Compromising Positions

It is surely possible for different people to share the same goals, but to employ different strategies. What I am increasingly seeing, however, is how easy it is for strategies and goals to meld together. We all want, I trust, to grow in grace and wisdom, to bear the fruit of the Spirit. We can all agree also, I trust, that careful study of theology can be used as a means to that end, a strategy if you will. What if, however, the strategy and the goal get so entwined that we end up measuring our spiritual maturity not by the standard of godliness, but by the standard of our libraries?

I first noticed this shift in the pro-life movement. Everyone, presumably, wants the babies to be protected. Along the way some have adopted what might be called an incrementalist strategy- we work on stopping the most heinous abortions, and eventually move on to the “exceptions.” For a time that meant pro-lifers were encouraged to support both legislation and candidates that allowed for these exceptions. What totally flummoxed me, however, was in 2000, when the National Right to Life Committee not only encouraged us to vote for George W. Bush, but bestowed on him the title “Pro-Life.” This for a man who expressly, straightforwardly affirmed his conviction that the federal government ought to protect the “right” of doctors and mothers to murder babies conceived in the process of rape or incest. This is the “pro-life” candidate that evangelicals and pro-lifers voted for in droves.

More recently we have seen whole swaths of the “pro-life” movement embracing and laboring for informed consent laws, waiting periods, and clinic regulations- all bits of legislation that conclude, after every hurdle has been jumped- “and then you can kill the baby.” After forty years of this “strategy” we have sunk to crafting, lobbying for and electing officials in support of legislation on how, when and where babies can be murdered. We have confused our strategy and our goal. This, even after Roe is no more.

All of which tells us how important goals are, and how dangerous strategies can be. My goal with respect to me is that I would become a more godly man, that I would more faithfully obey the law and more joyfully embrace the grace of God. On the life issue the goal isn’t to limit the availability of abortions, nor reduce the number of circumstances in which they might take place. The goal isn’t even that the sanctity of life would be more widely recognized, nor that more babies would be saved. The goal is that God would be honored, in the faithfulness of His people, and in the protecting of His image bearers. Life is not sacred. God is sacred.

We need to learn what Joshua learned outside the walls of Jericho- we don’t seek to enlist God on our side. Instead we seek to serve Him, the Captain of the Lord’s Hosts. Our calling is to fidelity. He will bring the victory. May we go forth into this battle, as with every battle, not following our strategies, but following the Ark of the Covenant- His law, His grace, His presence. And the walls will come tumbling down.

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Should Christians celebrate Independence Day?

Though it is an important question I’m not here seeking to answer whether the American Revolution was justified, or if it fell afoul of the command in Romans 13 that we submit to governing authorities. Rather I’m asking a couple more subtle questions. First, if patriotism ever proper for a believer and second, is it proper in our nation that is so radically in rebellion against the living God.

As is so often the case, how we define our terms ultimately answers our question. Can a Christian, while recognizing an overarching loyalty to the kingdom of God, acknowledge God’s grace in blessing his place of origin? Of course. Who would ever say otherwise? Can a Christian proclaim absolute fealty to a fallen nation? Of course not. The answer is somewhere in the middle. I feel a sense of loyalty to my country, and a gratitude for God having placed me here. I also feel a sense of loyalty to the homes of my ancestors, Ireland and Scotland and gratitude to God for the grace He has shown those nations over the centuries. None of which, however, is worthy to be compared to my loyalty to and gratitude for being brought into Christ’s kingdom by His blood shed for me. My people are the citizens of His kingdom.

Should we, however, be grateful to be American when America, as a nation, has turned its back on God’s good gifts of liberty and on God Himself? Again, defining our terms answers our question. Can a Christian, while acknowledging that our nation has never been close to perfect, was built by generations of faithful Christians seeking to live out their faith, and so give thanks? Can a Christian acknowledge that, however weakly we may have lived up to our ideals, ours is a nation founded on godly ideals of liberty? Of course we can. Can a Christian, however, hoot and holler about how wonderful our nation is when abortion remains legal in every state, perverts parade in our streets, when we are the world’s leading producer and consumer of pornography? Of course not. Pretending that this nation is what it once was is sheer folly and a failure to honor the Lord.

Christians are called, at all times, to repent for our failures, both individual and corporate, and to give thanks for His grace, both individual and corporate. As citizens of these United States, looking back over our history, we have more to be thankful for than any other nation. Looking over our current cultural landscape, however, we may well have more to repent for than any other nation. I suggest we, on Independence Day, acknowledge our dependence on His grace, that we give thanks and repent with equal vigor. I suggest we no longer rebel against Him who reigns and instead seek His blessing. I suggest that as we sing Stars and Stripes forever that we rest in His scars and stripes forever. God bless the USA.

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Broken Churches


Broken homes are created by broken people. Before we can offer the balm of Gilead to those living in broken homes, we need to be perfectly clear how they got that way. For all the pressures assaulting the family, for all the allure of the world, and for all the temptations of the Devil, it is the flesh, our own sin natures, that destroy our homes. We are so self-deluded, however, that we have lost sight of how self-destructive we are. We think we are but victims, when the hard truth is that we are villains.

Our homes are in shambles because our lives are in shambles. We don’t, of course, do this on purpose. No one gleefully plans to destroy his own home. No man, when he begins to allow his eye to wander, determines that he wants to destroy not only his own life but the lives of his wife and children as well. No one self-consciously drops a bomb on his own house when he starts looking at the pictures on the internet. What we do instead is determine that God is a liar.

He tells us, after all, not only what we are supposed to do and supposed not to do; He also tells us the fruits of our actions. He tells us that as we love our wives and children, we will rejoice with them at the table, our children arrayed like olive plants (Ps. 128). He also tells us that the unfaithful man hates himself, that our sins will find us out, and that when we sow the wind, we will assuredly reap the whirlwind. God tells us, shows us the very pathway toward blessing and joy, and we proudly blaze our own trails. Then, we wonder how we came to be broken and bloodied after falling off a cliff.

Our homes, however, can only begin to heal of their brokenness as we come to accept and understand our own brokenness. When we face up to the reality of our sin, when we confess the kind of people we are, God in His goodness draws near. He does, after all, give grace to the humble. That grace will not likely come in the form of the eradication of all our temptations. It may come, however, in helping us to see them for what they are — invitations to death.

They might also take a whole different form. When we recognize our own brokenness, we in turn know that we can’t trust ourselves. When left to ourselves we will choose for ourselves, and, in so doing, choose foolishly. This is why God has ordained the church to call us to faithfulness. Through the right preaching of the Word, we are reminded of His wisdom. Through the right exercise of the sacraments, we not only remember our brokenness but His faithfulness. We not only look back to our Husband dying for us at Calvary, His body broken and His blood spilled, but we look forward to the marriage feast of the Lamb. We enter into eternity and taste that He is good.

Church discipline, however, is another grace from God’s hand that helps us not to break our own homes. The elders of the church are called to speak into our broken homes, to call unfaithful husbands to repentance, to admonish straying wives to return home. They are to remind the whole congregation that those who practice these things will by no means inherit the kingdom of God (Gal. 5). They are to exercise the power of the keys.

Sadly, too often churches fail families here. They cover wounds lightly and leave the broken broken because they will not discipline where they must. They fear men, whether in the form of a loss of reputation or of civil repercussions. Too often, those called to shepherd the flock prove to be mere hirelings who look away when wolves break up and destroy homes. Being “nice” is so much easier than being first responders when homes become broken. It’s safer to run away from the problem than to run to it.

Our calling, however, is to set aside our worries and to seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness. He is the true Shepherd. He guards the door to the kingdom. And we are called to fulfill His orders, no matter the cost. Little girls are looking to us, men, to rescue them from unfaithful daddies. Little boys are learning that men run when times get tough, first by watching their unfaithful daddies, then by watching their unfaithful elders. Husbands are left with no one and no way to correct wayward wives. And wives have no men to look after them. All because the church is broken. Repent, and seek His kingdom, His righteousness.

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Expunged

I received a notice in the mail that, despite being from our local government, was most welcome. The local court let me know that my previous conviction of felony OWI has been expunged. As far as the state of Indiana is concerned, my grievous sin never happened. It was cause to celebrate and so we did. This change, however positive, doesn’t make a huge difference in my day-to-day life. When I apply for a job I click a different box than I used to. I do not have a felony conviction that has not been expunged. That said, any potential employer with the sense to do a simple google search will find plenty of webpages announcing my guilt, some even celebrating it.

There are myriad ways to remember someone’s sin. My critics, taking a cue from that accuser, Old Nick, delight to rub my face in it. Their bitterness is its own reward. Many of my friends take a different tack, looking at me with what might graciously be called pity. They take no pleasure in my sin, but look at it as if it was the end of my life, and usefulness for the kingdom. When our paths cross they look away, like I’m the Elephant Man.

Then there are those who genuinely care for me, who walked with me through this valley. They didn’t excuse my sin but nevertheless felt no shame to be with me. This group I call friends. It was a wise man who first said, “Your friends are not those who stand with you on the mountaintop but those who stoop with you in the deepest valleys.” No mere human, not a single soul, exhibited this spirit more fully, more tenderly and beautifully, than my beloved wife Lisa.

How I look back on it is another matter. It remains an occasion for shame to me, a scarlet letter. It is a constant reminder that even those who have been redeemed, like Gomer, are not immune from grievous sin. I too am tempted to look back on that night as the end of my usefulness for the kingdom. I also remember it, however, as a time when God poured out His grace on me.

First, He spared my life, the life of our boys and the lives of others on the road. Given the scope of my sin, this is no small grace. Second, He ripped from my hands several idols that were harming me and my relationship with Him. Third, He welcomed me to a whole other level of authenticity, as my façade came crashing down along with my platform. Fourth, He showed me who my friends are. My father, a walking testimony to our heavenly Father’s hesed, or “loyal love” used to encourage me with this pithy principle, “We stick with the stuck.” Finally, and most important, He forgave me. He removed my sin as far from me as the east is from the west (Psalm 103:12).

While I am thankful that the state of Indiana and the God of heaven and earth have both forgotten my sin, I am committed to not forget. Not because the shame has any value, but because the gratitude does. May my joy in His grace never be expunged.

Posted in Biblical Doctrines, Devil's Arsenal, friends, friendship, grace, kingdom, Kingdom Notes, RC Sproul, RC Sproul JR, repentance, scandal | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Sacred Marriage, 6th Commandment; Banned Books & More

This week’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

Posted in 10 Commandments, abortion, Biblical Doctrines, Biblical theology, Books, Devil's Arsenal, ethics, grace, Jesus Changes Everything, Lisa Sproul, Month of Sundays, Nostalgia, politics, RC Sproul JR, Sacred Marriage, That 70s Kid, theology | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Sacred Marriage, 6th Commandment; Banned Books & More

God Killers

There is a potent cure for rubber-necked ghouls. You know the pattern. An accident takes place on the interstate. The lanes are cleared, but traffic remains backed up. Why? Because too many people when passing by slow down to take a look. The cure, of course, is success. That is, those who look for carnage find that finding it isn’t all too positive an experience. They look only long enough to see, and then look away, repulsed. I understand the need to look away far better than the need to look in the first place. Why would anyone want to see anything that ugly, that brutal, that disturbing?

Though in our sin we like to argue for aesthetic relativism, the notion that there is no objective standard of beauty, that beauty is subjective, in the eye of the beholder, our lives tell a different story. There is no rush, for instance, down at the I-Tunes store to download the sounds of animals being slaughtered. There is no local radio station that specializes in sundry versions of “Fingernails on Chalkboard.” The same is true of visual beauty. Precious few of us adorn our homes with medical waste. I’ve never looked above a friend’s mantelpiece and found a painting of maggots getting to work on rotten meat. That which remains of the image of God in us, whatever our ideology, will turn to beauty and away from ugliness. Which may explain why we are so prone to look away from our own ugliness. It is because we are made in God’s image that we hate to see just how badly that image has become distorted in us. We know the difference between what we are and what we are supposed to be.

Because we are twisted and distorted, however, our desire in the face of our disfigurement isn’t to be made well but, like our parents in the garden, to hide. We cover up our festering wounds rather than seek healing for them. We cover, we hide, we treat death with fig leaves. Sadly, even we who are being made well, who have not only been covered by the blood of Christ but are being remade into His image, fall into the same temptation. We cover our sin in the gauzy fabric of rationalization, in the gaudy fabric of distraction. We construct ghastly effigies of ourselves, parading them around in front of our leprous selves crying out “Clean! Clean!”

Thousands of years ago the Canaanites placed their little babies in the fires of Molech. Why? Because they thought the terrible demonic god that they served demanded it of them. They sacrificed their children and wept. Today, in our own country, in our own neighborhoods, we sacrifice our children for mere ease, and we yawn. We do not know how sinful we are because we will not look in the mirror- the Bible. It shows us the very character of God, as seen in the very law of God. But we, vipers that we are, distort both, turning God into a tame lion, and reducing the law down to “Be nice.” If this is all God requires of us, that we be nice, then our sin, our failure is only that we aren’t as nice as we should be. Jesus then comes to atone for our failure to be sufficiently nice. We’ll die, our lack of niceness is forgiven, and we will be made to be nice forever. What a nice little gospel.

Our problem is far more profound. We’re the kind of people that receive the miraculous grace of God, who are fed by Him, cared for by Him. He leads us, directs us, taking us to a land flowing with milk and honey. When we get there He has to tell us, “Now, my beloved bride, when you come into this land that I have prepared for you, don’t worship Molech like your neighbors. Don’t kill each other. Don’t go next store and seduce the wife of your neighbor. Be sure, my children, not to take cattle from each other. Don’t lie about your friends.” We didn’t listen. Instead we crucified the Lord of Glory.

We fight a three front war against the world, the flesh and the devil. And because we lose so constantly we see the world as merely misguided, our flesh merely given to too much chocolate, and the devil himself comical and tragic. The reality is that the world is a massive, grinding, mauling, machine that swallows us whole, chews us to bits and spits us out the other side. The reality is that the devil is a raging dragon, a t-rex and a Great White. His demons are like swarming piranha. His forces are like an army of flesh eating, fast moving zombies that will stop at nothing to consume us. And our flesh- it is the love-child of the world and the devil. That same gnawing, raging won’t-be-denied hunger of self lives in us, just beneath our skin. The old man is not an old man but a Tasmanian devil, a howling wolf with blood dripping from its fangs. And we still manage not only to parade ourselves like Sunday School teachers, but fool ourselves into thinking that’s who we are.

We’re in a bad way. The answer to our problem, however, is rather simple. It is the answer to every problem- repent and believe the gospel. We don’t get well until we come to understand how twisted we are. The beauty only begins when we are given the grace to stare deep into our ugly. Jesus didn’t come to save the well; the healthy have no need of a physician. Those who think they need little will receive little. We need to look deep into the depth and horror of our sin, because that is where Jesus lives. Jesus didn’t come to meet us where we think we are. He came to rescue us from what we really are. His cross was not planted in our nice places where we don our Sunday best. His cross reached all the way into hell.

Our condition is altogether simple- we are wicked. Because we are wicked we seek to complicate the equation. We come up with scientific names to describe our selfish desires. We cast blame on our parents and their spotty understanding of the psycho-sexual implications of potty-training. We turn our base impulses into diseases at best and virtues at worst. We excuse, rationalize and marginalize. We do everything save the one simple thing we need to do- beat our breast and cry out, “Lord be merciful to me, a sinner.”

This, in turn, ought to be what drives the antithesis, how we understand our calling to be separate from the world around us, to be set apart. When we wake up to our worldliness, when we desire to come out from the world, the devil (along with our own flesh) is right there to encourage us, to remind us to thank God that we are not like other men. When we are proud at how different we are from the world around us, that is when we are most like the world around us. Pride started all this horror. What sets us apart isn’t our lack of sin, but the acknowledgement of our sin. We are called to be those swiftest to face what we are. We are the community of the repentant.

Our God has determined to manifest His glory not in making us heroes. He has determined to do so by being the hero. He does not swoop down and snatch us away from the bad guy. Instead He bows down and snatches us away as the bad guy. I am the monster. This is the way of His kingdom. Thus we march into His World, storming the gates of hell with this message- Jesus saves sinners. Repent and believe. If He can save me, He can save you. Hallelujah what a Savior.

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Are Mormons Christians?

No. No one, of course, can see into anyone else’s heart. What we can do, however, is listen to another person’s profession of faith. Mormons do not believe that which is essential to the Christian faith. There are many areas of disagreement among Christians. We call these “intra-mural” debates, literally, “within the walls” debates. The walls represent the division between Christians and non-Christians. Christians debate about the order of events at the end of the world. They argue about the timing of the creation. They argue about who the proper recipients of baptism are. They have these arguments, however, as Christians together.

That the arguments exist doesn’t mean either that there is no right answer, nor that we have no duty to embrace the right answer. They simply reveal the weaknesses or failures of Christians, not one of which has everything right. Today I read on a Pittsburgh Steelers fan page an article that said Tom Clements was born in 1963. He was born in 1953. I knew the author had made a mistake because I remember watching Tom Clements play quarterback for Notre Dame in the early 1970s. Does that make me a better Steeler fan? Of course not. On the issue of the birth year, two fans disagreed. If, however, the author had said “I hate the Steelers” he could not at the same time rightly say “I am a Steeler fan.”

Mormons have more problems in their theology than you can shake a stick at. They have a supposedly ancient text that quotes from the King James Bible. They not only intentionally deny the deity of Christ but unintentionally deny the deity of the Father. In fact, Mormonism tells us nothing about the God who created all things, the self-existent One. It is, however, the denial of the deity of Christ that most clearly and immediately puts Mormonism outside the bounds of the Christian faith. Affirming that Jesus is God incarnate isn’t just a debatable side issue to the Christian faith, but is essential. It is of the essence of the Christian faith. Take that doctrine away and what you have left, whatever it might be, isn’t Christian.

Mormons may believe there is an objective standard of right and wrong. They may believe there are only two genders. They may believe wives are to submit to their own husbands. They may be pro-life. They may be clean-cut. They may be devout. They may say nice things about Jesus. Their faith, however, is not a Christian faith. I’m old enough to remember when they themselves acknowledged this. Just a few decades ago Mormonism publicly affirmed that orthodox Christians were not believers in the true religion, and that we would go to hell when we die. Now, however, they just want to find room inside our tent. There is, however, no room for them there. Not because we’re mean and narrow-minded. Not because we are overly persnickety over the details of our religion. There is no room because only those who affirm, among other things, that Jesus is God incarnate fit inside the tent. They do not need our approval. They need to hear and embrace the gospel.

Posted in 10 Commandments, apologetics, Apostles' Creed, Ask RC, Biblical Doctrines, church, ism, RC Sproul JR, theology | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

God’s Hammer

Sometimes, indeed often, we build and maintain our paradigms for our own comfort. Our worldviews are usually less the result of careful, dispassionate, sober-minded analysis and more the result of self-serving, special pleading, rationalization of our sin. We believe not because these beliefs commend themselves to our minds but because in our minds the beliefs commend us. It is these habits of our desperately deceitful hearts that make us miss the voice of God. He speaks, but we hear what we want to.

We come to our Bibles with this most fundamental presupposition— whatever the Bible may be saying, it can’t be telling me that my life needs to be fundamentally changed. Wherever the Bible calls for such change, it must be addressing someone else. Out of this presupposition flows what I call “the diabolical art of simultaneous translation.” This is what happens when our eyes roam across the very words of God in Scripture, but our minds change what we read into something safe, something reasonable, something inoffensive. Jesus, for instance, tells us not to worry about what we will eat or what we will wear, that this is what the Gentiles worry about, and that we ought to know that we are under God’s care. What our minds hear is something like this: “Those people who are more prosperous than I am need to stop worrying about money. When I get as prosperous as they are, I will be pious enough to no longer worry. Those worrying, prosperous people really ought to be ashamed of themselves.”

Jesus tells us to seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and we hear: “Those people who don’t believe, who aren’t in the kingdom, who don’t have the righteousness of Christ, need to get serious about pursuing these things. Thank heaven I already have this covered. Because I have already done this, I can now devote my time to something important, worrying about what I will wear and what I will eat.” When the Bible steps on our toes, we try to quietly tiptoe away. What we’re supposed to do is face our sins. What we’re supposed to do is repent and believe.

One way we might begin to do battle against this weakness is to come to the Bible with a prior commitment to this basic truth— whatever this text or that text is saying, it is likely that it is speaking to me and my sin. Before we decide whether a covenantal paradigm or a dispensational paradigm makes more sense, before we settle the vexing question of who wrote Hebrews or which gospel was written first, before we figure out whether Genesis 1 and 2 are history or poetry or both, we need to come willing and eager to have the mirror of the Word show us our sins. That will happen when we expect it to show us our sins.

The Word of God consists of the words of God. Their meanings tell us what His meaning is. They are little mirrors that build the big mirror. They are also, however, little hammers that together make up the sledgehammer God uses to smash our recalcitrant hearts. Because our hearts are hard, we insist on soft words. When alone with our Bibles, we soften our Bibles, translating our hammers into pillows. When in the pew on Sunday morning, we insist on preaching that does not offend, that does not confront, that does not strike, that rests lightly on our stony hearts.

God’s hammer smashes not just the icons of the world around us; it also smashes the idols of my heart. It is hard, heavy, even painful, precisely because of the love of the One who wields it. He has promised to forgive me for my hard heart but has also promised to soften it. He has promised to beat it into submission. As He pounds my heart, He, in turn, opens my ears. Thus, we move from grace to grace, from life to life, from faith to faith.

When our stony hearts are beaten, they do not merely turn into gravel. Instead, they turn to soil—soft, welcoming soil. And then the Word no longer comes as a hammer but as seed. The soft ground of our hearts welcomes that Word, and soon it bears fruit, multiplying thirty, sixty, even a hundredfold. Soon we find that we have ears to hear and eyes to see, and the very mystery of the parables unfolds before us. If we would hear, we must be willing to hear. If we would be willing, He must make us willing.

His kingdom is that place where His Word is heard, welcomed, and obeyed. That same Word has promised that if we will drop everything for the sake of the kingdom, all these things will be added to us. Therefore, His kingdom is where worry about tomorrow is banished. God’s Word is a hammer, but it is a hammer that speaks blessing to us. May He be pleased to give us ears to hear the blessings that He speaks.

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RIP Consensus

Everybody is for diversity, until they aren’t. Everyone is for equity, until they aren’t. Everyone is for inclusivity, until they aren’t. Suppose, for example, that famed racist David Duke wants to speak on your campus about the racial superiority of white people. There are some who would cheer such an event on, but not many. Were Maya Angelou to come on campus to speak she would be warmly welcomed. But she comes from a privileged position. Her perspectives tend to match those of the ruling regime. She has standing, accolades, access that poor David Duke never had. It hardly seems equitable when David Duke draws a half dozen fans and a dozen protestors while Maya draws thousands of adoring acolytes. Nor would Mr. Duke feel terribly included.

One of the great things about a free market is that it doesn’t care about this folly. Maya Angelou has a broad audience, David Duke a tiny one. There’s no use grumbling about the size of one’s audience, as such is rather unlikely to grow it.

The real problems come when the free market is nowhere to be found. Take, for instance, the local library or the local government school. Both institutions are financed by tax dollars. The tax collector, now there’s a believer in inclusivity. He doesn’t care what you think about race or gender or global warming. He just wants your money. When, however, the government he collects for begins to hand the money out that he has taken from all of us, to whom does the government give it? Does David Duke get an equitable share? Will the local library host a family friendly cross burning, complete with kiddie klan kostumes? Will the little darlings be able to check out copies of the children’s version of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion? If not, will Barnes and Noble carry it for their “Banned Books! Spectacular Sale?”

What happens when both the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence and the Little Sisters of the Poor ask for a school wide assembly? What if PETA and the National Cattlemen’s Association want a chance to talk to the kiddies? Now it’s not just a question of which organization can drum up an audience, but which organization has the political clout to make all sides be the audience? Education is discipleship. For decades this country has sought to water down its faith into a gruel thin enough to not offend but not thick enough to feed its soul. We are starving our children.

We do not have a sufficient consensus to continue with the foolish notion that an education can be morally uplifting while being morally neutral on the issues of the day. Children right now are being told they are wicked if they believe men are men and women women. Across the country, in your neighborhood. And on your dime. The benign “virtues” they have left have already been distorted beyond all recognition. Respect now means disrespect for those who hold to Scripture. Kindness means hatred for those who hold to Scripture. Integrity means standing firm against the forces of darkness, that is, those who hold to Scripture.

This country is not what it once was. Its schools are not what they once were. Consensus died a long time ago and the stench all around us is its rotting corpse.

Posted in "race", 10 Commandments, abortion, Big Eva, church, Devil's Arsenal, Economics in This Lesson, Education, ethics, kingdom, Kingdom Notes, persecution, politics, post-modernism, RC Sproul JR, scandal, sexual confusion | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

Sacred Marriage, 5th Commandment; Uganda’s Gay Laws & More

This week’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

Posted in 10 Commandments, Biblical Doctrines, ethics, In the Beginning, Jesus Changes Everything, Lisa Sproul, Month of Sundays, persecution, politics, RC Sproul JR, Sacred Marriage, sexual confusion | Tagged , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Sacred Marriage, 5th Commandment; Uganda’s Gay Laws & More