Romans Study Tonight!

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 makes a person a hero?

I was blessed, over the years, to teach a number of the Great Works courses at Reformation Bible College. It is my contention that we ought to cover the great books of western civilization not so we can prepare our students to join in what some call the “great conversation” that back and forth over the centuries that seeks to answer the most foundational questions of our nature, purpose and end. Instead I want to prepare them for the “great confrontation.” I teach in light of the antithesis, the battle between the seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent that began in Eden and ends with the end of history. I want my students to understand the culture they are living in, the ideological water they are swimming in, so that they might both guard their hearts and press the crown rights of King Jesus.

One of the best shortcuts to understanding a given culture is to ask this question- in this culture, what does a person have to be or to do to be considered a hero? Such tells us a great deal. In ancient Greece you became a hero by courage and victory in battle. During the Renaissance you became a hero by dint of deep and wide study. In our day you become a hero by becoming the best in your field.

The high virtues of the Christian hero, by contrast, have precious little to do with accomplishment. Indeed I would argue that the first and highest standard of the Christian hero is a passion for repentance. The hero is the one who knows from top to bottom that he is not a hero. The hero moves through his days not only aware of his moral failures, but of his dependence on the grace of God in all its manifestations. He must know, increasingly, how weak and needy He is.

Second, the Christian, or the true hero is about the business not of making a name for himself, but of lifting others up and magnifying the name of Christ. Which is why real heroes are so hard to find.

Third, the Christian hero forgives. It is likely much less difficult to do a good deed for another than it is to forgive an evil deed done to us. The former flows easily from a high view of the self- I can do this giving thing for you, because I have so much to give.” The latter flows more from a low view of the self- “ I can forgive this wrong done to me because I know my need for forgiveness for the wrongs I’ve done to others.”

The temptation that began in the garden has not yet left us. We are always eager to become more than we are. The solution then and now is the same, to recognize our need for the work of the one true hero, Jesus. May we learn to imitate those who imitate Him.

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The Children’s Crusade

The Devil delights in false dichotomies. When he persuades us that our choices are between this foolishness and that weakness — heads, he wins; tails, the kingdom loses. When we are lukewarm in our commitment, when we think the kingdom of God is just some ethereal thing that no one can see, the Devil encourages us in just this direction. We see the kingdom as only future, and so we sit on our hands waiting. Such is not, of course, a passionate seeking of His kingdom or His righteousness.

The Devil is not afraid, however, of kingdom zealots. Those whose passion burns to make known the reign of Christ receive a whole different temptation from the Devil. These the Devil encourages to take up arms, to bear the sword. He seduces them into thinking they can make the kingdom come by force.The first option is a denial that we are at war. The second option is a denial that our weapons are not carnal. The biblical truth is that we are at war and that our armory is stocked with potent, spiritual weapons.

Consider first the reality of the war. God promised in Genesis 3 that He would put enmity between the Serpent and the woman, between their respective seeds. Thus, we have an identifiable enemy — all those who are yet outside the kingdom of God. This enemy is, of course, actively fighting its war against us and our King. Thus, we are at war. We are called to tear down strongholds, to destroy every lofty thing that exalts itself against the knowledge of God. We are commanded not to be conformed to this world, but to be transformed.

We also have an objective. Our goal is to see the reign of our Captain made manifest the world over. We are seeking His kingdom, and His promise is that a day is coming when every knee will bow and every tongue will confess that He is Lord. Indeed, He will come from His throne, we are told, when all His enemies are made a footstool. The language of warfare fills the Word, from beginning to end, despite our crafty Enemy’s attempt to cry “peace, peace,” when there is no peace.

Our Enemy, we would be wise to remember, is under no self-constraint not to use carnal weapons. Indeed, everything about his warfare is carnal. It was he whose spear pierced the side of our Lord. It was he who hurled the stones at Stephen. He worked through sundry caesars, leading the early Christians to the Coliseum for sport, lining the Appian Way with hundreds of crucified disciples of our crucified Lord. He animated the lies of Islam, whose scimitar first seized Jerusalem and later reached even into Europe.

The Devil, however, rejoiced more over the counterattack on Jerusalem than he did the seizure of it. That is, the greater victory wasn’t the success of the sword on his side of the battle but the taking up of the sword on our side. He wins not by fighting with carnal weapons but by seducing us into fighting with carnal weapons. The Bible, of course, leaves room for legitimate use of force. The use of the sword in defense of our land or of our families is not only permissible but mandatory. But we do not build the kingdom with the sword. Our weapons are not carnal. The kingdom advanced far more potently through the humble martyrs’ deaths than it did through the fighting of the valiant soldiers of the Crusades. We don’t kill for the kingdom but die for it.

We, too, have barbarians at our gates. Our walls are crumbling, and it seems in the West that a new dark age has arrived. The evidence, however, is found less in the rhetoric of the radical left, the cultural degradation pouring from New York and Hollywood, and the sexually confused marching in our streets, and more in the church that has lost sight of its God-given weapons. We move from defeat to defeat because we fight with coalitions, with media campaigns, with slick marketing, with compromise. We have washed away all our saltiness because we have forgotten how the kingdom comes.

We seek His kingdom as we seek His righteousness. The world is preserved, and the visibility of the kingdom increases when we live as His children in simple, trusting obedience. The world is changed by changing diapers, by hugging wives, by doing chores diligently, and by singing joyfully. War is fought by peaceful countenances. Loyalty makes walls come tumbling down. We do not, as the crusaders did, leave our hearths and homes, our wives and children, cross land and sea, and hack and poke with sword and spear. We instead cross the room, pray blessing on our children, and dance with our wives. We sit at the table, eating the fat of the land, talking about the glory of His provision in all our days. We visit the orphan and the widow. We preach the Word in season and out. We break bread and we drink the cup. And the Serpent trembles in his bunker.

As little children, we know it is the little things that change everything. The Serpent’s kingdom is brought low when the servants of the King are lifted on high, in worship. Praise Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, and the gates of hell come tumbling down.

Posted in abortion, Biblical Doctrines, Biblical theology, Big Eva, church, communion, Devil's Arsenal, eschatology, ethics, kingdom, Kingdom Notes, persecution, politics, post-modernism, RC Sproul JR, sexual confusion, sovereignty | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on The Children’s Crusade

Praising Her in the Gates

It is a sure sign of the tendency of men to be relational dolts that we don’t even see how destructive our doltiness is. Some time ago one of our sons was having a hard time. That hard time expressed itself in anger, harsh words, defiant behavior, and an outpouring of tears. It was like nothing I had ever scene, from him or any other child. I spoke with the boy, and I administered discipline to him. I hugged him, and reminded him that I love him, and always will, no matter what. Which is just where it would have ended, had it just been me.

But Lisa. My precious wife, the boy’s loving mother literally took our son by the hand, and led him out on a walk. She spoke to him tenderly. She helped him find voice to his frustrations, and led him to the wisdom of God’s Word. She assured him of her love for him, his secure position in our family, and of God’s love for him. She brought joy back to his face, and peace back to his heart.

None of which surprises me in the least. Because she has, time and again, done much the same thing for me, her husband. She, in fact, did much the same for me before I was her husband. As she did with our son, she saw into me; she discerned in me secrets I shared with no one. And instead of using that insight to beat me down, she used it to discern how to build me up. Better still, in both instances, with our son and with me, she brings her insights and requests before our loving Father in prayer.

Ladies, you will serve your families well, and the kingdom well, if you will do the same with your husband and your children. Men, you will serve your families well, and the kingdom well, if you will rejoice over your wife as she brings her giftings to bear on your family. Be a family. Do not let the challenges that come with life let you forget the calling of families, to stick together. Celebrate the grace of God in putting the perfect balance of ingredients together, and mixing until smooth.

Dear, your husband loves you. Your children love you. Let’s keep swimming against the current together, leading our little homeschool of fish. Let’s praise the One who redeems us, who brought us together, and who is leading us to the eternal land of rest, back to the garden. Worthy is the Lamb!

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Check out this week’s study on Romans

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Sacred Marriage; Shouting Down Dissent; Enemy Love & More

This week’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

Posted in 10 Commandments, abortion, apologetics, Biblical Doctrines, church, Devil's Arsenal, evangelism, Good News, Jesus Changes Everything, Lisa Sproul, Month of Sundays, persecution, RC Sproul JR, Sacred Marriage, sexual confusion | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Sacred Marriage; Shouting Down Dissent; Enemy Love & More

Digging into Romans

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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Does God want nations to stay separate?

There is, and always has been, a level of tension between loyalty to a set of ideas and loyalty to one’s neighbor. That tension, for instance, is immediately apparent when considering Russell Kirk and Murray Rothbard. The former grounds his notion of conservatism in local peoples, the former in an abstract set of ideals that is libertarianism. Kirk’s vision is idyllic, Rothbard’s idealistic. Kirk would likely identify with his literal neighbor, Rothbard his ideological neighbor.

Christians feel that tension in part because we have dual citizenship. We are citizens of whichever nation we were born in and citizens of that nation we were reborn in. The United States is defined by both its geographic boundaries and its founding principles. The latter explains why it is a nation of immigrants and the descendants of immigrants, because people have come here from all over the planet who yearned to be free.

Some professing Christians have argued that because God established the nations as described in Genesis 10 that intermingling is at best pushing against His providence, at worst a sin, violating His law. As a reaction against those whose ideology would decimate the many in pursuit of the one, those seeking one world government, one world culture, one world religion, such is understandable. It is, however, still wrong. Our choices are not binary, between the one and the many. Rather we can have both. We don’t have to choose between a melting pot that turns diversity into a colorless sludge and strict separation of the children of Shem, Ham and Japheth.

The tension between loyalty to a set of ideas and to ones neighbor is nothing new. Ruth felt it. God did not judge Naomi for emigrating to Moab. Nor did He judge Ruth for immigrating from Moab. In the end the two were united in a common faith, and a common family. The Moabites didn’t displace God’s people. Neither was Ruth turned back at the border. A person’s national identity does not need to be set in stone. I am loyal to my birthplace, the greatest city on earth, Pittsburgh. I am loyal to my country, these United States. I am loyal to my ancestral home of Ireland. I am loyal to my ancestors’ ancestral home of Scotland. All of which is not worthy to be compared with my loyalty to my home in heaven.

Paul felt the same. At one and the same time, right in the Holy Spirit inspired words of the Bible, Paul wished damnation on himself if it would mean the redemption of his Jewish kinsmen (Romans 9:5), affirmed that in Christ there is neither Jew nor Greek (Galatians 3:28), and considered his ethnic identity to be mere dung (Philippians 3: 4-8). We ought to have the same perspective. We are called to love our neighbor. We are called to love our brother. We are called, in walking out the Great Commission, to labor to see that our neighbor would be made our brother.

Every single one of us are both descendants of Noah, and his descendants who were judged at Babel for their refusal to disperse. And every single one of us are descendants of ancestors from across the globe. We’re all nuts if we don’t know we’re all mutts. And all those who have been bought by the blood, we are one in Him.

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The Victory Parade We Don’t Deserve


Though I didn’t think such was possible, my esteem for both my father and the Bible took a rather sudden spike. I was blessed to be sitting in a seminary class, while he stood, teaching. He mentioned, almost in passing, this notion that rocked my world. “Some scholars,” he said (and by the way he said it I had a strong suspicion that he was one of those scholars), “believe that the ‘man’ Joshua met outside the wall of Jericho was a pre-incarnate manifestation of the second person of the Trinity, a Christophany.” I was blown away as he went on to make the case. He encouraged us to remember that Joshua bowed and worshiped. Had he been with an angel from God, the angel would have forbidden such worship.

That the Father sent the Son further sanctified an already holy moment, as Joshua prepared for the first battle for the Promised Land. Better still, however, was the conversation itself. Joshua had only recently replaced Moses as the leader of God’s people. The wandering in the wilderness had come to an end. The Jordan had been crossed, and now between God’s people and the land stood Jericho and its impenetrable walls. Wouldn’t you have been frightened? Confused? Would you not have felt the weight of every brick in that wall on your back as you took up the mantle of leadership? In the midst of this turmoil, Joshua found himself facing a “man.” Joshua neither rashly attacked, nor did he shrink back. Instead, he asked what seems to us an utterly fitting question: “Are you for us, or for our adversaries?”(Josh. 5:13).

God the Son did not come, however, merely to honor the occasion. Neither was His goal merely to bring the victory. He came instead to sanctify His servant, to give Joshua the right perspective. To Joshua’s either/or question, God the Son replied, “No.” Just as Jesus would befuddle the Pharisees as they sought to trap Him with their questions, here He befuddles us. No? What does that mean? He then continued, “but I am the commander of the army of the Lord. Now I have come.” He explained to Joshua this most fundamental truth: “The question, Joshua, is not whether or not I am on your side or theirs. The question is whether or not you are on My side.”

Whether at war or at peace, in want or in plenty, whatever our circumstances, this is the question we all face each day. Indeed, when Jesus spoke from the Mount, He made much the same point. He did so because we, like Joshua, need to learn the same point. Like Joshua, we look at our obstacles in fear and confusion. Will we be able to win this struggle at work? Will we be able to tame this challenge in our homes? Will we be able to overcome this obstacle at our church? And in our prayer lives, as we meet with our Father, through God the Son, we ask — sometimes in hope, other times in despair — whether He is with us, whether He will come to our aid and win the battle for us. And in His grace and terrible sovereign power and authority, He tells us, “No.”

God is not a witness to history, choosing sides and cheering His favorites on. God is Lord of history, moving history forward as what it is — His story. God’s grace to us isn’t that He sides with us, but that He has put enmity in our hearts against the Serpent and his seed. God’s grace isn’t that He fights for us but that He, by the power of the Holy Spirit, gives us life so that we might fight for Him.

When Jesus tells us to stop worrying about what we will eat and what we will wear, reminding us that the Gentiles worry about such things, He, naturally, reasons in the same manner. His message isn’t “Don’t sweat it — God is for you. He’ll come to your aid to make sure you get what you want. God is on your side.” Instead, the command is not to worry about these things — our own interests and agenda — because we are called to passionately pursue the interests and agenda of the kingdom of God. He tells us, “No, but seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness.” The Truth, the Wisdom, the Word — He does not change and neither does His message to us. What He spoke to Joshua, He speaks to us.

Christ speaks the same message in both the Old and New Testaments because He is speaking to the same people — those who by faith are His. That He is Captain of the army of the Lord is grace to Joshua and grace to us because by the same grace we are made soldiers in that army. The same grace in turn ensures the victory. He is our Captain. He, not Joshua, brings down the walls of Jericho. He, not Joshua, brings His people into the Land of Promise. He, not Joshua, storms the very gates of hell. He, not Joshua, takes captivity captive. He, not Joshua, is Lord of lords and King of kings. And we, because He loves us, march in the victory parade with Him.

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You Think You’ve Got Problems

While I am not foolish enough to think that thinking wisely will solve all of our problems, I am wise enough to know it will solve this one- our problem of misunderstanding our problem. We are utterly filled with foolish worries. We worry about the weather, about traffic, about our finances, about our reputations. We worry about the economy, tensions among nations, pandemics and the health of the planet. All of which are, if they are real problems at all, “under the sun” problems. Every one of them will come to an end, no matter what happens between now and the end. When our curtain falls, whether through our own death or His final return, not one of these problems will remain.

The only real problem you or I or anyone has ever had that won’t be solved by the passage of time is that we are sinners and God is holy. His judgment, while it begins “under the sun” will not cease with the setting of the sun. It will continue forever. His judgment will not only continue forever, but it will in no way be punctuated with moments of grace, of peace. Constant, eternal, immeasurable torment. That’s not a problem. That is the problem.

Quite apart from the glorious truth that the problem has been solved for all those who are in Christ, what business does anyone have worrying about these nothings? And how much less should those whose problem has been solved worry about these nothings? Those outside the kingdom embrace petty, temporal problems precisely to keep their minds off mammoth eternal problems. What excuse though do we have?

Believers should be people of joy. When Paul commands joy of us, “Rejoice in the Lord always. Again I will say, ‘Rejoice’” (Philippians 4:4), we often wonder how such is even fair. We think joy is something that alights upon us like a magic butterfly rather than something we strive for. If, however, we kept in mind the only true problem we’ve ever had, and kept in mind the glorious truth that it has been solved in Christ, and kept in mind all the blessings we have already received, and all those we are certain to receive, joy would descend on us like a tsunami. Worry would be washed out with the tide.

The truth is, not just the things we worry about, but when those things don’t go our way, we still should be worry-free. Paul tells us, “For our light affliction, which is but for a moment is working for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory (II Corinthians 4:17). Even the hardships redound to blessing in eternity.

I don’t need my circumstances to change. I need my perspective to change. The joy I’m called to, the joy I enjoy, is within reach if I would but look at reality rightly. Forgive me Lord my failure to rejoice, and lead me to rejoice in Your forgiveness.

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