Is “color-blindness” the right response to racism?

No, and yes. Racism is, and will be, until Christ’s return a peculiarly ugly manifestation of the sin that remains within all of us. It is grounded in a pride that is as loathsome as it is ridiculous. Imagine taking pride in the history of cultures and genes that you neither built nor chose. Imagine looking down at those who were given a different culture, or a different genetic background. It’s just silly, embarrassing.

The “no” part, however, comes here. “Color-blindness” is wrong when it is used to wipe out any sense of cultural identity. I didn’t choose my family, but it is still my family. In my cultural context I identify not only with being a Sproul, but with being a native of Pittsburgh. In turn I identify with my ancestors who hailed from Scotland and Ireland. These cultural identities carry with them things to be proud of, like the glorious truth that no team has more Super Bowl trophies than my Steelers, and propensities that are not something to be proud of, like the habits of my Scottish ancestors to not do well getting along with each other. If “color-blindness” means I have to forget all that, ignore all that, I’m doing it wrong. Shared experiences unite us.

The “yes” part, however, may have been given its best expression in Martin Luther King’s “I Have a Dream” speech. Among the things King dreamt of was a future where a man would be judged not by the color of his skin, but by the content of his character. I am from Pittsburgh. My ancestors hailed from the British Isles. But I am also me. I know I didn’t do much to secure those Super Bowl trophies, though we Pittsburghers do believe in the power of a well-waved Terrible Towel. I like to think I haven’t succumbed to my cultural heritage of squabbling with my kin, even if my kin have such a cultural heritage. I should neither be praised for the virtues of my tribe, nor condemned for their vices.

In like manner, my calling is to look at others one at a time, to assess their character rather than their family tree. God, after all, rescued us from our first family, and adopted us into His own. Our identity is now in Him. And in Him we are called to love our neighbor, to recognize that our family is not black or white, but rather is all those covered by the blood of Christ. I not only have more in common with a believer who was born and raised in the Amazon than I do with an unbelieving Pittsburgher with Scots-Irish ancestors, but I am closer kin to that believer.

God has not only adopted me into His family, but has adopted in our family two boys whose ancestors came from Africa. They, and we with them, because we are family, ought to know and celebrate their historical background. But in terms of our family, their skin color is of no more significance than the color of their eyes. In the end we no longer have Adam as our father, but Abraham, the father of the faithful. All because we have the same elder brother, our kinsman redeemer, Jesus of Nazareth.

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Sacred Marriage, To Forsake All Others; Bible in 5, I Thessalonians

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Fool Me Once

Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me. I’ll admit I got taken in the first time. As a grade school child my conception of cool included too tight silk shirts and blue jeans with more flair than Liberace. I even had my own polyester jumpsuit. I looked like a cross between Howdy Doody and Elvis, in his latter years. The fashion craze of recreating the nightmare of the seventies didn’t fill my heart with a warm dose of nostalgia. Instead it made me embarrassed for what I used to wear. I’ve learned my lesson well. I won’t get fooled again.

It reminds me, however, of the power of nostalgia, even its most affected and insincere manifestations. Postmodernism, because it is parasitic and destructive, cannot build a culture. It can only reconstitute old ones. Because it is cynical and knowing, it goes out of its way to reconstitute that which is garish, immature, and kitschy. We dress like goofballs to demonstrate our knowing superiority over the narrative that is clothing. Because it denies that nothing lasts, it demands that everything be new. The danger is the speed at which our cultural spin-masters are spinning the old cultures. It won’t be long before we are encouraged to practice a faux nostalgia for last week.

Real nostalgia, true longing for days gone by is fed by a different kind of folly. It seems that hindsight can only be had through rose-colored glasses. And they never go out of style. We want things not as they used to be, but as we remember that they used to be. Which is why the author of Hebrews went to such trouble, argued with such passion, warned with such fervor in his epistle. Nostalgia can do worse things than make you dress funny.

Living in a comparatively free country, one where pluralism rules the day, it is difficult to understand what it would have taken for a first-century Jew to embrace the claims of Jesus Christ. More than likely, such would destroy a whole host of family relationships. Friendships would be sundered as well. Those, like Nicodemus and Joseph of Arimathea, indeed, like the apostle Paul, who once were honored and respected men of the community, would now become social pariahs, unable to get a place at the table. And a swift and painful death by martyrdom, with each passing day, became more and more likely.

Like their forefathers before them, we can have sympathy when some begin to talk about how they once had leeks and garlic back in Egypt, that though they were slaves, their pots were filled. Present suffering deepens the rosy hue as we look back at past suffering. And so many believing Hebrews struggled mightily with fits of nostalgia. Many were sorely tempted to throw off the dead-weight of this Jesus, that happy days might be here again. Cast off that cross, they reasoned, and they could stand upright in the halls of men again. Many, in short, were tempted to neglect so great a salvation.

Ironically, one could argue that their problem wasn’t that they were looking backward. The old saying, “you can’t go back again,” wouldn’t help. One might say their failure was that they weren’t looking far enough back. A love of the past may be a good thing, as long as what we love is a good thing. They were called not to look back to their recent Judaism. Neither were they to look longingly at the apex of their nation, to the days of David and Solomon. They should not look back to Egypt, nor even to the days of the great patriarchs. Rather, they should have longed to get back to the garden.

The right thing to long for is a world without sin. Our hearts should ache to be once again at peace with God, to walk with Him in the cool of the evening, to see the lion lay down with the lamb. This is godly nostalgia, as long as it moves us to godly obedience. While we ought to long for such things, we ought not to do so forlornly, knowing that you can’t go back again. Rather we do so joyfully, knowing that we, with every forward step, move back to the garden. That is, the path to the garden is through the consummation of the kingdom of Jesus Christ. To go home again, we must seek first the kingdom of God.

These things, however, are written for us as well. While our status as outcasts and victims in our own culture cannot compare with the Hebrews in the first century, we are headed in that direction. Like Augustine before us, we are called to witness the destruction of the culture around us. And, like the Hebrews, we are tempted toward nostalgia. We long for those halcyon days of the 1950’s, when the Hayes Office kept our movies clean, and the daily news wasn’t filled with liberal prelates gayly shouting the “love” that once didn’t dare speak it’s name. And like the Hebrews, we are looking in the wrong place.

As Christians, our longing is not that we might have a cleaner pop culture. The church does not place its hope in military/industrial/cultural American hegemony across the globe. Rather, we long for the day when every knee will bow and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord. The church longs for the day when we will be dressed not in the gaudiness and flash of a decadent culture, but will be dressed in the radiant robe provided by our Husband and Lord.

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Dear Exvangelicals,

I’m probably the last person you’d want to hear from. I’m an old school evangelical. I’m more conservative politically than the most ardent President Trump fanboy. Reformed, head of my home, still affirming that marriage is only between one man and one woman, and, here’s the kicker, only people married to each other should be naked together. Add to that the stench of hypocrisy sticks to me like white on rice given my very public failures. Maybe you believe the best person to call out to you to come home would be a nice neo-evangelical, a gentle progressive evangelical, or even a friendly Anglican charismatic. I believe, however, that the best equipped person is the one who knows best how ill equipped he is. I need His grace, just like you do.

I grant that I haven’t devoted sufficient study to your deconstruction tales to write a dissertation. I can say that one prominent feature is that you don’t much care for people like me. You looked at the evangelical church and found there people who not only believe sexual sin is what the Bible says it is, but who are willing to say so, out loud, without embarrassment. You’ve found there people who treated those under their care as sexual toys, and others who, for the shame of it all, covered up and enabled. You found people who not only believe that husbands are to be the heads of their homes, that elders should be men but also who have treated some women less than respectfully. You found porn addicts, mansion dwellers, prideful academics, bullies and brand builders. You found all manner of sin, which surprises me not in the least. It’s how we got in the church to begin with, confessing our need for grace.

You have, in pointing fingers, forgotten what we all are, sinners in need of His grace. You express in your “I thank you Lord that I am not like other men” diatribes against the siblings who loved you all along the way that you are ashamed of what you once were. And so communicate your pride in what you now are. You think yourselves so humble for confessing your complicity with those you are now leaving behind when what you’re really saying is, “I used to be like the rest of you evil monsters, but I got better.”

You haven’t gotten better, but worse. The love and humility, the doubt and uncertainty reveal their true nature when you hate people like me, when you pridefully separate yourself from people like me, when you know for certain that people like me can’t be the beloved of Jesus, because we aren’t good enough. We aren’t good enough, that’s true. But Jesus not only can love us, but does love us. You too aren’t good enough. Washing off yourself all the stench of your brothers’ sins, real and imagined, will never make you clean. It will just make a stench that is distinctively your own.

There is only one thing that washes us, the blood of Jesus. Not a one of us are worthy of it. Not the racist, sexist, homophobic, patriarchal, Confederate flag wavers that Jesus loves but you will not, nor you, the Pharisee. The first man, however, as he cries out, “Lord be merciful to me, a sinner” goes home justified. As will you, if you will cry the same prayer, and walk home with him. Come home. Leave your pride behind. There’s a ring, a robe, sandals and a fattened calf waiting for you.

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Forever Friend, Jeff Hixson; Curating Movies, Cary Grant; Why Unbelievers Hate Us

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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How was the first meeting of the Shepherd’s College?


Lisa and I, along with the rest of the board of Dunamis Fellowship, have been prayerfully working together to open the doors of the Shepherd’s College August 30. Several of us met several times a week to pray over this adventure. We put together a website, met with local pastors, planned our course of study, secured a meeting place, prayed some more, ordered books, prayed and moved forward.

I came home from that first meeting with a smile and a grateful heart. We had several men, including a former pastor, a future pastor and a deacon gathered in person with several more joining us through Zoom. We talked about the program and the philosophy of ministry undergirding it. We talked about the courses for this first semester, why they were important, the books we’re going to read together. We talked about the importance of talking. Best of all, we spoke well together about God’s Word and God’s Work.

There was, as there should be, a sense of worship as we gathered. We marveled at His grace, wondered at His wonder and devoted time to prayer. The encouragement that I brought home was less about this newborn institution, though it included gratitude for this day of small beginnings, but about the blessing of men talking together earnestly about the things of God, about once again remembering the blessings of our redemption and adoption. There was a spirit of camaraderie, a brotherhood born. No one, I believe, came away feeling burdened or weighed down by our planned course of study. Instead there was hope and excitement. I wish you could have been there.

Of course, you can. The registrar has set September 7th as the last day to join for this semester. You can read more about the Shepherd’s College here. If you have questions you can reach out through email at hellorcjr@gmail.com. Though we have purposefully designed our program so that it is eminently affordable, we also have limited scholarship funds available. (We could, of course, always use more as we have multiple students eager to enroll for whom finances, as things now stand, would be a barrier. If you’d like to contribute to our scholarship fund you can do so through the “Donate” button on our homepage. Donations are tax deductible.)

We believe that the day of the mega-church is beginning to draw to a close, that there is an urgent need not for branded entrepreneurs but shepherds who are unknown to Big Eva, but known and loved by their own flock. We believe the order of the day is courage, fidelity, humility and joy. We believe that he shepherds best who repents most. Or, to put it another way, we’re looking for a few bad men, committed to the service of the one Good Man.

Please keep us in your prayers. Please consider how you might come alongside us in this important work. And please consider signing up. The harvest is plentiful, though the laborers are few.

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Shorter Catechism 89; Appeal; Atin-Lay, Intellectus Dei

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Ruth II- Your God, My God; Your People My People

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Jesus is Lord


When we know our end we know our calling for today. What is our end? We will, for all eternity, inhabit a redeemed world, the new heavens and the new earth. We will enjoy peace, plenty, a life utterly devoid of sin. And we will serve and sit under the King. Eternity is a monarchy and Jesus is its king.

That can be hard for us who are Americans to swallow. We, if we were poorly educated, rejoice in and give thanks for living in a democracy, a place where the people rule. If we were better educated we rejoice and give thanks for living in a republic, a place where law, rather than people rule. In either case we buck against the notion of monarchy. We came into our own when we threw off the rule of George III, when the colonies declared themselves independent.

Our prejudices are confirmed when we read through the early history of Israel. After struggling through that part of Israel’s history when it was ruled by judges, charismatically gifted and chosen, that time when “Every man did what was right in his own eyes” we come to the account of Samuel, the last judge in Israel. The people, you will remember, came to him demanding that they be given a king like all the other nations to rule over them. That’s where we plant our anti-monarchy flag. “See,” we say, “these foolish people want a king and it’s all going to go wrong for them.” God tells Samuel what the king will be like- he will send your sons off the foreign wars. He will take your daughters to work in his palace. And, as shocking and terrifying as this may be, he will tax you at a rate of 10%.

A more careful reading, however, will show us that the problem was not that Israel wanted a king, but that they wanted a king like all the other nations. God tells Samuel that they had not rejected him as their judge, but had rejected God as their king. They didn’t move from judges to monarchs, but moved from having God as their king to having a king like all the other nations. God gave them over to their desires, and we know how that went. His promise, however, His solution to the problem of Saul, was not democracy or a republic. His solution was a king, His king, David.

David, along with his son Solomon reigned in a golden age for Israel. Neither, of course, were in the least sinless. Both had much to repent for. But the nation reached its geographic, economic and militaristic pinnacle. Even the nation’s worship hit a high point with the building of the temple. From this point forward in their history the question no longer was monarchy or not, but became instead good monarchy or bad. And so it is in our own day.

Which is why the great Hebrew prophet reminds us, “It may be the devil, or it may be the Lord, but you’re gonna have to serve somebody.” Kingship is unavoidable, woven into the warp and woof of reality. Because Jesus is Lord. This was, of course, the very first creed of the first century church, that affirmation in turn that lead so many to die the martyr’s death. “Jesus is Lord” is not a mere wish. That is, saying “Jesus is Lord” is not on par with saying, “We’re number one” about our favorite team. Neither are we merely affirming that He is our Lord. When we come to embrace Him it is not strictly accurate to say that we make Jesus the Lord of our lives. What we do instead is recognize that Jesus is Lord of our lives. We do not rise up to heaven to put a crown on His head, to seat Him on our throne. Instead we fall on our faces, and grasp that He always been our Lord; we had just been in rebellion.

Where we are going then is not to a future inauguration. “Jesus is Lord” is not affirming “Jesus will be Lord.” It is not just a future hope, but a present reality. What we yet await is the increasing recognition of His reign. First, as we grow in grace, as we become increasingly obedient we bring our own hearts, minds and hands into submission. His reign, however, is not simply over the church. The idea that “The kingdom of God is in our hearts” is true, not because it is not outside of our hearts, but because it is everywhere. That is, it is not only in our hearts. Wherever there is a there, there Jesus reigns. Wherever there is a that, Jesus reigns over that. There is, as Abraham Kuyper wisely said, not one square inch of the entire universe over which Jesus does not declare, “MINE.”

Like our fathers in the faith, however, we don’t want the King, but a king, like all the other nations. We want to be ruled by our desires, by our emotions. We want a king like all the other nations- a state that watches over us from cradle to grave. We want a king like all the other nations, that will send our sons off to die in adventurous wars, and now, our daughters as well. We want a king like all the other nations, whose tax burden suggests that they own it all. We don’t want Jesus to rule over us, fearing that He is too cruel and exacting. Instead we want a king like all the other nations, whose tender mercies are most cruel.

The good news, however, is that our king is at work overcoming not just our enemies, but all within us that is displeasing to Him. When we cry out for a king like all the other nations we do so as subjects of the one King, who happily does not run a democracy. He is about the business of bringing subjects into His kingdom, and in the business of making His subjects more subject.

Jesus is Lord. All authority in heaven and on earth has been given unto Him. His kingdom is forever, for He shall reign forever and ever. He is bringing all things under subjection, to the glory of the Father. We live in the midst of the greatest fairy tale every told. We are the evil hag that the Prince has married. And He has ascended to His throne. Which means, of course, that our story ends just as it ought- and we’ll all live happily ever after.

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The Gospel at Work, Bryan Marler

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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