Three Years

Jesus’ public ministry, because Jesus changes everything, changed everything. It’s hard to believe such a short time could render such potent change. It was not long after He ascended to the right hand of the Father that His disciples were called, “They who have upset the world.” (Acts 17:6)

Three years ago today my precious wife walked down the aisle of Saint Andrews Chapel and changed everything. My father led us through the marriage ceremony and then we walked that same aisle together. I wish I could look back over the last three years and see an impact coming from me like that that Jesus had. Instead I look back over the past three years and am reminded not how much I have done for Jesus, but how much He has done for me.

Over the course of the past three years almost all that He has done for me He has done through my wife, His daughter, Lisa. When I have failed, she has responded in love. When I have been attacked, she has come to my defense. When I have been discouraged, she has lifted my countenance. When I have felt alone, she has walked beside me. When I have clung to old habits she has set me free. When I have lost hope she has set my eyes on Jesus. She has been my counselor, my partner, my friend, my lover, my comfort and my joy.

And that is just me. She has mothered our children, loved and risked and sacrificed for them. She serves them, teaches them, trains them, hugs them, blesses them. She has led them out of the broken down home I had had them in and given them health and life and direction. The grace that He pours through her extends beyond me and our children. For three years I’ve been blessed to watch her encourage young mothers, meet the needs of those in need, open her home and heart to strangers, perhaps even angels unaware. I’ve watched her respond with grace to gracelessness from others, returning good for evil. I’ve watched her continue to live a life of faith in the One who sustains us both.

Just a few weeks after our wedding I, in my sin, brought my own platform crashing down around me. No longer did I have a public venue from which to introduce her, to encourage her, to praise her. She, however, doesn’t live to be known for her faithful service. She lives for faithful service itself. She never lost a step, never walked away, never beat me with the big stick of my big sin. For three years instead she has loved and been loved. For three years she has walked beside me as we have sought to follow the Teacher. Not once has she lost faith that He is leading us, and leading us to an eternity that is beyond our ken. When we reach those shores we will remember these three years with thanksgiving as we look forward with hope in the eternity He won for us. And the sower leads us…

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Spicy Chicken Hot Take

I get it. I really do. It’s no fun being a 97-pound weakling in the midst of the culture wars. Which is why we cling to our King Sauls and our Samsons, big burly heroes that strike fear in our enemies, but who, in the end, always disappoint us. Chik-fil-A was just such a chicken champion. Big and powerful, a top three chain, clear which side they were on, until now. After years of bad press for not being on the left side of the sexual revolution, years that saw the chain experience enormous growth, the corporate office recently announced that it would no longer give to the Fellowship of Christian Athletes or the Salvation Army. These two groups, as you might expect, are utter non-combatants in the revolution, but have had the bad taste to affirm their commitment to marriage. So yeah, like most Christians I’m disappointed, bummed, surprised. More than that, however, I find the whole thing baffling.

How did it come to pass that the corporate giving of a fast-food chain became news? Because somehow we’ve bought into the notion that who a company gives to somehow is a reason to either do business or not do business with them. The meta is cancel culture and I want out. Boycotts are more about virtue signaling than changing anything. It is clear that the left’s disdain for Mr. Cathy’s restaurants did them no damage. I suspect the coming disdain of the right will likewise do them no damage. The greatest danger in Chik-fil-a’s rearview mirror isn’t cultural warriors- it’s Popeye’s.

I am in complete agreement with the critics of the new policy. Neville Chamberlain apparently works in public relations in Atlanta. It’s bad enough to spin this move as, “We’re cutting off the Salvation Army and committing our resources to the hungry and homeless” but worse do so while claiming surrender as peace. It won’t begin to satisfy the left. Instead it will embolden them. It will anger the right. It is a clear sign that whoever is in charge of such things is Saul, not David. But choosing where to eat lunch is not a strategic maneuver in the culture wars. I will not lose a moment’s sleep over Chik-fil-a. I will, however, mark the date for more lines in the sand will be crossed, new lines drawn, only to be crossed. Goliath will continue to shout his insults at us, and we will continue to cower.

I’m not saying every Christian owned company needs to be on a crusade against homo jihad. I am saying that if Jesus is your chairman you tremble before Him, not pretenders to His throne. Chik-fil-a is free to do with its profits what it wishes. It now wishes to virtue signal to the left that they aren’t so bad after all. That’s a shame. But it is by no means unusual. We are a body of appeasers whose hunger for the world’s approval far outweighs our hunger for chicken sandwiches or our hunger for righteousness. Maybe what we need to do is not boycott Chik-fil-a but stand with and support FCA and the Salvation Army.

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Bible Study Facebook Live Nov 18 Lord Show Us Your Glory- God Knows

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Open Theism, The Screwtape Letters and More…

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything

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Ask RC- Why are we so awful to each other on the internet?

The internet did not invent sin. We were plenty awful to each other long before Al Gore went into his lab and wound his web around the world. That said, the internet did bring some new features to the sin party.

Perhaps the first feature is the ambiguity about the cyber world itself. Is it real, or a mirage? It is mirage enough that internet language has invented its own word for the world we actually inhabit, IRL, in real life. The “unrealness” of the internet encourages us to think that when we attack with our words that the attack is unreal. The person who is attacked, however, is assuredly real. As is the person doing the attacking.

Which brings us to the second impetus for our ugliness- anonymity. Common grace carries with it this restraint against our own sinful inclinations- we can bring shame on ourselves. But if the “self” we are is unknown by virtue of a fake name, or no name at all we miss the blessing of shame. A dozen years ago one man, out of hatred of me, turned his bile at Ligonier Ministries, writing dozens of scurrilous pieces under the fictitious name of Frank Vance. He hid his tracks with an elaborate network of proxy servers. He commented and linked under a multitude of other false names. That same man continues to publish a number of www.rcsprouljristhedevil.com sites. And people continue to read him. Now he doesn’t even bother with a fake name, but uses no name at all.

Which brings us back to the first impetus- the ambiguity of the cyber world. One of the deepest blessings of the internet is that it has democratized broadcasting. Time was that to reach an audience one had to amass expensive equipment, buy exorbitant airtime and make it through a gauntlet of professional editors and vetters. Now, anyone can say anything. But we, especially we who are older, look at the new world through the lens of the old, thinking that what we read or listen to carries with it all the backing that was once required to get an audience. Even when we know better we still slip up here. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve heard from people who say, “I heard this about you, and know it is nothing but a scandalous assault with not a hint of truth in it. I can tell your critic really has it out for you and shouldn’t be trusted. Still, there was this one question I’d love for you to address…”

It’s a good thing to be skeptical of unknown internet hit men. It’s a better thing to not believe what they write. It’s better still not to read them at all.

The problem, however, is found both in what we take in and what we put out. We have no editors, no one to vet us when we vent. So let me make three important suggestions. First, never publish nor read anything without a name attached to it. There is simply no excuse to hide out in public and to blur the lines between the real and the imagined. Second, always remember that no matter how wrong they might be, no matter how famous and powerful, no matter how truly vile they may be, whomever you are talking about still bears the image of God who redeems vile sinners like us. And third, build up and encourage the saints. Use your words to edify. The Bible says the world will know us by our love one for another. When we bite and snipe and attack our brothers we grieve the Spirit within us. Don’t.

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Samson as type of Christ, Lisa, the Purpose Driven Wife and More…

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything

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He Gave Us Songs

He was at least an insightful man, if not a wise man, who first said, “I care not who writes a nation’s laws, as long as I write the nation’s songs.” He understood that what shapes our lives is rather more potent than that which merely hedges our lives. We are at least obtuse men, if not foolish men, when we labor so hard to seize the engines of political power for the sake of the kingdom. It is a good thing that we aspire to see every knee bow and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord. His reign indeed covers all things political. But tt is a bad thing that we would rather see His Lordship confessed in a courtroom, than in song.

While we rightly affirm that man is soul and body, (not as we too often think, souls in bodies) we would be wrong to pass over the remaining distinction between mind and heart. We are two things, the material and the immaterial, and that which is immaterial is at least two things, what we think, and what we feel. A man of integrity has mind and heart in harmony. Few of us are there however. Excitement, more often than not, is a function of the heart more than the mind. As we consider law, usually our minds are more engaged than our hearts. It is a rare bird indeed whose nerves begin to twitter when he hears, “In re: Carleton versus the state of Nevada…” or “Whereas the charter of the town of Lycippus gives license to all who live therein to…”.

Music, on the other hand, has charms. Music has the unique ability to bring together heart and mind, to both teach and inspire at the same time. It, more than abstract arguments, more than abstract law, shapes souls. We are what we sing. Which is why He who is wisdom wisely gave us songs.

One of the weaknesses of the loss of Psalm singing in the church is that we have lost sight of the power of Psalms as song. We know that the Psalms are God’s Word. We know that they contain wisdom. We may even read and study them in an attempt to internalize the wisdom they contain. They become fodder for sermons, proof texts for sundry theological positions. But that’s not the way God intended us to be shaped by the Psalms. He wrote them so that we would sing them. (This doesn’t mean, of course, that this is all we might sing. Sadly, however, too many of us who conclude we may sing songs that are not Psalms don’t take the trouble to sing the Psalms. We seem to think our only choices are Psalms only, or no Psalms at all.) Singing the Psalms moves their wisdom from our brains into our hearts. And our hearts are the font of our actions, our lives.

It seems even the world is beginning to figure this out. A recent study (apparently sponsored by the Institute for the Incredibly Obvious) demonstrated that the more teenagers are exposed to sexually explicit media, whether it be television, video games, movies or music, the more likely they were to engage in sexual behavior at an earlier age. The world has not yet passed laws requiring teenagers to be sexually active. While we’re busy creating political action committees to keep condoms out of “our” schools, while we push for “Abstinence training” in “our” schools, “our” ear buds are telling us (and forgive the anachronism) that we feel like making love, that what we need is sexual healing. The ear buds win every time.

If we who serve Christ sing His songs, the songs of wisdom, and the world outside the church sings songs of folly what we would expect is different worlds. We should expect our lives to be marked by wisdom, by fidelity, by godliness. What we find, again according to sundry studies, is that evangelicals, both unmarried young people and married adults, are roughly as likely to be fornicators or adulterers as their unbelieving counterparts. The reason is likely this, we don’t listen to the music of wisdom, but instead listen to the music of the world. Our ears are as plugged into folly as the ears of our neighbors.

James Adams, in his fine book War Psalms of the Prince of Peace, affirms that the Psalms, however a rich source they might be on the life of David, exist first to tell us the story of Jesus. The Psalms cover the gamut of human experience. You will find there triumph and defeat, confidence and uncertainty, joy and despair. It is because these songs tell us the story of Jesus, however, that they are songs of wisdom. As these songs indwell us, as they shape not just our thinking but our feeling, we will become more like Jesus, who is the very personification of wisdom. As these songs proceed from our lips, we not only speak wisdom, but speak Jesus, showing forth His glory.

We ought to be distinct from the world around us. We are called to be a set apart people. Perhaps by His grace we might become distinct, if we would sing an old song to the Lord, if we would sing the Lord’s songs to the Lord. If we would sing wisdom, perhaps Wisdom might bless us.

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Ask RC- What’s the difference between a fundamentalist and an evangelical?

There’s a great deal of history and nuance to this question. One could argue that the terms are identical. Both groups trace their roots to a prior term, and the shift to the new term to the same source. That is, in a very real sense these once were synonyms for the prior term Protestant. At the time of the Reformation Protestants were those who affirmed the solas of the Reformation. That remained true across the board among Protestants until the rise of theological liberalism. Liberalism had its historical roots in Protestantism, but it not only denied the solas, but even creedal affirmations that transcend the Reformation- the miracles in the Bible, the deity and resurrection of Jesus. This is why J. Gresham Machen titled his landmark work Christianity and Liberalism, because he rightly saw them as two different faiths. Now there were two groups among the Protestants, those who affirmed the fundamentals, and those who would not.

So what is it that divides these two groups who affirm the fundamentals? That’s where it gets a smidge fuzzy, more cultural than propositional. Fundamentalists by and large adopted an ethic of separation that evangelicals would not accept. The fundamentalist is one who not only rejects those who reject the fundamentals, but rejects those who will not reject those who reject the fundamentals. Or, to put it in more technical terms, they practice and promote second degree separation.

To grasp this principle, let’s apply it to a contemporary situation. TD Jakes, a wildly popular author, will not affirm the historic doctrine of the Trinity. As such, any confessional person or body ought to see him as outside the universal church. A sound evangelical and a sound fundamentalist would not invite the man to preach in his pulpit. But suppose someone were comfortable inviting the man to come participate in an in-house discussion among brothers about how to do ministry. A sound, historical evangelical would not do this. He would, however, be willing to overlook, or forgive someone else for doing so. The fundamentalist, however, would not only reject TD Jakes for his egregious error, but would reject those who don’t reject him, including the pastor who invited him. Perhaps in turn the fundamentalist would even be willing to reject any who don’t reject the inviting pastor.

This distinction, in turn, may reveal something of a deeper divide between the two groups. One cynical, but perhaps insightful wag once described an evangelical as one who says to the theological liberal, “I will call you brother, if you will call me scholar.” Fundamentalists, to their credit, are not terribly interested in the applause and approval of the world. Evangelicals tend to be more hungry for such. There are other distinctions as well. Fundamentalists tend to adopt a more dispensational eschatology. Evangelicals do tend to be more scholarly. Fundamentalists tend to be more separatist, evangelicals more worldly.

What we have in common, however, is far more than what separates us. And, I would argue, what separates us is where we ought to learn from each other. Fundamentalists would be well served to learn to distinguish between actual guilt and mere guilt by association. They would do well to allow their zeal for the authority of the Word to undo their commitment to that hermeneutic, dispensationalism, which divides and ultimately misapplies the Word. But evangelicals could learn from their brothers a healthy indifference to the approval of the world. We could learn a deeper hunger for the approval of our Lord, who told us that if we are His, the world would hate us as it hates Him. We could learn from our fundamentalist brothers something of the spirit that birthed us both, that we are called to say to the watching world about the Word, “Here we stand. We can do no other.” In the end, where evangelicals are at their best, fundamentalists are on the same page. And where fundamentalists are at their best, evangelicals are on the same page. Evangelicals believe the fundamentals. Fundamentalists are evangelical. And all of us need and rest on the grace of God in Christ alone.

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Life in the Blender, with Lisa, Lead Us Not Into Temptation and More…

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Relevance Pottage

Even Jesus was known to have a Scottish revival or two. A Scottish revival, if you’ve not heard the term, is pretty much the opposite of a revival. It’s where the crowds get smaller and smaller instead of bigger and bigger. And it happened to Jesus in John 6. First, the crowds came. He fed the five thousand and they, understandably, thought it a rather nifty trick. Jesus, like Gideon obeying the Lord, decides to thin the crowd, first by speaking about eating His flesh and drinking His blood. Not exactly a delicate topic of conversation. The crowds began to fidget and grumble, so Jesus reached in His bag of sweet and winsome things to say to win them back. “And He said, “Therefore I have said to you that no one can come to Me unless it has been granted to him by My Father” (verse 65). Nothing like a good shot of total depravity to draw them in. The next thing you know the crowd suddenly found better things to do.

Not very strategic of Jesus. Had He been surrounded with evangelical counselors they would have explained to Him that such was no way to reach the lost. You couldn’t go around telling them about their inability to repent. You should never talk about something as strange and foreign to them as sacraments. You need to connect with them, and give them some news they can use. They would have told Jesus how the Sadducees had grown from a 1 percent to an 18 percent market share in just over three years by emphasizing the quality coffee they served at their meetings.

We have come to believe that an audience is more important than a message, whereas Jesus grasped that no one in any audience can be served by the wrong message. The offense of the gospel is the gospel. Take away the offense and you have taken away the gospel. Jesus was right- the only ones who can embrace the message are those who are given that ability by their Father in heaven. Our methods, our strategies, our attempts to woo people into the kingdom are worse than useless. They are uselessness gift-wrapped in pride.

Jesus, seeing that many of His disciples had abandoned Him, asked the twelve if they were leaving too. Peter, God bless Peter, didn’t say, “Jesus, You’re the best. We’re all in with You. Those poor people just don’t understand. I’m sure if they weren’t so confused they’d still be here with us. Let’s work on the message, and we’ll win them back.” There is almost a resignation, a sense in which Peter fully understood what had turned off the crowd. He hit the nail on the head, however, when giving the reason they wouldn’t leave, “You have the word of eternal life.”

Which He has given to us to steward. How could we possibly think it wise to bury or worse trade them in for some of our own wisdom? Our words are the words of eternal death. We have been called to give up relevance, esteem, respect, friendship from and with the world. All so we might speak the words of the Word, the One who redeems us.

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