All Believers

When we celebrate the Reformation, we would be wise to take the bad with the good. Or at least we ought to be on our guard. We rejoice in the recovery of sola Scriptura. We rejoice as well in the doctrine of the priesthood of all believers. But we ought to be able to see the danger rearing its ugly head. When we put the two together, as we should, we tiptoe close to what my friend Keith Mathison calls “solo Scriptura.” Here a body believes that they alone, with the Bible in their hands, are the ultimate authority. “What need have I,” the solo Scripturist affirms, “of the church, or of the gifts to the church, like teachers? Me and my Bible can go it alone.” The danger is real, and we are to this day reaping the whirlwind of every wind of doctrine.

The Scripture is, of course, our only final authority. And we are all a part of the royal priesthood. The fruit of this, however, ought not to be an army of little popes, but a family working together. Some are called to serve as pastors/shepherds/elders. Some are called to serve as butchers, bakers and candlestick makers. It is all too common, and a sad holdout of Rome that we think the former are engaged in spiritual matters while the latter are working for themselves. No one, however, when they have no water, forgets that the plumber is a servant and a blessing. It has been said that there is no such thing as Christian plumbing. Perhaps not. There is, however, plumbing like a Christian. There are plumbers who exercise dominion to the glory of Jesus.

We are all about the business of Reformation. The priesthood of all believers doesn’t make ministers out of cobblers. Instead it affirms the ministry of cobblers. We all have work to do, and all our work, if it is honest work, is kingdom building work. The Bible commends diligence, honesty, integrity not because there are natural graces but because they are the work of the Spirit of the living God.

The Reformation reminded us of our calling. And so we are called to remember the Reformation, and give thanks to the One who gave it to us. We, all of us, labor in the Lord’s vineyard, because every square inch of the created order is His vineyard. Every day. Every labor. Every place. Every believer. This is the day that the Lord has made. Let us rejoice and work hard in it.

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Fundamentalist Mormonism; Rise Up O Men

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Why the school shootings?

I don’t know, beyond a broad answer that likely would satisfy few. I do know there are those who want to lay the blame at the feet of the 2nd amendment. It is not the time to defend the 2nd amendment, nor is it the time to call to repeal it. Emotions, understandably, run high. There are others who lay the blame at various policy issues. That is, some say we could stop these events by arming teachers, putting police in every school, limiting access to schools. There are those who lay the blame on ideology. Is it really a great surprise that people who are daily told they emerged from the slime and will return to the nothing at death find it easy to gun down other cosmic accidents?

I don’t believe, however, that a perfect grasp of our God given right to protect ourselves and others, nor a perfect strategy for keeping gunmen out of schools, or disinclined to go there nor even sound biblical teaching on the objective evil of killing His image bearers will solve the problem. The problem runs too deep for such solutions.

While it seems mass shootings are becoming nearly a daily occurrence, they are not. That said, we do live in a country wherein every day roughly 2000 babies are murdered not by crazed gunmen, but by law-abiding citizens, not by socially awkward teenagers but by their very own parents. Every day, 2000 babies. The daily murder of the unborn trumps and trounces “what-about-ism.” Every other tragedy, every other evil pales in comparison.

There is only one solution. That solution is not difficult to understand. There is not in the least, given the desire to do so, anything difficult about it. The solution is repentance. Wholesale, national, crying out to the living God for His mercy in Christ Jesus repentance. Every other solution looks to our own wicked hearts, to the wicked, godless state. Every other solution misunderstands the nature of the problem- our fallen natures.

When God in His grace sent first hardship and then prophets to call His people to repentance, the message was never “Try harder.” Nor was it, “Change this policy.” Nor was it, “Adopt this ideology.” It always “Repent.” And as long as men sin, the message will never change. A pandemic with a million dead. School shootings becoming as common as thunderstorms. Empty shelves and shrinking money. The blood of two thousand babies flooding our streets daily. And the one thing these all call us to do is the one thing we won’t consider.

We don’t, of course, repent simply to make it stop. We repent because we are the problem. Not policy, not ideology, us. We are not homo sapien, man the wise but homo homicide, man the man killer. Our only hope is the Man who laid down His life for us. Repent. Believe the gospel. And suffer the children to come unto Him.

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Sacred Marriage, Dissing Your Spouse

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What Gives You the Right?


Getting a moral relativist to tie himself into a pretzel takes all the skill of shooting a great big fish stuffed into a tiny little barrel. If there is no transcendent moral standard then it isn’t morally wrong to believe there is a transcendent moral standard. If everyone is morally free to do whatever he wants then it is not wrong to disregard someone’s preferred pronouns, not wrong to mock those who advertise their preferred pronouns, not wrong to kill those who have preferred pronouns. “No one ought to judge anyone else” is, with no sense of self-awareness, a judgment on those who judge.

Of course moral relativists, like marriages with two boys or two girls don’t actually exist. Subject their statement, “You can’t impose your standard of right and wrong on others” to truth serum and it comes out, “You can’t, but I can, impose your standard of right and wrong on others.” Consider abortion. We have been told for decades now that a woman has a “right to reproductive freedom.” Let’s break that down. First, reproductive freedom. No one that I’ve ever heard have has sought to take away a person’s liberty to reproduce. What they really mean is a woman has a right to kill her unborn child.

Now let’s look at “right.” Where does this purported right come from? If there is no transcendent moral standard then there are no rights. If there is a not transcendent moral standard, say for instance, a Supreme Court decision as a moral standard, then it can change. “A woman has a right to kill her unborn child” may be true if we mean by right “is not subject to prosecution under Roe v. Wade.” If Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court, is the source of this “right,” however, it can be overturned. No Roe. V. Wade, no “right” to kill your baby.

This is how those who support the murder of the unborn reason. Roe v. Wade gave me the right. Therefore you cannot take away the right. What though if before Roe those opposed to the murder of the unborn said, “This court has not granted the ‘right’ to murder the unborn. Therefore the right doesn’t exist.’” Anyone whose god is the federal government, whatever branch or combination of branches must say of their god, “That feds giveth. The feds taketh away. Blessed be the name of the feds.”

Reason, however, has never been the strong suit of the pro-abortionists. The heart has bloodlusts that reason knows not of. That bloodlust, we can expect, will spill beyond the unborn as first Roe is overturned and then states forbid the practice. I am no prophet but I expect that what is coming will make the Summer of Unrest a few years ago look like a Sunday School picnic. People who will not be constrained from slicing up babies will not be constrained by the niceties of public discussion and debate. They will seek to burn it all down.

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That 70’s Kid- The Way It Was; Jr. High Girls

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Hope

More than once I’ve been asked- “Do you ever get angry with God?” Intellectually it’s a silly question. Emotionally it’s easy to understand. Hard times are hard, and we all know He determined our days before we were born (Psalm 139). All it takes, however, to get our heart in line with our mind is to remember who God is and who we are.

I don’t get angry with God. He doesn’t owe me anything but His wrath. But that’s not why He ordains hardship in my life. He gives it to me because He loves me. Hardship is neither punishment nor permission. It is a gift from Him.

Paul tells us that it is right and appropriate, in times of hardship, that we should mourn. Every day is not a day full of sunshine. Hardship, though it be for our good and His glory, is still hardship. And so we mourn. But, Paul tells us, we do not mourn like the world. They mourn without hope, while we mourn with hope.

There is an immediate and sound deduction we can reach here. Why would our mourning differ from the world around us? We know where we are going. We know what end is in store for us. Any sadness or hardship that we experience is, on any appropriate scale, brief and mild. Our suffering, after all, cannot be compared with the eternal weight of glory. The suffering of those outside the kingdom is but a prelude, a small taste of an eternity of agony. Our suffering, on the other hand, is but a speed bump on the way to Glory Road.

What we must not miss, however, is the reason for our different ends. Our grief is infused with hope not merely because we have a bright future. Instead our grief is infused with hope because of our past. We look forward, in the midst of our grief, in hope, because we look backward, in the midst of our grief, with joyful gratitude. My future is bright because the wrath that I am owed has already been spent. The difference is in the cross of Christ. Whatever sorrow God calls me to go through, He calls me to go through for the express purpose of remolding me into the image of His Son. Every hardship exists to make me more like Jesus.

Stephen, we are told, while he was being martyred, saw heaven open up. He beheld the glory of Christ, as He stood, a Witness for this witness. The joy was not merely that Stephen would be found innocent. The joy was not simply that Stephen would be with Jesus. The greatest joy was that Stephen knew that what he saw, that he would become. John, remembering that we ought not to mourn as those who are without hope, gives us this greatest hope, “Beloved, we are God’s children now, and what we will be has not yet appeared; but we know that when he appears, we will be like him, because we shall see him as he is” (1 John 3:2). He knows the plans He has for us, plans to give us hope and a future, a future so grand that eye hath not seen or ear heard, nor has it entered into the mind of man.

May we be blessed with the courage to believe His promises, even in the midst of hardship. May the world witness us, the witnesses of Christ, as we attest to His goodness, through mourning with hope. May they behold His glory, as we move from mourning to dancing.

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Ask RC: Who is God? In the Beginning, Gen. 1:1

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Should Christians be good friends with unbelievers?

The Apostle Paul writes to the church at Corinth “Do not be bound together with unbelievers; for what partnership have righteousness and lawlessness, or what fellowship has light with darkness?” (II Corinthians 6:14). The text at least ought to raise the question in our minds. Would Paul’s admonition here preclude close, personal friendships with those outside the kingdom? To answer properly we need only to answer this question- is such a friendship being bound together? Is it a partnership? Is it fellowship?

This text, for instance, clearly forbids believers from marrying outside the faith. There is no human relationship more tightly bound than husband and wife. I would suggest in turn that this text does not preclude us from doing ordinary business with unbelievers. I am not bound together with my internet service provider. I am not in partnership with my mechanic. I am not in fellowship with the dairy farmer who provides my family with milk. Where it gets tricky is in between these two extremes. Can a Christian doctor share a practice with a non-Christian? And can we have close personal friendships with those outside the faith?

Though it’s not terribly dramatic, the answer, as usual, lies in wisdom. For 25 years I prayed for a beloved friend who, while he claimed to be a Christian when we met, soon left the faith. Our friendship continued and it continues to this day. We speak on the phone a few times each year, catching up on the news, and remembering our times together in the past. On the one hand, this relationship is “close.” On the other, it is not. I’m delighted to report that he has returned to the faith.

My life, day to day, is not caught up in his. My focus, day to day, is on the lives of my wife, my sons, and the work He has called me to. I have neighbors that are “friends” that are outside the faith, neighbors that I likewise pray for. There is nothing wrong with such friendships, as long as they are loose. But my soul can only commune with those whose souls commune with our Lord. Whatever we might have in common, in terms of the image of God, with unbelievers, we are defined by our faith.

Each Lord’s Day we remember that we are not just one local congregation. We remember that on that day we gather with all the saints around the world, the church militant. We remember that we are all lifted up into the heavenly places, to the New Jerusalem where we meet our Lord, and join together with the souls of just men made perfect (Hebrews 12: 22-24.) We remember that we join together with the church triumphant. We remember that we are one body, because we confess one faith. Our loyalty, our hesed, or covenant love, is for those within the body. We are indeed free to reach out to those outside the kingdom, remembering that such once were we. We are not free, however, to juggle our loyalties.

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Curating Books, Under the Banner of Heaven; Psalm 24

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