What Bible translations do you most recommend?

It is a good thing that so many Christians love the Bible. It may not be such a good thing that Christians love their Bibles. That is, debating the relative merits of this translation over that can get rather emotional, and swiftly. Please take what follows in the spirit it is intended. I am simply making some broad suggestions, not saying your conversion was false because it all started when you read Good News for Modern Man or some such thing. I’m simply trying to give guidelines, not arguing that we measure one another’s piety by which Bible we use.

There are at least five distinct issues related to Bible translations. The one that receives the most press is the source manuscripts. There are two competing sets of manuscript families, an older set, and a larger set. As you might guess, those who prefer the older set argue that it must be more true to the original because it is older, whereas the other group argues that the larger set must be more faithful because it is larger. In my estimation this argument is grossly overblown, as are the distinctions between the two text families. It takes a brain much larger than mine to figure out which is better.

The biggest issue for me is the translation philosophy. There is a continuum among philosophies with a literal, word by word translation on one end, and a Bible paraphrase on the other end. I am rather strongly on the side of the former and opposed to the latter. I understand the motives that bring us The Message, or the Ebonics Bible. But it’s a bad idea. The further you move away from word for word translation, the more room you leave for interpretation, rather than translation.

The third issue is beauty. Which translation in its form best befits its content? This too is one of the weaknesses of most paraphrases. Ironically, in trying to make the Bible more readable they make it instead more pedestrian. This is likewise a weakness the more we push toward word for word equivalency. The most “faithful” translation often will clank, artistically speaking.

The fourth issue is one of authority. The hard reality is that in our day, Bible translations are important to the long-term financial health of publishing companies. Some companies, it seems, in defense of their bottom lines, have added to the already crowded alphabet soup of Bible translations. Should the Bible be in the hands of publically traded companies? How about parachurch organizations? Some have argued that the church alone has the authority to translate the Bible.

The fifth issue is history. That is, which Bible translation fits best into the life of the church over the centuries? Is it not jarring to read, “The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not be in want?” I believe there is great value in having a translation that has inspired our hymnody. I believe there is a profound blessing for me to memorize the same words that my grandparents memorized when they were small.

Different translations might score higher than others in one category above, but lower than others in another. No one Bible gets five stars in every category. That said, it is possible, if not wise, to use different translations for different contexts. For example, the New American Standard alone earns five stars on word for word translation. But it earns no stars for beauty. If I find myself in a situation where I need a level of precision that is high, but too low to go to an inter-linear Bible, I pick up my NASB. Otherwise, it stays on my shelf.

In like manner, the King James Bible scores points on the issue of history, and on beauty. But the anachronisms in the language are a real barrier to me. It tops the list on authority, but even there it is sketchy. An angry, and likely light in his loafers king, it seems to me, shouldn’t have the ability to supplant a perfectly good Bible like the Geneva Bible.

In the end, and on balance, my favorite for most circumstances is the New King James Bible. It scores high on history, without getting me confused. It scores high on beauty, without losing fidelity to the original text. It scores high, though not the highest, on word for word translation, while still communicating the gravity of its subject. Even on the issue of competing text families it does well as it usually includes parenthetically alternate readings in the older texts. The English Standard Version runs a close second for me. Then the Geneva Bible. This is how I approach the question, but it does not, to borrow a phrase, determine the boundaries of my fellowship.

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Why does God allow bad things to happen?

My friends at Social Church invited me on their podcast to address the question of suffering. Have a listen, and check out all their good work.

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Pickle Puss

 

I have a friend who was once a performer. He is a passionate man, but also, from time to time, profoundly honest. I went to see him perform and he made this confession. He said, “My wife told me that all I ever talk about are the things I’m against. ‘Why don’t you,’ she asked me, ‘ever tell your audience what you are for?’” Though he may have forgotten that line, I never will.

When we are just reaching adulthood, many of us find it rather easy to be mad. None perhaps more so than we who, ironically, embrace the doctrines of grace. “Young, restless and Reformed” as a descriptor was soft-pedaling the reality. “Young, angry and Reformed” is more like it. There are, of course, plenty of things for us to be angry about. The dogs of sin have paved paradise and put up a barking lot. Jesus is about the business of bringing all things under submission. Until He has finished there will always be death, disease, and destruction. What there should not be from us, the redeemed, is despair.

Which means, in turn, that we ought to be the most cheerful of people, the most upbeat. That’s hard for me, as my spirit animal is a marshwiggle. But the objective reality is that I have much to be thankful for, which means in turn I have a lot to be for.

My book, Growing Up (with) RC recounts various conversations I had along the way with my father. In one chapter I tell the story of when my father, noting my budding folly of skepticism, warned me, “Son, the cheapest way to develop a reputation as an intellectual is to adopt the pose of the cynic.” The temptation is still there. To be always on the attack, to spend our time and energy on the things we are against is to look to sophisticated to be taken in, to protect oneself from the vulnerability that comes from being moved.  It keeps me behind the judge’s bench, clutching what I think is a gavel, but which is just a baby rattle.

It is true enough that we live in a world, and in a church, that is reluctant to call sin sin, that won’t give the context of the bad news by which the good news becomes sweet. That said, our message is good news.  It is good news for us, the redeemed children of God. It is likewise good news for those yet outside the kingdom, the not yet redeemed of God. No, it’s not good news for the reprobate. We don’t however, know who they are. Shouldn’t we, once not a people, but now a people, once strangers to the promises but now joint heirs, be giddy heralds of the message of Jesus Christ? Yes, let us warn those outside to consider the cost. But how shall they believe that if they taste they will see that He is good, if our own faces are perpetually sour?

If we believed the good news we would dance like no one’s watching. And because they are watching, they just might join us.

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The Silence of This Lamb

 

It’s been said that the rise of every empire in human history was preceded by some great technological leap forward. I’d suggest the same truth applies to ideological empires. For all his brilliance, and his even greater courage, Martin Luther would be long forgotten, and the Reformation with him, were it not for Mr. Guttenberg’s contraption.

The study Bible and the Bible college were instrumental in the spread of dispensationalism, and radio and television birthed an explosion of prosperity preachers. What, though, hath Al Gore wrought? The internet has taken what the historian Nathan Hatch called the democratization of American Christianity and given it steroids. The gatekeepers are all at home licking their wounds while everyone and their brother has a blog, a podcast, a FB page from which they wage ideological war.

A little over two and a half years ago I had all those things. I had then, a few months prior, given up my ordination and ceased to serve as an elder in the church. Then came my very public arrest for drunk driving, with my two youngest sons in the car. With that sin and crime I lost my job, my podcast, my website, my audience. What I gained, however, was a deeper appreciation for the grace of God, of my need for that grace, and my lack of a need to defend my reputation. What’s the use?

After a year or so I dipped my toes back into twitter, began working on a book and after another half year, with the blessing of my local church, began to host a Bible study. Just weeks ago the book I was working on was released and with that came opportunities to promote it on multiple podcasts and broadcasts. As expected, when peeking out of my foxhole I felt my share of bullets flying by. “How dare he?” “He’s trying to set himself up again.” And in a stunning display of a lack of self-awareness, even had some anonymous attack bloggers chasten me for not being accountable.

And now, my website. I’ll be writing blog pieces. I’ll be posting Bible studies.  I’ll be accepting speaking invitations.  God willing, I’ll get my podcast back up and running. What doesn’t this mean? It doesn’t mean I’m unrepentant over my sins. It doesn’t mean I’m unaccountable. It doesn’t even mean I’m trying to “get back in ministry.” I am trying to proclaim the gospel. I am trying to praise His name. I’m trying to tell my story. I am trying to encourage the saints- all things every believer not only can, but should do. Ordination may be in my future. I hope it is. I don’t know, but then, I don’t need to, because I don’t decide.

I’m not a shepherd. I’m just a sheep. My time for silence has ended. If you see yourself as an enemy, let me ask you to love me. If you see me as a friend, and see my “enemies” disparaging me online, love them and follow that ancient wisdom of Elsa and “Let it go.” As I tweeted recently, Nehemiah didn’t get the wall built worrying about Sanballat. And if Jesus sees you as His friend, then let us together heed our Master’s voice, and follow Him.

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Podcast Conversation on Growing Up (with) RC

Regular Reformed guys talking with a regular Reformed guy about RC Sproul, a regular Reformed guy.

CLICK HERE

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Bible Study Facebook Live May 20, 2019

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Is there a hierarchy within the Trinity? Social Church Q&A with R.C Sproul Jr

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Ask RC – Justification By Faith Alone or By Works?

RC,
I have always been a bit puzzled by the “conflict” between Paul’s”justification by faith alone” and the “justification by works” mentioned in the book of James.
Do you think these guys actually disagreed about what it took to be saved?
Can you shed some light on this subject?

You’re not alone in your puzzlement. It is precisely this apparent tension that reportedly prompted Martin Luther, early in his ministry to say of the book of James that it was a “right strawy epistle.”
The first question is easy enough:
By no means did these men disagree with each other.

While we affirm that God used real men to write the Scriptures, in the end the Bible is God’s Word. God is one, and so is His Word.
Scripture does not and cannot contradict Scripture.

Jesus, remember, tells us that a house divided cannot stand.
James and Paul do not contradict, but speak in harmony, though they speak to different questions.

Paul affirms that it is faith in the finished work of Christ that brings to us that finished work. As we trust in His full provision, that provision becomes ours.
Our sins are forgiven, because of His death for us and we are counted as righteous on the basis of His obedience, His life for us.

Paul is diligent to disabuse his audience of any notion that we can earn this blessing, that we can please God ourselves.
He in turn emphasizes that even the faith we must have is not something that comes from us, but is first a gift of the Holy Spirit.

Paul affirms that faith brings us the work of Christ which brings us peace with the Father. James is answering a different question. James asks and answers, “What kind of faith does this?” Hell itself is filled with people who believe that Jesus died for the sins of His people. The devil himself believes this.
Faith is more than believing something is true.
A living faith is a trusting faith.
A trusting faith shows itself to be a trusting faith, James affirms, by bearing fruit.

Those who do trust in Christ alone will in fact grow in grace. They will become more obedient to the law of God. This obedience, or “works” do not make God deem us to be just, but justify the notion that we have faith.
Works are not what saves us, but it is the evidence that we have the faith that saves us.

“Justify”, please understand, can be used in at least two different ways. It can be that which makes something just, or it can mean that which shows something is just.
One meaning does not contradict the other, but rather answers a different question.

These issues continue to come up in our own day.
Some who claim to be Christians will argue that God will in fact judge us based on our own works. Others argue that mere assent to the truthfulness of the gospel message will bring peace with God.

It is faith, and faith alone that appropriates the work of Christ. It is a faith, however, that does more than simply agree. It trusts, it rests.

Have a Question for me?
Just type it below, I may answer your question in a future “Ask RC” or perhaps I’ll just reply to your email. Thank you!

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The Heart of the Matter

It may be the most frightening command in all of Scripture:
We are told by our Lord to pray, and to pray these words, “Forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors.”
If you fail to pray this way, you invite the judgment of God for your disobedience in prayer. If you succeed in praying this way, you invite the judgment of God for your disobedience in forgiveness.

Now you’re stuck between a rock and a hot place.

What we need is some context.
This prayer, after all isn’t given universally to the human race.
It is given instead to the children of God.

We begin with “Our Father, who art in heaven…” Only the redeemed have any business praying this prayer. And only the redeemed can pray this with confidence.

The relationship between forgiving and being forgiven, in God’s economy, works backwards. That is, Jesus isn’t teaching a doctrine of justification by forgiving alone.
We are not forgiven because we forgive. Instead, we forgive because we are forgiven.

If we are His children, we became such because we
were, by the sovereign power of His Spirit, made aware of our sins.
We confessed our sins.
We clung to the cross of Christ.
We come out the other side of this process not just forgiven, but changed!

We know what we were. We know something of the cost it took that we might be forgiven. Now, how can we do anything else but forgive others?!

We don’t forgive others out of fear of being not forgiven ourselves. We forgive others out of joy at being forgiven ourselves!

This, in turn, is how the world knows that we are His:
Our love one for another is the sweet fruit of forgiveness.

Saints and sinners alike not only sin, but sin against each other.
The difference is two-fold. Saints repent, and saints forgive.

Pray boldly, and keep going back to the heart of the matter.
It’s about forgiveness, forgiveness.

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A Verdict that Demands Evidence

It’s a bad thing to tell a lie.
Generally speaking we oughtn’t do it.
Truth be told, however, I suspect we lie less often than one might think, and do more damage with
the non-lies that we tell.

For me to lie I have to do two things, first- speak an untruth,
and also know that I am speaking an untruth.
It happens. I’ve done it and will do it again for certain.
The great thing about lies, however, is that they can be exposed.
Which puts some restraint on us from telling them.

There is no such restraint when we are certain of our perspective.
Often, however, our certainty outruns the facts.
We accuse our brother, not because we’re lying, but because we’re jumping to conclusions. And we’re jumping to conclusions because we love nothing more than to judge our brothers.
We do not love them, but think evil of them, we assign motives we cannot possibly know and having done so, finding them guilty, we then pass on our verdict to others, who convict on the basis of our testimony.

People are sinners.
We ought to know that.
When an accusation is made, no matter how horrific, we stand ready to believe it.

What we seem unable to believe is that people who are bad enough to commit horrific sins is a people bad enough to falsely accuse others of horrific sins.
When an accusation is made the cry comes forth from the compassionate ones that no quarter should be given to the accused, because the guilty deserve no quarter.
Those who raise questions about evidence are then deemed enablers, chiselers of the legal system, conspiratorial blackguards. You can always tell the guilty ones- they’re the ones trying to stop the lynch mob.

I have a friend who used to complain that in our day conversation had devolved into taking turns sharing. You give your opinion, while I silently count down the seconds until it’s my turn to give mine. When the third guy gets his turn we move on to a new theme, but the same practice.
Now, with social media, with instant communication, we all feel the pressure not just to have a take on everything, but to have one right now, you know, before witnesses can be deposed, before credibility can be assessed. The internet and the scandals it covers put us all on a jury. They demand a verdict all while confessing that, sadly, a trial just isn’t possible.

We are called to be Bereans. We ought to be checking out the teaching of those to whom we give our attention. And we are rightly free to comment on public commentary. This kind of trial, however, comes with a ready made system of evidence- footnotes1. Just because you think someone said “x” doesn’t mean they actually did. Better to check your sources. But we are also called to be Bereans about the accusations we make, or the accusations we hear against others.

We are to practice a love that “thinks no evil” (I Corinthians 13:1-6).

We are called to be Bereans of our own hearts, and of our own tongues.
A rush to judgment is always bad judgment.

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