Reparations, Guilt and Justice

What about reparations?

I’m in favor of reparations. I’m in favor of them because the Bible is in favor of them. When God established His nation, when He delivered that law which was to govern His people He established reparations as the fitting punishment for those who were guilty of theft or negligence. They didn’t call it reparations, but restitution, but the principle is the same. The thief, or the negligent, had a responsibility to make things right for their victim. One could even argue they were required to go beyond making things right. Sometimes they might have to return twice what was taken, or even more. One thing they never had to do, in that era considered harsh and inhumane by postmoderns, was be imprisoned. God’s law provided for no such punishment. There were only two kinds of punishments, restitution, or death.

The biblical practice, however, though the law was established long before the ministry of Ezekiel where God reminds us that He will not punish the children for the sins of the father, has always been that the guilty are punished, not the innocent. And that the victim is recompensed not those who are not victims.

That is not to say that the Bible has no room for the concept of corporate guilt. When Achan took of the accursed things at Jericho not only did it lead to God’s judgment such that many died at the battle of Ai, but when Achan was exposed his whole family was put to death. During the days of the kings it wasn’t at all uncommon for God Himself to pronounce a judgment on a wicked king that he would die and all his children. How do we deal with that? By simply remembering this foundational truth- we are all, in ourselves, because of our own sin, under a death sentence from the living God. Ever soldier at Ai, every family beyond Achan’s, every king, prince and every pauper are all guilty before God.

Which should lead us to this conclusion which is as plain as something remarkably plain- the call for, even assuming we could know who was whom, descendants of slave owners to pay reparations to the descendants of slaves is a cry for injustice. What is stranger still, however, is that any Christian, whomever his ancestors may be, would think it prudent to demand justice. Every last one of us has stolen from others. Every last one of us have treated others at one time or another as property. The very evil that resided in the hearts of slaveowners resided in the hearts of slaves.

Which is why it doesn’t surprise me that the racism that justified slavery (“these Africans are the descendants of Ham and therefore it is right to enslave them”) or even genocide (“these Jews should be put to death because they killed the Messiah”) is at work in the hearts of the descendants of Africans and the descendants of Jews. It’s what we all are. There are two kinds of people in this world- those who think other people are wicked and those who, by His grace, know that we are all other people to other people.

I know of a man who was enslaved. His master was a believer. The slave ran away. He became a believer. The same man led them both to Christ. That man sent the slave back to the master, carrying a letter not demanding reparations, not even demanding that the slave be freed, but rather asking that, in light of their shared liberty in Christ, who paid all that we all owe, he be welcomed not as a slave but as a brother. And all three of them now live happily ever after. We are all the servants of the One who paid all our debts. We are all His, and each other’s brothers as well. May we cease giving demands and ever more give thanks.

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Lockdowns? It’s Deja Vu All Over Again; Bible in 5, II Corinthians

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything

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Preaching Power

That we in the church have been infected by the consumerist mindset is a given. It is a buyer’s market, with sellers of every imaginable stripe vying for our attention. In the mindset of too many churches, and too many church members, entertainment rules the day. But even here I run the risk of boring my audience, the risk that you will click away from this piece and turn to other things if I merely rehearse the ills of the church-growth movement. It’s just another stale take, “Blah, blah, blah, those other people, blah, gurus, blah blah, inch deep, blah.”

If, however, we are among those few who yet worship in churches free of clowns on unicycles and assorted other circus freaks, we are not necessarily home free. If we are in the market for meat instead of milk, we are still in the market. Our problems aren’t solved, in other words, if we cater to the right demographic. Some may have better taste than others while everyone tends to feed the self.

What is missing isn’t just depth. What is missing is authority. Crusty, prickly Reformed folk who spend their Lord’s Day sitting like an Olympic judge, waiting for the pastor to slip up theologically are, in a sense, hardly better than the smiling evangelical who rates his pastors’ sermons with a laugh-o-meter. They both sit in seats of judgment. They simply have different personal standards.

While we are commanded to have the spirit of the Bereans, while we are to test the spirits, it is the spirit of the age that looks at the sermon as something to judge rather than as something by which to be judged. We come to the sermon not ultimately to measure it by the Word of God but to be measured through it by the Word of God. We come as those under authority, bondservants of the King. While from one perspective it is only that clumsy sinner who is filling the pulpit, from another legitimate perspective, what we are hearing is the Word of God preached. And for those who fill the pulpit, we are not there in our own authority, or for our own glory. And we too need to hear the Word preached.

If we would regain in our day the power of preaching, if we would see our selves, our families, our churches, and, from there, our culture remade by the power of preaching, those who listen must come not as those who are hearing a sales pitch but as soldiers being given marching orders. And those who preach must recognize that they are delivering not just a message but the very words of God. Sound preaching wounds us, heals us, and sends us back out into the battle. When the Captain of the Lord’s Hosts appears, there is no dickering. There are no negotiations. Instead, there we receive the commands of our King. From there we go forth as more than conquerors. May we, by His grace, be given ears to hear.

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Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them- Postmoderns, COVID and Miss Information

It is as deadly as it is swift and easy, the refutation of our most sacred national creed. That creed affirms, “There is no such thing as objective truth.” With these three words we refute it, slay it, and dust off the spot on which it once stood, “Is that true?” If there is no objective truth it is not objectively true that there is no objective truth. If it is objectively truth that there is no objective truth than there is objective truth.

The objective truth is that we all want to deny those truths that cramp our style. One strategy is to embrace that silly creed. What happens though, when you want to cramp the style of others? The very pantheon of the gods of relativism, the social media overlords, now find themselves frustrated that we deplorables, those they have been trying to convert to this most sophisticated creed, refuse to embrace their truth. Not just their truth that there is no truth, but their truth that COVID will kill us all if we don’t wear our masks and get vaccinated.

If I begin my affirmation with their creed, “Of course, there’s no such thing as objective truth. We all have our own,” can I go on to say, without running afoul of the Ministry of Truth, “and my truth is that we don’t yet know if the vaccine, which is unlike any prior vaccine, is safe and we do know that my family is not in any genuine danger from COVID.” I’m not saying it’s THE TRUTH. I’m just saying it’s MY truth. Will they let me say it? Or, could I simply identify as vaccinated?

To put it another way, if there is no information, how can there possibly be such a thing as misinformation? To me President Biden stole the election. To me President Trump stole the 2016 nomination. To me the 10th Amendment means 95% of the programs run and financed by the federal government are unconstitutional. To me homosexual practice is an abomination before the true and living God that must be, like my own sins, repented of. To me there are two kinds of boys, those who know they are boys and are content about it and those who know they are boys and are confused about it. To me, justice is colorblind.

I could, of course, go on. I could wave a great red cape before the eyes of the raging bulls in Silicon Valley. They may well charge at me. In doing so, however, they are confessing that colors are real, and that truth claims are either true, or false. If they really believed that there is no truth, they wouldn’t fear anyone’s truth claims. If they really believed there is no right and wrong, they wouldn’t try to end the wrong they call “spreading disinformation.”

They, however, are guilty of the worst disinformation. They lie that there is no truth. They do wrong in denying there is right. The Truth, however, Who set us free, is about the business of crushing their heads. And one day they will all join us in confessing that He is Lord.

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Forever Friend, Nick Eicher; Appeal; Preach

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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How were people saved in the Old Testament?

The only way there is to be saved, by trusting in the work of Christ alone. Because God is just, sin must be punished. Because we are sinners, that is bad news for us. The promise of God to Adam and Eve, however, was that the Seed of the Woman would have His heel bruised, while He crushes the head of the serpent. God took the man-made coverings our first parents fashioned and gave them animal skins to cover them, foreshadowing the need for the shedding of blood by a substitute.

These shadows continued throughout the Old Testament. With each passing generation, however, the shadows of the promise began to recede. The gospel, in its most nascent form, was given in Genesis 3, but it grew in clarity. Abraham’s sacrifice of Isaac, Joseph’s multiple deaths, burials, “resurrections,” Moses striking the rock in the wilderness, all these pointed to the coming of a substitute. The sacrificial system God gave His people made the promise still more clear.

We are all, however, given to confusing the sign with the thing signified. Adam and Eve were not redeemed by the animals whose skins they wore. And not a soul was saved by the sacrifice of bulls and goats. Were such sufficient, Christ would not have ever needed to come. Instead they pointed forward to the future hope, the future hope that secured redemption for those who believed. The redeemed in the Old Testament were redeemed by the work of Christ that was to come, which they appropriated by faith. As we look backward to His finished work for us, and rest in it, so they looked forward to His coming work for them, and rested in it.

For Adam and Eve the object of their faith was that first simple promise. I doubt they had a deep understanding of what the promise meant, but I believe they believed it was their only hope. For the earlier generations in the Promised Land the object of their faith included a better understanding of what the sacrificial system meant, and they believed it was their only hope. With the prophet Isaiah the meaning of the promise became more clear still, as he described for God’s people the suffering servant who would be bruised for our healing.

There is but one people of God, those who are covered by the blood of Christ. There is but one way to peace with God, resting in the work of Christ. There is but one gospel, the promise of God that He has reconciled us to Himself in pouring out His wrath for us upon Him. As they looked forward through the sacrifices, so we look backward through the table of the Lord. To rest in either would be deadly. To rest in the one each represents is to be at peace with the living God, to be adopted into His family, to eat as His children at His table. There are not two ways into the kingdom, just one.

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Atin-Lay, Posse Peccare; Catechism 84; Curating Books, Gilbert Keith Chesterton

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Paradise Remembered


 
Nostalgia has as its lightly buried foundation a longing for a place we have never been to, Eden.  Home is but an echo, a shadow of our first and final home. I understand that most were not blessed as I was, to grow up in an idyllic combination of peace and beauty, that many suffered early the curse of Cain, to wander east of Eden. Others had a childhood fueled more by the fruit of the fall than that which preceded the fall. For all the hardships I have been through, a traumatic childhood was not one of them. Indeed of all the blessings I give thanks for that flowed through hands of my parents I count among the dearest that they raised me in the mountains of western Pennsylvania, a stone’s throw from the Mayberry like hamlet of Ligonier, Pennsylvania. It certainly helped that my beloved Pirates, in addition to playing in the postseason when I was 7, 9, and 10 won the World Series when I was six and 14, while the Steelers made the playoffs every year I lived from 7 to 14, winning the Super bowl while I was 9, 10, 13 and 14. But all that was just icing on the cake of a boyhood marked by glorious fall festivals, summers tromping through a 20 acre wood and winters marked by a blazing fireplace, hot chocolate and sleds careening down sundry hills.
 
Each time I visit Ligonier I feel a perceptible weight lifted off my chest, breathing my air. While of course the apostle is right when he tells us of eternity, that our minds cannot begin to imagine what awaits us, there is a contrary corollary- eternity is everything good and blessed we enjoy now. When John Denver sang “Almost Heaven, West Virginia” he was right. Just keep driving north over the Pennsylvania border and you will be there.
 
My goal in writing isn’t to persuade you of the glories of my youth, and my hometown. Rather it is to give thanks, and to encourage you to do the same. While we were certainly sinners, indeed totally depraved sinners, there yet remains an innocence to youth, a trusting, wide-eyed wonder that could not help but give thanks. There was in our youth a perspective not just on the gifts but the Giver that inverts the wisdom of CS Lewis. You remember when Lucy, coming upon Aslan in a later adventure remarks at how much bigger he had become. Aslan gently corrects her, explaining that he had not grown, but she had grown in her capacity to see him. All true, gloriously true. But it is likewise true that the weight of growing up, the burden of our daily wounds in time dulls our eyes to what we once knew by His common grace- that He was here, and He was with us.
 
Youth, we must come to understand, isn’t so much something we are to grow out of, but something we are to grow into. For of such is the kingdom of God. It is a deep blessing to know that home is where I am going. We remember innocence that we might long for it; we taste eternity that we might hunger for it. We believe He takes us there, and there, feeds us.

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The Gospel at Work- Dan Smithwick

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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New Theses, New Reformation

Thesis 85 We must be quick to listen.

Movements move, eventually, off the mark. This may be because movements require two dangerous but potent ingredients- single-mindedness and certainty. One does not give birth to a movement while spinning multiple plates. One doesn’t change the collective wisdom of the world from a position of uncertainty. These two ingredients, however, have a rather short shelf-life, inevitably souring into tunnel vision and arrogance.

A reformation is a movement of sorts, but for it to succeed it needs to steer clear of such spoilage. The Bible gives us the antidote in reminding us to be quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry (James 1:19). What though are we to be listening to? First, we are to listen to the Word of God. One of the distinguishing qualities that sets Reformation apart from Revolution is that the latter always wishes to start from scratch, to tear down everything that had come before. The former recognizes that our past, like our present and our future, is a mixed bag. Where the church remains faithful to God’s Word, we are called to agree. We don’t toss it aside to make room for our own ideas.

Second, we are to listen to our fathers. Rome made the mistake of ascribing infallibility to church tradition. The radical reformation made the mistake of tossing the wisdom of our fathers overboard. The magisterial Reformers rightly found a balance. We ought to follow in their footsteps. We ought to honor our fathers, while being careful not to venerate them.

Third, we need to listen to those we are seeking to serve. The very purpose of Reformation, in the end, isn’t the increased health of institutions but the growth into godliness of the people in those institutions. The sheep know the voice of their Great Shepherd. Under-shepherds, on the other hand, must also know the voice of their flocks. This is one way we steer clear of the dangers of movements. Luther led the Reformation not to make a name for himself, but for the sake of the souls under his care. Every moment he devoted translating the Bible into the German vernacular was a moment he didn’t give himself to grandiose abstract disputations. He set aside feeding his ego that he might be used to feed His sheep

Finally, we need to listen to the voice of the Spirit of God. We are commanded to walk in the Spirit, to be led by the Spirit. When He speaks we not only must listen, but must act. He speaks to those sins we must become convicted of. He speaks to the needs of others we must seek to meet. He speaks of the glory of the Son that is our guiding light and our reason for being. He speaks the words that He would have us to speak to the watching world. He speaks the words that assure us of the love of the Father for us. Two ears, one mouth. Good counsel.

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