Where Were We Then?

Tune in for a special Jesus Changes Everything, an extended and final Life in the Blender segment as Lisa and I discuss where we were and where He is leading us.
Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Let No Man Tear Asunder

My favorite theologian of all time was known to argue that the defining quality of the theologian is to make distinctions. That’s what we do. We bring clarity through precision, precision through distinction. That man who may well be my favorite theologian’s favorite theologian, Francis Turretin, published his three-volume work The Institutes of Elenctic Theology as a sort of systematic theology by contrast. Each point is broken down, compared and contrasted, and examined in light of its opposite. One could argue that theologians are here following the path of their Maker. We serve a God who delights in distinctions. Reading through the creation account, for instance, we see not only the creation of light, but the separation of light and darkness, not only the creation of land, but the separation of land and sea, or land and sky.

On the other hand, the same God who delights in distinctions warns us against tearing asunder what He has brought together. He is a God who brings every tongue and tribe together into a holy nation, a royal priesthood. He makes of many grains one loaf.

Reformed theologians especially are given, at least when dealing with the critical issue of our salvation, to razor thin distinctions. The links in our chain of the ordo salutis, or order of salvation are strong, unbreakable, but nevertheless rather small. There is good reason for this, but also some danger. Sometimes the wedges we drive between concepts go too deep.

Consider faith and repentance. There is good reason to see these are two distinct things. With one we look to hope to the provision of God in Christ. With the other we acknowledge and confess our need from that work. One hypothetically could affirm that Jesus died for sinners, and miss the glaring truth that the one affirming is a sinner. One could more easily recognize the reality of his sin, but know nothing of the provision in Christ. Thus the two are two, and both equally needful.

On the other hand, however, one could argue that the two are actually one, or at the very least they flow from the same source. Faith is indeed the coming together of understanding, agreement and trust. But on a more fundamental level faith is as simple this- believing God. Faith is when God speaks, and we say “Amen.”

The devil, of course, knows that God is true. He is quite informed on the sacrifice of Christ. He knows to his very core, from the very longing of his heart by which he misses those who slipped through his fingers, that Jesus came to save sinners. He in turn is well aware of what and who he is, that he is a sinner. All of which will make his eternity that much more painful.

Faith and repentance then might be at their closest when we confess, in agreement with God, that, as He says, we are sinners, and as we cry out, as He has commanded, “Lord be merciful to me, a sinner.” God says, “All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God (Romans 3:23) we say, “Lord Your judgments are true.” And when God says, “The saying is trustworthy and deserving of full acceptance, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am the foremost” (I Timothy 1:15) we do not merely affirm our agreement, but sing it with hallelujahs and amens.

For all the important nuances, for all the valuable precision, the simple truth of the matter is we fell in the garden because we failed to believe God. All sin is a failure to believe God. The simple truth is that we are rescued from our sins by believing Him, both His judgment and His promise. That is, we are gifted with faith and repentance.

Just as we can make theology more complex than it need be, just as we are called, in seeking orthodoxy, to say our amens to what God has revealed about Himself, so we can make the living of our lives in faithfulness, the seeking of orthopraxy more complex than it need be. Here too we are to say our amens about what God has revealed about His promises for us, about His law. He commands that we not worry about what we will eat, what we will wear, and we are called to repent of our fears, and believe His promises. He commands us to seek first His kingdom and His righteousness, and we are called to repent for our pursuit of personal peace and affluence, and to believe His promises.

It is true that God is true and all men are liars. It is true in turn that every man is miserly, while God is extravagant. Were we wise we would repent expansively, even as we would believe with both deep conviction and broad expectation. Our sin is simple- we don’t believe God, and so don’t obey God. The solution is simple- believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you will be saved, you and your household (Acts 16:31). We don’t believe this once and then never more. Rather we believe it both ever more and evermore.

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Who Are You To Say? or The Bliss of Ignorance

It is my general direction to encourage people to believe they’re not quite as dumb as they think they are. I remind my philosophy students that Immanuel Kant was just a man who put his pantaloons on one leg at a time. They needn’t fear to challenge him. He’s just a slob like one of us. In like manner, the work I do in apologetics follows the same line. I even find myself helping unbelievers come to understand that they are not as dumb as they think they are. That is, when they claim that there is no truth, and therefore they don’t have any, I remind them that “there is no truth” is itself a truth claim. From there I help them understand that there are many other truths they know, even if they don’t like them all.

That faux humility that drives relativism is no humility at all. It is in fact a claim to have universal knowledge. One must know all there is to know to know nothing can be known. That, however, doesn’t mean humility has no place in our thinking and our knowing. Sometimes I have to push in the other direction, encouraging people to believe we’re not quite as smart as we think we are. Real humility looks at the fifteen pieces of the 1000 puzzle piece puzzle we have and says, “Yeah, I’m not real sure what this is part of a picture of. Whatever it is it has some blue and some yellow, but beyond that I just can’t say.” Real humility says this when your best friends have created a “Of course it’s a Dutch windmill picture” Facebook group that snickers at the dopes over at, “No,it’saparrotonapirate’sshoulder.wordpress.com.” It’s great that social media allows us all to have a take. It’s horrible that social media requires us all to have a take.

We birth a thousand non sequiters from every true fact we actually have. We string together supposition upon assumption upon motives magically discerned in order to reach the ridiculous conclusion that we have honorably walked our way to the prejudiced conclusion we began with. If we don’t like person, politician, pastor or policy X we stand ready to pronounce them guilty at the drop of an insinuation. If we do like person, politician, pastor or policy x we stand ready to pronounce the accusers guilty of slander not just while the jury is still out but before the bailiff has first bid us “All rise.” We find it all too easy to believe what we want to believe because we want to believe it.

“Maybe” is often our friend. “I don’t know” is faithful. “I’m not close to having enough information to reach any kind of conclusion. To do so would be utterly unfair and reckless” is wisdom. Opinions are like flaws and blemishes- we all have way too many of them. Let’s tweeze, pluck, prune the ones without sufficient roots in the truth, and embrace the bliss of ignorance.

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Lisa & I on Alias Grace, Devil’s Advocates

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Ask RC- Do minimum wage laws help either the poor or the overall economy?

No, on both counts. Our labor is a service. Its value is determined neither by law nor by wish but by the market. All of us, I suspect, would love to be paid $1,000 an hour. Given that all of us would want this, why don’t we pass a law stating no one could be paid less than $1,000 an hour? Were we to do so, I suspect that some athletes, some rock stars and perhaps a few actors would still be employed. The rest of us, however, would be out of work. There is no employer out there willing to pay me that much. (If you disagree, by all means, let me know who they are.)

I would, of course, also have to let go my butcher, my baker and my candlestick maker. As much as I like them, and value their services, I would rather keep $1000 in my pocket than hire any of them for even an hour. This, is it not, is pretty easy to see? The question is, why do we think dropping the number down to $15 an hour would make any difference to the principle? The concepts do not change simply by plugging in different numbers. I’m grateful my employers value my labor more than $15 an hour. That is, they gladly give up more than $15 in exchange for an hour of my labor.

But what if they didn’t? Anyone whose services are not valued by any employer at a rate of $15 an hour will be out of work. Any job not deemed important enough to pay $15 an hour to have it done will not be done. This, of course, hurts those on the lowest economic rung the hardest. I might have to do a job myself, or leave it undone if I don’t want to trade $15 an hour to have it done. But the fellow who would love to make $10 an hour is out of work and out of luck, all because the federal government thinks it can suspend the laws of economics.

Do people really think in these terms, valuing certain jobs at certain rates? Yes, we, in a manner of speaking do. We all make decisions whether to buy this or that. And this or that can and often does include the labor of others. When I go to the airport I have the option to pay a porter to take by bags at the curb. I don’t, but schlep them to the ticket counter myself. Why? Because I would rather carry my own bags and the few dollars in my pocket than to give someone else my bags and my dollars. I don’t know how much it costs to have a porter take your bags. I don’t know exactly how much I’d be willing to pay. I do know, however, that I am not willing to pay what it cost, or I would have hired one. I’ve never stopped to figure it out because I know it’s not even a close call.

Economics on the small scale matches economics on the large scale. That is, my decision not to hire the porter is the same kind of decision we all make, the same kind of decision countless employees will make when the federal government declares it a crime to trade labor for money at $14.99 an hour. Minimum wage laws hurt those they claim to help, and the rest of us too. The only thing they help is politicians who win votes from the economically illiterate with such dangerous demagoguery. This issue is so simple, so basic, I cannot help but conclude that those who propose and vote for such laws do so knowing they are hurting the poor. They are not that stupid. They are, however, that heartless.

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I Sam in 5; Sum of the 10; God Our Help


Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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First Church of the Not So Bad

We are adepts not at fighting our sins but hiding them. We gather each Lord’s Day dressed in our smiles, share our praise reports and our health concerns, pat ourselves on our backs, and return home to our gross and heinous sins. We miss this in part because we are preternaturally positive about ourselves. We are willing to confess that there are some weak churches out there, somewhere down the road. There are destructive schools out there, but ours is one of the good ones. There are broken families out there, but ours is, as far as anyone can tell, a model of grace and peace. There are deluded sinners out there, but I thank you Lord I am not like them.

We are more than willing, individually and corporately to cop to the respectable sins. Maybe college football or Nascar is something of an idol to us, but it’s good clean fun. Maybe I lose my temper from time to time, but kids drive everyone crazy, right? I don’t read my Bible like I ought. Sure we don’t tithe, but we’re under grace, not under law. Besides, didn’t Jesus die for sinners like us?

No, actually, He didn’t. Jesus, according to Jesus, came for the sick, not those who have no need of a physician (Mark 2:17). We might have a little tickle in our throat. We might have just a pinch of a fever. But sick? No, that’s not us. That’s those other people. We think we need Jesus because His Father demands perfection, and while we admit we’re not that, we think we’re pretty close. We have a small salvation rescuing is from a small problem by a small savior.

We won’t face what we are. Imagine if you will you’re a member of a medium sized evangelical church, with 100 adult males and 100 adult females. There are six ruling elders and two teaching elders. Chances are good that at least ten of women, and ten of the men have procured or encouraged abortions, several of them while they were professing evangelicals. Chances are good that at least a few are drunkards. Chances are good that at least a few adults are actively engaged in an extra-marital affair. It is likely that at least one member hits his wife and/or his children.

These numbers are still small enough though that we can push them to the side, treat them as aberrations, rather than proof of our weakness. But consider this. According to a survey taken ten years ago by Christianet.com, it is likely that one pastor, three ruling elders, twenty of the women and fifty of the men regularly consume pornography. This is not the people at the church down the street that we never much cared for. This is us. We are sexually immoral.

My point here isn’t merely to rub our noses in our sins. It certainly isn’t to deny the work of the Spirit in our lives. We are, if we are in Christ, forgiven for all our sins, and are most assuredly becoming more like Him. My point here isn’t even that we are worldly. Rather I want us, and me, to come to a deeper understanding of what a mess we are, and I am. I want us to come to a deeper understanding of just how far we have to go. I want us not once, but all our lives to beat our breasts and cry out, “Lord, be merciful to me, a sinner.” I want us to be Reformed enough to embrace the first thesis of the 95 that sparked the Reformation- When our Lord and Master Jesus Christ said, “Repent” (Mt 4:17), he willed the entire life of believers to be one of repentance. I want us to come to understand that the journey from dead in our trespasses and sins to being like Him for we shall see Him as He is is one we have all just begun. Whatever progress we are making is dwarfed by the great distance before us. Though the Great Physician died for us, though the Spirit indwells us, though the Father loves us perfectly, in ourselves we still more resemble the zombies we once were than the Savior we are called to be like.

God gives grace to the humble.

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Lisa’s Purpose Driven Wife; Love; Best Burgers

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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New Theses, New Reformation

Thesis 42- We must rejoice in the Lord always.

The grass is always greener at that other time. Or, to put it another way, our retro-vision glasses have rose colored lenses. Many of us face the tendency to not only look to the past as a sort of golden age, but in like manner, to look to the present as this present evil age. There is much both within and without the church, for us to mourn about our peculiar moment in history. In the west Christians are typically looked down upon and made fun of. Our churches are filled with those who want their ears tickled, our pulpits filled with men willing to tickle ears. On the face of it, it would seem that these would be among all times the most sad.

When Paul wrote his epistle to the church at Philippi, their problems were not like ours. They weren’t merely laughed at. They faced real persecution from their neighbors, and from the Roman empire, “For to you it has been granted on behalf of Christ, not only to believe in Him, but also to suffer for His sake” (1:29). At the same time they were warned not just of ear ticklers, but to “Beware of dogs, beware of evil workers, beware of the mutilation…” (3:2). Worse still, the church at Philippi receives this letter from their father in the faith, the man who first planted their church, who loved them with such zeal, while he himself languished in prison. And what was Paul’s command for this church, at this time? “Rejoice in the Lord always. Again I will say, rejoice!” (4:4).

Sixteen times in these four short chapters Paul enjoins the church to rejoice. What is God’s command for us in our circumstance? That we would rejoice as well. Consider all that troubles us. Go ahead, and make a mental list of all the grievances you now suffer. Now suppose someone made you this offer. You could lose everything that grieves you. It could all be taken away. All you would have to do to have your troubles disappear, is to give up the Pearl of Great Price. Would you take up that offer?

Is this not the very point of the parable of the pearl of great price? Did not Jesus tell us that those who are wise would give up everything they have, every blessing, every comfort, every penny, in order to acquire this precious pearl? If you are in Christ, you have this precious pearl.

And this precious pearl has you, and nothing will snatch you away. All of your troubles then are not in the end the cost of the pearl of great price, but the very gift of the pearl of great price. That is, all our troubles are not things we must slog through to get to the good stuff. Instead they are given to us by Jesus Himself, that we might be made more like Him.

Joy is indeed circumstantial. We should only have joy in these circumstances- where God is on His throne, and where we are His beloved children. If that describes you, then repent of your gloom, and rejoice in this promise, that if we will confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness” (I John 1:9).

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Rastafarianism; Love Is; Sell Everything?

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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