. She enjoyed every imaginable blessing. God had showered her with grace from her beginning. “But,” the devil explained, “God is jealous of His power, and if you eat of the tree, you will be like Him.”

Eve believes God could be jealously guarding His power because what she lusts for is that power. The devil is more crafty than any of the beasts of the field. He knew what to offer, how to cast a shadow on God’s character. Satan knew how to get good and loyal creatures to turn on their Creator. He knew this, of course, because he had been through it himself. He knew the thinking that had lead to his own fall, and led Eve right along that garden path.

Dr. Faustus was a much easier mark than Eve. He was already fallen, already given to heed the wisdom of his “father.” What sets him apart from the rest of us is all that he was able to win. That is, the shocking part of the story isn’t that he gave up so much, his soul, for so little, a lifetime of power, but that we give up so much for even less.

We are not promised great power as he was. Nor are we promised astonishing insights as he was. We are not offered the power to astonish the world as he was. Instead we are offered so much less. If we will believe the lie, all we get in return in our own pride. We sell our souls for the foolish notion that we can help to save our souls, for the fleeting pleasant thought that we’re better than our neighbor. So that we might believe this simple lie- we don’t already stand guilty before the throne of God.

Which highlights the raw silliness of all such soul selling stories. Since Eve believed the serpent we have all been born the property of the serpent. He has our souls, and so need not give up anything to get them. We are fallen from the start. We have nothing to offer Mephistopheles, and he has nothing to offer us. This world belongs to Jesus. Its wisdom is foolishness. Our souls, if we have professed our need to Him, belong to Him. Nothing, not even our own foolish pride, can free us from His loving grip.

God’s truth is not good for our pride. It manifests His glory and exposes our sin. Pride, in the end kept Dr. Faustus from repenting. As his death approached, as he saw the end of the line coming closer, he was given opportunity to turn. Time and again he was called to repent. His contract included an escape clause. All he had to do was release the lies. All he had to do was come to grips with what he was, a creature. But he missed the power. His longing for power made him miss the most potent words ever uttered on our planet- Lord, be merciful to me, a sinner.

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