For Better or For Worse

The Bible is full of promises. Most of them boil down to something terribly simple. God says to us, “Obey Me and be blessed. Disobey Me and be cursed.” This is God’s one covenant with man. Of course, praise God He has added a crucial addendum- it is possible to receive the blessings for the obedience of Another, and for that same Other to receive the curse due to us for our sin. Given that reality, however, we still see, especially in the Psalms, an expectation of comparative blessing for sinners who trust in the coming Savior and the comparative cursing on those outside God’s grace. The wicked will not stand. They shall soon be cut off. But the righteous shall be like a tree planted by the waters. While we recognize that proverbial promises are not designed to be math- that is, when God says those who do x will receive y, He is expressing the pattern by which He works, still there is weight here. We should expect greater blessing the more we are able to submit to His Word.

Then we hear the promises of Jesus. We should not be surprised when we are persecuted. We are promised trouble in this life. We are told to expect hatred from the world. In the old covenant we are tempted to expect the believing family to move from blessing to blessing, to enjoy prosperity, health, friendship, even admiration. In the new covenant it looks like we should expect to pick up our cross daily, that we will move from trouble to trouble, from heartache to heartache. What gives?

Our confusion flows out of a fundamental misunderstanding of the nature of blessing. Consider for a moment the children of Israel as they march toward the Promised Land. Certainly their lives began with hardship, as they suffered under Pharaoh’s yoke. But then they behold the miracles of God. He hears their prayers and delivers them in a spectacular display of both His power and His favor. But they grumbled. They complained. Our Father sent them water from a rock. He sent them first bread, and then meat. He, in a word, prospered them. But we are told in turn that because they grumbled He sent them “leanness in their souls.” Their bellies were full, but their joy was emaciated.

The blessings of God are not, typically, prosperity, health and honor. They are instead things like love, joy, peace, patience. Indeed these fruits find their most fertile soil in the context of hardship. The man who meditates on the law of God day and night may not grow a thriving business. He may not be much beloved in his community. But he will mourn his own sins. He will be poor in spirit. He will not enjoy great power, but will be mindful of God’s power, resting in his own meekness. He will hunger and thirst for righteousness. Meditating on the law of God, he will know his sin, his need for mercy, and so will show mercy, making peace even as he suffers under the sins of his enemies.

Such a man, of course, can look forward to pleasures at His right hand forevermore. But he need not wait for blessing. God will draw near. He is the reality of which all other blessings are but shadows. Such a man will walk through this world carrying his cross, and rejoicing in the very fatness of his soul. May He be pleased to make of us such men.

Posted in 10 Commandments, Biblical Doctrines, church, grace, kingdom, Kingdom Notes, psalms, RC Sproul JR | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on For Better or For Worse

Infantilism; Loving His Enemies

Todays Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

Posted in 10 Commandments, abortion, grace, ism, Jesus Changes Everything, kingdom, persecution, RC Sproul JR | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Infantilism; Loving His Enemies

“Meeting Jesus” Meets Tonight

Dunamis Fellowship and Sovereign Grace Fellowship continue our weekly Bible study at 7 eastern. Meeting Jesus consider our Lord’s death. All are welcome to attend. Come early (6:15) and we’ll feed you. You can also watch on Facebook Live, RC-Lisa Sproul. We hope you join us .

Posted in announcements, Bible Study, Biblical Doctrines, church, RC Sproul JR | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on “Meeting Jesus” Meets Tonight

Why is Big Eva so prone to compromise?

Because that is her nature. Evangelicalism as a social movement sought to find a compromise between the academically muscular theological liberalism of the twentieth century and the bold orthodoxy of the fundamentalism of the same era. This was not merely the strategy of the movement but the very nature of it. Such compromises, however, have trajectories that go in only one direction, downhill.

Consider God’s people in the Old Testament. Syncretism was their besetting sin. They would blend a little of the false worship of the locals with the true worship of God by setting up high places He did not command, to worship Him. Soon they added pagan “liturgy” to their worship of the living God. From there it was just a hop, skip and a jump before they were sacrificing their own, or rather God’s own children to Molech.

Or, consider what Paul said as the compromise between Judaism and Christianity infected the church at Galatia, “A little leaven leavens the whole lump” (Gal. 5:9). Many evangelicals, from the beginning, compromised on the creation account and Noah’s flood. Was it because of their passion for the Bible? No, it grew out of that hunger for respectability. Next up was the Bible’s teaching on the grounds for divorce. Many evangelicals cast that aside. Because of some new great insight into the Greek prooftexts? No, it grew out of a hunger to be deemed just as compassionate and understanding as the theological liberals and the broader culture.

By the time abortion became an issue evangelicals staked a claim to the middle ground between pro-choice and abolition, supporting candidates, legislation and the ideology that said babies conceived during a crime were fair game for butchers to hunt down and kill. Anyone surprised by the lemming rush to join, somewhere reasonably in the middle, the LGBTQ+ parade hasn’t been paying attention. One can only wonder where the middle ground will be when pedophiles finally get their cultural moment to shine.

Here is the devil’s simple trick. He tells us that in order to minister well to those outside the kingdom we must not become offensive to those outside the kingdom. It sounds like wisdom to us because we hate being hated. Jesus, however, the very One who loved us while we were yet sinners, says if we’re not hated like He was hated, we’re doing it wrong. He tells us that if we are not hated by them it is a strong sign that we are not loving them. If we are loving them enough to tell the truth, we will be hated and scorned.

And once again, Big Eva is just like them. Tell her the truth and she will hurl the same epithets that the world throws. Tell her her compromises have left her tainted and abused by her lover and she will blame you. The spectrum is not from the smart liberals to the ignorant fundamentalists with the evangelicals somewhere in between. No, the spectrum is from the cowardly lions of the mainline churches to the heroic courage of the fundamentalists with the evangelicals somewhere in between. Which means we don’t need better spokesmen, better scholarship, better strategies. What we need is courage.

Posted in 10 Commandments, abortion, apologetics, Ask RC, Big Eva, church, Devil's Arsenal, kingdom, RC Sproul JR | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Why is Big Eva so prone to compromise?

Celebrity Slander

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

Posted in 10 Commandments, apologetics, church, cyberspace, Devil's Arsenal, ethics, Jesus Changes Everything, RC Sproul JR, scandal | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Celebrity Slander

The Enemy of My Enemy is My Enemy

I was still a teenager, not terribly nuanced in my thinking, when Iraq and Iran went to war against each other. Thinking strictly in terms of geo-politics, and shamefully without a thought for families on either side my assessment was as simple as it was heartless, “Good, let them pummel each other to insignificance.” It was Bonaparte who sagely said, “Never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake.” When two of your enemies are making the same mistake, the sentiment is doubly true.

When, however, Iraq went to war with Kuwait suddenly we were supposed to paint Kuwait as the sainted heroes and Iraq the black hatted villains. Certainly I can see that Kuwait was more friendly to the United States than Iran was. What I can’t see is that they, Iraq, Iran or the US have ever been perfect. We all wear black hats to one degree or another.

Once again the world is in an upheaval as one larger country invades a smaller one. Once again we have determined that one side is the devil, while the other is nothing but sunshine and roses. I have half a complaint. One side is the devil. But so is the other. I can easily concede that Putin is a monster, that the Ukraine is being victimized by them. That doesn’t mean, contra the victimology hustlers, that Ukraine is a true friend of the Christian or even the United States. It doesn’t mean that the other side isn’t the devil.

There is, behind every human battle, the great battle between the seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent (Gen. 3:15). There are innumerable battle lines between these two armies. One seeks rebellion against God’s Word, the other submission to it. One is in the first Adam, the other in the last Adam. One seeks the glory of the serpent, the other the glory of the Seed of the Woman. There is, however, also this that separates them- one is indwelt by the Holy Spirit and united in Jesus. The other is indwelt by the spirit of death and is so corrupt that it is in union with no one.

The seed of the serpent may have an army vastly larger than the Seed of the Woman. The seed of the serpent may control far greater lands than the Seed of the Woman. While the Seed of the Woman faces one such powerful enemy, the seed of the serpent faces multiple enemies. First, it faces the Seed of the Woman. Second, it faces every one of its “allies” and fellow soldiers. They cannot fight together because every one of them has nothing but self inside them.

God didn’t, at Babel, send a conquering army to stop their project. He sent instead a spirit of confusion that broke up the alliance of evil into a billion individual pieces. Bonds may be forged, as when Germany and the USSR signed their early alliance. They cannot, however, hold. Our calling, however, isn’t merely to sit and watch while they destroy themselves but to call them to lay down their arms and join the army of One.

Posted in abortion, apologetics, Biblical Doctrines, church, Devil's Arsenal, kingdom, Kingdom Notes, politics, RC Sproul JR | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on The Enemy of My Enemy is My Enemy

Forever Friend, Steven Hoskins; A Fool for a Client

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

Posted in friends, friendship, Jesus Changes Everything, RC Sproul JR, repentance | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Forever Friend, Steven Hoskins; A Fool for a Client

Revealing the Mystery

It is an old temptation, to construct images of Jesus out of celluloid. Christians have fought for and against it, and will likely do so for generations to come, until the next medium seeks to supplant the Word. We have not only debated whether such images should be made, but have argued over whether such images are true to life. Long before The Passion of the Christ became a cultural phenomenon, long before The Chosen became a streaming success there was The Last Temptation of Christ. This film became a financial success, albeit a minor one, precisely because of the furor of Christians over the film. When we charged the film company with producing blasphemy, the resulting hub-bub put the film on the map. We marched, we protested, and the evening news sold tickets. Hollywood has always known that controversy is on their side.

At the time of the movie’s release, however, the studio put up an actual defense of their film. The film suggested that Jesus, at some point in His ministry, among other hardships, struggled with the sin of lust. The defense of this was rather clear, and expected. The producer, Martin Scorsese, affirmed that while he believed in the divinity of Christ, he simply wanted the film to affirm with that His humanity. He actually claimed he was honoring Jesus in making the film.

The doctrine of the incarnation, from the beginning, has suffered from the weakness of the pendulum. The great christological creeds came to pass because one side or the other was missing the other side of the coin. That is, the trouble was never the affirmation of the deity of Christ, but the denial of the humanity. Or, from the other direction, the trouble wasn’t the affirmation of the humanity of Christ, but the denial of the deity. In our age, with the secular world all-too-willing to deny that Jesus could be God, sometimes we fall into the trap of denying His humanity.

Like The Last Temptation, much of the uproar over The Da Vinci Code centered not around the sundry plot twists, but the suggestion that Jesus married and had children. While the Bible teaches no such thing, as such, our reaction may have more in common with Islam than with Christianity. That is, Islam refuses to embrace the doctrine of the Trinity because they believe it beneath the dignity of God that He should have a son. And we think that Jesus marrying and having children somehow besmirches His purity. In a strange sort of irony, a novel steeped in gnostic notions and ancient Gnostic texts has brought to the surface the gnostic notions that still lurk in our own hearts.

The truth of the matter is that Jesus did take a bride. Better still, Jesus and His bride have begotten children. And I might as well admit it here —I’ve not only met with and know many others but meet with them regularly. You see, I am one of those children. My wife too is a part of this family. I know it’s shocking, but it’s true. And this is the good news. You are one of us too.

Well, truth be told, the shocking thing is that it is not so shocking. We have grown accustomed to His grace. We are appalled by the notion of a few powerful men and women who are descended from Jesus’ line, who strive to rule over all the world. But that is not only what we are, but what we are called to do. Jesus, the second Adam, took as His bride, the second Eve, the church. Husband and wife have, ever since, been busy being fruitful and multiplying. They are, together, in fulfillment of the dominion mandate, filling the earth and subduing it. They are bringing all things into subjection for the glory of the Father. The conspiracy is that we didn’t even know we were part of a conspiracy. We have forgotten that our endgame is total world domination. Indeed, we have been promised that we not only will judge the world, but the angels themselves.

We haven’t believed God’s outrageous facts, given to us in His Word. We haven’t believed the good news, that our heavenly Father loves us so much that He allows us to be called His children, that He has seated us in the heavenly places with Christ Jesus. Our problem is that we won’t believe that God took on flesh and dwelt among us, precisely so that He could win a bride, and that He might be given a kingdom. Our problem is that we have missed that in Him we too are more than conquerors.

I never read The Da Vinci Code. I don’t intend to. I wouldn’t encourage anyone to do so. Instead, what I need is the courage to read the Bible as it is written. We will seek first the kingdom of God only when we realize that His kingdom has come, that His kingdom is forever, and that we reign with Him, kings and queens now and forever. May our Husband be pleased to purify us such that we might believe in the prodigality of His love, and the fullness of His promises.

Posted in beauty, Biblical Doctrines, Biblical theology, church, creation, eschatology, kingdom, Kingdom Notes, RC Sproul JR, sovereignty | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Revealing the Mystery

Made You Think; Ask RC, Must We Forgive Those Who Don’t Repent?

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

Posted in 10 Commandments, Ask RC, Biblical Doctrines, church, communion, ethics, grace, Jesus Changes Everything, prayer, RC Sproul JR, repentance | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Made You Think; Ask RC, Must We Forgive Those Who Don’t Repent?

My pastor’s daughter is in the military. What do I do?

One of the great unknown keys of test taking is learning how to morph the question asked into one for which you know the answer. While I think your greater concern here is the issue of women in the military, my greater concern is learning how to love our neighbor. I agree with you wholeheartedly on women in the military. The only thing you need to do on that issue is encourage daughter to not sign up.

The more challenging question is how we should deal with those in our local body whom we perceive to be to the left of us on this issue or that. Here’s what we do. We tell the children, “In that family, according to their understanding of the Bible, they believe they ought to do, or at least are free to do x. In our family, according to our understanding of the Bible, we do not believe that. Your obligation is to follow our family here. Your other obligation is to go on loving and respecting those with whom we disagree on these issues.” You explain that while this issue is an important one, the world is full of important issues over which Christians disagree. You explain that there are surely issues your family is wrong on. Some of these issues will make no difference at all in our relationships. Others might mean that we cannot be in the same church, or the same denomination. What we all agree on, however, is that we cannot insist on having relationships only with people who agree with us here. What we all agree on is that an important part of our spiritual maturity is learning to get along with people with whom we disagree.

We have to face these twin facts. First, spending time with other Christians carries with it the very real possibility that we will be influenced in an unhealthy way. Second, spending time with other Christians carries with it the near certainty that we will influence other Christians in an unhealthy way. Of course you know this. But we still need to be reminded.

How then do you approach your pastoral leadership about this issue? What you do is rather a lot like deer hunting. Sit, be quiet, and wait to see if they come to you. If they do, that’s when it stops being like deer hunting. Don’t let them have it. Instead, gently and graciously talk to them about the issue, Bibles and hearts open. Communicate as clearly as you can your love for them, and your confidence in them. And then explain that the only reason you’re explaining your convictions on the issue is because they asked you to. If they don’t come to you, go home happy that no one got hurt. You have no obligation to correct your leadership on this issue. They are responsible for their own families, just as you are for yours. God will hold them accountable. I suspect that He already has. That is, if sending your daughter off to war is a sin, it is a sin that Jesus died for. Such a failure by those in leadership in your church has already been covered by the blood of the Lamb, just like all your and my failures.

Posted in 10 Commandments, Ask RC, church, ethics, kingdom, RC Sproul JR | Tagged , , , , , , , | Comments Off on My pastor’s daughter is in the military. What do I do?