When Liberals Speak for God, or


The Sour Reign of Pope Lemon

Sometimes it’s tough to learn our lessons. Don Lemon last summer said this on national TV (if you count CNN as national TV)- “Jesus Christ– if that’s who you believe in—Jesus Christ admittedly was not perfect when he was here on earth.” Embarrassment ensued, but apparently didn’t stick for long. Almost two weeks ago the Pope, who is Catholic, let it be known that the Roman Catholic church would not be blessing same-sex unions. Rome, of course, believes that the Pope is the vicar of Christ on earth. Being said vicar, I suspect the Pope believes the same about himself. As such it should not surprise us when he seeks to let those under his authority know what he thinks Jesus thinks about this and that. Jesus told us this when certain snakes, seeking to avoid the plain teaching of the Bible asked Him about divorce,

“And He answered and said to them, ‘Have you not read that He who made them at the beginning ‘made them male and female,’ and said, ‘For this reason a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh’?” Matthew 19:4,5).

The Pope is no dummy. Yes, there is great social pressure on him. But it can get embarrassing when Jesus’ vicar clearly and obviously disagrees with Jesus. Don Lemon has none of the concerns of the Pope and all of the hutzpah. He, apparently believing he is the vicar of Christ on earth, explained to the Pope, his minions, and all evangelicals who happen to agree, this time, with the Pope, that

“I think that the Catholic Church and many other churches really need to re-examine themselves and their teachings. That’s not what God is about. God is not about hindering people or even judging people.”

Some claim he was also heard to say, “So let it be written. So let it be done.” The truth of the matter is that Mr. Lemon made one small mistake. He confused the true and living God, the God of the Bible, with his own idol, that god called “god-to-me.” Don Lemon is in fact the vicar of that god on earth. He is, in his own religion, infallible. He speaks perfectly for god-to-me because he is god-to-me. They are co-terminus. It’s like I’ve always said, scratch and idol and you find a mirror.

We who belong to Jesus must not find ourselves intimidated by such silliness. We must not fear such a paper god nor his vicar. Nor a culture plunging headlong into the same foolishness. Don Lemon, like the rest of us, is a mirror cracked. In embracing a perverse sexuality he shakes his tiny fist at God. Then he turns around and scolds us about our theology. This is what a mind turned over to its own depravity looks like. Our calling is less to scoff, more to weep. The true and living God has the power to rescue, redeem, remake, even the most vile sinner. He’s done it for me. May God have mercy on Don Lemon’s soul, lest Don find himself face to face with the judge of all the universe, who is, yes, all about judging.

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Atin-Lay, Ex Nihilo; Appeal; Doubt’s Roots

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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What’s the best decision you made in the last five years?

Responding to a message. No doubt about it. A person I had never met came to me online for counsel during a difficult time. I offered what counsel I could over the course of a few years. Then I brought scandal crashing down around me. That scandal prompted me to take a hiatus from all communication, private or public, on the internet. I explained to the person I had given counsel to that I would no longer respond. I was going radio silent, and I was sorry.

Over the course of the next months this person continued to send messages, updating me on everything from legal proceedings to the weather. I did not respond. I did, however, slowly creep back on to the inter-webs, ending my exile. Still, I did not respond. Then, this person sent me a message reading, “RC, have I done something to offend you, that you don’t reply to my messages?” And there I found myself at a crossroads.

If I don’t respond this person might carry an unnecessary burden, perhaps even some unwarranted guilt. If, on the other hand, I did reply, well, then she might come to know how much her messages had meant to me. I might begin to open up. I might end up risking actually getting to know her, and be known by her. Terror. Yet, I responded. And I began to open up. Still only typing, never talking, trying to keep what defenses I had in place, I responded. By His grace, and to His glory and for my good, I responded.

It was a difficult decision. What makes it the best decision, however, wasn’t that I chose rightly while tempted to choose wrongly. What makes it the best decision is the fruit that was born out of that decision. That person to whom I responded is now my wife, my best friend, my strength, my deepest blessing, my joy, my comfort, my one safe place, my partner, the love of my life, my soul-mate. She was used of God to lift me out of the grave I had dug for myself. She is used of God to inspire me.

Everything changed that day, five years ago today. We’ve faced plenty of hardships, and losses but we have faced them together. We have shared laughter and joy. And we look forward with confidence in the abiding grace of God.

I shudder to think where I would be, or even if I would be, had I chosen differently that day. I know this- I’d be without my beloved bride. Coming to saving faith creates the greatest eternal swing imaginable, moving from eternal torment to eternal bless. Short of that, no decision in the last five years, or the last fifty-five years has been a deeper blessing and created a greater change than this one. I, by His grace, answered. I, by His grace, opened up. And she, as His grace, has welcomed me, embraced me, loved me. I cherish her.

Posted in Ask RC, beauty, cyberspace, friends, friendship, grace, kingdom, Lisa Sproul, RC Sproul JR, special edition | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

King’s Servant Parable; Catechism 67; Forever Friends, David White

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Blessed Are Those Who Mourn

Jesus, just as His Father did before on Mount Sinai, is not, in pronouncing law in His Sermon on the Mount, laying burdens on us. He is instead instructing us in how we can lead a good life. He is telling us the pathway to blessing. Who, though, would ever think of suggesting that the way to have a good life is to mourn? Jesus would, and did.

We are a woefully woe-less people. That is, we are set on walking not the via dolorosa, the way of sorrow but the via media, the middle way, on staying steady, on avoiding looking too deeply into that which causes sorrow. This, however, will not lead us to the good life. It will instead lead us to a banal life, a useless life, a life that suffers from the unbearable lightness of being. Instead we are called to enter into mourning.

For what should we mourn? Not that our March Madness bracket has turned to rubble. Not that our name is being dragged through the mud. Not that our outgo is outpacing our income. Instead we ought to mourn over two hard truths. First, we ought to mourn over our own sin. We ought to enter into our sin, facing it squarely. When Jesus told us that a man loves more who has been forgiven more He wasn’t giving an invitation to sin more. Instead He gave an invitation to see our sin more. We need to know our sin. We can rest assured that however far we chase it, we will never catch up. No matter how deeply we enter into our repentance, we will never hit bottom. Nor will we ever outrun His grace.

The second thing we ought to mourn over is the collective power of our sin. That is, not only am I a sinner, but I live in a planet full of sinners. Not only am I destructive to the Eden God created for us, but so is everyone else. Here is my proof that we do not mourn as we ought. Today, in strip malls and offices on tree-lined streets across this land, more than 2500 mothers and fathers will hire doctors to murder their babies. Today more than 2500 hundred babies will be intentionally burned, vacuumed or torn to pieces. Each of us will go about our business, measuring our happiness for the day on the basis of whether we like the weather, whether our work is rewarding, whether our spouse speaks kindly to us, whether our side plays well in some twitter war, whether the traffic is light. All is not right with the world.

The end result of entering into this woe, Jesus promises, isn’t a life of misery. Instead He promises that we will be comforted. It is fair to suggest that a corollary to this promise is this- cursed are the blasé, for they shall be afflicted. Ignoring the evil, whether it be in the world, or in our own hearts, won’t make it go away. It won’t allow us to live in a fool’s paradise. Instead it drives us into a fool’s hell. Only entering into the mourning will bring us toward dancing. God forgives the contrite. God humbles the proud. Look away, and be scourged. Enter in, and be comforted.

Posted in abortion, Biblical Doctrines, church, grace, kingdom, Kingdom Notes, RC Sproul JR | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Blessed Are Those Who Mourn

Barnabas Piper & I, 2 TK’s Talk Grace and Fish Bowls


Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

Posted in 10 Commandments, Biblical Doctrines, cyberspace, grace, Heroes, Jesus Changes Everything, kingdom, RC Sproul, RC Sproul JR, scandal | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Barnabas Piper & I, 2 TK’s Talk Grace and Fish Bowls

I is for Irresistible Grace

Tune in. You know you can’t help it.

Posted in ABCs of Theology, assurance, Bible Study, Biblical Doctrines, church, Doctrines of Grace, Facebook Live, grace, kingdom, RC Sproul JR, sovereignty | Tagged , , , , | 3 Comments

New Theses, New Reformation


Thesis 67- We must not confuse worship with evangelism.

All those opposed to evangelism raise your hands. It would be, if it even existed, a rather lonely clique, the “Christians against evangelism” club. Every believer believes in evangelism. And when we believers get together every Lord’s Day, wouldn’t it be a great thing to have an evangelistic service? I mean, we’ve got a band there ready to play. We’ve got a pastor there ready to preach. We even have counselors standing by to pray. Perfect timing, right? Wrong.

There are any number of good things, great things, gifts from God most high that are not designed to be a part of a worship service. Preparing a Thanksgiving feast is a good thing. But not something we should all be doing at church Sunday morning. Steam cleaning the carpet is a great thing to do. But not while God’s people are gathered for worship. Worship is family time, the people of God gathering in the presence of God, drawing near to Him in a posture of intimacy. Evangelism is the people of God being used to draw those yet outside the kingdom in. That’s a whole different thing.

Is there overlap? Of course there is. I’m not suggesting that every church install a Holy Spirit detector at their front door and only let in those who pass the test. Nor would I ever suggest that the gospel doesn’t need to be preached every Lord’s Day. Of course it does. Every mother’s son of us needs to hear the gospel, not just because we might not be saved but because it is the power of God. The goals, however, of worship and evangelism are different. I rejoice when those gathered with the church come to saving faith. I rejoice also when those in the faith, when doing the work of evangelism, are moved to worship. But those are collateral benefits, the fruit of the richness of God’s grace. They are not each other’s reason for being.

Marva Dawn has wisely and insightfully described worship as “a royal waste of time.” It is royal, of course, because we are appearing before and by the redeeming power of the King of Kings. It is a waste of time not in the sense that it has no meaning, but because it is no means. It is strictly an end. That is, we don’t worship for the sake of some other thing. Every other thing exists for the sake of worship. It is the final end, the ultimate telos, our very reason for being.

Let us never be found denigrating either evangelism or worship. Let us never be found, however, confusing them. Evangelism, like missions, exists, in the words of John Piper, because worship doesn’t. We don’t worship that people might be saved. Rather we long to see more people saved that they might worship. Remember that soteriology serves eschatology. And eschatology serves Christology. We are saved for the sake of the kingdom. The kingdom exists for the King.

Posted in apologetics, Biblical Doctrines, church, evangelism, kingdom, RC Sproul JR, Theses | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on New Theses, New Reformation

Obscurantism- Word Salad; Plus, Teach Us to Pray

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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The ABCs of Theology I is for Irresistible Grace

Tonight, 7 eastern, we continue our ABCs of Theology Study, looking at I is for Irresistible Grace. All are welcome in our home or on FB live, RC-Lisa Sproul. We pray you’ll join us.

Posted in ABCs of Theology, announcements, Bible Study, Biblical Doctrines, church, Doctrines of Grace, evangelism, grace, kingdom, RC Sproul JR, sovereignty, theology | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off on The ABCs of Theology I is for Irresistible Grace