New Theses, New Reformation

Thesis 72- We must faithfully pray for our wife and children.

There is no calling more fraught with danger and import than leading a family. Certainly bad things can happen if we fall down on our 9-5 jobs. No doubt failures at the local church have deep impact. Every member of every family, however, is a person who will last into eternity. There are only two destinations where that eternity will be spent. No father, no parent, is fully responsible for all those under their care. We are, as husbands and fathers, given the tasks of raising our children in the nurture and admonition of the Lord (Ephesians 6). We are called to wash our wives with the water of the Word (Ephesians 5). Scared yet? If not, you clearly don’t understand.

The purpose of the fear, however, isn’t to make us freeze up, to futilely seek to flee our responsibility. Rather, the fear is there to drive us to our Father. The church is chalk full of tools and helps to carry out these callings. We have seminars and podcasts, conferences and books, whole para-church ministries devoted to equipping us. Many of these, of course, can be quite helpful. None of them, nor all of them put together, however, can hold a candle to the power of prayer.

Actually, while it may seem a pedantic distinction, the power isn’t in the prayer, but in the One prayed to. We often rightly chasten ourselves for looking to prayer as the strategy of last resort. “Tried everything else and still stuck? Try prayer!” We’re fools to forget where the power lies. We’re fools as well when we forget the promises of Him to whom we pray. Our Father indeed hears us when we pray, “Lord, won’t you buy me a Mercedes-Benz.” And He more often than not answers, “No.” When, however, we pray in line with His actual promises, we can be confident in positive responses.

Who, for instance, is more interested in your children being raised in His nurture and admonition, you or Him? Who is more committed to the washing of your wife, you, or Him? Who is more zealous for the growth in grace and wisdom of you and your whole family, you or Him? So let’s pray. Let’s daily storm the throne room of God Himself for those under our care, for those whom we love most of all. Let’s ask for direction, wisdom, power, strength, perseverance, faith from His Spirit. Let’s invest our time in time with our Father.

Let’s in fact, remember that husbands, wives, children, that we are all together both part of the bride of Christ, having the perfect Husband, and are all children of our heavenly Father. We are being washed by our Husband, and nurtured by our Father, all while being led by the Spirit. Reformation comes as we are re-formed into all that He calls us to be, as we are re-committed to doing all that He calls us to do. Pray for yourself. Pray for your wife. Pray for your children. Pray for His grace, and give thanks.

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Uniformitarianism; Parable of the Servants; Tithe?

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Why are Christians up in arms about homosexuality?

First, I’m not sure such is true anymore. Some, to be sure. Many professing Christians, however, are joining the world in embracing a love and let love ethic. Given the choice between being culturally marginalized or marginalizing the Bible, too many of us choose the latter.

Out and About

There are, however, some Christians who still are willing to affirm a biblical sexual ethic, which precludes homosexual practice. Biblical Christians have always taken this position. It was not, however, so much front and center fifty or more years ago. What changed? Not Christians, but homosexuals. There is a reason homosexuality was once called the love that dare not speak its name. It once made sense that homosexuals used to live in “closets,” hiding the truth about their sexual peculiarities. There was, not just among Christians but in the broader culture, a consensus that this was twisted. Those given to such behavior kept it on the down-low. The only reason Christians find themselves having to be bold and upfront in denouncing homosexuality is because homosexuals and their fellow-travelers are insisting that we celebrate homosexuality.

Pride, In the Name of Love

While it is in fact not true that all sins are equal in the eyes of God, it is true that homosexuals have not cornered the market on sexual sin, nor grievous sin in general. The norm among the hetero-normative includes all manner of besetting sins, closeted sins, Spirit-grieving sins. One could argue that homosexual behavior entails not only a general violation of God’s sexual ethic but adds to it a radical rejection of His created order. Homosexual is not merely licentious but also perverse. Whether true or not, there is a deeper distinction in our day between homosexuality and fornication, adultery, and other forms of heterosexual sexual immorality. No one is publicly celebrating those sins. No one is claiming one can be a faithful Christian while giving themselves over to those sins. When was the last time your city set aside a day and gave a parade for fornicators? When was the last time adulterers took to the streets to announce their pride? No one is demanding that those opposed to these sins be considered sexual immorality phobic monsters on par with the Nazis.

Intolerance to the Intolerant

The homosexual lobby has no interest in protecting their “rights” to do what they do in private. No one has been trying to take those “rights” away. The whole of the movement isn’t about what they do, but about what we think about what they do. We are being made, through the tender mercies of the state, to care. Christians want nothing more than for everyone to repent and believe the gospel, to turn from our sins and rest in the work of Christ for us. The homosexual lobby wants Christians to repent of our Christianity, our belief in the gospel, our conviction that we are all sinners, that we have a duty to submit to God’s law. Christians proclaim our message, the sole weapon of our warfare being the preaching of the gospel. The homosexual lobby uses the bludgeon of the state, their sole weapon of enforcing their religion of “tolerance.”

We Christians have no need to go out of our way to condemn homosexuality. We bear a message of deliverance from every sin’s power and destruction. We remember, such once were we. We must, however, have the courage to not bend God’s Word to the world.

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Unmasking Politicians; Bible in 5 Minutes, Habakkuk

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Rebels Without a Cause

It was Marx who argued that, rather than man shaping economic realities, it was the economic realities that shape man. Despite his manifold and manifest follies, he had something of a point here. Setting aside for a moment the chicken and the egg issue, wouldn’t hard times, for instance, give rise to strong willed and stiff backed men? Wouldn’t economic blessing tempt us to softness? Might this be why Agur cries out in Proverbs 30 “Give me neither poverty nor riches; feed me with the food that is needful for me, lest I be full and deny you and say, ‘Who is the Lord? Or lest I be poor and steal and profane the name of my God” (verses 8-9). Doesn’t it make sense that the greatest generation, the one that made so many sacrifices during World War II, was likewise the generation raised in the heat of the Great Depression? In turn doesn’t it make sense that the post-war prosperity of the next generation would give rise to whining hippies?

Elbow Room

One could argue that the very nature of colonization and westward expansion in the early history of these United States would create, or at least attract, a peculiar mindset. People content to collect a paycheck by pushing papers or stamping out widgets need not apply. American individualism didn’t arrive out of the American experience de nova, nor from the writings of Horatio Alger, but rather sprung from the hard scrabble of the frontier and the prairie. It was forged in the cold tundra of winters. Uncharted territory never opens wide before the effete, but challenges the hearts of men. That economic reality in turn shaped the artistic reality, America as a nation of lone wolves. James Fennimore Cooper brought us the Leatherstocking Tales, a collection of novels about a frontier hero. Natty Bumpo was Daniel Boone before Daniel Boone. He lived off the land, did right by his neighbors, but aspired mostly to be left alone. That Daniel Boone was real enough doesn’t explain our country’s abiding interest in him. He was a hero to us because he went out on his own and built a life for himself. Mark Twain continued the same pattern as Huck Finn only begins his adventures as he heads west, on his own, to make his mark. That Holden Caufield inhabits the city and spends his sophomoric days whining doesn’t change that he too is the lone wolf, alone, with no body to catch the body falling through the rye.

Whaddya got?

Of course, truth be told, we have by now virtually run out of frontiers. In turn we aren’t exactly overrun with opportunities for vision quest, for soul-shaping heroism. But that doesn’t mean we have run out of rebels. Marlon Brando at one point virtually owned the franchise. Stanley Kowalski, of the torn t-shirt, may have been torn between two women in A Streetcar Named Desire, but he was yet a man on his own. He defied convention, in the pursuit of all that his heart longed for. In The Wild Ones Brando played the leader of a motorcycle gang. They blow into a small town, and while at a bar Brando’s character is asked, “Johnny, what are you rebelling against?” With his trademark sneer Brando replies, “Whaddya got?” James Dean would later be but a pale imitation.

To Be is To Be on TV

The pattern is only now beginning to fade, but for all the wrong reasons. The modern world is regimented, a well-oiled machine. Naturally the hero longs to escape such a prison, to rebel not against nothing, but against everything. But in the postmodern world, the only answer we can give Johnny is, “Nothing.” The only prison the would-be rebel must escape is the inescapable reality that there are no prisons. There are no laws to break in a lawless culture, no taboos to transcend when the only taboo is to hold on to taboos. Now all we have left is the aching desire to be seen, to get on camera. We no longer are a nation of rebels, but a nation of exhibitionists and voyeurs, whether we appear on Jerry Springer, or some hot-for-the-moment reality TV show.

Breaking Free

In the Matrix movies, Neo, the new man, had to discover that he wasn’t in a postmodern world, but still just a cog in a machine, so that he could in turn set himself, and others free. He had to discover that there actually was a reality before he could break free of it. And once free, they would be right back where we’re starting from.

Fish Swimming Upstream

Which is why we must be careful. How easy it is to feed ourselves on these images from the world around us, as an inspiration to rebel against the world around us. We are rebels with a cause, but sadly we are more excited about being rebels than we are about the cause. We are Jesus Freaks who are more interested in being freaks than we are in Jesus. How worldly we are when we boldly, like any hero from Bumpo to Neo, stand against the tide of the world, so that we can be heroes. When we do such we are not only not swimming upstream, but are being tossed to and fro by every wind of doctrine. When we boldly bring forth a new paradigm, or when we boldly fight for the old paradigm, I’m afraid we too often are looking at ourselves in the mirror to see how bold we look.

Our Hero

To be counter-cultural it isn’t enough to fight the culture with the culture’s tools. We must instead fight the culture as Jesus would have us do. We are called, though one can hardly expect to receive garlands and have folk songs written about those who do such, to live in peace and quietness with all men, as much as is possible. To be counter-cultural is to stop worrying about how we look, and to start worrying about Whom we obey. Our hero must be He who obeyed His Father, even to death on the cross.

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Preparing for Persecution

Apologists for the world inside the church love to downplay the power plays of the powerful. They argue that since, so far, no Christians in the west are being fed to the lions that we are not experiencing persecution. Persecution, however, is here. At Gracelife Church in Alberta, Canada it looked like the government would eat humble pie after Pastor James Coates politely refused their demand that he cease preaching. He served 35 days and they let him go. Humble pie, however, left them an appetite for revenge and so the government encircled Gracelife with not one, not two, but three layers of fencing. They sent 200 police officers out that Sunday to stand guard and ensure no worship took place. Apparently no one in Alberta government is aware that Jesus doesn’t demand that we worship on this mount or that, but is looking for those who will worship in Spirit and in truth. The saints of Gracelife met and worshipped beyond the reach of Alberta’s Royal Mounties.

Three Options

No Christians were killed, beaten, or, this time, jailed. But persecution is here. What do we do? Peter’s first epistle was written to believers who were facing the early stages of persecution- social ostracism, ecclesiastical rejection, families cutting ties, loss of position and wealth. Christians in such circumstances have three options.

Capitulate

The first is to surrender, to capitulate. Consider the cause of most of the cultural angst against the church. They hate us for our refusal to approve their sexual confusion. Great swaths of the evangelical church have responded by boldly, missionally, grace-filledly approving sexual confusion. What, after all, does who we’re sleeping with, have to do with Jesus? This approach has this advantage- it blunts the wrath of the world. It has this disadvantage- it welcomes the wrath of God, on both the sell-outs and the sexually confused.

Conflagrate

The second option is to prepare for war, to meet assaults on our liberties with all the ferocity of the founding fathers. We become culture warriors, marching against social justice warriors. We rattle our swords, wave our American flags and refuse not just the second mile, but the first. We fancy ourselves as heroic as Luther, as immovable as Knox, as bold as John the Baptist. We ask the Lord is He’d like us to call down fire on His enemies, demonstrating we know not what spirit we are of.

Believe

While the second option has much more going for it than the first, it too falls short of the biblical model. Peter’s call to his audience is neither to capitulate nor to conflagrate, but to believe. Peter calls them, and us, to believe the promises of God. We were dead, but by His grace we have been made alive. We have suffered, but Jesus is glorified because of it. We have been impoverished, but our inheritance is in heaven. We have sorrows, but we are to count it all joy. Joy, remember, is the settled conviction that God is able, and that God is for us.

This is what we have to look forward to- a deeper joy in what He has done for us, a deeper confidence in what He has secured for us, a deeper satisfaction in how He is glorified through us. Give thanks. Do not fear.

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Forever Friend, Bruce Goodreau; Appeal; What about seminaries?

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A Conversation with Dr. David White on Growing Up Ligonier

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Looking for Love

We must not allow our grasp of total depravity to lead us to miss the remnants in us of the image of God. We are plenty bad. Sin touches every part of us, and makes us utterly unable to do anything in ourselves pleasing to God, including coming to faith. We do not, however, run in precisely the opposite direction of where we ought. Romans 1, wherein Paul’s chief goal is to explain the universal guilt of man, for instance, tells us not that man in his sin, made to worship God, merely refuses to worship God, but rather says we worship the creature rather than the Creator. Because we’re fallen we won’t worship God. Because we bear His image, however, we will worship. Even at Babel they didn’t merely turn their back on the dominion mandate but rather twisted it. They built the tower because of God’s image. They built it for their own glory because of their depravity.

Distortion, Not Destruction

The same principle, that many of our desires (to work, to worship) are good and proper but because of sin, misdirected, applies to our desire to be loved. We are relational beings, just like our Father in heaven. It is not good, He told us, for man to be alone. Wanting to be loved isn’t a shame, weakness, a failure. Looking for love in all the wrong places, however, is a shame, weakness, a failure.

Seeking, Not Finding

When we are men pleasers, ear ticklers, hungerers for the approval of the world we are seeking love where we ought not, and missing the love that we have. When we commit adultery, indulge in pornography, escape into fantasy we seek love where we ought not, and miss the love that we have. When we gossip, slander, bear tales, we are seeking love where we ought not, and missing the love that we have. When we use social media to present our lives as one glamorous success after another, we look for love where we ought not and miss the love that we have.

Our Hearts Are Restless…

The answer to our longing, the one thing that will satisfy our hunger is the Father who sent His Son to dwell with us, to be our Husband, and to feed us. If I am in Christ, I am His beloved, and I am in turn beloved of the Father. The Spirit is ever with me, encouraging me. If I am in Christ I have all that I could ever ask or hope for. In my sin I’m like the beloved son of the wealthiest man the world has ever known, going to the seedy part of town to pick through dumpsters, seeking to fill my belly. A feast is laid out for me at home, my Father’s table heavy laden with the choicest delicacies, and I’m looking for a pizza crust in a trash can.

Full and Famished

My shame is not that I am hungry, for I was made to eat. My shame is missing what my Father has given me. My weakness is not that I want, but that I don’t recognize that I have. My failure isn’t that I long to be loved, but that I’m wrong to not know I am infinitely loved. He is my beginning- I bear His image. And He is my end- I will be with Him always.

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Top 5 Old TV Shows; Wedding Feast Parable; Catechism #71

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