Is it wrong to have more than one needs?

Of course not. Some years ago I talked with a friend who was concerned that he was guilty of gluttony. The problem wasn’t persistent hangovers, or missing work after being up all night partying. No, he was worried because he sometimes continued to eat after he had had sufficient. That ethic, that eating after you’ve had what you need was gluttony he had learned from a former diet guru whose empire collapsed when she embraced heresy. Still, the idea persisted.

It is not wrong to eat more than you need, nor is it wrong to have more than you need. There are, of course, gluttons, people whose entire lives center around the pursuit of sensual pleasure, who move from party to party. And there are people guilty of being acquisitive, of having an insatiable desire for more stuff, and who have the debt to demonstrate it. Neither the person who had two donuts during coffee hour at church, and who could afford to lose ten pounds, nor the person whose wrist watch cost more than a month of groceries for a family of four fall into those sinful categories.

The devil delights to lay traps for us in the ditches on both sides of the road. That way he can encourage behavior in one direction while pedaling guilt in the other. The Lord has laid on us a set of obligations. This is His law. Such requires of us that we return to Him a tithe of all He has blessed us with. It requires that we be good stewards of what remains. It also requires that we set aside a tithe so that we can purchase whatever our heart desires, steak and lobster dinners, well aged single malt, a wrist watch that costs more than a month of groceries for a family of four. Think I’m crazy? Read Deuteronomy 14: 22-27. It’s in there.

Just as there are those who tend to see wealth as a sign of God’s favor, so there are those who equate poverty with godliness. Proverbs, in its proverbial way, does say that God tends to bless those who are diligent and wise in their labors, and to bless them financially. And there are those who give up financial opportunities that are perfectly legitimate, for the sake of the kingdom. Just a few weeks ago I visited with a medical doctor whose wife is a medical doctor. Those two incomes would surely make this family “wealthy” by almost any standard. But they are giving all that up, and trying to raise money to serve as medical missionaries in western Africa. Good for them I say. Just as I would say if they ditched their medical careers to make a fortune investing in gold mines.

It is true that sins usually come with opposite sins. It is true as well that non-sins might lean us in the direction of real sins. But such cannot make sins of non-sins. Having nice things is no sin, and refusing nice things is no virtue. Ingratitude is a sin. Envy is a sin. Pride in one’s financial standing, on either side of the spectrum, is a sin. Godliness with contentment, that is great gain (I Tim. 6:6).

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Giving Tuesday Held Over Indefinitely!

It has always been my prayer that God would put the gifts He’s given me to good work. I assume the same is true for you. Some pathways to fruitfulness are laid out clearly. You go to school, get certified, grab the ladder and start climbing. Other pathways are more clouded in mystery. Just how does one become a talk show host?

Dunamis Fellowship is my teaching ministry. It is my effort to put the gifts God gave me out there to serve the body. My desire is to be effective, to help believers believe more fully the fullness of the gospel. To that end, I publish every week four blog pieces. Typically Mondays I post an Ask RC, answering questions of readers. Tuesday, Thursday and Fridays I post pieces I call Kingdom Notes.

Wednesdays our weekly Jesus Changes Everything podcast goes up. Each episode includes a conversation on marriage with my precious wife, biblical insight, political commentary and from time to time, some nostalgia and humor and even an occasional guest. Monday evenings we host a Bible study online and in our home, welcoming local guests with a meal beforehand, fostering relationships. In addition to livestreaming, the study is made available at my website.

In addition to the above that is available to all, I’m continuing the challenging work of planting a church. I meet weekly with a young man for theological training. I engage in counseling young men. Each quarter I speak to a cadre of men seeking to mature as Christians and as men through the work of Warriors’ Week and my dear friend Sam Falsafi. I endeavor always to make myself available to the body.

In 2024 my prayer is not only for more opportunities but that God would be pleased to bless me with help where my strengths do not lie. The production side, the business side, the growth side, these are challenges for me. Nevertheless, we continue to press on.

Would you prayerfully consider supporting the work of Dunamis Fellowship? If we have been of some service to you in your walk, if you look forward to reading, listening, watching, attending, if you want to bless others who are blessed by our work, would you come alongside us? We have still more projects in the works for 2024, including a teaching video applying the ten commandments to the challenges we face in our work, and a book looking at the grace of scandal and the scandal of grace.

We are grateful for any and all gifts. Year-end gifts help us start the new year strong. Monthly commitments help us better plan out our year. All donations are tax deductible and enable us to continue to provide so much of what we do for free. No pay walls. No subscriptions.

Above all else, please remember that our desire is to serve. Please don’t let this gentle reminder of our needs stop you from enjoying any of the things we provide. Freely we have received and freely we delight to give. May God bless you and yours this holiday season.

PS If you are reading this at rcsprouljr.com there is a donate button on the homepage. If you are not, well, you can find a donate button on the homepage of rcsprouljr.com.

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Sacred Marriage, Ps. 64:10; Propaganda Barrage; & More

This week’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

Posted in 10 Commandments, assurance, Biblical Doctrines, ethics, Good News, Jesus Changes Everything, Lisa Sproul, Month of Sundays, persecution, politics, prayer, RC Sproul JR, Sacred Marriage | Tagged , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Sacred Marriage, Ps. 64:10; Propaganda Barrage; & More

The Gates of Hell Advancing

The feint is a rather critical part of any battle strategy. There are few occasions where a direct, unambiguous assault will work out well. We want instead to keep our enemy guessing, unsure as to whether we will be coming at this flank or that, whether we will circle around his troops, or if our dive bombers will descend from the clouds. The devil is no different. He too wants to tie up our attention, our resources, defending land he is not attacking. Long after modernism lay in the ash heap of western civilization, too many Christians were still firing sorties against it. While we were guarding against Darwin, Derrida slipped between our lines.

The same is true in the church. We who are the far right side of the evangelical spectrum have stood guard over the past several decades, watching out for weaknesses in our theological defenses. We have rightly strengthened our bulwarks on the inerrancy of Scripture. We have wisely strung razor wire around the pure message of justification by faith alone. We have done our apologetical spadework on both the past resurrection of Jesus and the future return of Jesus. These are all good things, even necessary things. Despite these defensive maneuvers, however, the gates of hell have marched right into our sanctuaries, and raised up its banners in our holy places. We have not guarded that place where we are always the most vulnerable, our character, our integrity, our holiness.

Were we honest we would recognize that in our day at least, churches have been torn asunder less by sloppy theological thinking and more by sinful hearts. Church splits are rarely over an honest disagreement over a discreet biblical (or unbiblical) doctrine. Neither, despite the cliché, are they over the color of the carpet. Instead church splits happen because trust is lost, because suspicions thrive, because factions multiply. Churches are torn asunder more by roots of bitterness than they are by heresies. And it all starts with unguarded tongues. These are the flaming arrows that the seed of the serpent fires into our midst, turning the beauty of the body into ashes. While we were pulling sentry duty against Socinianism, while our floodlights searched the skies for German liberalism, whispers infiltrated the camp and we were undone.

Gossip is real. And gossip is precisely as destructive as the Bible says it is. It begins with an unguarded word, the raising of a simple question, “Do you think the elders are being sufficiently attentive to x?” What follows is open-ended speculation, “I wonder why the elders haven’t sufficiently looked into x?” The next step is a more tentative accusation, “Could it be that they aren’t paying enough attention to x because they are split on the issue?” Then we choose sides even where there are no sides. “I’m sure Elder Jones has brought this to their attention. After all, when I mentioned x to him he paid attention to me, and promised to bring it up at the next session meeting.” Eventually, either Elder Jones adds fuel to the fire by joining up with Mrs. Grundy and her complaint, or he too gets tied to the same stake, for having allowed himself to be won over by the wicked faction on the session. It doesn’t much matter what x is. It doesn’t much matter which side we are on. The hunt is afoot, and we are swept away in all the pathos. Our hunger for drama, our need to be in the know, our insatiable appetite to be engaged in the great battle will not be sated until the entire church has burned to the ground. Then we sadly move on to the next church, and start it all over again. We walk on to the next battle convinced that we have boldly defended the faith, no matter the cost.

It is not a hard thing to cast yourself as the hero. It is not a challenge to stand firm on your convictions. It is not a hard thing to pick up the prophetic mantle and expose those we think have lost their way. What is hard is keeping on the path. What is difficult is cultivating the fruit of the Spirit, like love, and patience. What stretches our faith is the practice of humility. We all want to be Luther, when God has instead called us to be quiet.

Jesus promised the disciples that the gates of hell would not prevail against His church. This, of course, is because Jesus builds His church upon the rock. That rock, contra Rome, isn’t Peter, but is instead the profession of Peter, that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of the living God. As we plant ourselves on that truth, then we can fight back. First, we remember that Jesus is the Messiah. He is the one who came to save us from our sins. When our focus is what Jesus has done with our sins, it is difficult to focus on the sins, real or imagined, of others. I’m not the Christ. I wasn’t put on the planet to save anyone. I’m the one that needs to be saved.

Second, we remember that He is the Son of the living God. He is almighty, all powerful. He sees all things and knows all things. If our elders are plotting evil, He is able to stop it. We are to look to Him, rather than to take these things upon ourselves. Our calling is to pray, and to pray in all confidence. We pray that the church would be pure, knowing that Jesus has promised to purify His church. Our calling is to rest in Him, to be still and know that He is God.

This too we must do when, despite our best efforts to stay outside the fray, our local church implodes. It is a tragedy when this happens. But the church moves on, carried forward by the prayers of its people, and by the power of its Lord.

Posted in 10 Commandments, Big Eva, church, communion, Devil's Arsenal, ethics, grace, kingdom, Kingdom Notes, RC Sproul JR, resurrection, scandal, wisdom | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Bible Study Tonight, Entering Romans 9.

Tonight we continue our look at the monumental, towering book of Romans. All are welcome to our home at 7 est, or you may join us for dinner at 6:15. We will also stream the study at Facebook, RC-Lisa Sproul. We hope you’ll join us.

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What does it mean to “preach the gospel to yourself?”

One of the weaknesses of the evangelical church in our day is that we tend to look at our salvation as a process, like we’re moving down an assembly line. There are good reasons for this perspective, not the least of which is the great chain of salvation in Romans 8. There is an order to it all. The trouble comes, however, when we think that once we have gone through one step we can leave behind all it entails. The gospel, for instance, and the faith that grabbed hold of it saved us the moment we believed. Yea and amen. It was, whether we remember it or not, a point in time, a once for all moving from death to life.

In our new life, however, we neither lose our need to hear the gospel, nor our need to believe it. Hearing and believing the gospel are not once for all things. Now don’t misunderstand. I’m not suggesting that once we believe we can ever stop believing. Of course not. I am suggesting, however, that the very essence of our walk, of growing in grace is believing more fully what we already believe. Which is why we preach the gospel to ourselves.

Have you ever been discouraged by your sin? You need to believe the gospel. Have you ever been discouraged by the sins of other believers against you? You need to believe the gospel. Have you ever been discouraged by seeing the wicked prosper? You need to believe the gospel. So preach it.

We preach the gospel to ourselves when we simply remember its promises. We remember that we are indeed, in ourselves sinners, justly deserving His displeasure. But we remember that we are not in ourselves, but in Jesus. Our sins are covered in His blood. His righteousness has become our own. We have peace with the living God. He has adopted us into His family. He has promised that we will see Him as He is, and we will be like Him. His steadfast love for us endures forever, each of us, by name. And, the day is coming when every knee will bow and every tongue confess that Jesus is Lord. He will bring all things into subjection, when He will deliver the kingdom to the Father (I Cor. 15).

We can simply rehearse these truths in the quiet of our minds. We can recite the passages of Scripture that teach them. We can sing songs that celebrate them, read writings that herald them. We can talk with friends who know them and pray to the One who knows us. Gospel simply means “good news” and for we who are in Christ, it is all good news.

Joy is the steady conviction that God is able, and that God is for us. The gospel is the ground of that joy. Hear it; heed it; speak it. Repeat.

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Secure Investments

The Sermon on the Mount is tough to swallow all at once. Though what we have recorded for us in Matthew 5–7 is significantly shorter than the sermons most of us are used to, it is on the other hand rather more rich than what we are used to. It is chock full of what could be discreet, independent units worthy of a lifetime of study—the Beatitudes, the Lord’s Prayer, the exposition of the law of God, our calling to be salt and light. Or we could explore what it means to seek first the kingdom of God. We find there not just the call to seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, but we see what distracts us from this call—our fears, our worries.

Take one step back from “seek ye first” and you find “do not be anxious about your life, what you will eat or what you will drink, nor about your body, what you will put on” (6:25). Take another step back, though, and we find why we need to be told this over and over: “For where your treasure is there your heart will be also” (v. 21).

I’m afraid that we tend to think we can learn what our heart values most by looking at what makes us most happy. Or, I fear that we are happy to delude ourselves about what matters most to us. The truth of the matter is that we learn what our heart most values by learning what we fear. Our treasure is what we fear losing, and I fear that we fear losing our treasure. We are lovers of money.

Fifteen years ago, in a matter of days, the stock market took its deepest hit since 1928. “Too big to fail” banks were rescued, merged. “Too big to fail” industries were propped up by “stimulus.” And many of us lost far too much sleep. The headlines are now filled with new stories of government run amok, but we still remember from time to time our economic bad news–trillion-dollar deficits, upside-down houses, abiding unemployment. We still fret.

No one likes bad economic news. There is more than enough sin and foolishness in Washington to derail the engine of prosperity. Bad economic news, however, is not all the news printed that should cause us fits. How many of us, I wonder, spend as much time and energy worrying about the destruction of the unborn as we do the destruction of the economy?

Those babies who survive their mothers’ wombs— do we worry more about their souls or our finances? Studies by George Barna and USA Today suggest that 75 percent of all Christian children leave the church after high school. Is this, however, what we talk about around the water-cooler? When we get in the car and turn on the radio, are we listening to talk radio that talks about eternal souls, or talk radio that talks about Federal Reserve Notes, dollars and cents? Are we more concerned with paper dollars shrinking into nothingness before our very eyes, or for the souls that will last forever in torment?

Were I to poll the evangelical church and ask this question, “Which is more important, the eternal state of the souls of your children, or your financial position?” chances are we’d have a radically lopsided poll. If, however, I were to construct a worry meter, and attach it to the hearts of those evangelicals, what would it show us? Our treasure is where our fear is.

Which is why, of course, Jesus directs us to love, to cherish, to treasure that which can never be taken away. When we seek the kingdom of God and His righteousness, we are not merely pursuing the more valuable as opposed to the less valuable. Rather, we are also pursuing what we cannot lose, as opposed to what we cannot hope to keep. When we seek to raise our children in the nurture and admonition of the Lord, when we teach them the way they should go when they are young so that they will not turn from it when they are old (Prov. 22:6), we are not just investing in eternity, but we are investing in that which cannot be lost. When we plant the seed of the Word, we know it will not— because it cannot— return to Him void.

There is a simple and wise trick to get us over our worries. We need only to ask ourselves, “In a thousand years, will this really matter?” With respect to our children, the answer is always “Yes. For thousands of thousands of thousands of years it will matter.” Invest in eternity. Invest in your children.

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Give Thanks

The best wisdom I can offer today is to get off the internet and give thanks. God bless you all.

Posted in 10 Commandments, Biblical Doctrines, church, communion, grace, kingdom, Kingdom Notes, prayer, RC Sproul JR, special edition, wisdom, worship | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Give Thanks

If God is For Us- Romans Study

Posted in assurance, beauty, Bible Study, Biblical Doctrines, church, communion, Doctrines of Grace, grace, RC Sproul JR, sovereignty, theology | Tagged , , , , , , , | Comments Off on If God is For Us- Romans Study

Sacred Marriage; Seismic Shift? That 70s Food

This week’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

Posted in church, covid-19, ethics, grace, Jesus Changes Everything, Lisa Sproul, Month of Sundays, Nostalgia, politics, psalms, RC Sproul JR, Sacred Marriage, That 70s Kid, wonder, worship | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Sacred Marriage; Seismic Shift? That 70s Food