Welcome To the Machine

It may be a sign that we are in a technological age that we tend to equate technology with machines. Technology, however, is not just about machines. Technology includes in its range of meaning the entire idea of techniques. Human technology need not refer to mechanical pacemakers, but instead can refer to the systems by which we bring about changes in humans. Both a ten-ton bottle-capping machine and an insightful question are tools. One keeps a bottle of soda from spilling and going flat on the way to market; the other, one hopes, provides insights toward spiritual growth. The difficulty is when we begin to see our friends, families and our churches as an assembly line of bottles, in need of the right cap.

Much of the wise criticism that has been made against the church over the last thirty years falls into one of two jeremiads. Sometimes we chasten the church for succumbing to that spirit of the age that we call the therapeutic revolution. Other times we chasten the church for bedding down a different spirit of the age that we call the managerial revolution. In the former the church exists to soothe the tender spirits of the congregants, to keep the pop from losing its fizz, with a dose of pop-psychology. In the latter the spiritual CEO organizes the troops and motivates them until they become an efficient ministry, what else- machine. These two models for the church share two things in common. First, they are utterly unbiblical. Second, they are both technologically minded. They see the church, and its members, as products to be manipulated to bring about a desired end.

The Bible never describes the church in these technological terms. Never is the church called that which guides the psyche toward completeness, nor that which provides the greatest efficiency for the building of the kingdom. The Bible has all sorts of analogies for the church, none of them technological. Instead each of them is organic. The church is not a set of gears and levers, a clockwork orange. Rather it is a set of limbs and appendages, or as Paul describes it in I Corinthians, a body. Of course that might not steer us completely clear of our problem. We’re so technological that we have come even to think of God’s great gift of our own bodies as yet another machine to be tweaked to maximize efficiency. We see our parts as parts, and miss the holiness of the whole.

Paul has another image for us, however, that is hard to reduce to something made down at the machine shop. Paul says that we are, the church as a whole, the bride of Christ. Brides are not given to technology. I’m not saying that tools are a man thing, and ladies should stand clear. Rather I’m saying that when we think bride, we necessarily think in organic and not in machine terms. No one says as the bride walks the aisle, “Mercy, look at the torque she’s able to handle with her medial collateral ligaments.” No one says to the bride, “You know, that veil of yours is not ergonomically designed for the giving of a kiss. Why not leave it off?” No one brings a stopwatch to measure the bride’s time in getting up the aisle. A bride is not meant to be efficient, but to be beautiful.

We will not, however, ever read a church bulletin that reads, “First Community Church By the Freeway’s purpose is to look really, really nice for Jesus.” Or, “Our first priority here at Our Lady of the Perpetual Committee Non-Denominational International Family Center is to clean ourselves up good for the wedding day.” That, however, is the health and the business of the church. I’m not suggesting that we shouldn’t be proclaiming the good news, or that we must cease and desist from visiting the sick. I’m not saying we can never have a church picnic for the sake of fellowship, or never deliver turkeys to the poor. Instead we do these things, all that we do, in order to make us more beautiful as a bride. We are not a machine that needs to be honed, but a bride that needs to be beautified. That’s what the Groom has not only called us to do, but what He is doing in us.

That’s not all though. Brides do far more, though never less, than look their best. The first of which is to love and to honor the Groom. The problem with machines is that they lack heart, something the church must cultivate. We are to grow in our love of Christ, to love Him more daily not with our gears and our levers, but with our hearts and souls, minds and strengths. That’s why we study Him and His Word, why we meet Him at His table. That is why our preachers preach His glory, to fill our hearts with sincere affections.

That we are a bride is a given. We were made for such. And so when we take a technological approach to our calling, we turn our Groom into a machine. He is not a machine. He is not a tool by which, if we punch in the right code, we can have happy, successful, well-ordered lives. He is not a means, which is all tools are, to some other end. Instead our Groom is the end. He is our delight and our joy, not just because of what He has done, what He now does, or because of what He will do, but because of what He is.

He will succeed. He will, because our Groom is altogether sovereign in authority and in power, get us to see what He has already told us, that we are His spotless bride. When we see it, maybe then we will be spotless, besmirched with neither grease, nor sin.

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SGF- A Hospital for the Hurting

Today’s Update on Sovereign Grace Fellowship

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My Valentine

In two days two things will happen. First, it will be, for everyone around the world, Valentine’s Day. Second, it will be for me and my Valentine, and all those who join us, our first day of worshipping as Sovereign Grace Fellowship. My bride and I will be hosting in our home a meeting with our Groom. These two events, however, are far more tightly bound together than we might think.

It is a good and right thing, a biblical thing, for husband and wife to be equally yoked. It is not a good way to share a life together if you don’t share the same new life together. There is, however, more to Christian marriage than walking side by side on the way to the Celestial City. There is the encouragement along the way.

The whole of the internet cannot contain all the reasons that I love my wife. The best one, however, the one that outshines them all is this- she helps me to love Jesus more. Nine out of nine marriage books for women insist on the importance of wives encouraging their husbands. The question is, encourage them toward what? Lisa has no patience with the idea of encouraging me to be more me. She isn’t diligent to be sure I believe in myself. No, she encourages me to run to, cling to, cry out for, walk with, listen to Jesus. She encourages me to believe in Him.

Lisa found me lying in the grave I had dug for myself. She found me projecting an image, dressing for success while hiding in the folds of the Grim Reaper’s robe. God used her to call me out, to inspire me to live again. He, and she, however, didn’t stop there. When my shame brought me down, she stuck with me. Why? Because she trusted Jesus to carry me. Which helps me trust Jesus to carry me. For more than four years now she has prayed over me, with me, for me, never stopping, wavering or doubting.

Sunday, when we open those doors and welcome our guests, when I break open God’s Word and preach the Good News, it will be because He gave her to me as a help suitable, a blessing, because she is now bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh. She has not only encouraged me, but encouraged Sovereign Grace Fellowship- setting deadlines, getting the word out, preparing and opening our home.

It is not typically my habit to preach most holidays, but instead to preach the next text. Sunday our text, our first text, will be II Kings 7:1-16, about the four lepers who discovered the feast that their enemies had left behind. My sermon title is “Beggars All,” reminding us that we are no heroes, but beggars telling other beggars where to find bread. That is why Lisa is my Valentine, the love of my life. She has been, from our very beginning, a beggar telling this beggar where to find bread. And so we feast together on the Feast Day of Saint Valentine. And feast together with our Lord at His table of peace.

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Lisa & I on The Mentalist; Sovereign Grace..

Fellowship and The Call to Gratitude

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Should we take up an offering during worship?

It was likely the most surreal thing I’ve ever witnessed at a worship service. Not surprisingly it happened on a Sunday morning at the Orlando Convention Center. My esteemed father was scheduled to preach at this service in conjunction with the annual Christian Booksellers Association convention. Back in those days CBA was a huge deal, with more than 5,000 souls in attendance representing book and music publishers, authors and artists and Christian bookstore owners. I don’t remember what big name sang the offertory, but it was a big name. Just before my father got up to speak, however, a gentleman in a nice suit went up the microphone to let us all know, “This worship service is being brought to you by the W@#R Music Group.” (I honestly don’t remember which music company it was and if I did I’d likely leave it out to protect the guilty.) A corporate sponsor for a worship service? What?

My concern, however, is less with what happened 30 years ago and more with the perspective I fear may be behind it. Too often we look at the presentation of our tithes and offerings as some sort of commercial time out- that portion of the service where we tend to the necessary business of financing the work of the church. It’s sort of like a smoking break- necessary for some, a bit of an intrusion, and not a little unseemly.

I have these suspicions in part because of how I hear some churches explain their reasoning for removing the giving of tithes and offerings from their liturgy. We’re told they don’t want the unbelievers in the meeting to feel uncomfortable or pressured, and they don’t want them believing we care too much about money. But, they reason, the necessary chore of meeting the financial needs of the church can be met by a collection box near the narthex, or even direct deposit from members’ checking accounts.

I honestly have no strong quarrel with differing views of how tithes and offerings are collected. Nor am I particularly concerned with the practical side, wanting to make sure the church has the money it needs. Instead I fear what we lose when we remove this aspect of worship from our liturgies.

That is, the giving of tithes and offerings isn’t a business transaction, but an act of worship. We are responding, in God’s presence, to God. We are handing these tokens back to Him as a way of acknowledging not that the bills must be paid, but that all that we are and all that we have are His. In the same way that we set aside the Lord’s Day not to say to God, “We love you so much we’re willing to give you a whole day” but instead to say, “We give you this day to remember that all our days are Yours” so we do not say, “One tenth of our income is Yours, but instead, “I have been bought with a price. All that I have received is from Your hand, and You have made me but Your steward. I, and all I have, belong to You alone.”

Might this make unbelievers uncomfortable? Perhaps. So ought the preaching of the gospel. Might it make them feel pressured to give? Perhaps. So ought the preaching of the gospel make them feel pressured to repent. Might it make them not want to come back? Perhaps. So might the preaching of the gospel make them not want to come back. We are there, remember, not for W@#R Music Group, not for the lost, not for ourselves, but for Him. Our liturgies ought to reflect such.

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WSC 61; Forever Friends- Jim Robbins & More

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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The Scandal of the Gospel

All of us, both within and without the church, face the temptation of being legalists when dealing with others’ sins against us, and antinomians when dealing with our sins against others. We want those we have perceived to have wronged us to pay for what they have done, while reminding our own tender consciences that we all deserve a little grace.

The two propensities come to a head at one and the same time as we seek to preach the gospel of Jesus Christ to the walking dead all about us. The first objection, typically, comes from the antinomian side. The sacrifice of witnessing to our enemies is that we know we will be hated for pointing out the reality of their sin. We will be pilloried as narrow, bigoted, judgmental, medieval. We will run smack into Romans 1. The unbeliever, in his unrighteousness unrighteously suppresses his knowledge of his unrighteousness. He, in short, doesn’t want to hear it. The irony, of course, is that what we are trying to tell them is just what they need to deal with their guilt. We would be wise to remember that when we fall under the onslaught of their wrath. They want to hide from their sin, while we are trying to tell them how to make it go away.

The second problem, however, arises when we get to the promise of God. As we preach, “Repent and believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and you will be saved” they will find “believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you will be saved” to be almost as incredulous as “Repent.” In fact I’ve often heard this objection- “What a minute. You’re telling me that if Adolph Hitler had simply said just before his death, “Jesus, forgive me” he would have entered into heaven at his death? That’s all it takes, just saying you’re sorry?”

Of course that’s not all it takes. Though our repentance is never the ground of our peace with God- that is, God doesn’t forgive us simply because repenting is such a wonderful thing it covers our sins, it is necessary and necessary that it be genuine. Saying something and meaning it, because we are sinners, often means two different things. Second, the ground is not in our repentance, but His provision. “All it took” was for God to put on humanity, to live a perfect life, and to suffer the wrath of the Father due to all those who would believe. The passion of Christ is not a small thing.

The scandal, in fact, is less that we who are sinners should get off scot free, but that God should pay such a high cost for our redemption. Had Hitler repented at the last moment he would indeed now be enjoying the blessings of eternity. Not, however, because his sins would have gone unpunished, but because his sins would have been punished on Christ. And such are we.

I wonder if perhaps those outside the kingdom would be less tempted to think of the gospel as a cheap get out of jail free card if we were more faithful in grasping that we are Hitler, and Jesus suffered for us. The gospel is not for good people who fall a bit short, but for evil people. Jesus did not come to rescue the beautiful princess. He came to rescue the ugly hag that killed Him, because He laid His life down. Perhaps the gospel would scandalize the world less if it scandalized the church more.

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Parables- Wheat and Tares; CYBL Given For You

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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New Theses, New Reformation

Thesis 61 We must flee from temptation.

There’s a reason he’s called the rich, young fool. Though he was wise enough to ask the right person, Jesus, his question, “what must I do to inherit eternal life” he was fool enough to claim, after Jesus reminded him of the 10 Commandments, that he had kept them from his youth. There’s a smug pride in him, the same smug pride in us when we think we’d never say such a thing. Praying, “I thank you Lord that I am not like other men. I acknowledge the reality of sin and my need for forgiveness” is not that far from the Pharisee’s prayer.

We are, unlike that rich young fool, willing to admit that we are sinners. Are we, however, willing to admit that we have sinned? That we are sinning? That we will sin? Are we not so prideful that we see the warning of Jesus to flee temptation as something quaint and old-fashioned? Do we not presume upon the grace of God and see sin as something small? Do we not over-estimate our own strength by playing with fire and thinking we won’t get burned?

Sin is destructive. A little harmless flirting, a quick peek at those images on the internet, talking about our suspicions about our pastor, what’s the worst that could happen? Death. Broken homes and the broken children that come with them, church splits. Nobody sneaks up on those sins planning for everything to blow up. Nobody intends to fall into grievous sin. We just want to get look at it, to peer over the edge.

Reformation starts now, as it did then by putting aside our foolish plans for covering our sins and returning to the one plan, repenting and resting in the finished work of Christ alone. That means owning the cost of our redemption. This sin, the one drawing me in right now, doesn’t merely increase the number of coins Tetzel will demand of me. This sin is one more ounce of the poison cup the Prince of Peace had to drink for me. A casual “Put it on Jesus’ tab” is a good sign that we are not truly His friend.

How seriously did Jesus take the dangers of sin? In His Sermon on the Mount He had this to say,

If your right eye causes you to sin, pluck it out and cast it from you; for it is more profitable for you that one of your members perish, than for your whole body to be cast into hell. And if your right hand causes you to sin, cut it off and cast It from you; for it is more profitable for you that one of your members perish, than for your whole body to be cast into hell (Matthew 5:29, 30).

Sin comes to us as a furry kitten, leaves us behind as a roaring lion. Boasting that we are beyond temptation is nothing but an invitation. Humbly fleeing, on the other hand, closes the door. No one of us has ever brought good out of sin. Better that we get out while the getting is good.

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Monasticism; Inerrant & Impotent; Ode to Snow

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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