Ask RC- Do you believe there are people who are incapable of repenting?

Yes. Recognizing these people, I might add, is rather easy. Most of them have two eyes, two ears, a nose and a mouth. That is to say, we are all by nature children of wrath. We begin our existence at enmity with God. We have, in ourselves, nothing good in us. As such, left to our own devices, we don’t even have the capacity to repent. God commands that we do so, but we hate Him and all that He stands for. We are rebels.

But God, who is rich in mercy, because of the great love with which He loved us, while we were yet sinners, made us alive in Christ Jesus (Ephesians 2:4-5). All things, after all, are possible with God (Matthew 19:26). He who raised Jesus from the dead is surely able to give life to spiritual corpses such as we all once were.

I have a friend who was sent to plant a church in a hostile city, in a neighborhood dominated by sexual perversion. While making the rounds, introducing himself to pastors already serving in the city one pastor warned him that so many others had sought to minister to that demographic, but, the pastor reasoned, they just weren’t reachable. My friend, though he had served in the special forces, and could well be Chuck Norris’s younger brother, broke down in tears. He explained to the pastor, “If the gospel has no power to save them, it has no power to save me.”

There are, of course, those whom God has determined that He would never give new life to. Those who have committed the unpardonable sin, blasphemy against the Holy Spirit (Matthew 12:31), will not be regenerated. Those who have trampled under foot the blood of Christ (Hebrews 10:29), will not be regenerated. Those who have committed the sin unto death (I John 5:15-16) will not be regenerated. I do not pretend to know whether this is one, two or three distinct groups. I do know this- that whose who fall under these texts do not come equipped with a signed affidavit letting us know for certain that they are guilty of this sin. As such, I don’t believe we can single out real flesh and blood people and determine- “That one is beyond redemption.”

We ought not be surprised when God gives life even to the most notorious of sinners. He saved Saul of Tarsus after all, and even managed to make him useful for the kingdom. Neither ought we be surprised when God humbles believers through the most notorious of sins. King David not only committed adultery, but committed murder to cover it up. Yet he was still a man after God’s own heart. Sin is powerful, even for those who have been reborn. Grace, however, is more powerful still. This is a true and trustworthy saying, that Jesus came into the world to save sinners, of which I am the chief (I Timothy 1:15). To diminish the power of grace is to diminish the scope of our own sin. Jesus, after all, didn’t come to save the polite, well-behave people. He came to save His own, and gave them first repentant hearts.

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Jesus Changes Everything, part deux.

And on the second day there was a second podcast. Have a listen to my interview with former career criminal, police informant and servant of Jesus, Paul Derry, and more on Jesus Changes Everything.

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Where Have You Been? Episode 1 of Jesus Changes Everything Answers That, and More

Episode 1 of the Jesus Changes Everything reboot, answering these two questions, Where have you been? And, what do you do when grievous public sin derails your public life? with one answer- Repent and believe the gospel.  I hope you’ll give a listen, and join me in praising God for His grace. And then, tell your friends.

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Pleasures At Your Right Hand

Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s Rime of the Ancient Mariner is the source of that ode to frustration, “Water, water everywhere nor any drop to drink.” Salt water is the cruelest trick, looking, sounding, even feeling like that which satisfies, when in truth it only makes us thirst all the more. But it’s worse. For if you are surrounded by salt water you have no access to fresh water. You are in a place of torment.

And so it is with all our idols. There is a reason why they look like they will satisfy. Whether it is pleasure, power, or position, these are all, like water, in their places, amazing gifts from the hand of God. He tells us that we are His beloved sons, that we are seated with Christ in the heavenly places and that at His right hand are pleasures forevermore. Of course these things are appealing. The One who made us and loves us made them for us to bless us, to demonstrate His love for us.

From the moment Adam and Eve ate the forbidden fruit, however, we have sought the pleasures of the gifts while fleeing from, distrusting, indeed hating the Giver of those gifts. And so we find ourselves all the more thirsty. The power of the satisfaction, the fulfillment of the desire isn’t found in the things themselves but in the Giver. Augustine said, “Oh Lord, our hearts are restless, until they find their rest in Thee.”

But God. He will not share His glory with another, even if that other is His own gift to us. He calls us out of our idolatry not just for His sake, for His honor but also for our good. He removes us from the ocean of churning saltwater, and leads us beside the still waters. How often, however, we do, having learned that saltwater can’t satisfy, turn around and look down our noses at God’s gifts? We think the problem is the water, and not the salt, and so refuse to drink from Him. We think pleasure is a bad thing in itself, rather than by itself. And so we reject His good gifts. We become ascetics in the midst of the feast our Father has prepared for us.

The solution is not to drink salt water. Nor is it to give up on water altogether. Rather, the solution is to drink deep of the fresh water, gratefully praising the one who leads us there, to joyfully feast upon the green pastures while giving Him glory. Gratitude is how we enjoy His gifts, while looking through them to Him, the Giver. There are pleasures at His right hand forevermore because He is our pleasure forevermore. Life giving water flows from His throne because He is the life-giver. We drink of the water of life because the Father was pleased to strike the rock that was our Lord.

Give thanks. Drink deep. Give thanks. Repeat.

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Believing God

We live in an age of spin, propaganda. We no longer weigh careful arguments and reach our conclusions judiciously. Instead we inhabit what one cultural critic called a “sensate culture.” We do not think; we feel. We do not decide; we choose. We do not deliberate; we do. Our choices are made for us by the master manipulators. They tell us, through images, through associations, but never through logic, what toothpaste we will use, what shoes we will wear, and what party we will vote for.

Consider, for a moment, our own self-image. Christians, in the west at least, tend to see themselves in terms of cultural trade-offs. We may not, we reason, be as smart as the unbelievers, but we are more nice. We may not be quite as sophisticated as the unbelieving intellectual crowd, but we are more clean. We may not read their highbrow authors, attend their ponderous films, or frequent their trendy galleries. But we read nice, clean historical romance novels, watch rapture fever movies and have paintings of nice, warm cottages hanging over our mantels.

There is some truth to this self image. After all, has not the apostle Paul told us, “For you see your calling, brethren, that not many wise according to the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble, are called. But God has chosen the foolish things of this world to put to shame the wise, and God has chosen the weak things of the world to put to shame the things that are mighty; and the base things of the world and the things which are despised God has chosen, and the things which are not to bring to nothing the things that are, that no flesh should glory in his presence” (). For those of you keeping score, that’s us- we are the foolish, the weak, the ignoble, the despised.

Fools that we are, we sometimes seek to undo this arrangement. We look across the battlefield at the seed of the serpent. We see their sophistication, their wisdom, their nobility, their strength, and we seek to imitate it. We think that in order to win the debate, we need first to win their approval, to demonstrate to those outside the promises of God that we are just as together, just as hip as they are. We take our gnawing hunger for approval and baptize it, turning it into “being all things to all men.”

We have need of two things. First, we must jettison this approach to winning the lost. We will never cool anyone into the kingdom. The more we pander to them, the more we persuade them that they are what really matters. The more we mimic them, the more they delight to see themselves in our mirror. The more we become like them, well, the more we become like them. We end up, as we seek to shine our own lights, under a bushel. We become savorless salt, good for nothing but being trodden underfoot.

Second, we need to have a better, more Biblical understanding of those with whom we are dealing. The image shows us learned mean and women, sitting in endowed chairs at prestigious universities. They have letters after their names. We pay tens of thousands of dollars a year to have our children listen to them. They appear on C-Span and PBS. They write for the New York Times Review of books, as well as writing books reviewed therein. They are graduates of elite universities, and now teach at elite universities. And God says that they are fools. The new atheists are, in the end, not appreciably different from the old ones, of whom God said, “The fool has said in his heart, ‘There is no God.'” Their image is power and glamour. The reality is that they are mouth breathing, knuckle dragging rubes. We, when we enter into the arena of truth, are not facing Goliath. We are not coming face to face with the chariots of Pharaoh. Instead we do battle with frightened and foolish little children who already know what we are seeking to prove.

As Christians called to seek first the kingdom of God, to make known the glory, the power and the beauty of the reign of Jesus Christ over all things, we must do far less than trying to fit their image of what it means to be urbane, but we must do far more than merely believing in God. Instead we are called to believe God. He is the one who says they are fools. He is the one who says that in Christ we are more than conquerors (). Our calling is to be as unmoved by their image as we are by their “arguments.” Both are mere folly.

Jesus told us to see our worries aside. Wherever we find ourselves, whether we are walking through the valley of the shadow of death, or engaged in the battle of ideas at Mars Hill, we ought have no fear. He, after all, is with us, even unto the end of the age. Our calling is not to seek grand victories. He will not, after all share His glory with another. Our calling is fundamentally simple- to seek first the kingdom of God, and His righteousness. Then, and only then, will all these things be added unto us. May God grant wisdom to His fools, that by them more fools might be brought in.

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Slacker Nation

It is a long standing standard of my top ten reads list, that potent tiny tome, The Abolition of Man by the incomparable C.S. Lewis. Here Lewis enters into a critique of postmodernism that is prescient, gracious, and devastating. Of course, exposing the soft underbelly of postmodernism is like exposing the soft underbelly of a soft underbelly. It is not a difficult task to gainsay those who say, “We don’t know from nothing.” Epistemologically, postmodernism is clear and immediate hooey. It is self-referentially absurd. If it is true, it is false.

What so tickles me about Lewis, apart from the fact that he saw this coming before most people, is that he then turns his attention to the question of telos, or purpose. Relativism not only destroys truth and goodness, but it destroys purpose. If there is no good and bad, there is no good to pursue. If there is no true and false, there is no true direction to move. If, in other words, our world is ever and always under the sun, then of necessity, all is vanity.

I wonder if it is less the numbing influence of media and more the deadly poison of relativism that has given us a generation of youth who are not only directionless, but are listless. Could it be they have no get up and go because their telos has got up and went? If nothing matters ultimately, then securing the high score on some video game is just as important as serving your country. Why should we be puzzled, to borrow Lewis’ idiom, that the geldings we have made are not fruitful?

The mirror to all this is our own blessing inside the kingdom. We have been given the truth in Jesus. We are being made to be good, to reflect the character of Jesus, And we have the most sacred of callings, to make known the glory of His reign. We have not just a reason, but the reason to get up in the morning. We of all people are the most blessed. We cry out to those who would abolish man, to behold the Man, to embrace the Man, to become more like the Man. May He bless us and them with ears to hear.

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Ask RC- How should we pray for unbelievers?

While I am hard at work at re-launching my own podcast, Jesus Changes Everything, I continue to be blessed to work with my friends at Social Church and to be a guest on their podcast. Check it out.

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Fear and Loathing in Eden

Paranoia, long before it became a psychological term, served as a fitting antonym for not just trust, peace, but love. We know this in part because the Apostle Paul, under the inspiration of the Spirit tells us in I Corinthians 13 that one of the defining qualities of love is that it “thinks no evil.” This doesn’t mean that the more love I have the less evil I will think. Rather it speaks of how love causes us to look at others, how it removes from us the temptation to think the worst of them, to believe, for instance, that they are out to get us. Love looks at the beloved and believes, hopes, trusts that the beloved desires only blessing for the lover.

Paranoia, like sin, began in the garden. Satan, in order to deceive Eve, had to persuade her not only that God was wrong, “You will not surely die” but that God was withholding blessing from her, that He was not willing to share the knowledge of good and evil. He got her to believe, despite the overflowing of blessings He had already given her and her husband, that He was selfish, that He was only looking out for Himself.

Which is why our sins not only give rise to the wrath of God, but also to His hurt. Wrath says, “How dare you defy Me when I am the maker of heaven and earth?” Hurt says, “How could you think that of Me, after I have loved you so well?” I suspect that most of us think that the burden of helping a loved one deal with paranoia is the frustration of trying to diminish their fears. We want them to be blessed with peace, but their fears get in the way. That may be a frustration, but it is not the real hardship. The real hardship is being suspected by those we love.

Sin is not sickness in the sense that it’s something that happens to us, over which we have no control. It is however, sickness in this sense- it is truly twisted and unnatural. It is bad enough that we might distrust those who love us well, who are among the most trustworthy on the planet. How much worse is it to distrust, to suspect with all the fervor of a rabid dog, the one who loves us not just well but perfectly, infinitely and unchangeably? The One who not only has love, feels love, shows love, but who is love.

He is the Great Physician. He is healing us. But how often when He draws near, to pour into us the water of life, to inject us with the balm of Gilead, do we look at Him with terror in our eyes, screaming at Him to keep His hands off us. He is not a God who will love us if we learn to obey Him. Rather He is the God whom we will obey as we learn that He loves us.

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Bible Study Facebook Live July 15, 2019 Peace

We continue our study, The Spirit of the Fruit, focusing our attention on Peace.

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What If God Were One of Us?

 

It is an old temptation, to construct images of Jesus out of celluloid. Christians have fought for it and against, and will likely do so for generations to come, until the next medium seeks to supplant the Word. We have not only debated whether such images should be made, but have argued over whether such images are true to life. Long before The Passion of the Christbecame a cultural phenomenon, one that many Christians cheered on, there was The Last Temptation of Christ. This film became a financial success, albeit a minor one, precisely because of the furor of Christians over the film. When we charged the film company with producing blasphemy, the resulting hub-bub put the film on the map. We marched, we protested, and the evening news sold tickets. Hollywood has always known that controversy is on their side.

At the time of the movie’s release, however, the studio put up an actual defense of their film. The film suggested that Jesus, at some point in His ministry, among other hardships, struggled with the sin of lust. The defense of this was rather clear, and expected. The producer, Martin Scorsese, affirmed that while he believed in the divinity of Christ, he simply wanted the film to affirm with that His humanity. He actually claimed he was honoring Jesus in making the film.

The doctrine of the incarnation, from the beginning, has suffered from the weakness of the pendulum. The great Christological creeds came to pass because one side or the other was missing the other side of the coin. That is, the trouble was never the affirmation of the deity of Christ, but the denial of the humanity. Or, from the other direction, the trouble wasn’t the affirmation of the humanity of Christ, but the denial of the deity. In our age, with the secular world all too willing to deny the Jesus could be God, sometimes we fall into the trap of denying His humanity.

Like The Last Temptation, much of the uproar over The DaVinci Codecentered not around the sundry plot twists, but the suggestion that Jesus married and had children. While the Bible teaches no such thing, as such, our reaction may have more in common with Islam than with Christianity. That is, Islam refuses to embrace the doctrine of the Trinity because they believe it beneath the dignity of God that He should have a son. And we think that Jesus marrying and having children somehow besmirches His purity. In a strange sort of irony, a novel steeped in Gnostic notions, and ancient Gnostic texts has brought to the surface the Gnostic notions that still lurk in our own hearts.

The truth of the matter is that Jesus did take a bride. Better still, Jesus and His bride have begotten children. And I might as well admit in these pages- I am one of those children. So was my father. My wife too is a part of this family. I know it’s shocking, but it’s true. But this is the good news. You are one of us too.

Well, truth be told, the shocking thing is that it is not so shocking. We have grown accustomed to His grace. We are appalled by the notion of a powerful few men and women who are descended from Jesus’ line, who strive to rule over all the world. But that is not only what we are, but what we are called to do. Jesus, the second Adam, took as His bride, the second Eve, the church. Husband and wife have, ever since, been busy being fruitful and multiplying. They are, together, in fulfillment of the dominion mandate, filling the earth and subduing it. They are bringing all things into subjection, for the glory of the Father. The conspiracy is that we didn’t even know we were part of a conspiracy. We have forgotten that our endgame is total world domination. Indeed we have been promised that we not only will judge the world, but the angels themselves.

The problem then isn’t the Christians have sullied themselves by reading Dan Brown’s silly fiction. The trouble isn’t that Christians have been tempted to believe it. The problem is that we haven’t believed God’s outrageous facts, given to us in His Word. We haven’t believed the good news, that our heavenly Father loves us so much that He allows us to be called His children, that He has seated us in the heavenly places with Christ Jesus. Our problem is that we won’t believe that God took on flesh and dwelt among us, precisely so that He could win a bride, and that He might be given a kingdom. Our problem is that we have missed that in Him we too are more than conquerors.

I never read The DaVinci Code. I don’t intend to. I wouldn’t encourage anyone to do so. Instead, what I need is the courage to read the Bible as it is written. We will seek first the kingdom of God only when we realize that His kingdom has come, that His kingdom is forever, and that we reign with Him, Kings and Queens now and forever. May our Husband be pleased to purify us such that we might believe in the prodigality of His love, and the fullness of His promises.

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