Riding the Storm Out

In my lifetime I have lived in San Francisco, Kansas, and Florida. I have experienced an earthquake, a tornado and a hurricane. The odd thing is that I experienced all three while living in Pennsylvania. I’m a fan of weather. Not sunny weather, but storms of every kind. Just last night, here in Hurricane Alley, northern Indiana, we had hurricane speed winds. It was all I could do to stay inside. We were safe, and like so many storm warnings of the past, the fear was likely more damaging than the thing feared. We saw power at work, but were safe and secure.

Every storm, in the end, is but a shadow of the great storm in the end. A day is coming, even more certain than the arrival of whatever the Weather Channel is hyping today, when I will have to stand before the living God. His perfections will expose my imperfections, His holiness my unholiness. I do not, however, prepare for that day, nor have I any fear. For the storm has already passed. Before He drew me to Himself, before He knit me in my mother’s womb, 2000 years ago the One who calms every earthly storm walked into my storm, taking on His Father’s wrath for my sin. The daytime sky turned black. The ground shook, the winds ripped through Calvary and the cup poured down on Him. I was made safe and secure.

That storm is past. And so I will stand before my heavenly Father, washed, safe, beloved. He will not put my in the cleft of a rock, but will take me in His loving arms. He will tell me I am His beloved son and He will never let me go.

I don’t know what the next great weather event will bring. All the mapping, modeling, tracking and still we do not know the future. I may see the clouds approaching. What I can’t see is the real end. But He who told me not only knows the future but brings it to pass. He can only speak truth, for His Word is the source of reality. He promised He would welcome me. He promised He would keep me. He promised that He would never stop loving me. I am safe in the eye of a hurricane because, because of Jesus, I am the apple of His eye. Behold He gives His beloved rest, right in the midst of the storm.

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Psalm 28; Compassion on the Cheap

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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What about the January 6 Hearings?

I know I’ll never win a prize for investigative journalism, but the drum that I beat remains important. That drum comes right out of the Bible where we read, “The first one to plead his cause seems right, until his neighbor comes and examines him” (Proverbs 18:17). My constant plea is that we learn greater patience and cease with jumping to conclusions. I seek to apply this principle whether it is my friends or my enemies who are being accused.

Which is not so difficult this time. It is because I am as politically conservative as I am that I have had from the start many concerns with President Trump. Better than Hillary? Well yes, of course. The person we should have voted for? Perhaps so. Full of pleasant surprises? Most certainly. To be trusted? I don’t think so. Which means, it’s possible the previous president may have encouraged what could only be legally recognized as a coup attempt.

It is also possible that the coup he attempted was an attempt to counter an earlier successful coup by his political opponents. It is also possible that some of his friends plotted a coup and he played it too cute. Finally, it’s possible his friends plotted a coup and he was clueless about it. I don’t know. How could I?

The Democratic party is utterly untrustworthy. ABC News is utterly untrustworthy. None of which makes President Trump in the least bit trustworthy. Which is not something I’m especially worried about. Because I have never hitched my wagon to President Trump’s wagon. When he did well he did well in combatting liberals of the political and journalistic kind. Hip hip I say. I say it because I’m conservative, a position that both existed and had a deep place in my heart long before President Trump was even known. My conservative convictions will remain undaunted and unstained should the President actually be found actually guilty of actual treason.

That President Trump assaulted the opposite side of the aisle with Trump Derangement Syndrome is not certain evidence that he is God’s special hero. That he nominated conservative justices isn’t proof that he is beyond wicked doings. That some professing Christians claimed to have had messages from God that he is the true president doesn’t mean that he is. What fools we are that we begin our investigation with our conclusion already reached, and then only look at evidence that supports us.

I am not of a mind to scour the internet looking for proof of the crookedness of the investigators of January 6. I’m not inclined to seek out further proof of the election being stolen. Even when conspiracy theories turn out to be true, they don’t cease to be rabbit holes. I’m not hoping my political allies will build a coalition with Trumpsters, Proud Boys, Oath Keepers and Promise Keepers. I’m hoping, and praying, that justice will prevail, the guilty will be exposed and that the Lord’s good reign will be acknowledged from sea to shining shore. For that, I don’t need to know, nor refute what this panel concludes.

Posted in 10 Commandments, abortion, cyberspace, Devil's Arsenal, ethics, kingdom, politics, RC Sproul JR, scandal | 1 Comment

Sacred Marriage- Peter’s Wisdom

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Father’s Day

In a few days I will have the opportunity to preach the gospel at Cedarville Community Church just outside Fort Wayne. It’s a small congregation where the pastor, Monte Sheets, has served for over 35 years. Monte is a fine man who has shepherded faithfully in reminding the congregation of the reality of their sin, the power of God’s grace in Christ and the assurance of God’s love. That congregation will hear that same message when I preach.

This particular Sunday is a “holiday” of sorts, Fathers’ Day. The less attractive, socially awkward younger brother of Mother’s Day is often used as an occasion for sermons on the need for fathers to step up. It is an old trope, grounded in a sad reality, that in most churches mothers are honored on Mothers’ Day while in most churches fathers are admonished on Fathers’ Day. The solution to this discrepancy, however, isn’t to honor fathers more or mothers less, nor to admonish mothers more or fathers less. The solution is for Fathers’ Day and Mothers’ Day, and every other Lord’s Day would be about the Lord.

Faithful preaching should include both acknowledgment of jobs done well and encouragement to us to do well. The key is that faithful preaching should always acknowledge the jobs done well by the living God, the work of Christ for us, the work of the Spirit in us, and from there the encouragement to do well. We are His children, therefore we go and do. We are His bride, therefore we go and do. We are indwelt, therefore we go and do. As theology wonks like to put it, the indicative drives the imperative.

Which brings us back to the church. We do what we do because we are what we are. What we are is His. What we do each Lord’s Day therefore ought to be about Him. We gather neither to be rebuked nor to be encouraged. We gather to worship. Worship isn’t what we do before the preaching, while the band is on the stage. Worship isn’t the feeling we have when the pulsing music leads us to sway. Worship, friends, is ascribing glory to the living God. It is honoring Him, praising Him, celebrating Him. Does that move us? It should, but that’s not the goal. Does that unite us? It should, but that’s not the goal. Does that make us want to come back again next week? It should, but that’s not the goal. The goal is His delight.

It is not uncommon for believers to grumble about the vapid worship at their local church. We all say the church is a mile wide and an inch deep. Then we go look for something different by moving from this vapid worship to that, from this mile wide and inch deep to another just like it. It is vapid and shallow because it is about us, the vapid and shallow. It aims low and hits low. We are not worthy of our attention and focus, and will always disappoint us. Let us instead go and meet with the living God. It isn’t Fathers’ Day, but our Father’s Day. Let us rejoice and be glad in it.

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That 70s Kid- Crossroads TV; Wellness Check

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Reforming Reformation

Lord Acton was absolutely right that power corrupts and that absolute power corrupts absolutely. He may have been more right, however, if he had adapted a bit of biblical wisdom in articulating the dangers of power. What if he had said instead:“The love of power is the root of all kinds of evil.” Just as greed is not the exclusive province of the rich, so the hunger for power extends well beyond the powerful, and with it goes all manner of evil. Those without power often seek power by sidling up to the powerful. If you have no power, the next best thing may be to get close to those who do.

We see this principle worked out in spades in the English Reformation. The Reformation came to England not because of a popular uprising of the people. It was not rooted in the heartfelt convictions of the clergy. The Reformation came to England because a king wanted a new wife, one who would bear him a son. The king thought he was pulling the strings of the clergy to get what he wanted, while the clergy believed they were pulling the strings of the king to get what they wanted. O, what a tangled web they weaved when the English Reformation was first conceived. At any given moment, the shape of the Reformation was determined not by the Word of God, but by who had the king’s ear. This inauspicious beginning laid the groundwork for what would ensue – centuries of confusion, death, and strife.

Trying to untangle the knots created by shifting alliances, convicted consciences, and the providence of those born to inherit thrones may make for an interesting historical survey. What may be better, however, would be for us to consider our own failures and weaknesses as we set about the business of reformation in our own lives. Whose ears do we seek access to, and to whom are we listening? Rather than trying to divine whether the Church of England skewed too Romish or whether its problems grew out of its Erastianism may just be a distraction from examining our own lives.

Reformation, rightly understood, is nothing more than dominion. Adam and Eve, in being called to rule over the creation, were called to re-form the world. After the fall, the call to dominion abides, and so does the call to re-form. Now we are not merely turning jungle into garden, for we are at the same time turning sin into righteousness. Our re-formation is, by the power of the Holy Spirit, remaking the sinful dust of our fallen father, Adam, into the glorious gold of our elder brother, Jesus, the second Adam. The Reformation not only is not over, but it will not end until all things are brought into subjection. Those “all things” certainly include the rulers of England, both ecclesiastical and civil. They certainly include all who rule here in these United States. They include our churches, our culture, our labors. But they begin with our families, ourselves, our hearts.

In the economy of God, we do not re-form by seeking power. We do not re-form by seeking the ear of those in power. The only way to re-form is to die. The dead have no lust for power. They have no ears to be tickled. They have no lips with which to seduce others. Indeed, this is where our power is found. By being powerless we are beyond the seducing power of power. By being dead, we strike fear in the hearts of the powerful, for their power has no sway over us.

In the economy of God, the great things that we do for the kingdom we do in peace and quietness. When we speak to our children of the things of God, we are bringing reformation. When we visit the widow on our block, we are bringing reformation. When we sit down in a moment of quiet and meditate on the powerful Word of God, we are bringing reformation. When we wash the dishes after sharing a feast with our fellow saints, we are bringing reformation. We bring reformation to the world in the very ordinary tenor of our lives.

We have no need to sit next to kings, for we are seated beside the King. Indeed, we are kings and queens with Him, seated in the heavenly places. We do not need to seize the engines of ecclesiastical authority, for we are already a royal priesthood. We need not seek positions of power and influence, that we might whisper in the ears of the powerful. Instead, we must make known our desires to the Almighty, Him whom we are instructed to call, “Our Father, who art in heaven….” We need not tear out the great weeds of unbelief that infest the church at large. We need only tear out the great weeds of unbelief that infest our tiny little hearts, that we might instead bear much of the fruit of the Spirit.

We must re-form our understanding of Reformation. The world is changed through service, not power. It is changed by service to “the least of these” rather than the powerful. Perhaps to understand this better, we ought to tell ourselves the next time we find ourselves changing a dirty diaper: “Be of good cheer. For in this deed we shall light a fire across the globe such as shall never be put out.” Perhaps that is what it means to play the man.

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Why Should the Church Repent? ITB- Assess, Divide, Name

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What are your thoughts on “minced oaths?”

First a definition for those unfamiliar with the term. A “minced oath” is a bowdlerization of words or phrases otherwise deemed offensive or blasphemous. Common examples would be the substitution of darn for damn, heck for hell, gosh for God. Some argue that when we use these substitutes we nevertheless stand guilty of using the originals, that gosh takes God’s name in vain, and darn belittles the reality and horror of damnation. While I am sympathetic to that perspective, and give thanks for those who seek to be deliberate and to honor God with their tongues, I do not share that conviction.

The ground of my concern with this objection is in an understanding of how language actually works. On the one hand we must steer clear from the notion that words have no meaning, that meaning is imposed on words from the outside, that we can mean what we wish with whatever words we use. This is the post-modern conceit and it is deep folly indeed. On the other hand, however, we would profoundly misunderstand language if we took that view that words are utterly static, immovable soldiers that are completely unfazed and unchanged by how they are used by actual people. That is, usage may not define meaning but it impacts meaning. And usage changes over time.

It may well be two hundred years ago people began to substitute those terms, that when they said, “Darn this dull ax of mine” that they were actually wishing that their ax should suffer eternally, but wanted to say so while maintaining a façade of politeness and respectability. That, however, doesn’t necessarily mean that today when someone says, “This darn operating system keeps crashing “ that they intend to communicate, “I want my operating system to suffer God’s wrath eternally, but I want to say so in a more genteel way.” I suspect that what is intended to be communicated is simply this, “This operating system is frustrating me by crashing all the time.”

Now it is certainly possible for people to have competing meanings for different words. This is why I’m supportive to those who refuse to use “minced oaths.” If they mean by darn what others mean by damn, they should not use the word cavalierly. (How much more on gosh and God?) We should shudder at the thought of eternal torment. The trouble is when those who rightly won’t use minced oaths, because they see such a connection between the substitute and the original term, impose their understanding of the term on their brothers who don’t see such a connection. Some judge their brothers for saying damn when what they really said is, “I’m frustrated,” or, “That’s a disappointment.”

I admire the scrupulosity of those who won’t use minced oaths. I do not admire the judgment of some among them who impose on those who will use minced oaths, not seeing them as minced oaths. Not only should our language be seasoned with grace, but so should our reaction to our brother’s language be seasoned with grace.

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Psalm 27; Atin-Lay, Fides Implicita

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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