The Purpose Driven Write

You know it’s the right career for you if you can’t not do it. And so it is for both the aspiring writer and the working writer. Writers write whether anyone reads or not. It’s a compulsion, because the words just keep coming. Those who write best, however, don’t write for the sake of writing, but for the sake of the reading. That is, we write with this purpose in mind- serving our readers. We want to bless our readers, to help them grow in grace and wisdom, to, for the Christian writer, praise Him more joyfully, follow Him more diligently, believe Him more passionately, reflect Him more clearly.

I published my first book, Money Matters, with Tyndale House 35 years ago. Since then I have published more than a dozen more. I’ve written for World, Chronicles, The Freeman, Homeschooling Today, Tabletalk and many more. I know how to get from inspiration to completion, and how to help others do the same. At my company, The Purpose Driven Write, I help writers not merely find their voice, but find their audience. I provide developmental editing services, coaching, copyediting and ghostwriting. I’m looking for writers and aspiring writers who want to tell not their story, but His story, and how He has changed them. I’m looking for those who have experienced the glorious truth that Jesus changes everything and who want to be used by Him to change others.

If you have a manuscript, a project, even simply a dream, let’s talk about how we can drive what you have to the “write” destination. I am happy to provide references from satisfied clients, samples of the work I have done and free estimates for the services you are interested in. I can be reached at hellorcjr@gmail.com. It’s time to fulfill your purpose and get your message to those who need to hear it.

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Scary Witches

Witches are real, and witches are evil. To be sure, while warts, brooms and cauldrons are also real the caricature that brings them all together is rather far from the truth. God, in His infinite wisdom, told His people Israel not to suffer a witch to live (Exodus 22:18). Our fathers the Puritans followed the same perspective. They rightly saw witchcraft as a great evil. They, in accordance with their times, saw it also as a capital offense. Neither of these, however, is the source of the great horror of the Salem Witch Trials.

We are all so comfortable scolding our fathers for their folly before us. Of course they are guilty of folly, not because they came before us, but because they are our fathers. They act foolishly because they are what we are, fools. We are, if outside the kingdom, outraged over the witch trials, and if inside the kingdom, deeply embarrassed by them. What though are we embarrassed for?

Not, in my judgment, for finding witchcraft evil. Though I believe it is not the function of the state to punish witches, I don’t think the greatest evil either was that our fathers thought otherwise. No, the great evil was the manner in which the trials were held. The injustice was less in the sentencing, more in the means by which the victims were found guilty. The failure was a failure to follow biblical and humane rules of evidence. Unverifiable, unanswerable, subjective evidence was used to destroy the innocent.

We, of course, have grown past that. Especially in the church we have learned from this black eye, this skeleton in our closet. Now we insist in judging the accused decently and in order. We’d never fall for, “I know she’s a witch because she gave my sow the stink-eye and a week later all her piglets were dead.” We now know that a people wicked enough to practice witchcraft are a people wicked enough to falsely accuse others of witchcraft, and so no longer presume the guilt of the accused based simply on the testimony of one person. We’ve grown past the habit of hearing testimony from those who are beyond the injunctions of Deuteronomy 19 wherein God’s Word says that the man who perjures himself will receive the punishment the accused would have received had he been guilty. Isn’t it great to be in a world so much more careful and biblical than the world of our Puritan forebears?

Except, of course, that we’re not in a better world, because we are not better people. Every kind of bogus evidence received in Salem is daily received in our modern courts of public opinion. We receive evidence from cowards who in their anonymity will not come into the light. We fall into the post hoc ergo propter hoc fallacy, believing that because B happened after A that A is the cause of B. We reach conclusions without hearing a defense. We leap from the obvious truth that X is a wicked and horrible crime and a sin against God to the unjustified conclusion that Pastor So-and-so must be guilty because he’s been accused of X. And we insist that his accusers, false or not, must be protected at all costs.

We all, including our Puritan fathers, have our blind spots. But we are never more blind than when we see the blind spots of others and insist we’ve grown past our own. Lynch mobs are still with us. Kangaroo trials still happen. And we’re all all too ready to be judge, jury and executioner. Until, of course, we find ourselves the accused.

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Sophistry, What is Man and Do Not Neglect the Gathering Together of the Saints

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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New Theses, New Reformation

Thesis 12- We must practice the grace of church discipline.

The Reformers wisely argued that there are three distinguishing characteristics of the true church. The church is that place where the gospel is rightly preached. It is that place where the sacraments are rightly administered. And it is the place where discipline is rightly practiced. Since the time of the Reformation the evangelical church has been rightly seeking to recognize, define and defend right preaching. Seminary students are trained in how to prepare and deliver faithful, God honoring sermons. Since the Reformation we have debated the meaning, the efficacy, and the object of the sacraments. But in the last fifty years or so, church discipline has fallen utterly by the wayside.

There are any number of explanations for why this is so. If we adopt a business model of the church, and we see parishioners as market-share, then discipline makes precious little sense. No one wants to drive customers away. Worse still, we have found that lawsuits are bad for business. Churches that practice discipline have and will found themselves embroiled in civil suits, often losing them.

The above are rather crass and unspiritual reasons for a failure to practice church discipline, which is why the evangelical church has come up with a more “reasonable” rationalization. Many churches gladly affirm that they do not practice church discipline, claiming to be “grace centered” churches. These churches believe that church discipline is unloving, unkind, and ungracious. They believe it to be counterproductive, and counter-gospel. And they are flat wrong.

Discipline is neither in the home nor in the church some grim, law-infused, mean-spirited exercise designed to harm those who receive it. It is instead an expression of tender care and love. The Bible itself says, “For whom the Lord loves He chastens” (). Church discipline is a powerful act and means of the grace of God, for both the recipient of the discipline, and the rest of the congregation. When we confront a brother with his sin, when we call him to repentance, when we remind him that those who refuse to repent for gross and heinous sin give evidence that they are outside the faith, we are proclaiming the gospel. We are giving the very warning of Jesus, “Unless you repent, you will all likewise perish” (). We speak the same warning to the entire congregation as well, reminding all that those who repent find forgiveness and peace with God, while those who refuse will face the judgment.

There is one other excuse evangelical churches use for their failure here. We reason that the excommunicated will simply move down the street to some other church, and thus it does no good. But Jesus said to Peter, “Whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth will be loosed in heaven.” We are called to live by faith, and not by sight. A rightly disciplined man may join the church down the street. But that doesn’t change his standing before God. When we use this argument we show our own unbelief, rather than the unbelief of those under discipline.

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Because of His Pure Heart, We Will See God. And We Will Be Like Him

“>Yesterday’s Sermon on the Mount Study- Blessed Are the Pure in Heart

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Docetism, Joey Pipa, Hero and Gene Edward Veith’s Postmodern Times

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Ask RC- How should we honor our elders when they err?

By treating them honorably. It should never surprise us when we discover a beloved pastor, a respected teacher, a living hero of our faith, has feet of clay. We, after all, like they, are descendants of clay footed people. Our elders have blind spots. Their youngers have blind spots. All God’s children have blind spots.

One blind spot common to elders is insisting that because they are elder they can’t be corrected by their youngers. A blind spot common to youngers is taking the occasion of the errors of their elders to really let them have it, to offer not just correction but a heaping helping of disdain. Such should not be. While it is likely always a good thing for a prophet to embrace a posture of weeping over a posture of thundering, how much more so when addressing a father in the faith?

We have, of late, witnessed through the magic of the internet, two profoundly influential evangelical leaders disappointing their legions of fans. One put his foot in his mouth to the delight of his younger, sharp-tongued acolytes. The other, also a decorated veteran of sundry theological battles is being accused of going soft, of adopting a strategy of appeasement to social justice warriors. My own counsel to myself has been to recognize my distance from these occasions, and to stay out of them both. While I know both of these gentlemen and have been blessed by them I recognize that both could be plenty guilty of what their critics are accusing them of. They may not be, but they could be. I’m not in a position to know.

What has astounded me, however, has been the almost gleeful “gotchas” from a veritable peanut gallery of young guns. I’ve watched, over the years, plenty of trolls build their platform on the back of the object of their fevered criticisms. But these youngsters are not bad guys. They are, by and large, sound guys. They’re just not mature guys, and it shows. They would do well to put down the mantle of Ham, and pick up the garment of Shem and Japheth.

Our spiritual fathers are not beyond being corrected. They need it, just like the rest of us. They should, however, be beyond being utterly shamed by those who call upon the name of the Jesus, the one who took on our shame. Our elders should be shown respect, even while being shown what may be the error of their ways. The pride of these spiritual children, however, may well put them beyond being called to correct. If they haven’t the humility to correct their fathers with tears, they probably ought not to be in the business of correcting anyone. If they cannot keep themselves from boldly thundering, they may find themselves caught in the whirlwind of their own pride. Gentleness is a fruit of the Spirit. Not one that will bring forth cheers and grow audiences. Which is how you know it comes from Him.

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Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Turning the Other Cheek

Craig James, former football star at SMU, was briefly a sportscaster with Fox Sports. After his convictions on the nature of marriage, the sin of sexual perversion became known to the network he was fired. Then he filed a complaint with the Texas Workforce Commission, with help from the Liberty Institute. I share Mr. James’ convictions, without shame or apology. They are nothing more nor less than what the Bible affirms on the issues at hand.

I am in turn frustrated and angry at the legal brutality of the homosexual lobby against people who share those same convictions. Arizona recently backed off from legislation that would have protected the liberty of photographers and bakers to refuse to lend their crafts to same sex pantomimes. As such the interwebs has been abuzz over the question of how Christians ought to respond to such challenges.

Most homosexual activists, I would guess, would take the position that bakers have an obligation to bake for whomever seeks their services. Most would in turn, I suspect, support the notion that Fox News has every right to fire a “homo-phobe” like Mr. James. Most Christians, on the other hand, I believe, would hold the view that the baker should be free to just say no, and that Fox News should be forced to give Mr. James his job back. If I’m correct in my guesses then we can conclude one thing- most people are more interested in protecting their own desires than they are in being consistent.

When we go to the state and ask it to make those who don’t like us play nice with us, do we not implicitly invite others to go the state when they believe we are not playing nice with them? When we ask the state to arbitrate interpersonal relations, we should not be surprised when the state determines it can determine how we must relate to others? Is the problem in these two instances simply that the Gay lobby has more power than the Christian lobby? Is our calling then to rally the Christian troops to wrest power from the Gay lobby? Or ought we perhaps turn the other cheek?

The Fox network has no more obligation to hire a man whose perspective, however biblical it is, offends a part of its audience than a baker who abhors racism has a duty to bake a cake for a Klan rally. To put it another way, the Fox network ought to be legally free to not hire people, even good people, they don’t agree with, and Christian bakers ought to be legally free not to bake for people, good or bad, whose events they find offensive.

I understand hypocrisy, self-contradiction among the heathen. They have no reason to pursue a consistent and coherent view of liberty. They have no reason to respect the liberties of others. Christians, however, are called to do unto others as we would have them do to us. We want to be free to determine with whom we will do business. Why then, even if others do the same to us, do we seek to take away that same liberty from others?

Jesus says we are blessed when we are persecuted for His name’s sake. He doesn’t call us to call in Uncle Sam to persecute those who persecute us. Instead He calls us to turn the other cheek. Perhaps if we selflessly affirm the liberty due to those who wrongly hate us we might one day be free from oppression from those who hate God.

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Ask RC- Who married Cain?

The more honest question would be this one- why was it permissible for Cain (and Seth, and many more for that matter) to marry his sister? It is a more honest answer because we know there could be no other choice. We know also that God established, over time, differing standards of marital consanguinity. As late as Abraham we have a man married to his half sister. Why would God seem to adjust His law?

And that question is one He has not given us an answer for. We can, however, speculate a bit, so long as we remember that is what we are doing. Could it be that the law changed because the danger changed? We need to remember that our most ancient fathers did not live in exactly the same world we live in. These men lived for hundreds and hundreds of years. They may have lived in a time where there was no rain. They lived in a time when their bodies were just a few generations removed from the perfect, unfallen bodies of Adam and Eve. Is it just possible that those realities meant the dangers that come from a too close interbreeding were significantly less than they are in our own day?

It is important that we grasp both the continuity and discontinuity between that world and our own. Adam was a man, Eve and woman. Just like, after the fall, you and me. They were neither spiritual monsters nor spiritual heroes. But there is discontinuity as well. They didn’t have the accumulated damage that comes from sin, whether you tend to side more with nurture or with nature. The world was very much like our own, but it also had not suffered through the cumulative effects of centuries of curses on the ground, nor centuries of the destructive habits of sinful men.

We must grasp as well the distinction and the overlap between natural law and positive law. Natural law describes God’s law in terms of natural goals. Positive law is a specific application. God, for instance, in the Old Testament required his people to put up fences on their roofs. Is that law still with us? Yes and no. In terms of the goal, protecting people from danger (as roofs in those days were used as living spaces), the law still stands. The application of it, or the positive law version of it would be a requirement that we put a fence around an in-ground pool, lest someone could come upon it unaware, fall in it and drown.

The laws of consanguinity (how close a relation one is permitted to marry) are positive law reflecting natural law. The natural goal is to not pass along genetic flaws shared by close relatives. How far distance needs to be would impact the positive law. Cain and Seth didn’t sin in marrying their sisters, nor Abraham in marrying his half-sister, not because God was more easy-going that long ago, but because the danger was so much less that it would be in our day.

All of which ought to remind us that God’s law is given for our good, for our blessing. Which is why we should not just obey it, but give thanks for it.

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