Did God create us because He was lonely?

Of all the silly notions that run rampant in our thoughtless, sentimental times, this one may well take the cake. That’s the “Boy howdy is this a silly idea” cake mind you. It is beautifully true and truly beautiful that He does indeed love us. He delights to be in relationship with us. All of which is rather a long way from He needs us lest He be lonely. Let me suggest two reasons, one a bit ethereal and abstract, the other more obvious.

God is all sufficient. That, of course, is not language we typically use. It’s a fancy way of saying He not only doesn’t need anything, but He can’t need anything. That is, God did not work hard to get Himself to the place where all His needs are met. No, when there was God and nothing else He was already without any needs. It’s not as though He had some odd sense of dis-ease, pondered it for a while and then determined to make man, to see if that would scratch His itch. He had no itch, and never will have an itch. God did not create man to fill an empty place in Him but to make known His absolute fullness.

Second, not only was God not alone prior to the creation but God’s essence is “not aloneness.” That God is trinitarian is not accidental. Please don’t misunderstand. By “not accidental” I don’t mean that it happened on purpose. In fact, it didn’t happen, because it has always been. What I mean by “not accidental” is that the tri-unity of God is essential to what He is. If I weighted forty pounds less and were three inches taller I would not have changed my essential being. If my hair were thick and the hue of a red, red rose, I’d still be me. God’s trinitarian nature isn’t like that. Make Him one being in three roles and He would be something and someone completely different from what and who He is.

Which is why there was no loneliness prior to the creation. There was no aloneness. God the Father enjoyed perfect, infinite union with the Son and the Spirit. The Son enjoyed perfect, infinite union with the Father and the Spirit. The Spirit enjoyed perfect, infinite union with the Father and the Son. No person of the Trinity could ever say of another, “I feel like I just don’t know you.” Nor could any person of the Trinity experience a moment of loneliness.

No, God has never been lonely. His motive for creating the world, and mankind is the same as His ultimate motive for all that He does, to make manifest His own glory. That is done in part in and through His genuine love for us, the sacrifice Jesus made to restore our relationship with Him. He is not in the least aloof and indifferent toward us. Neither, however, has He ever sat by His phone waiting for us to call.

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Run of the Milley Treason; Bible in 5 I Timothy

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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What Love Is This?

The simplicity of God is a doctrine that provides a rather useful fence. The perfections of God are, of course, worthy of our excitement. Their infinity is, of course, staggering. But the simplicity of God is that place where these infinite perfections show themselves to be one where the glorious colors come together in a blinding white. Whatever else we delightfully affirm about God, we must affirm that He is one.

It is the very point of the doctrine of simplicity, however, that we don’t diminish one attribute when we remember another. We have misunderstood simplicity if, as we wax rhapsodic over the love of God, we throw a wet blanket over the party by remembering, “Well, He is also a God of wrath, after all.” The wrath of God doesn’t restrain the love of God, nor does the love of God restrain His wrath. Rather, in a profound way, they are one and the same thing.

There are some fairly obvious ways that we see this. In Psalm 2 we see the wrath of God coming for a specific reason, because the kings of the earth will not kiss the Son. The love of the Son is what provokes the wrath of the Father. We see much the same thing on the road to Damascus, as Jesus accuses Saul, “Why dost thou persecute Me?” Christ’s loving union with the Bride brings wrath on Saul. And in turn, that wrath brings forth love as Saul becomes Paul, a part of the Bride.

Love is universally loved. We who belong to the King rightly celebrate His love for us. But those outside the camp do not stay outside the camp because of a self-conscious rejection of love. Those who think the lost are lost because they have trouble accepting love have been accepting too many foolish bromides from pop psychologists. The very creatures that the lost create, in their rejection of the Creator, are characterized by love. One can safely finish the idolater’s sentence, when he begins, “Well, my god is a god of … .” It’s love, every time. Have you ever heard someone object, when we tell them to repent and believe on the Lord Jesus, “Well, I’m repulsed by your God that forgives the repentant. My god is a god of raging, irrational fury.” No. Everyone loves love.

But while love is not diminished by wrath, a love that excludes wrath is not a biblical love. The love clamored for by the lost is a wrathless love. But the love they crave is just unknown. While there is, rightly understood, a universal love of God that includes even those who will be damned, this love is a simple love, one that includes all that God is. There is no wrathless love that comes from God.

The Bible tells us that God causes the rain to fall on the just and the unjust. We find there what some theologians call “common grace.” God acts kindly to all men living. We all need to remember this. When we, or others, in trying to describe their particular anguish describe their situation as “a living hell,” they do not understand the patient love of God. Any suffering experienced on this earth, save for the passion of Christ, is a suffering mitigated by His love, a suffering that is less severe than what is due, a suffering less severe than hell. But even the most wicked among us do not live their earthly lives exclusively in agony. Some unbelieving mothers genuinely rejoice when blessed with a child. Sometimes unbelievers win the Super Bowl and are genuinely happy about it. Even the heathen in the remotest, most desolate part of the world sometimes sit down to a favorite meal and feel real joy in eating it. Common love is common, love, and real.

Common love, or the universal love of God, however, cannot be separated from common wrath. Because God is one, a simple being, you cannot wrap your arms around His love and miss the wrath. The Lord our God, the Lord is One. For the wrath of God is revealed against all unrighteousness, including the unrighteousness of ingratitude. The common love of God is connected with the common wrath of God right here, where Paul tells us of all natural men, “For although they knew God, they did not honor Him as God or give thanks to Him …” (Rom. 1:21a). Though the lost will receive the loving gifts of God, they will neither honor Him nor thank Him, and so they will earn His eternal wrath.

God’s love is not only inseparable from His wrath, but it is equally bound together with His sovereignty. That is, when God sends the rain to the unjust, He does so knowing that the unjust will not honor Him. But this doesn’t frustrate God. First, He planned it that way. And second, He planned it that way because of one more connection between love and wrath — God loves His wrath. He delights to manifest the infinite perfection of His wrath just as much as His love, because they are one thing.

This, in turn, must inform how we look at the world around us. The problem with the broader culture, that place where they love love, isn’t that they’ve embraced part of the truth, and that our job as sound Christians is to teach them the hard parts. Rather we have to understand that the love they love is no more love than the god they worship is God. They are wrong on all counts. And unless they embrace the true and living God, the God of love that is wrath, of wrath that is love, of both that are manifest sovereignly, they will perish. Biblical love requires that we tell the world that their love of their love will earn them only His wrath.

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The Beauty Community

There is a reason our heart sometimes has its reasons that reason knows not of. We are not disembodied minds. We are not often motivated by something as sterile as the conclusion to a syllogism. Neither are those outside the kingdom. We are demonstrating our own worldliness when we think that what the world needs is to learn how to think like us. Because they bear the image of God, even in their sin they want things to make sense, to live in a world of truth and coherency. Because they bear the image of God, even in their sin they want things to be just, to live in a world of law and fairness.

Because they bear the image of God, however, even in their sin they want to take in and be taken in by beauty, to live in a world both stirring and sublime. Because we are being remade into the image of our risen Husband, we are called to live, as individuals and in community, lives marked by truth, goodness and beauty. Which is just another way of saying we are to be a city on a hill.

Consider the experience of Ruth. When her husband, brother-in-law and father-in-law were all dead, it made perfect sense for her mother-in-law to tell Ruth and Orpah to go back to their own mothers and find a new husband. Orpah saw the sense in it herself. The syllogism led to that decision. The beauty of Naomi, and the promised beauty of the people of God in the Promised Land led Ruth to a better answer. Why does Ruth insist to her mother-in-law, “Whither thou goest I will go?” Because she had experienced grace and beauty in Naomi, and likely in Elimilech, Chilion and Mahlon. Why does Ruth insist, “Your people will be my people?” Because she learned from Naomi that she came from a land where widows were protected and provided for, where they were safe. Why does Ruth cry out, “Your God will be my God?” Because she knew that He was responsible for the first two things. It was His law that made Israel a welcoming land, and His grace that made Naomi a warm blessing.

Jesus said, “By this will all know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one another” (John 13:35). The proof is not in the pudding but the bonding. As we bicker with each other, snipe and snark, we lie about our Redeemer. As we are knit together inside the kingdom, as we love one another well, the very glory of the trinity shines forth. As we carry one anothers’ burdens, as we delight in one another, as we live out the one anothers in our daily lives we offer life to the walking dead all about us.

We are called to commemorate, communicate, cultivate the love of Christ within the church, knowing such He uses to call into His communion those yet outside the kingdom. May He find His bride beautiful.

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Forever Friends, Grant and Ray Chu; Psalm 3; Humble Pride

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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What is the doctrine of illumination?

Illumination is that doctrine that describes the work of the Holy Spirit in helping the believer to understand God’s Word. Though regeneration is required to rightly understand the Word, while having spiritual eyes comes before having spiritual sight, they are not, strictly speaking, the same event. Rather illumination describes how the Spirit comes to us as believers opening up the Bible.

There are at least two ways we tend to misunderstand this. First, illumination is not the Holy Spirit bringing us new revelation. Our insights into the text are not on par with the text itself. I sought to make this point a few years ago when many charged a well-known radio preacher of failed prophecy when his prediction of the return of Christ failed to come to pass. That preacher did not claim new revelation. Nor did he even claim special, supernatural insight into the text. Rather he argued that his interpretation of the text led him to his conclusion. He was a bad exegete, not a lying prophet.

Second, illumination is not the Holy Spirit giving us a particular text to answer our questions. If, for instance, I am wrestling over a decision to cut all carbs from my diet, and I come upon that text where King David eats the showbread, this is not the Holy Spirit nudging me to eat bread. The Bible speaks of the Urim and Thummim, the breastplate of the High Priest that provided divine revelation from time to time, but the Bible is not our own personal Urim and Thummim.

Instead illumination is when the Holy Spirit helps us understand a given text as it actually is. It is His work as the perfect exegete, helping us poor exegetes try to stay out of trouble. Such is certainly not as glamorous and exciting as the giving of new revelation. It is, however, where the power is. One blessing of a sound understanding of the work of illumination is it helps us have a sound understanding of the importance and work of the Word of God.

Illumination can, indeed should work alongside the Spirit’s work of conviction. Here the Spirit not only helps us understand the text, but helps us understand ourselves. James tells us that the Word of God is like a mirror. It shows us what we are, with all our blots and blemishes. But, James tells us, we are prone to forget. The work of conviction is the Spirit showing us those spots, and helping us not to forget.

In John 14 Jesus promises to send the Spirit, whom He calls “another helper.” A good exegete would ask here, “Helper for what?” The Spirit is the one who beautifies us, who washes the bride, who, in a word, sanctifies us. The work that we need help with is to become what we are being made into, reflections of the glory of Christ. The Spirit, like our Husband, washes us with the water of the Word. Along the way He helps us understand it, to see ourselves in it. He is, however, also the Encourager. He shows us our sin, but reminds us of our standing. We have a long way to go, but we have also already arrived.

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Atin-Lay, Assensus; Appeal; Curating Books, The Book of Acts: Witnesses to the World

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Don’t be Ruth-Less; Check out last night’s study on Ruth.

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Once Not a People

The RC Sproul Jr. Principle of Hermeneutics is a simple truth, and a deep passion of mine. It goes like this- Whenever you see someone in the Bible doing something really, really stupid, do not say to yourself, “How can they be so stupid?” Instead say to yourself, “How am I stupid just like them?” It matters to me in large part because it reveals how the Bible reveals my sin. James tells us that the Word is a mirror. Because we are sinners, however, we too often look in the mirror, see the Hero rescuing us, and think that’s us in the reflection. We are indeed called to be rescuers, but first we have to know that we not only needed, but continue to need to be rescued.

One of the frequent snapshots of human stupidity in the Bible is the propensity of the people of God to think themselves such by birth right. We can, of course, err in the other direction. I remember once speaking at a Christian high school graduation, wherein not just one or two, but all of the graduates were given opportunity to speak. Each of them stood up and thanked their parents for raising them in the nurture and admonition of the Lord, for sacrificing to give them a distinctly Christian education, for washing them with the Word. So far so good. What shocked me was that after giving their heartfelt thanks, each and every student went on to say that all that Christian nurture had nothing at all to do with their faith, that God rejected all that fidelity, and intervened to give them life. They dissed God’s work through their parents in order to praise God’s work apart from their parents.

The more common problem in the Bible, however, is the lazy conviction that because my parents were Israelites, I am due the privileges appertaining thereunto. The scribes and Pharisees insisted that Abraham, not the devil, was their father. Jesus said the opposite. Jesus was right. That this dynamic is not foreign to us, however, does not mean that we are in no danger of falling into it. Whether it be because we live in a nation with a strong, albeit rapidly waning Christian heritage, or whether it be closer to home, that our parents, grandparents, etc. were believers, we tend to think our being brought into the kingdom is a natural thing rather than a supernatural thing.

I was raised by faithful, believing parents. My ancestors hail from lands to whom missionaries braved death to bring the good news of the life, death, resurrection and ascension of Jesus Christ. This happened more than 1500 years before I was born. The land in which I was born, little more than 400 years before my birth, had been barren, virtually untouched by the gospel. What a fool I would be to think I was never in danger, that I was never outside the people of God. I, and my people were once not a people. But He made us His people. It was not my birthright. That was death and destruction. Instead it was His grace.

This same gospel is at work around the globe, bringing in the elect from the four corners. All the nations are being brought in. The kingdom is covering the earth like a stone uncut by human hands. Jesus saves. Do not forget that He called us from far off, even as we never forget we are the children of our father, Abraham.

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The Gospel at Work, with Mark Lamprecht

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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