Is Christianity a religion, or a relationship?

Yes. There are, of course, all manner of things that separate the Christian faith from all other faiths. Ours is the story of God condescending to us, rather than we climbing to Him. Ours is a story grounded in history, and eyewitnesses. And most importantly of all, ours is true. If then religion means merely how man earns God’s favor, if religion is merely the myths of our fathers, if religion is but the lies men tell themselves to feel better about themselves, then of course, Christianity is no religion.

It is, however, perfectly appropriate to use the term religion as “that set of dogmas, institutions and practices by which a supreme being is submitted to and worshipped.” In this sense, of course Christianity is a religion. Our faith is not merely grounded in but subsists in historical realities. We are what we are, we do what we do, we believe what we believe, we proclaim what we proclaim precisely because a man and a woman disobeyed their Maker and plunged all their descendents into the vortex of the wrath of God, because God took on flesh and came as the New Man, and in space and time, under Pontius Pilate, lived a perfect life, died an atoning death, and walked out of His tomb three days later, alive. Forty days after that, this same Man, God in the flesh, ascended to His everlasting throne where He is now bringing all things under subjection. We are the people of the Story, the true Story.

What this aphorism, “Christianity is a relationship, not a religion,” is getting at however, is not only true, but important. That is, the Christian faith is not merely signing off on these historical events. “Yes, I believe this happened. Yes, I believe that happened.” The devil himself, along with his minions, can agree with the historical account (James 2:19). They can even agree with the sound interpretation of that history. They believe Jesus died for sinners. They believe men have peace with God as they repent and trust in His finished work alone. Trouble is, they hate the truths they can affirm (much like a godly person can affirm that the New England Patriots have won six Super Bowl championships, and hate that truth). They know the religion. Their relationship is all hate.

What we are affirming when we emphasize the relationship is that we delight not just in the truths about God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit, but that we delight in them, Father, Son and Holy Spirit. What we affirm, better still, is that because of these historical truths, we have not only been forgiven, but adopted, that we have been made the very children of God. Because of these historical truths, because of His love for us from eternity, we are indwelt by the Spirit. Because of these historical truths, because of what He did, we are the very bride of Christ. Because of the love of God shed abroad in our hearts, we are together the very family of God. Christianity isn’t then a relationship, but a series of relationships, all grounded not in a religion, but the religion.

Posted in apologetics, Ask RC, assurance, Biblical Doctrines, church, communion, kingdom, RC Sproul JR | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Is Christianity a religion, or a relationship?

Bible in 5- II Samuel, WSC 43 and More…

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

Posted in 10 Commandments, Biblical Doctrines, church, Jesus Changes Everything, kingdom, RC Sproul JR, Westminster Shorter Catechism | Tagged , , , , , , | Comments Off on Bible in 5- II Samuel, WSC 43 and More…

Savorless Salt or Normal Evil

When we are yet outside the kingdom, before we are born a second time, we suppress the truth in unrighteousness (Romans 1). This does not mean we are stupid. It does mean we are foolish. We know what we know, but because such knowledge exposes our guilt, we suppress it. We are born again when God the Holy Spirit changes us, replacing our hearts of stone with a heart of flesh, when that same Spirit indwells us, and cleanses us.

But we are not changed fully and instantly. We are still dirty. We are still, in ourselves, guilty. And we still seek to suppress the truth in unrighteousness. Consider those Australian “ethicists” who some time ago published a “scholarly” article outlining why they thought “after-birth abortion” ought to be considered ethically acceptable. Their reasoning has a diabolical logic to it- there is no real difference between the baby before it is born and after it is born. We are free to kill the child in the first instance, why not in the second? This is a rather telling illustration of Romans 1 level foolishness. It ought not, however, surprise us. We’re dealing with unregenerate people here. This is the kind of thing they come up with.

It seems however that Christians were indeed surprised by this revolting development. Not just surprised, but outraged, furious, indignant and morally flabbergasted. We wrote learned pieces decrying this new evidence of cultural decline. We clucked and fretted on twitter and facebook. And, as is our wont, we missed the point. Because we are still dirty, we miss the blood on our own hands. If it is true, as these “ethicists” argue, and it is, that there is no moral difference between the practice of abortion or pre-natal infanticide and after birth abortion, or infanticide, why do we, who have been blessed by the indwelling Holy Spirit, get up in arms about one, and yawn over the other? Why the moral outrage over the moral outrage du jour, and the lack of moral outrage over the moral outrage of our generation?

We in the church are blind because we walk backwards, in the face of a decadent culture, drawing perpetual lines in the sand, boldly declaring “Thus far, and no further.” We’ve done it so many times we have forgotten where we came from. Our salt has lost its savor, and we are trodden underfoot. Abortion, the murder of babies in their mothers’ wombs, has, by virtue of the church’s relative ease on the matter now become distasteful, uncouth, and normal, like spitting on sidewalks. The Australian “ethicists” are not pushing the boundaries of their ethics; they are embracing the norms of our ethics.

We expose our hypocrisy, our callowness and shallowness when we protest after-birth abortion, sex-selection abortion, partial-birth abortion, late-term abortion, unsafe, unregulated abortion, Obamacare funded abortion, all the while living a business-as-usual life in the face of babies being butchered in our neighborhoods every day. The evil of killing babies is that they are babies, no matter their age, no matter whether they are born, no matter how they came to be, no matter what butchering technique is used. We, the living, must repent. Lord have mercy on our souls, and the souls of the babies we destroy.

Posted in abortion, apologetics, Biblical Doctrines, church, ethics, kingdom, Kingdom Notes, philosophy, RC Sproul JR, scandal | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Savorless Salt or Normal Evil

Elisha & the Bears; A Taste of Heaven; Shannon, Hero


Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

Posted in apologetics, Books, church, communion, Heroes, Jesus Changes Everything, kingdom, RC Sproul JR | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Elisha & the Bears; A Taste of Heaven; Shannon, Hero

New Theses, New Reformation

Thesis 43 We must be humble about our ability to understand our neighbors.

One of the great evils of pop psychology, and there are many, is the pop part. That is, as psychology has been repackaged for mass consumption, it has left us all with a faulty understanding of the scope of our knowledge. Psychology promises the nearly God-like ability to see into people’s souls, to assess and judge their motives, to plum the subconscious, and read it like a news report. We’ve been told that we can read people’s body language, to get the message under the message. We put long dead authors on our little couch, pretending such will help us understand their works. And, worse still, we practice this prideful art with our neighbors.

Our pride, however, does not stop here. We not only are fools enough to think we can read other people, but, surprise surprise, what we read there tends to make our neighbor come out like a jerk, while we come out smelling like roses. We slant and twist their behaviors to shift blame to them, while vindicating ourselves. To put it another way, we are all, at heart, junior high girls. You remember these scenarios. Suzie is walking through the mall. She smiles and waves at Cindy, who doesn’t acknowledge the greeting. The next day the story makes the rounds, at school, or on the internet. Suzie declares, “I know Cindy saw me. She didn’t wave back. Cindy is so stuck up.” Of course the truth of the matter is that Cindy might not have seen Suzy. Maybe her glasses were all fogged up. Maybe it wasn’t even Cindy, but just someone who looked like Cindy. Maybe it didn’t even so much look like Cindy, but Suzy’s glasses were fogged up. Or maybe Cindy did see Suzy, but didn’t wave because she was too depressed. Maybe she was grieved over the problem of gossip.

We’re not in junior high any more, but we practice much the same thing. We do not look at facts, but instead put a spin on the facts, all driven by our utter confidence that we know the secrets of others. The Scripture, however, calls us to humility. We need to know our frame. We need to grasp the limits of our knowledge, and recognize our own propensity to spin things in our own favor. Even the disciples, after three years of sitting at the feet of Jesus, didn’t know themselves well enough to see their own way of twisting things during their argument over who would be greatest in the kingdom.

This may seem like a small thing. This, however, is how relationships are broken, friendships destroyed, families separated, even how churches are split. We do not have the humility to know what we cannot know. We do not have the humility to know that we are spinning things. And the love among the brethren is torn asunder, and the devil laughs. Repentance and humility, however, will cause the devil to flee, and cause brethren to dwell together in unity. Repentance and humility are the very oil pouring down the beard of Aaron.

Posted in Biblical Doctrines, church, communion, cyberspace, Devil's Arsenal, ethics, grace, kingdom, RC Sproul JR, Reformation, Theses | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on New Theses, New Reformation

Pugilism; Love Is ii; What Are You Worried About?

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

Posted in apologetics, assurance, Biblical Doctrines, church, communion, cyberspace, Devil's Arsenal, grace, ism, Jesus Changes Everything, kingdom, prayer, RC Sproul JR | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Pugilism; Love Is ii; What Are You Worried About?

Ask RC- What do you find so appealing about Autumn?

People begin to notice, after a while, if they are paying the least bit of attention, that I love the Steelers, that I delight in CS Lewis, that I praise God for Lisa. You might have to be just a smidge more observant to notice that I am a huge fan of Autumn. Like, write odes to it, count down the days to it, giggle over it, lobby others to embrace its pumpkin spice glory. I’d mourn inconsolably each time it came to an end were it not true that I’m also a big fan of winter. But why? What’s the appeal?

First, it’s not summer. Summer is hot and hot is bad. I’ve spent enough time in Florida to have a lifetime worth of hot. Summer also has inordinately long days. Autumn does not. It gets dark when it’s supposed to. Dark and cool is cozy; hot and bright not so much.

Second, Autumn is mostly when the Steelers play. It’s true they also usually play in the Winter, on account of being so great and everything, and usually being in the playoffs. But Autumn is when the season starts. Even if your favorite team isn’t good, you know, like the Steelers are good, Autumn is that part of the season when they still have a chance. For some of you it’s college football, and for others still, high school football. It’s homecoming, festival season, sweaters and hoodies, frost and the sight of our own breath in the morning.

Third, fires, s’mores, hot cider, hearty soups.

Fourth, and likely most importantly, Autumn is the beginning of the end. It is the slowing down that leads to the rest of the Winter, the preparing for a long Winter’s nap. As such it is a yearly reminder of what lies behind and what lies ahead. The falling of the leaves remind us both that death comes to us all, and that leaves are not made to cover our sins. But there is hope in the falling leaves as well. For they are the cover that protects the ground, and as Autumn progresses, they become the food that will feed the Spring. It is the dying that must come before the resurrection, the reminder of all that we have lost.

Nothing communicates this more to me than the smell of Autumn. There is a marriage most strange that is carried by the chilling winds. That smell is the rotting of the leaves, the slow, steady decay that at one and the same time hints at death and speaks of the fecundity to come. Life and death kiss. Raking the leaves gives us our last natural outdoor sweat. Jumping into the pile is one more reminder that we were once young. And burning the leaves turns that smell into incense, an offering of praise to the Lord of the Dance of the Seasons.

A better man would be able to praise every season with the same fullness. He, after all, made them all. But He made me too, and gave me a special love for this season. So this is my homage.

Posted in Ask RC, Biblical Doctrines, creation, grace, kingdom, RC Sproul JR, sovereignty, wonder | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Ask RC- What do you find so appealing about Autumn?

Where Were We Then?

Tune in for a special Jesus Changes Everything, an extended and final Life in the Blender segment as Lisa and I discuss where we were and where He is leading us.
Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

Posted in cyberspace, Devil's Arsenal, grace, Jesus Changes Everything, kingdom, Life in a Blender, Lisa Sproul, prayer, RC Sproul, RC Sproul JR, scandal, special edition | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Where Were We Then?

Let No Man Tear Asunder

My favorite theologian of all time was known to argue that the defining quality of the theologian is to make distinctions. That’s what we do. We bring clarity through precision, precision through distinction. That man who may well be my favorite theologian’s favorite theologian, Francis Turretin, published his three-volume work The Institutes of Elenctic Theology as a sort of systematic theology by contrast. Each point is broken down, compared and contrasted, and examined in light of its opposite. One could argue that theologians are here following the path of their Maker. We serve a God who delights in distinctions. Reading through the creation account, for instance, we see not only the creation of light, but the separation of light and darkness, not only the creation of land, but the separation of land and sea, or land and sky.

On the other hand, the same God who delights in distinctions warns us against tearing asunder what He has brought together. He is a God who brings every tongue and tribe together into a holy nation, a royal priesthood. He makes of many grains one loaf.

Reformed theologians especially are given, at least when dealing with the critical issue of our salvation, to razor thin distinctions. The links in our chain of the ordo salutis, or order of salvation are strong, unbreakable, but nevertheless rather small. There is good reason for this, but also some danger. Sometimes the wedges we drive between concepts go too deep.

Consider faith and repentance. There is good reason to see these are two distinct things. With one we look to hope to the provision of God in Christ. With the other we acknowledge and confess our need from that work. One hypothetically could affirm that Jesus died for sinners, and miss the glaring truth that the one affirming is a sinner. One could more easily recognize the reality of his sin, but know nothing of the provision in Christ. Thus the two are two, and both equally needful.

On the other hand, however, one could argue that the two are actually one, or at the very least they flow from the same source. Faith is indeed the coming together of understanding, agreement and trust. But on a more fundamental level faith is as simple this- believing God. Faith is when God speaks, and we say “Amen.”

The devil, of course, knows that God is true. He is quite informed on the sacrifice of Christ. He knows to his very core, from the very longing of his heart by which he misses those who slipped through his fingers, that Jesus came to save sinners. He in turn is well aware of what and who he is, that he is a sinner. All of which will make his eternity that much more painful.

Faith and repentance then might be at their closest when we confess, in agreement with God, that, as He says, we are sinners, and as we cry out, as He has commanded, “Lord be merciful to me, a sinner.” God says, “All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God (Romans 3:23) we say, “Lord Your judgments are true.” And when God says, “The saying is trustworthy and deserving of full acceptance, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am the foremost” (I Timothy 1:15) we do not merely affirm our agreement, but sing it with hallelujahs and amens.

For all the important nuances, for all the valuable precision, the simple truth of the matter is we fell in the garden because we failed to believe God. All sin is a failure to believe God. The simple truth is that we are rescued from our sins by believing Him, both His judgment and His promise. That is, we are gifted with faith and repentance.

Just as we can make theology more complex than it need be, just as we are called, in seeking orthodoxy, to say our amens to what God has revealed about Himself, so we can make the living of our lives in faithfulness, the seeking of orthopraxy more complex than it need be. Here too we are to say our amens about what God has revealed about His promises for us, about His law. He commands that we not worry about what we will eat, what we will wear, and we are called to repent of our fears, and believe His promises. He commands us to seek first His kingdom and His righteousness, and we are called to repent for our pursuit of personal peace and affluence, and to believe His promises.

It is true that God is true and all men are liars. It is true in turn that every man is miserly, while God is extravagant. Were we wise we would repent expansively, even as we would believe with both deep conviction and broad expectation. Our sin is simple- we don’t believe God, and so don’t obey God. The solution is simple- believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you will be saved, you and your household (Acts 16:31). We don’t believe this once and then never more. Rather we believe it both ever more and evermore.

Posted in assurance, Biblical Doctrines, church, communion, creation, Devil's Arsenal, Doctrines of Grace, grace, kingdom, Kingdom Notes, RC Sproul JR, theology | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Let No Man Tear Asunder

Who Are You To Say? or The Bliss of Ignorance

It is my general direction to encourage people to believe they’re not quite as dumb as they think they are. I remind my philosophy students that Immanuel Kant was just a man who put his pantaloons on one leg at a time. They needn’t fear to challenge him. He’s just a slob like one of us. In like manner, the work I do in apologetics follows the same line. I even find myself helping unbelievers come to understand that they are not as dumb as they think they are. That is, when they claim that there is no truth, and therefore they don’t have any, I remind them that “there is no truth” is itself a truth claim. From there I help them understand that there are many other truths they know, even if they don’t like them all.

That faux humility that drives relativism is no humility at all. It is in fact a claim to have universal knowledge. One must know all there is to know to know nothing can be known. That, however, doesn’t mean humility has no place in our thinking and our knowing. Sometimes I have to push in the other direction, encouraging people to believe we’re not quite as smart as we think we are. Real humility looks at the fifteen pieces of the 1000 puzzle piece puzzle we have and says, “Yeah, I’m not real sure what this is part of a picture of. Whatever it is it has some blue and some yellow, but beyond that I just can’t say.” Real humility says this when your best friends have created a “Of course it’s a Dutch windmill picture” Facebook group that snickers at the dopes over at, “No,it’saparrotonapirate’sshoulder.wordpress.com.” It’s great that social media allows us all to have a take. It’s horrible that social media requires us all to have a take.

We birth a thousand non sequiters from every true fact we actually have. We string together supposition upon assumption upon motives magically discerned in order to reach the ridiculous conclusion that we have honorably walked our way to the prejudiced conclusion we began with. If we don’t like person, politician, pastor or policy X we stand ready to pronounce them guilty at the drop of an insinuation. If we do like person, politician, pastor or policy x we stand ready to pronounce the accusers guilty of slander not just while the jury is still out but before the bailiff has first bid us “All rise.” We find it all too easy to believe what we want to believe because we want to believe it.

“Maybe” is often our friend. “I don’t know” is faithful. “I’m not close to having enough information to reach any kind of conclusion. To do so would be utterly unfair and reckless” is wisdom. Opinions are like flaws and blemishes- we all have way too many of them. Let’s tweeze, pluck, prune the ones without sufficient roots in the truth, and embrace the bliss of ignorance.

Posted in 10 Commandments, apologetics, church, communion, cyberspace, Devil's Arsenal, ethics, grace, kingdom, Kingdom Notes, philosophy, post-modernism, RC Sproul JR | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Who Are You To Say? or The Bliss of Ignorance