Knowing the Enemy

There are, no matter what may be happening around the globe, at least three wars going on at the same time. There is, from the garden of Eden to the consummation of the Kingdom of God the battle between the seed of the woman, and the seed of the serpent. God has divided all the world into two great armies, and all of history is the story of this great battle. In the end, though he succeeds in bruising the heel of the seed of the woman, the serpent’s head will be crushed. This the primordial battle, the paradigmatic conflict, the mother of all wars.

Both the second and third are intimately related to the first. The seed of the woman, we would do well to remember, joined this brightly arrayed army having been drafted from the army of the enemy. Since the fall of Adam and Eve, we were all by nature children of wrath. But the gospel promise is that He would put enmity between us and our natural father. He has given regenerated us, given us new hearts such that we now love Him whom we once hated, and hate him whom we once loved. Trouble is, we still struggle with what we once were. The old man is both dead and being put to death. It wars with our members. Thus the battlefield where this second great conflict takes place is within the very souls of the children of God. Once again, the promise of the gospel is victory. He has promised that if we confess our sins, not only will He forgive us of our sins, but will cleanse us of all unrighteousness. When we pass beyond the vale, we enter into peace, for this war will be over. All that is displeasing in the sight of God will be driven as far from us as the east is from the west.

The third battle is the mirror image of the second. The seed of the serpent not only wages war with the seed of the woman, but they too have an internal battle. Here the battle is not between an old man and a new man, but between their created nature and their fallen nature, between the remnants of the image of God, and the brokenness of the fall. This battle works itself out in this peculiar tension. The unregenerate man, because he yet carries the image of God in him, desires peace, order, joy, purpose and integrity. But because he is a sinner, a rebel, a pretender to the throne of God, he desires in turn that there be no God to whom he must one day answer.

It is a fools quest to seek both of these ends, for they are mutually exclusive. There can be no peace if there is no law, and there can be no law without a lawgiver. There can be no order if there is none to give the world order. There can be no joy, if there is no ultimate good who transcends us. There can be no purpose if all our lives are lived under the sun. We cannot be whole, unless or until we are remade into the image of God. God is our peace, our order, our joy, our purpose, our integrity. Lose one and you must lose the other. Keep God, and all your life is lived under the known threat of His coming judgment.

It is not difficult to measure how this battle is going, in the lives of individuals, or in the context of a given culture. The strung-out, self-loathing, skid-row bum is seeing the battle go toward the denial of God’s existence. The respectable, prosperous, loving father and husband bum is inching toward integrity. The same is true of a society. A nice, clean, safe society is one wherein the battle is currently favoring the remains of the image of God. A bloodthirsty, epicurean, baby-murdering culture is one that is more willing to give up the blessings of the image of God in order to escape God.

It is good and appropriate that we should seek, in the larger battle between the seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent, to push our friends, neighbors and cultures in the direction of integrity. This is what it means, by and large, to pray for the peace of Babylon. It is, on the other hand, most important that we not confuse those enemies of the kingdom of God who yet have a better handle on the image of God, with our real friends. It is critical to the grand battle that we remember that upstanding, “moral,” citizens of the world are in fact citizens of the kingdom of darkness.

Jesus is not only our king, but He is our husband. We, the bride of Christ, are only whole, when we more clearly reflect our husband. He is our glory, our calling. When we love the world, whether it is the world of vile depravity, or the world of vile middle-class morality, we are still playing the harlot. Integrity begins with fidelity to our husband. As we practice this, as we exhibit a loyalty to Him and Him alone, He in turn blesses us. As we put aside our love of the world, no matter how clean it may be, our Husband showers us with grace. Or, to put it another way, as we seek first the kingdom of God, all these things will be added unto us.

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Missing the (Decimal) Point

It’s a crazy real estate market out there. Prices have shot through the roof faster than, well, faster than the last real estate bubble we had. My neighbor across the way had 31 live viewers the first day it was on the market and sold it for ten percent above an aggressive asking price. Which makes those who own their homes outright, or with solid equity rich, right? Well, no. Follow me through this scenario to see which part of the magic trick you missed.

Suppose I own a house that in this market could sell for a million dollars. It matters not how much I owe on it, if anything. It matters not what I paid for it, if anything. I sell it for a million dollars. Now, if I want a house in a similar neighborhood, or a similar size, you know, say an exact replica of the house I just sold, how much will I need to pay? Right, a million dollars. So how much have I gained through this red hot market? Nothing.

Still not seeing it? Ok, let’s try it this way. Suppose I buy a house for a million dollars. Now suppose the market tanks. I sell my house for a measly $10,000. Calamitous, right? No. I’ve lost nothing. What would it cost me to buy an exactly replica of the house I just sold? $10,000. Before the sale I had a house that the market valued at $10,000. After the sale and the buying of the other house I have a replica of the first house valued at $10,000. Samesies. What did I lose in this burst bubble market? Nothing.

In both scenarios I had a house and after selling it I’m able to buy a house that costs what I sold my house for. Moving from one market to another, moving from one sized house to another may change up things a bit but the bottom line is that whether it’s a buyer’s market or a seller’s market makes little difference if you’re both a buyer and a seller.

The key to understanding basic economics, it seems to me, is never leaving part of the equation out. Henry Hazlitt’s classic, Economics in One Lesson, which I commend most highly to you, upended the old saw that breaking things is the path to wealth simply be doing just that, showing the part of the equation we leave out. When we think we’re getting a free lunch, we can be certain we’re not looking at the whole thing. We know that because there isn’t such a thing as a free lunch. Wealth doesn’t come by invisible and unknowable forces but by creating it. That means working, producing, meeting the interested of consumers who will freely pay for what you provide.

Buying low and selling high is all well and good. But if you’re buying the same thing you’re selling and at the same time, you’ll not likely find yourself getting richer or poorer.

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Curating Movies, The Meddler; Appeal; Preaching the Congregation’s Sins

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Does God want me to be happy?

The Bible is replete with warnings. Those yet outside of His grace are warned of the certainty of judgment. Those weighing life and death are warned to consider the cost before taking up the cross. And those born from above are warned of persecution, hatred, and the many troubles of this world. We all walk the via Dolorosa.

Knowing these biblical doctrines, we are rightly put out by purveyors of popcorn prosperity. Whether it’s vapid promises of health and wealth or smiling faces offering you your best life now, we scorn the notion that God wants us to be happy. There is a certain charlatan appeal to the merry mongers. Who doesn’t want to believe not only that they can be happy, but that someone will provide them a map? But there’s another reason this dark distortion of God’s Word won’t die and go away- God’s Word.

The same Word that calls us to take up our cross told us that He came to bring life, and life abundant. The same Word that warns of persecution tells us that if we ask our Father for an egg, He will not give us a stone. The same Word that tells us how to be abased promises to tell us how to abound. The same Word that gives us the sorrows of Job tells us “Now the Lord blessed the latter days of Job more than his beginning.” (42:12) One cannot choose either the idea that good times and pleasant circumstances are the will of God for all men everywhere, and every time, nor that God exclusively uses hardship and paucity to shape us for blessings that all reside on the other side of the vale.

The truth is that God’s will for His own is that we would be made ever more like Jesus. The glory of suffering and hardship is that it is potent to move us in that direction. It is a good thing to face dark providences and loss with joy precisely because such does the good work of making us more like Him. That doesn’t mean, however, that when we find ourselves in a bed of roses we are far from Him. He is the Great Gardener. He is the Groom who loves His bride and delights to shower her with every good gift. Hardship cleanses the bride. Blessed circumstances help the bride remember that she is His beloved.

Both are true, and both are beautiful. Does God want you to be happy? He wants you to both be remade into the image of His Son, and to feel His love and delight in you along the way, to receive the gifts of the bride. In hardship, remember the work He is doing in you, rebuilding you into the image of Christ, the express image of the glory of the Father. In blessing, know that He loves you, delights in you, rejoices over you, because you bear the image of the Son. In all circumstances rejoice, because He loves you.

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Parable of the Uninvited Guest; Atin-Lay, Regula Fide; Forever Friend, Pat McCune

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Jesus Changes Almost Everything

I love Twitter. When I first heard about it I confess I was conflicted. The social commentator in me was appalled. My inner Neil Postman took the curmudgeon approach, bemoaning the dumbing down of our discourse to 140 characters. Has our attention span really dropped this far? The poet and the economist inside me, however, formed a strange alliance in embracing Twitter, the economist loving the streamlined nature, the poet adoring the challenge of cramming as much wonder, as many surprising moments of epiphany wrapped in beauty into 140 characters as possible.

As a theologian my job is to make distinctions, often ones so subtle they are hard to see. Precision and nuance are the tools of that trade. On Twitter all of these hats I wear often clash. The use of the most potent poetic image may mean, from time to time, that qualifiers are left off. On the other hand, using the qualifiers not only clouds the beauty of the image, but puts you over the character count.

Consider this glorious truth- Jesus changes everything. I admit that with the exception of Jesus, the words themselves are not startling. They’re pedestrian even. But the thought is supposed to be shocking. Everything? All of us face the temptation to divide our lives into the sacred and the secular, the holy and the mundane. Jesus is given charge over our prayers, our eternities, our deepest selves. But isn’t a peanut butter sandwich just a peanut butter sandwich? Isn’t such the same for the most devout believer and the most wretched and lost soul? No, it’s not.

The peanut butter sandwich is to the believer not just bread and peanut butter, but the answer to our prayer that He would give us this day our daily bread. It is a fulfillment of the dominion mandate, to rule over the creation. It is a foretaste of heaven, manna from on high. It is an occasion for worship, a gift, like all gifts through which we behold the glory of the Giver. Jesus changes everything.

Except, of course, that He doesn’t. It’s just not strictly true that Jesus changes everything. What is missed in such pithy shorthand is another sublime reality- that the God of heaven and earth, Father, Son and Holy Spirit, has never changed, will never change. Insofar as the Godhead is a thing (and more theological nuance could argue that while real, the Godhead is not, strictly speaking, a thing) it is one thing that stays the same.

Contra Einstein, time is not that fixed point by which all else is relativized, an ontological North Star, but God is. There is no shadow of turning in Him. He is the same yesterday, today and tomorrow. The Westminster Shorter Catechism describes the living God to us as a spirit, infinite, and eternal before adding this fourth attribute- unchangeable.

I, along with the whole of the created order, depend upon Jesus, the Alpha and the Omega. He is about the business of bringing all things under subjection- in less poetic language, changing everything, from Twitter to peanut butter sandwiches. But, to His everlasting glory He does not and will not change. Consider this piece then a footnote, the fine print. Jesus changes everything. Except Jesus.

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The Gospel at Work, David Knight

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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V is for Vim, Vigor and Vitality

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New Theses, New Reformation

Thesis 83- We must see our good deeds as filthy rags.

It is easy enough to laugh at the folly of Tetzel. The crass salesman of indulgences that played such a vital role in the Reformation is something of a stock character, Elmer Gantry, a carnival barker and a traveling salesman all in one. We pride ourselves in our sophistication, thinking ourselves above being snookered like those rubes who wrote checks to get their lost loved ones out of purgatory more quickly. No, we pay for our own souls with our own good deeds.

Of course we confess with our lips that we are justified by faith alone. But in the dark recesses of our hearts we still tend to think He is pleased with us because we’re such fine fellows. We would never, like the Pharisee in Jesus’ story, boast in our tithing or our fasting. No, we boast in our giving and our feeding others. We boast of our theological acumen and our moral superiority. We boast of our ideological lineage and our signed copies of the books of the finest scholars. If you think you have no such boast, congratulations- you boast in your humility.

The Bible says our works are rubbish (Philippians 3: 8-9) and filthy rags (Isaiah 64:6). The trouble is, we already know that, and still don’t believe that. We are double minded, confessing what the Bible says while believing the lies our deceiving hearts tell us. Paul calls on us to throw our righteousness overboard that we might have the righteousness that comes by faith. He tells us this, I suspect, because we are prone to not do so.

How then do we get this biblical truth from our minds to our hearts? First, we stop boasting. When we find ourselves, whether speaking to others or to ourselves, cataloguing our great deeds, we should bring these verses to mind, realize that we while we think we’re showing off our trophies we’re actually airing our dirty laundry, perhaps we will stop. Perhaps we will blush.

Second, we will devote our minds to contemplating the perfection of Jesus. In John 13 we know Jesus is about to begin His passion. He is moments away from the greatest hardship any human has ever faced. And that, He determines, because of His love for the disciples, is the perfect time for Him to wash their feet, the perfect time to pray for them, the perfect time to give them a lesson in love. Somehow, in the face of that, that time I did my daily devotions 272 days in a row seems plenty small.

Third, we own His righteousness. The more we are persuaded that we are beloved of the Father the less likely we are to think we’re bringing something to the table. The more fully we grasp the riches that are already ours in Christ Jesus the less likely we are to break open our piggy bank of rags and rubbish.

Last, we repent. We repent for both our best works and for believing our best works are anything other than rags and rubbish. And we believe the gospel, and rejoice.

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Anachronism; Catechism 82; The Grace of Law

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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