The Peace that Passes

The Bible is a book that is bigger on the inside than it is on the outside. Look at it from one perspective, and it’s rather a small book. It occupies less space on a shelf than a dictionary. Some versions you can even carry in your pocket. Yet when we consider all that is within it, it’s a rather large book. It equips us for every good work (2 Tim. 3:16). Its riches can and will occupy our meditations into eternity.

Many, if not all, of the Bible’s parts have much the same quality. Jesus gives the most famous, most significant, most far-reaching sermon in all of history, and yet it covers just three chapters, Matthew 5–7. In those short chapters, Jesus tells us how we may receive the blessing of God. He speaks to how His people are to relate to the broader world, calling us to be salt and light. He explains how His Sermon on the Mount relates to the first “sermon on the mount,” the giving of the law at Sinai. He expands our understanding of the Mosaic law, tells us how to love those within the kingdom, and shows us how to serve those without. He teaches us how to pray, and how to fast, then reminds us that our treasure is in heaven.

All of this fits nicely into such a significant sermon. These are matters of the first importance, fitting themes for this cosmic exposition. But then, Jesus does something most of us wouldn’t expect — He tells us to stop worrying. Why this? Why here? Sure, avoiding anxiety is important and valuable. But couldn’t this have waited for another sermon, for a less auspicious occasion? Precious few freshly minted seminary graduates would include such an admonition in their first sermon. Not many pastoral candidates would choose this application to conclude their candidating sermon. But Jesus includes it. Why?

Our first clue is this — Jesus doesn’t merely tell us to not worry. Instead, He tells us what we should not be worrying about:
“Therefore I tell you, do not be anxious about your life, what you will eat or what you will drink, nor about your body, what you will put on” (6:25). Stranger still, in this brief sermon, Jesus reiterates this point: “Therefore do not be anxious, saying ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’ For the Gentiles seek after all these things” (vv. 31–32a).

Jesus, in the Sermon on the Mount, is, before He tells us to seek the kingdom, telling us what life looks like inside the kingdom. This is how you love; this is how you pray; this is how you obey. And this, He tells us, is what you don’t do — be anxious about what you will eat, what you will drink, what you will wear. This mindset defines the people of the kingdom; it sets us apart from the Gentiles. This is the mark of Christians. You will be recognized, Jesus tells us, not because you have no food, drink, or clothes. Your Father in heaven knows you, like the Gentiles, need these things. What will set you apart from the world around you, what will separate you, is that you will not worry. You will be at peace. You will have but one priority — to seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness.

We should be encouraged to remember that Jesus preached this sermon to the choir. That is, Jesus isn’t here castigating the scribes and Pharisees. He is talking to His own. The same is true with that first sermon on a mount (Ex. 20). While all men everywhere must not worship false gods or construct idols, while all men must honor God’s name and His Sabbath, while all men must respect those in authority, keep covenant, and so on, God is speaking to His own people here. He is saying, “I rescued you from Egypt, because you are Mine. I am carrying you on eagles’ wings, because you are My people. I will establish you in a land flowing with milk and honey, because you are My beloved. When you get there, be sure not to murder each other. Don’t steal the property of your neighbor. Keep covenant with your wife.” In like manner, Jesus is telling us not to worry not because we are never tempted to do so, but precisely because we are so tempted. He is preaching to the choir because we aren’t choirboys. We do fret. We do fear. We do follow the patterns of the Gentiles.

Our calling, then, is twofold. First, we need to learn to believe that our Father in heaven cares for us. Jesus in this sermon makes this abundantly clear. God provides for the sparrows, for the lilies of the field. He knows what we need, and He will provide. Second, though, we must repent of our fears. In the end, this is what marks the Christian, not that we are sinless but that by His grace we repent when we fall. When we repent, we have been promised that “He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness” (1 John 1:9). When peace passes, when it slips from our grasping hands, we rest here, and thus rest in that peace that passes understanding.

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It’s People Like You…

Every believer hopes, prays and works for more believers. A man cannot be born again, be carried into the kingdom and then close the door behind him. Jesus commands us to disciple the nations, baptizing them and teaching them all that He commands. The debate is often over how to do that. Street preachers are often considered uncouth, while hipster churches equipped with big screens, skinny jeans and fog machines are often considered worldly and untethered.

There are arguments both for and against competing strategies. I want to point out, however, that one argument bandied about on all sides, is no argument at all. How often believers look down their noses at other believers and suggest “It’s people like you who keep other people out of the kingdom.” Do the foibles of one group of Christians really block the doors to heaven from unbelievers? And if they do, isn’t it likely we’re guilty on all sides? Hippies looking down their noses at squares are just as pharisaical as squares looking down their noses at hippies.

“It’s people like you that drive people away from Jesus.” “If we don’t change the perception/convictions they have of us, they’ll never come in.” On the other hand some seem to suggest that what Christians do and how we behave has no impact whatsoever on the decisions of unbelievers. The truth is that unbelievers don’t need any help in their unbelief. Romans 1 teaches that all of us, in our natural state, actively suppress all that we know that God has revealed to us. No one can accuse the God of heaven and earth of doing it wrong. No one will be able to stand before Him and say, “Well, if You had presented Yourself this way, I would have repented and turned to you.”

What underlies this kind of perspective isn’t a heart for the lost, but a heart for the approval of the lost. That is, Christians are tempted to hide from whatever complaints unbelievers make. If the Bible disapproves of sexual sin that the world approves of, and faithful Christians concur, disapproval comes on us. So we shove our brothers and sisters under the bus. If the world complains that we are judgmental, we join in, thanking God we are not like those judgmental Christians. We seek the approval of man, natural man, whose nature is at war with God Himself.

John warned us about this, telling us, “Do not love the world or the things in the world. If anyone loves the world the love of the Father is not in him” (I John 2:15). This love of the world does not necessarily mean embracing the ways of the world. It may well mean hungering for the world to return our love. And all it costs is betraying others for whom Jesus died. We are all betrayers, and sufficient reason to both drive people away from Jesus and drive people to Jesus. We drive them away from Jesus because we are all sinners. We drive them to Jesus because they are too. We’re beggars telling other beggars where to find bread. Let’s not grumble about the table manners, good or bad, of other beggars.

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Lisa and I on Proverbs 31; NHL vs. LGBTQ; Jesus on Divorce

This week’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Last Night’s Romans Study

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Theology Has Consequences

Richard Weaver first made a name for himself when he published his seminal work Ideas Have Consequences, a brief book whose ideas are still bringing forth consequences. He was to the secular academic world something of a Francis Schaeffer, introducing thousands to the concept of worldview, arguing that what we think about little things, more often than not, is determined by what we think about big things. Weaver demonstrated how a modernist worldview wasn’t something academia simply studied, but was instead something that shaped academia. Indeed, modernism is academia’s mother. You wouldn’t have the former did you not first have the latter. Schaeffer named many of the strongholds we are called to tear down, the sundry ism’s that we in the evangelical world carefully study, the same ones we once studiously ignored.

While I don’t deny the importance of the study of worldviews, indeed, I’ve written my own book, Tearing Down Strongholds, looking at ism’s, I’m afraid there just might be something modernist about our modern fascination with ism’s, whether we’re fighting or promoting them. The Bible does argue that we fight against every lofty thing that exalts itself against the knowledge of God, but on the other hand, it spends far more time worrying about sins on a grand scale. The children of Israel, for instance, are never sent a prophet who thunders against them because they have embraced behaviorism. He never destroys a city with fire and brimstone because the citizens there believed in utilitarianism. No, the problem, doesn’t have much academic allure. The problem was always idolatry. Nations rise and fall, cultures ebb and flow, based on this simple question- do they worship the true and living God? Worldviews may shape how we see the world, but theology shapes our worldviews.

Since the fall of Adam, wherever we were, there we would find the seed of our own destruction. But such doesn’t mean we can’t look for particular forces that toppled us in a particular direction. Some, for instance, see the practice of chattel slavery as the great moment of national apostasy. Others look to the Scopes Monkey trial as a watershed moment when we turned our backs on the God who had so blessed us. Still others think it all went wrong when prayer was removed from the state’s schools. A few might argue that it was January, 1973, when the Supreme Court handed down its decision in Roe v. Wade.

I’d like to posit a different theory. The handwriting was already on the wall, we had already been tried in the balance and found wanting, when our New England forbears jettisoned not just the rugged Calvinism that had sustained them in times of hardship, but when they began to embrace Unitarianism. Here the problem isn’t simply the playing fast and loose with the Bible. The problem wasn’t merely the Pelagian revival, the notion that culturally speaking, we could create the New Man and usher in paradise on earth. The problem wasn’t the smug pride that drove the rejection not only of the Bible, but of the wisdom of our fathers in church history. The problem was this, we stopped worshipping the true and living God. The evil of Unitarianism is that it isn’t trinitarianism.

So now what do we do? We do not simply change our worldview. We do not simply elect better politicians. We do not merely refute Darwin, or B.F. Skinner, or Derrida. All of this is lopping the tops off of dandelions. No. There is but one way for us as individuals, as families, as churches, as a culture, to become once more pleasing in God’s sight. We must worship God in spirit and in truth, which means we worship Father, Son and Holy Spirit. We repent for our idolatry, and we turn away from it.

The historians will argue for centuries over what brought about the downfall of this once great land. Dissertations will be written, and tenures will be denied. Great schools of thought will do battle with competing schools. Arguments as elaborate and as rickety as the tower of Babel will rise and fall, like rising and falling empires. But there is but one thing that exalts a nation, one way for a nation to enjoy blessing from the true and living God, and that is that we should worship Him and Him alone. We will only enjoy His blessing when we pray, “And may the blessing of God Almighty- Father, Son and Holy Spirit, abide with you now and always.” So let it be done, for the sake of our fathers, for the sake of our children, for the sake of our nation, and for the glory of our Triune God.

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Romans Study Continues Tonight

Tonight we continue our look at the monumental, towering book of Romans. All are welcome to our home at 7 est, or you may join us for dinner at 6:15. We will also stream the study at Facebook, RC-Lisa Sproul. We hope you’ll join us.

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Do all paths lead to heaven?

Yes, and no. It is a common enough analogy supporting a common enough fallacy, the idea that all religions are simply different paths that meet at the top, finding God. If it’s a fallacy, and it is, then in what sense is it true? It is true that everyone, in the end, meets the true and living God. There is no path that leads, ultimately, away from Him. The question isn’t whether all men will meet Him. The question is, when we meet Him, will we find His grace and love or His just wrath? All those who climb the mountain will find the former. All those who seem to think that their efforts can bring themselves to paradise are fruitless, futile and foolish. Every effort made by every man to secure salvation is simply something else we need to be saved from, to repent of.

When I hear this notion, “All religions are different paths to the same god” my mind immediately translates it into, “I know nothing about religion.” It is true enough that almost every religion is some variation of self-salvation, some different path up the mountain. The Christian faith, however, doesn’t meet that definition, doesn’t follow that path. The Christian faith is not about how men climb up their way to God but about how God descended His way down to men. It isn’t about how we sought Him out but how He sought us out. It isn’t about what we’ve accomplished for Him but what He has accomplished for us. It isn’t about the way up the mountain but the way down.

Every other religion begins with, “Here’s how.” The Christian faith begins with “Here’s Him.” They say, “You can do this.” He says, “I have done this.” The Christian faith may be old, widely believed, grounded in a holy book like Judaism and Islam. It is not, however, the same. For the message of old, rested in by all who believe and taught in the Holy Book is that we are dead in our sins; He suffered for us; and as we rest in Him we are welcomed into the loving arms of the very Father who sent Him for us.

The path to heaven comes down. He, having been brought down, lifted up, buried and raised, carries us up with Him. Hallelujah, hallelujah!

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Good Friday

It is not a great mystery why we call this day “Good” Friday. This is the day each year that we remember the suffering and death on the cross of our Savior. Though they surely had little understanding of what it all meant, God’s people, from the exit from Eden, looked forward to the coming of the Seed of the Woman who would, in crushing the serpent’s head, have His heel bruised. Today we remember that bruising. Sunday we remember that crushing. Though the sky turned ebony, though the earth quaked, though His agony echoed through the place of the skull, it was a good day. It was the day He secured His bride.

While we call this day good, we do so because it is the answer to our being bad. Ours should be a somber joy, for we are they who crucified the Lord of Glory. Yet it is a true joy. For the Lord of Glory saw us as the glory that was set before Him. He despised not our shame but embraced it, bound it to Himself that we might be His.

In every tragedy a question reverberates- can this be redeemed for good? Today we have our answer. There has never been a deeper tragedy than the outpouring of the Father’s wrath on His Son. Only once in all of history has a man ever received from on high a punishment that went beyond what was due. He received the punishment that wasn’t due to Him at all, but was due to us. For this He volunteered, going like a lamb to the slaughter. One time an innocent man suffered, and it was a sacrifice sufficient to pay for every guilty act of every other man. Not only can great evils be redeemed for good, but evil men can be redeemed by the one Good Man.

Jesus died for me. He paid it all. It was a good day, the day the Lord made. Let us rejoice, and be glad in it.

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Goodness, Truth and Beauty

What hath Jerusalem to do with Athens? Much in every way. On the negative side, we would do well to remember that the citizens of God’s city, like those in the city of man, are still sinners. Though we are indwelt by God’s Holy Spirit, though we have been given hearts of flesh, we remain sinners on this side of the veil, not utterly unlike those around us. Thus Jesus, in His Sermon on the Mount, enjoins us not to do that which still comes all too naturally to us, to fret and worry about our food or our clothing. Such things, He tells us, the heathen worry about.

On a more positive note, Jerusalem and Athens have this in common: they are ruled by the same Man. That is, Jesus is Lord of both. There is no city over which Jesus does not reign. He is Lord over all of creation. We must be zealous to make this affirmation with boldness. We must, however, do so with care.

That Jesus is Lord of Athens does not mean that all is well with Athens. We cannot safely assume the city to be safe because our Lord rules over it. Instead, remembering the antithesis, the biblical truth that the seed of the woman and the seed of the Serpent will war against one another until the kingdom comes in its fullness, the reign of Jesus over Athens means Athens is in trouble. The city belongs to Jesus, and yet it rebels against Him. His lordship is less an imprimatur over the city and more a Sword of Damocles, a constant threat of judgment.

There is a third thing these cities have in common. Not only does Jesus rule both, not only are both cities populated by sinners, but both are populated by those who bear God’s image. Though the seed of the Serpent is at war with God and His people, they still bear His imprint. We see this theme repeated several times in the Bible. God calls His children to exercise dominion over the creation. The wicked line of Cain is not lazy with respect to exercising dominion. Bearing God’s image, it goes to work, turns mud into bricks, and builds a tower to make a name for itself. That this line does not labor for God’s glory but its own is a sign of sin. That it builds at all is a sign of God’s image. The same is true with respect to worship. In Romans 1, Paul belabors both that all men everywhere worship and that outside of Gods’ active grace in our lives, we all worship creatures rather than the Creator. Because we are God’s image bearers, we worship. Because we are in rebellion, we worship falsely.

This ought to inform our understanding of how these two cities relate. We do not send out envoys of peace against the enemies of God, beating our swords into plowshares. Neither, however, do we allow our sense of antithesis to cloud our common humanity, or better still, our common bearing of God’s image. Thus, we do not determine that piety demands that we who worship the risen Lord ought to walk on our hands, because the children of darkness walk on their feet. We do not assume that the right thing is for Christians to hate their children because unbelievers love their children. Instead, we thank the Lord of all for all that we still have in common. Instead, we encourage all that is good, true, and beautiful in Athens, knowing that, in the end, it all must belong to the Lord.

The Athenian Plato was not, contra those who would forget the antithesis, a sadly uninformed but brilliant man whose well-intentioned philosophical meanderings can be richly gleaned for wisdom. He was instead, as we all were prior to the work of the Spirit of God in us, an enemy of God. His philosophical thoughts had as their end goal the denying of God. Plato was, with respect to wisdom, deaf, dumb and blind. He could not, according to the Scripture, even see the kingdom of God (John 3:3). There is wisdom, however, in that nugget that suggests “even a blind squirrel finds a nut now and then.” Plato did not tell us anything we did not already know when he first suggested that the three high virtues are goodness, truth, and beauty. He did, however, speak well, truthfully, and beautifully in so saying. Plato, in drawing our attention to goodness, truth, and beauty, made manifest the image of God in his own life, and in turn taught us how to better recognize that image in others. When unbelieving firefighters act heroically — when they exhibit the good — we have no reason for shame. When unbelieving scientists speak truthfully, we have no reason for shame. When unbelieving musicians create moments of beauty, we have no reason for shame. For these things neither belong in the end to Jerusalem nor to Athens. Instead, they belong to the One who is Lord of both.

Plato recognized the goodness, truth, and beauty of goodness, truth, and beauty. Jesus is goodness, truth and beauty, and every other perfection infinitely. If we would pursue goodness, truth, and beauty, we must pursue Him. We must seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things will be added unto us.

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Lisa & I on Prov. 31; AI & Jobs? Lord of Darkness & More

This week’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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