Ask RC- Are we living in the last days?

Yes, of course we are. Before, however, you start packing for the Rapture Express, you might want to remember that your grandparents were also living in the last days. And their grandparents before them, and their grandparents before them. Luther lived in the last days, as did Aquinas before him and Augustine before him. Same for Polycarp, John the Revelator, Peter and Paul. We have been in the last days for close to 2000 years now. How much longer will the last days last? I don’t know.

The Bible itself describes its own times as being a part of the end times. Among other places, Peter, during his sermon at Pentecost describes what everyone was seeing by alluding to Joel’s prophecy of the last days, “But this is what was spoken by the prophet Joel:
‘And it shall come to pass in the last days, says God,
That I will pour out of My Spirit on all flesh;
Your sons and your daughters shall prophesy,
Your young men shall see visions,
Your old men shall dream dreams.
And on My menservants and on My maidservants
I will pour out My Spirit in those days;
And they shall prophesy (Acts 2:16-17).

Does that mean Jesus will return soon? He certainly might return soon, but this specific text does not say that. We commit the fallacy of equivocation, using the phrase “last days” in two different ways but act as though we are only treating it one way. If “last days” always means that Jesus is coming soon, and soon cannot be 2,000 years from now, then the Bible is in error. “Last days” however can refer to any number of things. It can refer to the last days of the old economy. When the New Testament was written the utter destruction of Jerusalem was coming soon, and with it the end of the temple system.

Last days can refer to those days immediately preceding the physical return of Jesus to earth. No one would dispute that. He is coming again, and my hope is that it will be soon indeed. Last days can also, however, refer to that time between the ascension of Christ to the right hand of the Father and His return. And that, we know, is a time period that has almost stretched to 2000 years by now.

All three of these uses are perfectly legitimate ways to speak of the last days, though each can be referring to actual days that are rather far apart. The old economy has come to a close. We are in the time period between His ascension and His return. And we might be just around the corner from His return. All of which means that we are called, as our grandparents were, and their grandparents were, to be ready for His coming, to pray for His coming, to look for His coming.

Jesus Himself, when He walked the earth, did not know the day or the hour (Matt. 24:36). It demands immeasurable hubris for any man to suggest that he knows what Jesus did not. May He grant us all the grace to long for His return, to prepare for His return. May He find us faithful.

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200th EPISODE! Lisa Joins Me In Looking Back

Special 200th Episode Edition!

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People of the Feast, or, Seaing the Holiday

Dwarves, as a rule, are a rather recalcitrant lot. It was their stubborn refusal to follow directions that caused some of them to suffer the indignity of being turned into dufflepuds, in C.S. Lewis’ The Voyage of the Dawn Treader. No doubt some distant cousins of the duffers were found in the stable at the end of the chronicles, in The Last Battle. You remember what happens there. History has drawn to a close. Aslan, the great king, and son of the Emperor Beyond the Sea has consummated all things. Some mule-headed dwarves refuse to be taken in by any religious hornswaggle, including faith in Aslan. The dwarves insist that time has not ended, that they are in fact still locked in an old stable. When the redeemed seek to awaken them by offering them food from Aslan’s table, they insist that they have been offered dung from the stable floor.

While I deny with vigor that the lost in hell suffer only because they don’t know they are in heaven, there is a lesson to be learned here. Lewis makes the same point when he says, “When infinite joy is offered us, [we are] like an ignorant child who wants to go on making mud pies in the slums because he cannot imagine what is meant by the offer of a holiday at the sea. We are far too easily pleased.” Which is exactly how we like it.

Lewis, however,still missed something here. Isn’t it possible that the reason we have such a hard time believing that the king’s banquet is indeed a feast is because we are already feasting in the gutter with our mud pies? That is, the reason we are satisfied with so little is not because we are all pig-headed philistines, but because even a tidbit of the grace of God overpowers us. There is a beauty and a power in His grace, in whatever form it takes. Like Lucy’s bottle of healing cordial, it only takes a drop. The grace and the beauty of God are omnipresent, and so we find it hard to take our eyes off the beauty of this thing which reflects His glory to look through a glass that is somewhat less dim.

But Lewis is right in this; there really is a banquet, and it really is far more grand than the mud pies. Let’s follow a few different versions of the invitation/encounter in the gutter, and see what we shall see. Here am I, a servant of the king. I have been sent out into the highways and byways to be sure that my Master’s feast is full. I find you in the gutter with your mud pie. Each of us has an opportunity to sin here, and each an opportunity to do the right thing.

Suppose, for instance, that I look at you, see your filthy little fingers, see the silly delight you are taking in the mud and conclude, “Forget it. He’s happy where he is. Leave him be. Anyone that foolish just can’t be worth the trouble.” Have I been nice? I could walk away with a smile, and you could watch me walk away thinking, “What a nice, smiley man. I wonder why he was looking at me,” and then get back to your mud. That’s one option in which I sin, and you don’t.

Now let’s try another. I’ve come to fetch you. I see you in the mud, and I say, “Hey you blamed fool! What’s the matter with you? Haven’t you any more sense than a pig? The Master, I’ll never understand why, has sent me for you. Now get out of that muck, and get a move on. That stuff is nasty. Let’s go.” On the one hand, in this scenario I was nicer to you in a sense. I didn’t leave you where I found you. I told you about the good news of the great feast. On the other hand, I wasn’t as nice as I should have been. I didn’t exhibit much of the Master’s grace. In fact I pride, forgetting that I only became the servant of the Master because He used His grace and power to get me to see that I was in the gutter.

Stick with the second scenario for a moment. Now let’s look at how you could respond. You could conclude that if the Master is anything like the servant, you just can’t believe that His feast would be better than your mud pie. While such a response would be understandable, it would also cause you to miss the feast. The hard truth is that the Master doesn’t perfect us before He sends us out with word about the feast, knowing full well that we will probably stink up the joint serving as His ambassadors. The Master, after all, isn’t a tame lion.

Consider though this third scenario. You are still there in the gutter. I say, “The King has invited you to come to His feast. You will find there delights and joys far surpassing what you have here in your gutter-“ “See here,” you say, “who invited you to knock what I have going on? You certainly are an arrogant cuss, aren’t you? It’s not terribly nice of you to come along bragging about how your feast is better than mine.” “I’m sorry,” I suggest, “did I say the feast was mine? How clumsy of me. No, it is the King’s feast. He is the source of all its delights. (And, by the way, He is even the source of that pie you have there.) I add nothing to the feast. But it is indeed far greater than what you have here. I know because I once also played with mud pies in the gutter.” “Go away you mean-spirited, old coot. God gave me these mud pies, and you should be ashamed of yourself for knocking them.”

Now who is in sin?

We, by His grace, should believe Jesus when He tells us, “I have come that they may have life, and that they may have it abundantly” (John 10:10). We see, through His power, that giving up our lives isn’t the path of duty, but rather the only way to gain our lives. And we do, because of His love shed abroad in our hearts, go out and invite any who would come to join us in this feast. We ought to remember the wisdom of Tony Campolo, who rightly reminds us that the kingdom of God is a party. We are both building and reveling in that kingdom when we come to that feast because we are making manifest, and drinking in the glory of God. This is blessing and not burden. Would that we would see the grace of God in all that we do, that our joy and thanksgiving would be such a part of our lives that we’d known around the world as the people of the feast.

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Carpe Diem


Because we are given to self-interest, the first place our minds tend to go when hardship comes to town is bewilderment. We can’t begin to understand how or why God would allow pain to come our way. Eventually, by His grace we usually come to the place where we’re willing to admit that God could use even our hardship for our good and for His glory. We, after all, have always been impressed by His creativity. We can’t even make a silk purse out of a sow’s ear. He can make sows, purses and universes out of nothing. So, yes when God gives us lemons, we’ll cry our tears, and then make the best of it by making some lemonade.

What we don’t often do, but ought always do, is look at the hardships He sends as opportunities. What if I told you that for weeks on end the whole of the believing world would become obsessed with the possibility of dying? What if I told you that you would have a whole month of Sundays when there would be no sportsball games clamoring for your attention? What if I told you that whole nations that bowed at the feet of their government leaders were about to find out their government leaders had feet of clay?

Would you be excited to hear of these opportunities? Or would we miss them? John F. Kennedy, hardly a man known for great wisdom, said, “The Chinese use two brush strokes to write the word ‘crisis.’ One brush stroke stands for danger; the other for opportunity. In a crisis be aware of the danger—but recognize the opportunity.” The first part of the counsel is important- we do need to be aware of the danger. I’m not suggesting that when crisis comes, whether it comes in the form of a pandemic, an economic meltdown or some other unpleasantness that we should go through our days with maniacal grins on our faces. I am saying we should go beyond acknowledging God can use hardship and instead give thanks for it, and look for our calling in the midst of it. If we would live our lives coram Deo, before the face of God, then we had better carpe diem, seize the day.

Our Lord has appointed us as His stewards over the creation. When He returns He will require of us an account of how we have managed the talents He has put in our hands. Will we look at Him, as we look over the spring of 2020 and say, “What could I do? You sent such a crisis.” Or, will we instead be able to say, “I saw the opportunity You gave us and I moved forward with it.

God tells us that it is the wicked who flee when none pursue but that the righteous are as bold as a lion (Proverbs 28:1). We, of all the men in this world, have been given by the God who made us a fear of Him, and a love that casts out every other fear. Our calling is to live in light of that truth, in good times and in bad, until He comes again.

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Lisa and I Talk Joshua, the Movie, God Smashes Idols and We Listen for His Voice

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Should pastors preach a congregation’s sins?

Of course. And of course not. The sermon is that part of the service where God’s Word exposes our failures, and proclaims Christ’s provision. The end is not the sin, but neither can the sin be ignored. We do not preach simply to tell the congregation, “Stop it. Try harder. This is the right way to go.” Rather we preach to tell the congregation, “Stop trying harder. Jesus already went this way.” That is, we want to face our sins, give thanks for the forgiveness of our sins, and in gratitude seek to follow the royal law of love. As such we do indeed preach sin. The notion that we hide the sins of the flock, so as not to offend, to keep them from leaving the church is pure folly. No church has enough musical skill, no pastor enough entertaining style, no coffee shop enough tasty coffee to keep the crowds coming. What we have are the words of eternal life, which begin with Repent, and end with and believe the gospel.

Even in less seeker-friendly services though we can find the same problem. Here we are willing to preach against sin, but against the sins of those who are absent. We may fuss about the bad theology, or the bad strategy of the church down the street. Or we may thunder against the sins of the world. But it is the sheep of our fold that need to know and repent from their sins.

In what sense then is it wrong to preach against the sins of the congregation? Well, we are not called when we step into the pulpit to deliver a sermon inspired by Mr. Jones’ inability to make it to church on time, or Mrs. Brown’s immodest clothing choices. Now it may well be that someone needs to talk to Mr. Jones, or Mrs. Brown, but the sermon is not the time for that. We do not take up the time we have been given to open up the text of God’s Word in order to do private discipleship in public. We do not accuse the brethren in a context in which they cannot speak to their own defense. We do not abuse our opportunity to put someone in his place. That’s not our place when in the pulpit.

How do we avoid both of these failures? The preacher should preach to his own sins. It is likely that this will include the sins of his own congregation. But thankfully they don’t exclude the preacher. When we preach against our own sins we can address where “we” go wrong, and are in need of grace and repentance, rather than a situation where I preach against where “you” go wrong.

Preaching ought to convict. Otherwise it’s just wasted time. It ought, however, to also provide the solution to our guilt, in extolling the provision in Christ. May we preachers decrease, and the One we preach, may He increase.

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Prince Caspian, Immutability & Denominations

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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The Law of Grace, and the Grace of Law

Some call them “Nice Nazis.” These are those stormtroopers, some professing Christians, some not, who can be counted to race to the aid of the accused. That is, if I say, “It is wrong to do X” the “Nice Nazi” alarm will go off, sirens will blare, until they show up on the scene and excoriate me for my failure to be nice, or, in the church, for failing to be all about grace. We’re all, especially we Christians, to refrain from judging others, damaging their self-esteem, making them feel less than welcome. So we are to refrain from mentioning their sin. If we fail, however, the grace purveyors judge us, destroy our self-esteem, make us feel unwelcome. The Law of Grace says that- “No one may ever judge another, and if they do, they will be severely judged.” The hypocrisy is laughable, but the terror and the dread that result are not. Christians, knowing we are to be humble, and forgetting we are not to be fearful, often are silenced, and the destruction of the sin not confronted escalates unabated.

Which brings us to the grace of the law. It is both tedious and necessary that we should recount how Jesus looked at the law. He said not one jot or tittle will pass away. He said that on our calling to love our Maker, and our neighbor hangs all the law and the prophets. He said if we love Him, we will keep His commandments. He said we are to disciple the nations, teaching them to obey all that He commanded. The law, in short, is clearly not something we are to discard. Neither is it merely something we are to do just because God says so. Rather, obedience to the law is how we know what love looks like. It is how we love our Maker, and how we love our neighbor.

Consider the Christian man intent on leaving his wife for another. It is not grace but hatred which does not confront him in his sin. It is love and law that says to him, “Brother, you must not do this, for you will be living in adultery and those who practice adultery will go to hell.” In turn it is not grace but hatred that simply lets him go, leaving children without a father and a wife without her husband. This kind of “grace” explodes bombs in people’s homes. Law, on the other hand, is gracious in that it protects the weak and the helpless.

The Christian life is not choosing grace over law. It is instead exhibiting grace by law. Love and obedience are one, just as love and calling for obedience are one. We will fail at love, which means we fail at grace. But in His grace He kept, and keeps, His law, the perfect law of liberty. Do not, beloved of the Lord, despise what our Lord loves. Pray for the grace to love His law.

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Harvey Watson, Hero, The Sin Stones & More…

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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New Theses, New Reformation

Thesis 22 We must preach the kingdom of God.

It may be nigh onto impossible for Martin Luther to be given too much credit. The ripples that extend from his earthly labors continue to spread across the globe. He helped the people of God recover the very Word of God, after centuries where it was distorted and shrouded by Rome. He helped us remember what that Bible tells us about how a man is made right with God, recovering a sound view of our justification. Some, however, in wanting to credit Luther for this recovery on justification, have been a bit injudicious in their language. Some have claimed that Luther “recovered” the gospel. I believe Luther was spot on on justification. I believe Rome was way off at the start of the Reformation, and sadly that they irrevocably codified that error in the Canons of Trent. But Rome never imperiled the Gospel, and Luther did not recover it.

The good news is that the good news is not the means by which we are made right with God. It is of course good news that we can have peace with God. It is great news that we have that peace not through our own efforts, but by the provision of the life and death of Christ for us, appropriated by God’s gift of faith. It is stupendous news that because of this work we will enjoy the blessing of God into eternity. But the Good News, or the Good News, according to the Bible, is that the kingdom of God has come. As both John the Baptist and Jesus went about their public ministry their message was not, “Here is the good news. We have a new way to have peace with God.” They did not say, “Here is the good news. God’s way of salvation is now going to be much more clear than it was in the Old Covenant.” They said, “The kingdom of God is at hand.”

Our preaching is not merely for the purpose of getting souls saved. It is not merely for educating the laity in the finer points of theology. It certainly isn’t for our amusement and for the amusement of those “seekers” seated next to us. We too are called to proclaim the coming of the Kingdom of God. We are called to preach the Good News. We are called to proclaim the glorious truth that the second Adam has come, that He has established His kingdom, that He is about the business of bringing all things under subjection. We preach Christ born, and Christ crucified. We preach Christ’s life and message, and Christ crucified. We preach Christ resurrected, and Christ crucified. We preach Christ ascended, and Christ crucified. We preach Christ’s continuing conquest, and Christ crucified. We preach Christ’s promised return, and Christ crucified. We preach this glorious news, that because He was lifted up on the cross, He will draw all peoples to Himself (John 12:32). We will only live in the kingdom, we will only show forth the kingdom, as our pulpits faithfully preach the kingdom, remembering that His is the power and the glory and the kingdom, forever and ever, amen.

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