Last Week’s Truth You Can Count On Study: Cunning Fables

This study considers Peter’s assurance that our faith is grounded not in cunning fables but in eyewitness accounts. Check it out.

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Study Tonight, Truth You Can Count On: Spirit of Truth

We continue our Truth You Can Count On study. Tonight, 7:00, we unpack the role of the Spirit in illuminating God’s Word. We stream our study on Facebook Live (at the account Lisa and I share, RC-Lisa) for those who attend online. You can usually also find a link to the week’s study a day or two later right here in this space. We welcome conversation from all in attendance, whatever form it takes. The atmosphere is casual, though the study itself is serious.

Local friends are welcome to come early for dinner at 6:15. Do please let us know if you plan to attend in person. Hope to see you there.

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Learning War No More: What is “Just War Theory?”

Though some argue that Just War Theory (JWT) can be traced back to ancient Egypt, I’m interested in how Christians have reasoned over the ethics of war. Among the earliest theologians to set about the business of thinking through if war can be justified and justly fought was Saint Ambrose, bishop of Milan. His most esteemed student, Saint Augustine continued in the same vein.

The church has argued since those early days that war may be justly entered if all the following conditions are met:

1. The war must be defensive in nature. Instigating a war is unjust.
2. It must be led by a legitimate authority.
3. It must be motivated by a right intention.
4. Its ultimate goal must be the establishment of peace.

Once in a war, a nation seeking to engage in just war must remember these principles:

1. It must acknowledge the distinction between enemy combatants and civilians.
2. It must acknowledge hors de combat. Here it is forbidden to intentionally fire on those parachuting out of a fallen aircraft or sailors who have been shipwrecked.
3. It must not impose any unnecessary suffering.
4. Its response to being attack must be proportionate.

These principles, tested by time, seek to stake out that moral ground between pacifism and militarism. Pacifism is the view that it is never right to fight in any war under any circumstance. While there are Christians, and even whole denominations who take this position, it runs afoul of God’s commands to Israel. While Israel had a unique relationship with the living God, “All participation in war is sinful” goes too far by condemning what God commanded.

Militarism is the opposite error. Here men are prone to cheer on war in any circumstance where it might be imagined that a nation’s interests might be served. It is the wartime equivalent of that jingoistic fervor expressed in that odious saying, “My country, right or wrong, my country.”

The challenge is that we are all tempted to depart that safe middle ground of just war, for our own personal reasons. I don’t want to get shot at, and can’t blame anyone else who feels the same. But if my country is overrun by hordes of marauding Saxons, my duty is to take up arms to protect my family and my neighbor.

I don’t either blame those who distrust foreign nations that are unfriendly. Nor those who want what an unfriendly foreign nation has. But we don’t send our sons and our neighbors’ sons to die for “strategic interests.” Perhaps the only thing more tragic than being overrun by our enemies is killing and being killed for nothing greater than geo-political maneuvering.

The application of JWT is what keeps us in that safe zone. It keeps us from being swallowed up by some aggressive empire. And keeps us from swallowing up other nations as an aggressive empire. Whatever nuances living in a nuclear age may bring, the JWT transcends them.

Christians of all people must come to both understand and champion JWT. For it is little more that the application of God’s law to the direst of circumstances. Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called the children of God.

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Oh Brave New World, With Such People In It

Neil Postman, in his delightful albeit ominous book Amusing Ourselves to Death, draws an insightful comparison between two important dystopian novels. Utopian novels, of course, are those designed to show us edenic cultures. Dystopian novels show us hellish futures.

The two Postman discusses are 1984 by George Orwell and the slightly lesser known Brave New World by Aldous Huxley. Both books alarm us, but in different ways. The citizens of 1984 are haunted and hunted by Big Brother, the embodiment of the statist dictator. Every moment of every day is both regimented and watched by the repressive state.

In Brave New World, however, the citizens are, in a certain sense, not at all oppressed. They don’t live in fear of the state. They are enslaved more by the carrot of pleasure and entertainment. In 1984 they are enslaved by the stick of torture and the secret police. What if, Postman asks, we were all on our guard for 1984, but what snuck up on us was Brave New World?

Winston, the “hero” of 1984, works as a bureaucrat at the Ministry of Truth. He is both a censor and a revisionist historian. The past is changed to fit the needs of the regime, and truth is sent to burn up in the memory hole. One of his friends has a slightly different job — culling the nation’s dictionary. Here the goal isn’t merely to rid the book of outmoded words but to rid the language of dangerous thoughts.

By whittling language down, the state whittles away its citizens’ capacity to even think in terms of freedom and liberty. Is it possible that all our communication conveniences are, in a manner of speaking, an assault on language and liberty? But from the perspective and approach of Brave New World? Have we, with emails, tweets, and texts 4gotn how 2 thnk? Have we entered a brave new world not with our fingers in our ears but our thumbs on our keypads?

Postman argues persuasively that levels of discourse can certainly rise or fall, and that such may be the fruit of given technologies. His argument is that with the advent of television, we ceased to be a word-based culture and rapidly became an image-based culture. Images, as a medium, are much better than words at evoking emotions. They are much less effective than words at communicating abstract ideas.

I recall realizing just how dumbed-down our culture had become while a student in seminary. One of the key books we were assigned to read for our systematic theology course was The Institutes of the Christian Religion by John Calvin. I read both volumes, finding them rich, helpful, but by no means an easy and comfortable read.

I was ashamed, however, to consider Calvin’s goal in writing this work — it was designed to be a primer, a basic introduction to the Christian faith for laypeople. And there I was not only reading it as a text in my seminary but finding it among the more difficult books in the whole of my studies.

Perhaps stranger than our growing ignorance is our concomitant growing confidence in our wisdom. Instead of looking to the ancients as our betters, we see them as hopelessly undereducated. Reading the Bible’s epistles, however, ought to disabuse us of our pride. We might be tempted to escape this conclusion by remembering our doctrine of inspiration. Paul, Peter, John, all the authors of all the epistles had some rather potent help along the way. When the omniscient God of heaven and earth is superintending your writing, you can certainly reach depths of wisdom that you would not have reached on your own.

Communication, however, is a two-way street. What we learn from reading the epistles is not just the brain power behind the writing of them, but the brain power behind the reading of them. Like Calvin’s Institutes, the New Testament epistles were written by and large for laypeople, pew sitters, regular folk.

The readers of these letters, while they were certainly blessed to have pastors and teachers to help them understand, likely did not sit down over the course of a year or three to dissect these letters, word by word. They didn’t spend a month of Sundays on 1 Corinthians 1:1a, before daring to move on the next month to 1:1b. Instead, they received these letters as letters. They understood them as letters. They submitted to them as letters.

As education gadfly John Taylor Gatto has wisely argued, we are being dumbed down by our own state school systems. That is 1984. But we are also dumbing ourselves down by refusing to sit, be still, and to read reasoned discourse that moves sequentially from one thought to the next, communicated in complete sentences. That is our Brave New World. Our calling then is not to live as the citizens under 1984. Nor should we see ourselves as the vapid consumers of Brave New World.

Instead we are called to seek first a different kingdom. Instead we are to seek His righteousness. We find both in the Word of Him who is the Word. May we drink deeply of that Word, that we might walk rightly with that Word.

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Assessing Self Assessments: Poor Richard’s Lesson

The story is told that for a time a young Ben Franklin had the diligence to daily score his own performance on a number of character issues. On a scale of 1-10, how respectful had he been that day? How honest had he been? He noticed a peculiar pattern. Those days where he scored well on most of the traits, he found he scored poorly on humility. And vice, so to speak, versa.

I doubt any of us have the humility or insight to give a terribly accurate assessment of our character. The heart, after all, is deceitful. A reality we all struggle with until we cross the veil. Which ought not lead us into a hopeless sense of skepticism. Instead it ought to lead us to humbly seek out a humble rubric in self-assessment. One, you’ll not be surprised to learn, that is grounded in humility.

Consider the case of the Pharisee and the tax collector. The Pharisee had the spiritual awareness to begin his prayer thanking His Maker. He was foolish, but not so foolish to think himself a self-made man. “I thank You Lord that I am not like other men,” he began. What followed was a list of spiritual accomplishments. His tithing was exemplary. His passion for fasting was commendable. On certain sins of commission, he was innocent. By all these standards he far exceeded the tax collector.

The tax collector, however, scored higher on the three most important questions, his understanding of God, of himself, and the gap in between. He begins by acknowledging God’s transcendence- Lord. Next he expresses his dependence on God’s grace, repentingbe merciful to me. Finally, he acknowledges what he is- a sinner.

Happily we are not left with mere self-assessments of either man. For the One who is the Truth tells us of the tax collector, that he went home justified. Not more respectable. Nor superior. Not wiser. Nor well trained. He went home justified. Why? Because by God’s mercy he knew God’s mercy was his only hope. It’s not that pride keeps us from heaven while humility opens the gates of pearl. Rather, it is His mercy that opens the way. Humility, which is itself a gift, rests in that mercy.

Which means the correct answer to “How am I doing?” is simple- Not well enough. The better question, however, is “What has He done?” The answer is more than I could ever hope or imagine. He has covered my sin by His death on the cross, given me the righteousness that marked every moment of His life. He is even now preparing the home for me where I will go, having already been justified.

There is an important place for parsing sound doctrine. Sola fide is of the utmost importance. Penal, substitutionary atonement an absolute necessity. These, however, are, albeit sound and essential, doctrines. The tax collector couldn’t explain these doctrines to save his eternal life. What he did, by His grace, was live them out in his earnest cry, “Lord, be merciful to me, a sinner.”

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Sacred Marriage; WAR; Flying Toys of the 70s; Spurgeon

What can we learn from Moses’ sister Miriam? Find out in our Sacred Marriage segment. What would just war theorists and/or the Constitution have to say about the war in Iran? Remembering toys in the sky. Plus, the jolly Calvinist, Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Surely you can see that tuning in would be the right move here.

This week’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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First Episode of A Cat in a Dog’s World: Check it Out

A dear friend, Dave Nelson, recently started a new program on public access TV program here in Fort Wayne. His goal? To talk about the challenges of pursuing sanctification in a culture hell-bent against holiness. He invited me to be his first guest. Below find the link to the first episode. Check it out and let me know what you think. As for me, I enjoyed the conversation, and believe it to have been fruitful. But I might be biased.

A Cat in a Dog’s World, Episode 1

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Jesus Changes Everything, At Such an Immeasurable Cost

God made men for work, for protection, and for rescue. When we look at the imago Dei, the glorious truth that we are made in the image of God, I fear we miss much when we describe it in terms of abilities. God wills and man wills. He God feels and we feel; He thinks and we think. But the connection runs deeper. It is grounded in telos, purpose, design. We reflect God’s glory also in our calling. The dominion mandate, to rule over the creation, reflects God in His act of creation.

God placed Adam and Eve in paradise and commanded them to protect that garden, and to “gardenize” the “jungle” beyond. The garden was the model, the world outside it the calling. He gave our first parents every perfect gift. The garden itself, the “jungle” devoid of thistles and thorns, each other, and best of all the presence of God, walking with them. They failed, plunging creation, themselves, and all who would come after into utter ruin.

The promise of the coming Seed of the Woman wasn’t plan B, but was instead the new plan to complete plan A. The Last Adam would not merely save us from the just penalty for our sins, but would complete what the first Adam failed to do. The redeemed, the bride, the Last Eve would be a helper suitable for Him. The dominion mandate would be fulfilled, but this time in the context of curse rather than blessing. Adam had every blessing, every advantage. Jesus, on the other hand, faced a humanly impossible task. But He won, and is recreating creation, us, and as many as are afar off.

All it took was taking flesh and dwelling with us. All it took was speaking truth, being despised. He merely had to take on an all out assault from the devil himself in the desert, and the full assault of the demonic realm at every turn. All it took was betrayal by His closest friends. And then there was the horror of death by crucifixion. None of which is worthy to be compared with this- all it took was for the wrath and fury of His own Father due to us for our rebellion, to fall upon Him. All it took was descending into hell.

When I consider how unworthy I am, when I fear He would grow weary of carrying me, I return to this thought. He did not go through all this to abandon me. If ever a person should have confidence that His rescuer will never give up, it is I, who have been so painfully rescued. I am called to not neglect so great a salvation, which means in turn that I am called to believe that He will never neglect His great salvation of me. Jesus won me. He will not lose me. Because Jesus always wins. He is even now about the business of changing everything.

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Study Tonight, Truth You Can Count On: Clever Fables

We continue our Truth You Can Count On study. Tonight, 7:00, we unpack Peter’s claim that we do not bring cunningly devised fables. We stream our study on Facebook Live (at the account Lisa and I share, RC-Lisa) for those who attend online. You can usually also find a link to the week’s study a day or two later right here in this space. We welcome conversation from all in attendance, whatever form it takes. The atmosphere is casual, though the study itself is serious.

Local friends are welcome to come early for dinner at 6:15. Do please let us know if you plan to attend in person. Hope to see you there.

Posted in announcements, apologetics, Apostles' Creed, assurance, Bible Study, Biblical Doctrines, inerrancy, RC Sproul JR, theology | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Should we undermine unbelievers’ Christian stereotypes?

I confess that I have been among the throng of sophomoric Christians. We all, along the way, thought up a brilliant idea to grow the kingdom of God. What if we blend together the coolness of the world and the holiness of the faith? Exhibit a little charm. Skate a little close to what even we would consider relatively minor sins. Keep up on sports and celebrity news and hey presto goats get herded by droves into the sheep fold. It took me ages to discern that this approach was not only an affront to Jesus but counter-productive. Nothing earns the contempt of the cool kids like desperately seeking their favor.

It was my habit as a kid to pray that God would allow me to be an All-Pro for the Steelers. So I could give Him honor and praise. Then I asked Him to make me a rock star, so I could shape the worldview of the young. As I got older I asked Him to help me write the Great American Novel. Strictly, of course, as a means of growing the kingdom. Then I noticed what all three of these plans had in common. I was volunteering to be universally loved and fabulously wealthy, all for the sake of my Redeemer.

When Jesus warns us that the world will hate us as it first hated Him, He wasn’t laying down a challenge to see if we could do better. He was preparing us and establishing for us a sound measure of our faithfulness. If the world loves us, in short, we’re doing it wrong.

That said, I would argue we should push against certain stereotypes unbelievers attach to believers. Not as a strategy for winning them, but as part of our growth in grace. Consider for instance our reputation for being prideful. It’s true we might hear such a charge simply by virtue of affirming that something is true. But it is also a charge we might hear because it can be true. We do in fact think too highly of ourselves. We do tend to think that what separates us from the unbeliever is something good in us, rather than the grace of God.

The same principle applies to the accusation that we are judgmental. Often that charge comes because we are standing on the Word of God, affirming His law. In such a context we need to simply grin and bear it. It is also true, however, that we can be prone to forget, when dealing with sinners, that not only such once were we, but that we still battle against our own flesh. We can present the gospel as a way of life that we have mastered rather than the rescuing of our life by the Master.

The short answer is we need to grow in grace and wisdom, with our eyes looking to please Him rather than them. As we do so we may very well surprise them, and be given an opportunity to tell them about Who is at work in our lives.

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