New Thesis, New Reformation

Thesis 60 We must love each other.

It should, though it doesn’t, go without saying. There’s no question that the Bible teaches this. There’s no question that the Bible emphasizes this. There’s no question that we’re not very good at it. Why, when the command is obvious, are we so bad at obeying it? Because we’re no good.

Even a cursory reading of the gospels will reveal the connection between God’s love for and grace toward us and our call to love and be gracious toward one another. When we have been forgiven much we are to find it easier to forgive much. When we have received grace we’re to find it easier to give grace. We fail here, however, because we judge unjustly. We minimize our sins while maximizing the sins of others. We minimize the importance of others, while maximizing our own importance. Whether it is a marriage, a family, a friendship, or a church body, believing ourselves morally above others is a sure recipe for disaster.

When I find myself hated by others, including those who name the name of Christ, I try to find my comfort in the sure knowledge that my heavenly Father loves me. He knows how truly awful I am. Those who despise and accuse me are blind to my real flaws. My Father knows them all, and despite this loves me. When I find myself hating others, including those who name the name of Christ, it should be enough for me to remember that I am not due the love I receive. It’s not a bad first step. But I will do so much better if I remember not just that Jesus loves me, despite my sin, but that Jesus loves the one I’m despising, despite his sin. When we fail to love our brothers and sisters we put ourselves in direct opposition against the One who loves and redeemed us and who loves and redeemed our brothers and sisters. “Jesus loves me” doesn’t blow me away like it ought to. “Jesus loves them” barely registers with me. Because I am a fool.

Our love for each other makes manifest three things the world needs to know. First, that love is possible. How easy it is to grow jaded and cynical when living in a world untouched by God’s redeeming grace. Those fragments of the image of God that yet remain in the unbeliever long for love and acceptance. What a testimony when they see it among believers. Second, it shows that change in us is possible. My growing capacity to love the brethren is evidence that I am part of the family, that the Spirit is at work in me. When the unbeliever is discouraged in his own sin, it is light to blind eyes to see believers growing in grace, evidenced by increasing love one for another. Third, that acknowledging our sin is not a doorway to despair but the entrance into liberty. When the love others have for me is grounded not in me being good but in Christ being in me, when I have no need to pretend to be better than I am then I can know that the love I receive is for me, and not the image I project.

More important than all this, however, when we love one another we delight our heavenly Father.

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Clericalism; 2 Minutes Mourn; FF-Tim Caldwell

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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What’s missing from the contemporary church?

Sinlessness. That is, the weaknesses that plague the contemporary church aren’t, in the end, all that different from the weaknesses that plagued the historical church. The more things change and all that, after all. It is said that one Lord’s Day a parishioner asked Martin Luther, “Brother Luther, why do you preach the same message every Lord’s day?” To which he responded, “Because every week we forget.” I’m not prepared to say that in the western world the church is at its lowest point. I am prepared to say that it’s not in good shape, just like normal. I would also suggest that what is missing is what is usually missing- a deep, heart, mind, soul and strength grasp of this message: I am in myself a vile sinner at war with a holy, omnipotent God. Jesus came and lived a perfect life in my place, then received the wrath of God in my place. Now, because the Spirit gave me faith, I am forgiven, beloved, adopted, secure.

That message is not new. It’s not especially insightful. Nor is it complicated. It’s not appealing to those outside the kingdom. It’s not especially appealing to those inside the kingdom. It is not the fullness of the message. It is, however, the center of the message, and the most needful thing to be proclaimed, believed and lived out in the church of Jesus Christ. It is the health of the church.

The irony is that everything in the contemporary church that shouldn’t be there would be quickly driven out by this simple message. A second irony is that the most potent weapon against our problem of sinfulness is a failure to believe this simple message. Programs, celebrity, entertainment, worldliness, compromise, these are the things we glom on to because we are not, as we should be, convinced of our own sinfulness, persuaded of Jesus’ payment for all our sins, comforted by the sure knowledge that our heavenly Father loves us infinitely, immutably, and by name. We have feel-good, white-washed, motivational messages because we feel bad, are ignorant of ourselves and are unmotivated to get back on the world’s hamster wheel.

As we come to a deeper grasp of our need and His perfect provision we are better able to stand on the Word, for we don’t need the world’s approval. We are better equipped to walk in the way, for we know where we are going. We are better driven, for we know our calling to run to the battle. We are at peace, for we know that we rest in the Son.

What the church needs in our day is what the church has always needed and will need until He returns. We need the gospel. We need to repent and believe. We need to teach our children that their need is the same, that our grandchildren will be fed the same truth. No branding, no marketing, telling not selling. It needs sheep that demand the message and under-shepherds who proclaim the message even when the sheep demand something else.

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Sacred Marriage Under Fire vii; Lamentations

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This Is My Body

I have some degree of sympathy with the argument because I once made it myself. I was in high school, and served faithfully as the poster child for the National Sophomoric Self-Important Blow-Hard Association. I dressed in black, listened to Pink Floyd albums. I wrote morbid poetry, wore my hair over my eyes. And I made this incredibly profound discovery- the church is full of hypocrites. I know it’s shocking, but I was the one who blew the lid on the whole hypocrisy in the church thing. That was me.That was my excuse for not embracing the gospel. Jesus was more than alright with me. But those friends of His, how déclassé. Jesus and I were just too cool for the rest of those geeks that claimed to be His friends, and so I couldn’t make the claim that I was with Him.

It is powerful evidence of the potency of His providence that God could use my pomposity to illustrate two important points. First, it highlights the importance of our collective image. I’m not suggesting that we play to the crowd, pander to the audience around us. We will do Jesus no favors if we try to out world the world so they’ll like us. But that doesn’t mean complete indifference. While our goal is to be pleasing in the sight of God, we can know something of how we are doing by our reputation among the heathen. We are called to love one another, for instance. Whatever the world might think of this, we are still to do it. But we are likewise told that by this, our love for each other, the world will know we are His. Our obedience, steeped in a happy indifference to the thinking of the world, leads in turn to a happy difference in the thinking of the world.

We need to understand that while the lost may have some foolish ideas of what we are supposed to be about, we are nevertheless the incarnation to them. We are the Jesus they can see. That we are His body not only means that we ought never to have a war between the toes and the nose, it also means that we are the image of Him to all the world. If they would see Jesus, they must look at us. We not only make visible the invisible kingdom of God, but we make visible God’s invisible King.

This also answers, however, my own previous dilemma. Or rather it exposes my former folly. In another context Paul admonishes us that no one ever hated his own body. But for me to look down my nose at the church, and try to marry that with a love for Jesus, that just shows that I don’t know Jesus. His identity with the church isn’t limited to double imputation of our sin to Him, His righteousness to us. Remember how He responded to Saul, “Saul, Saul, why dost thou persecute Me?” Jesus so identifies Himself with the church that those who persecute the church, persecute Jesus. We tear asunder what God has brought together when we claim to love Jesus, but despise His bride, His body, the church.

The two of these points, that we must be lovely because we are the body of Christ, and that we must love the body of Christ, come together when we consider our call to be prophetic. We all ought to be like Jeremiah, the weeping prophet. Or perhaps better still, we ought to be like Hosea. When we take the church to task, whether it be for worldliness, for faulty thinking or doing, we are not speaking to them out there. We are instead speaking to ourselves, to the body of Christ. It is because we are the body of Christ that we must bring the Word of God to bear in our common life. Our love isn’t a permissive love that allows us to continue, without challenge to besmirch the image of our husband. But neither is it a mean-spirited love that denies that we are the body of Christ. When the church succumbs to the wiles of the world, we chasten her/us, but never disown her/us.

Do you ever read the gospels, and long to be there? Do you ever think, “If only I could have been there to see this or that, then I would love Jesus better.”? To paraphrase Jesus with respect to His Father, “Has He not been with us this long, and still we do not know? He who has seen the church has seen the Son, for the Son and the church are one.” We haven’t learned the lesson enough if our response is merely to be less cynical about the church. We are called to love the church, to be filled with a holy passion.

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Surviving Biden

There has to be balance. There is a fatalism that simply shrugs when Rome’s imperial army is parked outside Jerusalem’s door. The destruction of the city in 70 AD was plenty bad. On the other hand, there are those who mourn and bemoan over every bit of God’s providence as if He somehow were taking a nap. Bad things are truly bad things. All things are truly God things. Yeah and amen to both says I.

The question each one of us needs to ask ourselves is this- which error are we more prone to? If you’ve been hiding under your covers since last Wednesday, you’re probably in the latter category. If you’ve been going about your daily routine while joyfully channeling your inner Doris Day singing “Que Sera, Sera” you’re probably in the former category.

Those who are prone to be accused of being Christian nationalists, who spent more time and energy the past four years talking about the President than the king of kings are more likely to be, right now, officers in the Chicken Little club. Those who are prone to be accused of being Wokey McWokerson, who spent more time and energy the past four years distancing themselves from their conservative evangelical peers than they did trying to bring the lost into the kingdom are more likely to be the ones voted, “Most likely to rat out Christians to the thought police.”

Before, however, we can get the log out of our own eyes we first need to stop looking for the speck in our brothers’ eyes. That is, conservatives need to stop suggesting that those who are not as panicked as they are aren’t really concerned, while those more lefty need to stop suggesting that those who aren’t as giddy as they are about the next four years somehow are denying God’s sovereignty. Not everyone who never heard of OAN or Infowars is therefore a card-carrying member of the Communist party. Not everyone who has heard of OAN or Infowars takes off his white sheet each evening before putting on his tinfoil nightcap. There’s nobody here but us regular people. And we all get better when we all worry more about ourselves than everyone else.

There is, at the end of the day, more damage that Joe Biden can do to this country, to my neighbors, to the redeemed by Christ than I ever could. Not because I’m morally superior, but because I’m power inferior. On the other hand, there is more good that I can do for my own sanctification than the President can do for my sanctification. It starts here- when I realize that whatever prophetic calling I might have, whatever justice I might be called to fight for, whatever my role is in discipling the nations, my greater calling is for me to seek first His kingdom and His righteousness. To butcher an old Jesus People song, “Let there be obedience on earth, and let it begin with me.” The monster I’m called to slay, the one I have been given the power to slay, is the one whose face I see each time I shave. Politics matters. Genuine evil still comes out of the swamp. But the swamp inside me is mine, the one inside you yours. Let’s beseech the Spirit that He would lead us to drain them all.

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Parables; Sovereign Grace Plant & More

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What does it mean to live a “simple life?”

Simplicity is not what I would call a simple word. That is, it has multiple meanings in differing contexts. Often, for instance, when Christians speak of being “simple” it is seen as a synonym for a kind of Amish lifestyle. When we speak, however, of the simplicity of God we mean something radically different, that God is one, not a conglomeration of parts. This second meaning, however, can meld with the first when we consider what God has to say about our lifestyle. No, He does not command that we embrace Amish peculiarities. He does, however, call us to live in light of one goal, one purpse.

It is my conviction that we grow weary, that our lives grow complicated principally because we refuse to heed the warning of Jesus who tells us that no man can serve two masters (Matthew 6:24). The Old Testament testifies to our myriad failures, as well as our constant folly in trying. Syncretism, the blending together of true and false worship existed then as it exists now precisely because we seek to serve two masters, the true and living God of the ages, and the god of the age. While our Lord is gracious, every false god proves to be a cruel and demanding taskmaster.

In our age that false taskmaster is he whom Francis Schaeffer called “the god of personal peace and affluence.” We Christians frantically seek to serve the Lord, which we ought to do, while pursuing the American dream, which we ought not to do. Too many Christian ministries offer up counsel on how we can have it all. We ought instead to encourage believers to tear down our high places, to destroy our idols, and to hear and heed the voice of the Master alone.

Over the years I have sought to argue that we often miss the Master’s voice precisely because we are dancing to the beat of the broader culture’s drum. When the call of Christ tells us to set aside our American dreams we determine that Jesus must give way. When following Him leads to even the mildest persecution we think He is misleading us. When peace and affluence let us down, we blame Him.

Our heavenly Father, however, has told us what we must do that it would go well for us in the land- we must honor Him. His Son has told us to put away those worries we share with the Gentiles, and to seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness. And the Spirit calls us to think on that which is noble, pure, lovely.

The glorious promise of Christ is that when we pick up His cross, we discover that its burden is light. The glorious promise of Christ is what when we lose our lives we gain them. We are not called to victory. We are not called to power. We are not called to success. We are not called to strategize. We are called to obey. Everything we hope for has already been won; everything we fear is in His hands. One Lord, one faith, one baptism. And one Voice.

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WSC 59; Top 5 Disney Cartoon Movies & More

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A Tale of 2 Sons- School, Lefties & the State

Imagine six people, two fathers, two mothers, two sons. Two of the parents, we’ll call them the Sprouls, are Christians. Sinners to be sure, but by God’s grace, repenting ones. The other parents, we’ll call them Mr. and Mrs. Horace Mann, are non-Christians. This theological difference, of course, will impact all manner of convictions. Each parent, I suspect, would be saddened by the convictions of the other parents. The Sprouls would hope that one day all six would agree with them, that they would embrace the finished work of Christ. The Manns would like all six to agree with them, to embrace that glorious notion that we are cosmic accidents who will return to the dust. These are important, life-shaping issues that separate these two men. So what do we do, especially with these two little boys?

What I propose is that the Sprouls instruct their son in their faith. We are called, as Christians, to raise our son in the nurture and admonition of the Lord (Ephesians 6:1-4). If God should provide opportunity we would certainly welcome conversation with the Manns, in which we would call them to repentance and saving faith. If God should so bless we would then delight to encourage them to raise their son in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. But, if they will not, we are left to pray. As we would pray for their son. What we would not do is ask the state to regulate how the Manns teach their son. We would not insist that the boy must study the 10 Commandments and the Reformation. We would not threaten them that if they failed to meet our regulations we would require his son to be homeschooled at our house.

The Manns, however, all too often, have not been willing to reciprocate our broadmindedness. In their concern over what we teach our children, they are quite willing to have the state tell us what we must teach, and how long. Their perspective is not live and let live, but live like us, or else. Fail to educate in our home as they wish and we will be forced to send our son elsewhere to be educated as they wish. Sadly, however, they do not stop there. The Manns want still more. They want the authority to determine what and how our children must learn, and they want us to pay for the education of their own child. They aren’t saying, “Regulate the Sprouls, but leave us alone.” They are saying, “Regulate the Sprouls, and take of their wealth to finance our educational goals for our son. Tax their wealth to pay for our regulation to make sure their son is regulated as we see fit.” The Manns are the aggressors, insisting that the state force us to measure up to their convictions.

My hope this little illustration might help us see through the fog of battle in the education wars. It is true that Christians stand on one side, and unbelievers on the other. But we’re not asking for different versions of the same thing. We Christians are not asking, at least those of us who remember our calling to do unto others, to control the education of the children of our neighbors. We’re not trying to seize government schools for Jesus. Jesus doesn’t work that way. He doesn’t call us to take from our neighbor so that we might teach our neighbor and his children what they don’t believe. What we want is liberty. For ourselves, and our neighbors. We believe in the power of the gospel to change they world. They believe in the power of the sword. We are financed by the gifts of God given freely by His people. They are financed by forcefully taking from their ideological enemies. We are seeking to live by the golden rule. They want to control our children.

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