Ask RC: Why is hypocrisy so rampant?

Because the world is full of hypocrites. Now, before you shake your head in disgust at those terrible hypocrites, let me channel my inner Paul Washer and remind you, I’m talking about you. And me. We are all eager to present ourselves as better than we are. And so we project an image that is flattering and inaccurate. Such may be the actual engine that drives the raging success of various social media platforms. We all get to put our best foot forward, using the best moments of our lives to construct an illusion.

Social media, however, has another part to play in our Hypocrisy Follies. Social media discourages thoughtful discourse. We don’t so much think as feel, and our feelings are driven by our echo chambers and our memes rather than careful, deliberate and rational thought. Consider the strange bedfellows of politics. First, how can we miss the hypocrisy of Republicans who twenty five years ago vehemently insisted that the President’s private life disqualified him from office and then, when it was their guy vehemently insisted that the President’s private life is of no significance? That’s the obvious part. But wait, there’s more. While the left delights to poke fun at Republican hypocrisy in this matter, such shows that they too are hoisted on their own petard. That is, they insisted that President Clinton’s private life was of no consequence, and now insist that President Trump’s private life is of no consequence. But wait, there’s more. When the right delights to poke fun of the left for being hoisted on their own petard, for insisting first that President Clinton’s private life didn’t matter and now insisting President Trumps does, the right is then hoisted on its own petard, since they insisted the opposite when it was President Clinton.

To put it more succinctly, we are utterly indifferent to logical consistency but deeply committed to fussing at our enemies while ignoring the beams in our own eyes. All of which reduces down to the hard fact that in our sin we all like to think of ourselves as better than we are, and are more than happy to prop that folly up by insisting that our enemies are worse than they are. We have one standard for ourselves, and another for everyone else. See jet-setting, size 16 carbon shoe wearing climate change heroes or limousine liberals who laugh all the way to the bank trying to shame those who have prospered.

What do we do about it? Confess, rather than cover our sins. Confess our, rather than their sins. Confess our not mistakes, but sins. We own that we are worse than others can see. We judge ourselves by the same standard by which we judge others. We remember, and rejoice, that our standing is not based on how we compare with others but on how He identifies with us. We have nothing to hide, for we have nothing to boast of, and know well that all will be revealed. Let’s put down the masks and lift up the cross.

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Rightly Dividing

Though we don’t give it its due, objectively speaking it is a rather dramatic moment. First, of course, there is the broader drama, a recreation of the temptation in the Garden of Eden, but this time taking place in a savage wilderness. Jesus, without food for forty days, is facing temptation from the devil. Immediately prior Jesus had received baptism from John, and God spoke from heaven, “You are my beloved Son; with You I am well pleased” (Luke 3:22). The devil, just as he did in Eden begins by questioning the faithful Word of God, asking, “If you are the Son of God command the stone to become bread.” Jesus answers the assault with the Word of God- “It is written, Man shall not live by bread alone.” Satan then ups the ante, tempting not just with bread, but with all the kingdoms of the world, if only Jesus would worship him. Jesus again speaks God’s words- “You shall worship the Lord your God, and Him only shall you serve.”

Then the devil, who is more crafty than any of the beasts of the field, surprises us. He begins his final assault with a shocking weapon. He encourages Jesus to throw Himself off the temple’s pinnacle, using God’s own words- He will command His angels concerning you, to guard you- and On their hands they will bear you up, lest you strike your foot against a stone.” Dirty pool. But then Dirty Pool may just be the devil’s middle name.

Jesus triumphs. But we are left shaken. If the devil can use even God’s Word against us, what hope do we have? Not much, unless we understand how important it is to understand God’s Word, unless we learn to rightly divide. In both the Garden and in the wilderness the devil did what He always does- he undermines what God has said. His assaults on the Word, however, can come from any number of directions. The direct assault has its diabolical benefits. When we come to the Bible believing it to merely be a politically motivated account of the convictions of a primitive people, we show ourselves to already be on his side. When we take a baby step to the right and affirm that the Bible contains God’s Words, mixed in, under and around the words of men, we are still on the wrong side of the battle.

Are we safe, though, if we not only attest to our conviction that the Bible is God’s inerrant and infallible Word, true in everything it teaches, but having thus affirmed actually avail ourselves of the Bible? Not yet, not by any stretch of the imagination. After all, the Pharisees believed this. Worse still, their father, the devil believes this as well. If we would rightly wield the sword of the Lord we have to not only read the Word, believe the Word, but we must also love the Word and study the Word. We must, in short, love the Word of God will all our hearts, minds, souls and strengths. It’s only bibliolatry if we separate what no man can tear asunder, God’s being and His truth. If we wish to be changed, washed by His Word, then we must study it well.

Rome rightly understands that we are not yet out of the wilderness when we simply affirm that the Bible is true and trustworthy. Her solution, however, simply makes things worse. Because men can and do interpret the Bible wrongly, Rome reasons, God gave us the church which has the ability to give us the authoritative and perfectly accurate interpretation. There are two problems here. First, God nowhere made any such promise. If men are imperfect, and His Word is perfect, then men must submit to His Word, rather than the Word submitting to men. Second is the problem of infinite regress. If we cannot know God’s perfect Word unless we have an inerrant interpretation, then do we not need an inerrant interpretation of the interpretation? Assuming we could find such a thing, would it too not need an inerrant interpretation? Once we embrace the notion that we must have a perfect interpretation to understand something, we will forever be chasing the perfect interpretation of the perfect interpretation of the perfect interpretation, ad nauseum.

Protestants agree that we must interpret the Bible properly. One key difference, however, is how we understand what it means to interpret. In the hands of Rome, or in the hands of those given to postmodern gobbledy-gook, “to interpret” something is to finish it. That is, both Rome and liberalism look at the Bible as an unfinished book, and hermeneutics is the science of finishing the job. The Bible is like a monolith of granite. We come to it and through the science of interpretation chip away and polish and chisel until the full and final message is revealed. By no means.

Hermeneutics, or more commonly the science of interpretation, isn’t about turning a slab into the Pieta. It is instead learning to see the Pieta for what it is. We, when we interpret well, are being shaped and formed by God’s Word that is already finished and complete. The science of hermeneutics is never finishing the message, but hearing it. It is allowing the text to speak. It isn’t contributing our two cents, but getting out of the way. Our calling is to listen, and to say “Amen.”

We are, however, Pelagians at heart. Even as we want to contribute something to our salvation, so we want to contribute something to our interpretation. The Bible then is sliced and diced, molded and shaped, twisted and distorted. Consider, for a moment, the medieval scholastics. Here the goal was open and unashamed- we must learn to synthesize the Bible with Aristotle. If we can take the wisdom of the one and meld it together with the wisdom of the other, these folks seemed to think, we’ll have even more wisdom. One wonders how there could not have been even one desert prophet there to expose the nakedness of this hermeneutical emperor. Well, I suppose God did send one eventually, Martin Luther. For one could make a strong argument that Rome’s departure from the faith began here.

We who are Protestant, however can have our own versions of impositions on the text. There is a brand of hyper-covenantalism out there that forgets that sometimes a cigar is just a cigar, that, like lawyers gone wild, can’t bear to see a relationship that is just a relationship, that comes to us without a suzerain/vassal form from the Ancient Near East. And, of course, the covenant must appear to us in a chiastic structure. We are lawyers with biblical poetry and poets with biblical law, all while looking down our noses at the other guys’ mistakes.

Then there is that system that is the anti-system. Here we are so committed to coming to the text with no preconceived notions that we don’t allow even the Bible to give us any preconceived notions. That is, lest we be tagged with “system” we have this text telling us this and that text telling us the opposite. We treat the Word of God not as a coherent whole, but as a huge mass of isolated bits of data. We forget the first rule of sound hermeneutics- that Scripture interprets Scripture. Jesus understood this quite well which is precisely how He was able to combat the Serpent’s use of Scripture against Him.

Hermeneutics then isn’t so much a set of rules and regulations that will make it possible for the Bible to speak. It is instead a set of principles to help us not drown out the Bible as it speaks. Remembering that Scripture interprets Scripture, we move on to the most simple rule of all, though it has a rather complicated name. We let Scripture speak when we remember how language works, that nouns are nouns, verbs are verbs, and forms are forms. That is we interpret well when we stick with the grammatico-historical method. This is a “literalist” approach not in the sense that it denies the use of metaphor, simile and sundry other poetic forms, but in that it allows each of these forms to operate as they ought. To suggest that when Jesus says “I am the door” that we ought to expect to find on His person hinges and a door-knob isn’t to be faithful and literal, but to once again impose from without rather than to listen from within.

To be simple in hearing God speak then is to not complicate things by bringing our own baggage to the table. We affirm that we are joining a conversation that began without us and that will continue after us. We submit to it, rather than asking it to submit to us. We, in seeking to practice faithful hermeneutics, do not come with our systems, but submit to its systems. We see poetry as poetry, proverbs as proverbs, and history as history. We listen to hear God speak.

The God who speaks to us in His Word is the God who is about the business of making known the glory of His reign over all things, including us. Just as the kingdom does not exist for us, but we for the kingdom, so the Word does not exist for us, but we for the Word. For if we would learn but one thing from His Word it is this- in the beginning was the Word. And the Word was with God, and the Word was God. The Word and the Son are one. May we give honor to both by submitting to both. May we see Him in the Word, as we see the Word in Him. Glory and kingdom, Word and Word.

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Ask RC- What do Protestants protest?

Sadly in our day, not much of anything. Luther, of course, began the Reformation by posting his 95 theses. His chief concern was the sale of indulgences. Underscoring that concern were two principle concerns- the singular authority of the Bible, and the doctrine of justification by faith alone. Luther, along with the other magisterial Reformers, argued that the Bible is our alone ultimate authority in binding our conscience with respect to our faith and practice. It denied that the church provided either a compelling interpretation of the Bible, or a second source of infallible information. (For an outstanding exposition of this issue see my friend Keith Mathison’s The Shape of Sola Scriptura.)

On justification Protestants protested against what seemed, at the time of Luther’s posting his theses. to be Rome’s perspective that the way a man had peace with God was by trusting in the finished work of Christ, and cooperating with the means of grace as they were poured out by the sacraments. That seeming perspective, however, became crystal clear during the counter-Reformation, specifically at the Counsel of Trent. There Rome declared as settled canon law, that anyone who says a man is justified by faith alone, apart from the works of the law, should be damned. The heresy that was prior to Trent more practical, implicit and consequential became precise, explicit and unchangeable.

What then Protestants protest is the false authority of Rome and her false gospel. We protest not because we are complainers, grumblers, sticks in the mud. We protest precisely because of our dual love for Jesus Christ, and those who are not yet covered in His blood. We do not protest Rome for all she ever was, or ever said. Indeed we protest the notion that Protestantism is something novel. We protest the turning aside from the gospel once delivered. We protest the notion that we are a mere branch of or an offshoot from the true church. We are, insofar as we hold to the glorious gospel truth that we have peace with God through trusting in the finished work of Christ alone, the continuing church, the sons of Augustine, Athanasius, Anselm, the sons of the father of the faithful, Abraham.

We protest that Rome is not catholic, that she in fact shuts out the saints. We, however, are catholic, embracing all those who turn to the living Christ alone. We protest that guarding, defending, proclaiming justification by faith alone is not sectarian, narrow, nor divisive. It is instead a fulfillment of the command that we contend for the faith (Jude 3). We protest against squishy, feel-good ecumenism that imperils souls, that buys the love and respect of men and sells the wrath of God. We protest the beard-stroking, nuance exploring, subtlety affirming of those who refuse to remember that Rome damned and damns justification by faith alone with clarity, forthrightness and immutability.

We protest the notion that we who protest are hidebound, out of step, tilting at long since fallen windmills. We are fighting for the faith.

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Today’s podcast includes a Life in the Blender segment with my dear wife Lisa, an Economics in this Lesson on trade deficits and more…

Today’s podcast

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Conscientious Objecting- Choosing Your Twitter War Wisely

Either/or either works, or it doesn’t. Sometimes we really do have to pick our poison. Other times we find ourselves being roped into a false dilemma, and escape through a tertium quid, a third option. Joshua asked the Captain of the Lord’s hosts if He was for the children of Israel or for the children of Jericho. He wisely answered, “No.”

Viet Nam is no argument for pacifism. Chamberlain is no argument for waging aggressive war. We can be against this war, but not against all wars. We can be for that other war, but not for all wars. And so it is with Twitter Wars.

It is not my contention that we all have a duty, if we can’t say something nice, to say nothing at all. It is my contention, however, that not every time some member of the Axis rattles his cyber saber that it is the duty of every member of the Allies to rattle back and amass toy soldiers on the border. In fact, it may be that the best course of action is for all of us to keep our swords in their scabbards.

My gratitude for the courage, Biblical insight and humility of Martin Luther knows no bounds. As we approach the 502nd anniversary of his nailing his 95 theses on the church door in Wittenberg, we would do well to remember that he wasn’t starting a revolution. He simply sought to start a conversation. The fruit of those conversations eventually led to that watershed moment when all the power of Rome was aligned against him, demanding at the Imperial Diet of Worms, they dressed in their gaudy array, and he in his monk’s cowl, that he recant. And he boldly responded, “May I have 24 hours to think about it?”

It was only after a long night of intense prayer that he gave his “Here I stand- I can do no other” speech. We, on the other hand, can’t be bothered to take time to even proof-read before hurling our rhetorical grenades in the latest twitter war. And the issues we fight over are mole hills compared to Luther’s mountain. Maybe he was cautious, slow to speak where we are not because he was facing the very real possibility of being put to death, whereas the worst that can happen to us is we might lose a few followers.

That, however, is just the problem. Because it is “safe” to be over the top in our assaults against others over the interwebs we forget our calling- that we not be contentious, that our speech be marked by grace, that a soft answer turns away wrath, that we will be known to be His by our love one for another. We forget love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. We forget that the very ones we are fighting against over secondary issues are those Jesus fights for, the ones He died for. We forget that He came and was crucified for His bride, the Second Eve, not for her ugly caricature, Big Eva.

Lord, teach my hands to make peace and teach me to pray, “Here I kneel; I can do no other.”

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Jesus Changes Everything

Today’s podcast- Pastoral Failures, Thy Kingdom Come and Writing Well

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Five Common Expressions I’ve Never Understood

Common sense may be more common than sense. There are any number of shorthand aphorisms in the world and in the church that shape our thinking, but don’t stand up to scrutiny, at least right away. Below are five common expressions that might fit under the banner of common sense, that I just can’t make sense out of. There may be good arguments behind all or some of them, but that is rather a far thing from being a self-evident truth.

1. We shouldn’t judge people. This one we hear from both the world and the church. With the church it even comes complete with a proof-text, Matthew 7:1. While Jesus warns us to not be too quick to judge, to judge with charity, to judge in a manner we would like to be judged, even He is in this very text calling us to judge, but to judge well. A blanket condemnation of all judging is, well, condemning, and therefore judging. It is hoisted on its own petard.
2. Jesus loved the most vile sinners, but hated the Pharisees, the religious conservatives. Really? Did Jesus hate Nicodemus? How about Joseph of Arimathea? They were both Pharisees He was likely rather close to. Did Jesus love the adulterous, incestuous, murderous Herod? How about that spineless and corrupt Pilate? Even a cursory reading of the New Testament reveals that the calculus Jesus used for His grace was rather simple. The question wasn’t how spectacular of a sinner you were, but how repentant you were. When Jesus compared the proud Pharisee who prayed “I thank you God that I am not like other men” to the tax collector who prayed, “Lord be merciful to me, a sinner” (Luke 18) He wasn’t saying the former was bad because he was a Pharisee, and the latter good because he was a tax collector. The difference was in the repentance. What an irony then that in our day we proudly present ourselves as the sinners, praying, “I thank you Lord that I am not like other men. I sin openly and unrepentantly. I mock those who affirm Your law, and do not judge like those vile judgers.”
3. Sending good thoughts your way. What? Have you ever been sitting around, when suddenly a “good thought” popped into your head, followed by this thought, “Hey, how nice of, hmm, let’s see here. What’s the return address on this good thought, so I can thank the sender?” Thoughts a. do not travel across space magically, and b. even if they did they have no magic power to change anything. Weird that people who think praying to the Living God is fruitless and powerless nevertheless think that their sent thoughts can change the future.
4. You always think you’re right. The Creator is always right. Fallen creatures, however, aren’t so fallen as to actually believe that they are always right. We do, those beings that never fell, those that are fallen, those redeemed, even those perfected, however, always believe we’re right. To think I’m always right is to claim to be infallible. To always think I’m right, however, is nothing more than to think. It is to believe what we believe. In addition, that I believe something has no bearing on whether it is true or not. That I always agree with me, just like you always agree with you, doesn’t make me arrogant. It merely means I don’t have a split personality. No one ever said, “I believe X, but I think I’m wrong.”
5. Christians shouldn’t divide over doctrine. The first question I have is, “Well, what should we divide over?” But the more foundational question is, “Who are the Christians?” There are issues that divide Christians and often those divisions are driven by our flesh more than His Spirit. But there are also issues that divide Christians from non-Christians, some of whom actually claim to be Christians. Is claiming to be Christian sufficient to preclude division? Not according to the Bible. The New Testament tells us to have nothing to do with those who preach a different gospel (Galatians 1:8) That’s a doctrinal matter. It tells us we should have nothing to do with professing believers who are sexually immoral (I Corinthians 5). That’s a doctrinal matter. But worst of all, are not those who make this claim dividing themselves from Christians who believe we should divide over doctrine? The statement itself is doctrine, and is divisive.

Common? Yes. Wisdom? Not so much.

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Today’s Podcast- B is for Bible, Ad Astra and More…

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Bible Study Facebook Live Oct 21 Lord Teach Us to Pray- Forgive Us Our Debts

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Today’s podcast- Rationalism, Alexander Strauch’s Leading in Love and more…

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