Ask RC- How do we best fight against arrogance?

On the one hand I’m the perfect person to ask this question. Because I struggle deeply against this sin. On the other hand I’m the worst person to ask this question because I so often lose the struggle. Not because it’s hard to be humble when you’re as wonderful as me, but because it’s hard to do right when you are as sinful as me. Nevertheless, I will share some of my strategies. Perhaps they might work better for you, or perhaps you will see some holes in my strategy, and be able to help me out.

First, cultivate an ever growing consciousness of both the bigness of God’s being and His grace. One of the greatest moments in the cavalcade of great moments that is The Chronicles of Narnia is when Lucy, after some time away from Narnia and Aslan comments at their reunion that Aslan has grown. Aslan gently corrects her. He hasn’t grown at all, but she has. That is, her capacity to take in his glory increased. Which is a great way to help us keep in mind how very small we are. If it helps for no other reason, remembering God’s sovereignty should remind us that even if we had something of which to boast, we only have it because He gave it to us. He, and not I, is the source of every good gift.

In cultivating a bigger, and therefore more accurate grasp of the scope of His grace I am both more grateful and more confident. I’m more grateful for the forgiveness I have been given, and more confident that it covers all that is wrong in me. I don’t need to be afraid to acknowledge my weaknesses and failures when I know they are utterly powerless to remove me from His love and from His family.

Second, cultivate an ever growing consciousness of the smallness of me and the bigness of my need for His grace. We are not called to lives of misery and sorrow because of our sins. We are not to carry forward with us that which has been nailed to the cross. We are, however, called to lives of repentance, of genuine sorrow for our sin, and for the effects our sin has on others. We are called to mourn. We enter into that mourning, while escaping a life of misery and sorrow because of His promise, that those who mourn will be comforted. There will never be a time where I need grace and will not find it. There will never come a time, not seventy times seven, but seventy times seven to the seventy times seventh power, when He will not forgive. JESUS PAID IT ALL.

Third, remember that everyone else is just like you. That we see ourselves as better than others is a sure sign that we are not, that we do not judge rightly, that there is still a log in our eye. The same grace I need is the grace they need. Not less, not more, but in the same measure. My filthy rags are no less filthy than theirs.

Finally, let us pray for one another. Let us ask the Captain of the Lord’s Hosts to ride forth and slay this persistent and deadly dragon.

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Lisa Joins Me for Life in the Blender and I Introduce a New Segment- The Feast, on the Lord’s Supper

Today’s JCE Podcast

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The World and All

The Sadducees and Pharisees were no dummies. They just weren’t as smart as their enemy. As we read through the gospel accounts it seems their strategy was simple- they would put an end to Jesus by forcing him to destroy Himself. They would silence Him by making Him put His own foot in His own mouth. They posed trick questions – should we pay taxes to Caesar- who would be the husband of a woman who went through six levirate husbands after her first husband. In the first instance they wanted Jesus to run afoul of the Romans, in the second of His own people. In both instances Jesus escaped the trap. He who is the Word, who spoke the world into existence, is never at a loss.

It may well be that the most challenging question Jesus received, however, came neither from the Sadducees nor the Pharisees but from Pontius Pilate. Having been delivered over to be put to death, Jesus is asked “Are you the king of the Jews?” That’s a dilemma. Answer “no” and Jesus would both be disappointing His followers, and more importantly, lying. Answer “yes” and He is sure to be put to death for sedition. Given this dilemma it is all too easy for us to misunderstand Jesus’ answer. We are tempted to think that when Jesus said, “My kingdom is not of this world” that He was trying to walk a razor’s edge, to say to His followers, “yes” but to say to Pilate, “But you have nothing to worry about from my kingdom. You see Pilate, when we say “kingdom” we mean something so intangible, so hidden away in our hearts, that you really have nothing to worry about. My “kingdom” as we like to call it, has no bearing on you, on Rome, on civil government. I’m the king of an invisible, spiritual kingdom only.”

It is true enough that Jesus distinguished His kingdom from the kingdoms of this world. The difference, however, was not dimensional, or geographic. Rather the difference was in terms of our weaponry. What sets apart the kingdom of God is that the soldiers of the king do not fight with swords and spears. The weapons of our warfare are not carnal. They are, however, mighty to tear down strongholds, and every lofty thing that exalts itself against the knowledge of God.

When we forget the glorious truth that Jesus’ kingdom is everywhere, that all authority in heaven and on earth has been given unto Him we end up dividing His realm. We think real kingdom is where the church is, where it is doing church-y things. When we are praying, when we are giving and receiving the sacraments, when we are preaching or hearing sermons, there we have entered into His Kingdom. When, however, we are making widgets, buying groceries, coaching Little League, then we have left the safety of the kingdom and have ventured into the world.

The truth is, of course, that His reign is universal. We do not move into and out of His kingdom so much as either recognize or fail to recognize it, either manifest or fail to manifest it. When we leave the church, and enter into that which is para, or around the church, we are not crossing some kind of border, entering into Pilate’s realm. Because we are still within the kingdom of our Lord, we are still to be about our Lord’s business. We are to do all that we do as unto Him.

The plumber then, if he serves our Lord, is a parachurch worker. He is most assuredly in ministry. And make no mistake about it, there is a Christian way to do plumbing. The Christian way to do plumbing, however, isn’t to drag it into the church, to sanctify the work by etching Bible verses on the pipes, or by passively praying away the nagging drip, drip, drip of the bathroom faucet. Rather it is to serve your neighbor by exercising dominion over the flow of water through the house. Rather it is to rule over every drop that eventually flows into the sea. It is to be diligent, honest, even cheerful. It is to do the work such that it proves not to be wood, hay and stubble, but will last even to forever. It is to plumb remembering that right now counts forever.

Jesus calls us to seek first His kingdom and His righteousness. He tells us not to worry about what we will eat or what we will wear, not because such concerns are unseemly, worldly, tainted. Rather we have no reason to fear because all these things are under the power and authority of our kingdom’s Sovereign. His kingdom is not of this world. It is this world. And every world. And the world to come, from everlasting to everlasting. There is no place where He does not reign. Let us then be of good cheer and be about the Master’s business. Let us till the King’s fields, and tend His cattle on His thousand hills. And whatever we eat, whatever we drink, let us do so to the glory of the Master of the Feast. This is our Brother’s world.

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To See the Kingdom

“Unless a man is born of water and the Spirit he cannot see the kingdom of God.” Jesus spoke this to Nicodemus in John 3. It is, like every text, an important one. Jesus gives us a prerequisite, a sine qua non, a that without which for seeing the kingdom. As such it is quite reasonable that we would seek out an understanding of what this prerequisite is. I’m all in favor of thinking through with biblical care what it means to be born again. Many in the evangelical church make a foundational error here, looking at the rebirth as something we do, rather than something done to us. And the rest of us are quick to try to correct them on that.

What both sides tend to miss, however, is not the thing necessary, but the thing promised. We stop, stroke our beards, get out our lexical tools over “being born again” and skip lightly over “to see the Kingdom.” If we have been born again, if we have been moved from death to life, from darkness to light, we are able to see the kingdom. Which is nothing to yawn at.

What does it mean to see the kingdom? Well, first, and here I think we do just fine, it means being in it. I can see the kingdom of my office because I am in my office as I type. We have to be born again in order to be in, to be a part of the kingdom. True, vital and glorious indeed. Being in the kingdom, however, isn’t all there is to seeing it. We see it when the power of the King is made manifest. We who have been born again are blessed to see the hand of God at work, to see the wind that is the Spirit blow where He wills.

Better still, we are able to see the kingdom in our fellow citizens. The fellowship among the servants of the king, a fellowship that crosses over lines of socio-economic status, nationality, denomination is not just the blessing of the sense of unity, but the blessing of seeing God at work. When we give food to the least of these we not only see Jesus in the least, but we see Jesus in ourselves. We are Jesus, feeding Jesus. We are the kingdom at work.

I don’t know whether our low view of the church has birthed a low view of the kingdom, or a low view of the kingdom has birthed a low view of the church. I do know that both are far more vital than we tend to think. The kingdom isn’t just a waiting room for heaven. The church is not just a social club for those who have a ticket. Both are God at work, manifesting His glory, showing forth His reign, bringing in the elect from the four corners, setting the prisoner free, giving sight to the blind. Would that we would have eyes to see the Kingdom, that we might better glorify the King.

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Lisa and I review The Aeronaughts, M is for Man and Addicted to Mediocrity

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything

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Ask RC- How can I know if I’m saved? 5 Key Principles

There is no greater personal issue than our relationship with the living God. There are no greater stakes imaginable than the difference between eternal torment and eternal bliss. As such it is no wonder that so many struggle with issues of assurance of salvation. I cannot, of course cover the gamut of the issues in a brief piece, but can give some basic principles that I pray will help.

1. No one is allowed, save the Lamb, to look into the Book of Life, but there is no need to. Too often, especially in Reformed circles, the concern is expressed this way, “How can I know if I’m elect?” As a Reformed theologian let me clearly affirm that all the elect will be saved, and only the elect will be saved. But I will still ask, “Why would you want to know that?” We don’t believe in justification by election. If you stand before the judgment throne and God asks, “Why should I welcome you into My kingdom?” and you reply, “Because my name is in Your book” your name quite likely isn’t in His book. The issue isn’t the secret things of God, but what He has revealed. Jesus saves you.
2. Your obedience is not the bedrock of your assurance. Given the remains of sin within us it can be profoundly difficult to give a clear measure of our own spiritual growth. In fact I have been known to argue that the better we get the worse we seem to ourselves. That is, as we grow in grace we grow in our capacity to see our own sin more deeply. Which the devil delights to use to discourage us. It is Christ’s obedience that secures for us our eternity. Jesus saves you.
3. Your obedience is a part of your assurance. Be careful, especially when trying to help others, not to simply assume that all those struggling with assurance need to be assured. If you are living a lifestyle of unrepentant gross and heinous sin, you would do well to doubt your assurance. The center of the obedience I would call you to look for, however, would be here- believers are those who repent and believe. Jesus saves you.
4. Repenting is neither more nor less than crying out to God in Christ, “Lord be merciful to me, a sinner.” Believing is rejoicing in the faithfulness of His promise, that as we so repent, we go home justified. It is not the depth and power of your repentance that earns God’s favor. None of us repent as deeply as we ought, and so must ever repent for the weakness of our repentance. But Jesus came to save sinners. Jesus saves you.
5. If you fear you have committed the unpardonable sin, you almost certainly haven’t. Those who blaspheme the Holy Spirit do not have the Spirit in them to convict them for blaspheming the Spirit. If you find yourself obsessing over this question, it is almost certain that you obsess over other things and may be suffering from Obsessive Compulsive Disorder. If so, when you struggle with this fear, remind yourself a. that the fear is a good sign and b. Jesus died for sinners, including those struggling with OCD. Jesus saves you.
Bonus point- Remember also that you are not called to answer this question alone. The elders of your church are called to judge the credibility of the professions of those under their care. They, of course, can and do err. But if they are concerned for your soul, you ought to be as well. If they are delighted to receive you as a brother, be a brother and receive them back with joy. Jesus saves you.

Bonus Bonus Point- One great theologian ministers to those suffering a lack of assurance by asking these questions- Do you love the Lord with all your heart, mind soul and strength? And when they answer, “no” he asks, “Do you love the Lord as you ought?” And when they answer, “no” he asks, “Do you love Him at all?” He’s a wise man. Jesus saves you.

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Simul Justus et Peccator, All God’s Children and Blue Suede Shoes and I Know a Little Greek (Philosophy)

Today’s JCE Podcast

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Beating Mr. Bulver, or Suspecting the Man in the Mirror

That Bulverism is a fallacy (wherein one discredits the conclusions of another on the grounds that said conclusions benefit the concluder) does not mean that it is not also a temptation. Suppose, for instance, I were to make the argument that Roberto Clemente was the greatest all around baseball player in history. You would be committing the Bulverism fallacy if you thought you have proven that Willie Mays is actually the best all round player ever by saying to me, “You just think Roberto is best because you are from Pittsburgh.” The issue isn’t where I was born, or my motives for believing something. The issue is baseball ability. That said, the truth is that I am tempted to skew my assessment of those skills because of loyalty to the city of my birth.

We all suffer the same kinds of temptation. Sometimes it goes by the more scholarly term confirmation bias. You and I, coming from two different perspectives, look at the same evidence (or worse, mere affirmation) and quickly reach differing conclusions based on our differing perspectives. When there is an internet dust-up between congregants and a pastor my default position is to defend the pastor, because I have been a pastor. Those, on the other hand, who have ever been mistreated by a pastor tend to be quick to convict. (So also are pastors who are jealous of the accused pastor quick to convict.) We, because we like ourselves, are given to seeing ourselves as careful, dispassionate and thoughtful. If we better knew ourselves we’d confess to being sloppy, self-interested and thoughtless.

My first suggestion is simply that we slow down. It is much harder to change direction than it is to start in one direction. When we let our own interests start us in one direction it is nigh onto unlikely that the facts will change our minds. The immediacy of the internet, and the shrill cries on both sides of any given issue seem to demand we choose sides quickly. Wisdom, however, calls us to take our time (Proverbs 18:17).

Second, we need to start with a dispassionate assessment of ourselves. We can find such, happily in the Bible. It tells us that our hearts are deceitful above all else (Jeremiah 17:9). This text tells us more than simply that the guy we suspect must be guilty. It tells us that we who are doing the suspecting are guilty. You can’t adopt a skeptical pose toward “people” without being skeptical of yourself. Call it Zeno’s Paradoxical Uncertainty Principle if you like.

Last, all our lost socks are now appearing in that echo chamber that we call Sock Puppet Theater, or, our own peculiar corner of cyberspace. Because we like to have our biased ideas confirmed, we tend to hang out with like-minded people. We may call our favorite sites froo-froo names like The Center for Discernment International, or The National Center for Debunking the Center for Discernment International, but all they really are is meandmine.com versus youandyours.com.

There is a time and a place for strong language. And there is a time and place for caution. We often confuse the two when we are in high dudgeon. Which then puts us in the deep weeds. May God help me to be quick to hear, slow to speak, and slow to become angry.

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Adam Smith’s Invisible Hand, Francis Schaeffer’s Christian Manifesto and More…


Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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New Theses, New Reformation

Thesis 8- We must be a city shining on a hill.

“And this is the judgment: the light has come into the world, and the people loved the darkness rather than the light because their deeds were evil” (John 3:19). We serve a God of contrasts. He is all light. In Him there is no shadow of turning. But from the beginning and unto the end, God delights to separate, to distinguish. In the creation He separated light from darkness, land from sea. And in the recreation He separates His people, calling them out of the darkness into the light. In accord with His promise in Genesis 3, He drafts the soldiers of His army from the army of His enemy, “I will put enmity between you and the woman and between your offspring and her offspring.” Meanwhile, we, fools that we are, seek to bring together what God has torn asunder.

Jesus, in the Sermon on the Mount, reminds us of our calling. He tells us that we are the salt of the earth, that we are the light of the world. Outside the kingdom we find putrescence and darkness. Inside the kingdom we are salt and light. In our zeal to bring those outside inside, however, we have lost sight of this truth. We think that the blind will be made to see if we can simply be more like them. Our minds are so darkened that we think that the darker we are, the more we will shine. The evangelical church has called us to dress like the world, only, we hope, with a little more cloth. We are called to talk like the world, only we hope, with a little less, ironically, “saltiness.” We are called to watch their television programs, only not the ones on late at night on pay TV. We are called to listen to their music, only with nice clean words substituted by our friends in Nashville. We think we are baptizing the world when I’m afraid we are instead taking a bath in worldliness.

It is time for the church to be the church. Jesus says we are a city on a hill. We do not live in the valley of darkness. We are set apart, not merely for our own spiritual safety, but for the sake of the lost. We will win them only when we are not like them. Long before the Sermon on the Mount, God established a city on a hill. He instructed the children of Israel to wipe clean the land of Canaan. He gave them His Word. And He promised them that if they would stop behaving like their neighbors, if they would abide in His Word, then all the nations of the world would be blessed, that the lost would be banging down their doors, to find out their secret.

A life well lived may or may not be the best revenge. It is, however, most assuredly, the best way to proclaim the good news. May God give us the grace to live lives of such beauty, of such joy, of such light, that even the blind might be made to see.

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