The Prince and the Paupers: Sharing His Riches

One of the troubles with trouble is that it can encourage us toward selfishness. When things are going well for us, it is rather easy to feel magnanimous. When challenges come our way, however, suddenly we feel entitled to be focused on ourselves.

Not so with Jesus. It is more than shocking that the Lord of glory would, as He did in John 13, take on the form of the lowliest servant and wash the feet of His disciples. What makes it all the more potent is that He did this on the night in which He was betrayed. Jesus was within a day of facing not just Roman crucifixion, the most gruesome death one could imagine, but facing the full wrath and fury of His Father poured out on Him. Yet His immediate concern was not this grave challenge before Him but that He might teach one more lesson to His disciples.

A few chapters later, He focussed His prayers on two things — that God would be glorified in what was about to take place and that God would bless these same disciples. Jesus was thinking of others. In the face of His passion, His passion was those whom He loved.

Compassion, rightly understood, means entering into the passion, or suffering, of others. It means setting aside our own concerns, our own fears, our own needs, and not just supplying but feeling the needs of those around us. This, ironically, happens not when we have all that we need. It happens instead when we come to understand that we have nothing and that we need nothing. Compassion flows not out of the well satisfied but from those who have not. There is, in turn, only one way to do this — to die to self.

When my aspirations, my hopes and dreams, my wants are crucified, I enter into liberty. I am free to take up the concerns of others. A dead man has no need to protect his comfort. He has no need to protect his wealth. He has no need at all to protect his reputation. Perhaps Janis Joplin had it right: freedom may just be another word for “nothing left to lose.”

The Serpent is more crafty than any of the beasts of the field. His passion is to build up in us misguided passions. Jesus hungered and thirsted after the will of the Father, yet the will of the Devil is that we would hunger and thirst. He delights to fill us with needs, whereas our Father delights to fill our needs. Jesus spoke to this in the Sermon on the Mount. He encourages us:

Therefore I tell you, 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. Is not life more than food and the body more than clothing? Look at the birds of the air: they neither sow nor reap nor gather into barns and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not of more value than they?” (Matt. 6:25–26).

We can die to ourselves not because we are so worthless, but because He has ascribed worth to us. The One who gave us our value, who values us, is the same One who meets all of our needs. We who were dead, He has made alive — and He keeps us alive. He meets our needs daily, such that the last thing we need to worry about is our needs. Now we are free to show forth His compassion because we are indeed filled. We lose our cares when we remember we are dead. We care for others out of our fullness because He has made us alive.

Our passion, then, ought to be that we would identify with our Lord. We enter into His passion as we put to death all our selfish concerns and fears. When we take on the form of servants and wash the feet of our brothers, we become one with Him in dying to self. But we likewise are called to enter into His resurrection — even His ascension. He has, in Him, made us alive.

When He walked out into the garden from His tomb, the Firstborn of the new creation, He blazed the trail where we now walk. When He ascended to the right hand of the Father, He took us with Him. He has, in Him, made us kings and queens, seated in thrones of glory in the heavenly places. He has made us joint heirs with Him, such that we inherit the whole of the world. We, in ourselves, have nothing, and so have nothing to lose. We, in Him, have everything, and so have everything to give.

When we live with Him, when we seek to live like Him, then we are seeking first the kingdom of God. When we put our desires to death, we are seeking first His righteousness. And when we feast before Him, we feast because all these things have been added to us.

He has given us one holy passion, His own passion. He has called us to identify with Him, and, in so doing, we identify with His body, the church. Love your brother. Walk with him. Mourn with him when he mourns. Rejoice with him when he rejoices. And in both instances, know that your Father in heaven mourns and rejoices with you.

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Surviving Incredulity World: Why What We Don’t Know Hurts Us

Lies are a double-edged sword. Not only are they designed to get us to believe things that are not true, but they encourage us to not believe things that are true. Every lie borrows its credibility from some other truth. Which then loses its credibility. Tell your friend his coogie sweater looks great. Then tell him the bridge is out just around the corner. If he’s smart enough to know the first is a lie, he’s apt to believe the second is a lie. You spared his feelings, but caused his death. Such is the work of the Father of Lies.

I remain utterly dumbfounded not only that Democrats and their PR team, the mainstream media, tried to convince us that Joe Biden was mentally sound. The only thing more shocking is that any one of them would at this point be believed about anything. Ever. By anyone. Ever.

Nor is this the only example. Every COVID lie that had no argument in its defense save the mantra, “Believe the science” makes every scientific claim now suspect. If “the science” told us whole nations would be underwater by the year 2000, if “the science” told us Wuhan lab had nothing to do with COVID, then “the science” is a donkey. We have been inundated with a tsunami of lies that would make the devil himself blush.

Which feeds an apocalyptic skepticism. Not skepticism about the apocalypse, but a skepticism that is apocalyptic in its devastation. We are overdrawn in trust, sitting on a 38 trillion foot mountain of disbelief. As I type, the President’s State of the Union address is just hours away. He will not only say things that are not true, but will say things he knows are not true. He will say things we who generally stand in his corner will know are not true.

Then, Virginia Governor Abigail Spanberger will get her chance to do the same for the blue team. It is not true that the problem rests solely with the left wing. It’s not even true that the problem is contained within the confines of the swamp. Hollywood lies. Wall Street lies. The internet lies. And we now find ourselves unwilling or unable to believe even the truths we are being shown. We’re Charlie Brown resolutely refusing to try to kick the football. We won’t get fooled again.

In such times believers have much to be thankful for. We have a message to us that is true in all that it affirms. A message that is true we are called to proclaim to those living in a world of lies. We have an absolutely trustworthy Father above us. The One who is the truth intercedes for us. The Spirit of Truth indwells us. We have our old man to wrestle with, to be sure. But by His grace we are on the Truth Team.

Let us cherish this blessing, and live without fear. We not only know the truth, but the Truth knows us, and loves us now and forever.

*Oops, they did it again. USA Today ran this headline post State of the Union- “Trump claimed gas is under $2. What’s the real price?” Did he though? No, he did not. Weirdly, the article itself acknowledges he didn’t, but feared people might be confused by what he said. So they “clarified” with a lying headline. How helpful of them.

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Sacred Marriage; Sovereign Grace; State of the Communion

The body of Christ, the bride of Christ and more on today’s podcast, hot off the presses and made especially for you.

This week’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Gently Restore: The Lost Art of Biblical Correction

The devil, I suspect, delights to play both sides against the middle. He encourages God’s people to careen into the ditch on one side of the road. Then he encourages corrective measures that lead to others of God’s people careening into the ditch on the other side.

We live in an age where the greater weakness in the church is a reluctance to make affirmations. Whether on issues either of theology or morals. The mass of evangelicals have drunk deep of the world’s postmodern conceits. Thus we think it simple kindness to never mention the grievous sins or heresies of our professing brothers and sisters.

Then there’s the rest of us. We know not only the difference between right and wrong, true and false, but the importance of differences. We consider ourselves heroic, pushing against the cultural tide in denouncing our spiritual siblings. The Bible, however, calls us to something different,

Brethren, if a man is overtaken in any trespass, you who are spiritual restore such a one in a spirit of gentleness, considering yourself lest you also be tempted. Bear one another’s burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ. For if anyone thinks himself to be something, when he is nothing, he deceives himself (Galatians 6:1-3).

When we correct our brothers, and we of course are called to do so, encouraging one another toward righteousness, no one, I suspect, objects to the idea that we think we are right and our brother wrong. After all, if there’s a disagreement then our brother likewise thinks we are wrong. What upsets the applecart is when there is disagreement, and I not only think I am right, but think I am better. How quick we are to consider a wrong idea to be a grave moral failure. We do this, I’m pretty sure, because we’re foolish enough to think that our correct doctrine is the surest sign of our moral superiority.

A spirit of gentleness, as the text above suggests, is grounded in a deep grasp of this most foundational moral and theological principle, “There but for the grace of God go I.” It is a false humility that argues we are all on the same plane. It is a false pride that thinks the difference is grounded in us.

This follows from the text. Who are the spiritual ones? When a man is overtaken in a trespass, how do we know whom to send? Are the spiritual ones the ones with the most impressive theological library? The ones with the most honorable advanced degrees? No, the spiritual ones who should be called in are recognized precisely because they exhibit a spirit of gentleness, who recognize that they might also be tempted, that aren’t deceived into thinking they are all that and a bag of chips.

Reformation did, does and always will mean bringing correction. And it will always be destructive when driven by a spirit of pride. The One whose image we are being re-formed into never breaks the bruised reed, nor extinguishes the smoldering wick. Let us learn from Him.

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No Study Tonight

We will not be meeting tonight for our Truth You Can Count On Study tonight. God willing we’ll be back next week.

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Is it a sin to be wealthy? Prosperity and Providence

No. One can certainly get wealthy by sinning. One can certainly sin while being wealthy. But it is surely not a sin to be wealthy. Though few are so crass as to express this sentiment, it nevertheless often reveals itself, ironically among the wealthy. Wealth, remember, is a relative term. Most of us like to think of ourselves as somewhere safely in the middle. But I suspect 99% of you reading this are in the 1% of the wealthiest humans to walk the planet.

Wealth, like wine, is a blessing from God that can be misused. Prosperity can bring with it a bevy of temptations peculiar to it. One temptation common to many of God’s blessings is that we forget they are God’s blessings. That is, we lose sight of the Giver of the gift in loving the gift. Every good gift, however, should be seen as a window through which we behold the grace and the beauty of the Giver. Wealth has this added danger- it can encourage us to lose sight of our dependence of God. See Proverbs 30.

Which brings us to how to rightly respond to the gift of wealth. First, give thanks, knowing that it comes from the hand of God. Were we to recognize we are all in the 1% we’d push back against the envy that crushes gratitude. We see wealth as wicked because we think it’s something other people have that we don’t. But to 99% of those who ever lived, we are the other people.

Second, recognize that we are but stewards of what God has given us. Better yet, recognize that you are the steward of what God has given you, and I am the steward of what God has given me. Sometimes we use the truth that we are stewards of what is God’s as a pretext to judge how others handle what God has given them. We think this one shouldn’t have such a big house but should be financing missions, and that one shouldn’t have such fine clothes but should be supporting the local soup kitchen. How prone we are to pride ourselves into thinking we could steward the money God gave the other guy to care for than he does.

We can debate on the requirements God makes of His stewards, whether the tithe is still binding, to whom it should go, gross or net. What we must not do is add to God’s requirements. Nor subtract from them. That is, not only is it not a sin to enjoy the wealth God has given you, it is likely a sin to not enjoy it.

God commands His people in Deuteronomy 14:26- “And you shall spend that money for whatever your heart desires: for oxen or sheep, for wine or similar drink, for whatever your heart desires; you shall eat there before the Lord your God, and you shall rejoice, you and your household.”

Which means the key is gratitude, not how much or how little we have been given to steward. We need not repent of our wealth. We likely need to repent for our failure to recognize it, and give thanks to the Giver. Wealth is no more proof of greed than poverty is proof of laziness. Work hard. Remember your dependence. Give thanks. And enjoy.

Posted in 10 Commandments, Ask RC, Biblical Doctrines, Devil's Arsenal, Economics in This Lesson, ethics, grace, kingdom, politics, proverbs, RC Sproul JR, wisdom, work | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Learning from the Master, Not From Our “Masters”

“If you think education is expensive, try ignorance.” “If you can read this, thank a teacher.” Such is the wisdom one can expect to find on a car’s bumper. Wisdom, however, is found in God’s Word, which, surprisingly, says not a peep about “education.” Yet it does call us to seek wisdom. Even as it calls us to seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness. It speaks of truth, and it speaks this truth — that Jesus is the truth that sets us free.

We, once upon a time, understood education to be that which both grounds us and sets us free. It has now become that which sets us loose and costs us everything. And all because we serve the false god of mammon. Consider first how a modern, or should I say a postmodern, education sets us loose. As Allan Bloom taught in The Closing of the American Mind, our universities fervently affirm there’s no truth and no right and wrong. Ninety-eight percent of all incoming college freshman enter the hallowed halls persuaded of relativism.

Over the course of four years, that assumption is systematically entrenched. Thus, students walk away from their college educations utterly adrift. But they are not free from another perspective. Students pay tens of thousands of dollars a year for the privilege of learning the truth that there is no truth to learn. They walk away slaves to debt.

Why would anyone make such a trade? Foolishness. We’ve learned that a college education is key to a well-paying job or to a better graduate school. Which in turn is the key to a well-paying job. We need a well-paying job so that we can afford either private education or to live in the “good” school district. So our children can get into the best colleges, so that they can get into the best graduate schools. They can then, in turn, make the money to keep the process going for our grandchildren. I call this “hell’s hamster wheel,” and it is time for all of us to get off.

There is, of course, nothing wrong with learning a set of skills that increases our productivity. Studying a trade or a profession can be a good and healthy thing, a tool toward fulfilling the dominion mandate. We did not, however, originally create the university for this purpose.

Education once aspired to be “liberal.” Liberal in this context isn’t intended as a political designation for those who desiring a more intrusive state. Neither does it describe theological liberalism, which denies the truthfulness of God’s Word. Instead, liberal here refers to the liberty of the graduate. We equip a liberally educated person not for a mere job but to think God’s thoughts after Him. To see His world as He would have us.

A free man, for instance, is not prone to accepting the status quo. He doesn’t assume four years down at the state university is an undiluted good. A free man is not given to buying into a deadly nostalgia that assumes his alma mater hasn’t changed in the twenty-five years since he went there. A free man rejects the wildly implausible notion that sending his son or daughter off to Vanity Fair for four or more years is a great way to bless his heirs.

Free men are wise enough not to buy into the lottery-like unspoken pitch that if you don’t spend a hundred thousand dollars on an “education,” your child will starve. A free man thinks deliberately about his own future and the future of his children. He finds wisdom where God keeps it, not in the knowledge of the experts but in the simplicity of the Bible.

Fathers, I understand, worry. A sound, biblical education may prepare children for heaven, but how will they live? Steeping our children, as they prepare to enter adulthood, in God’s Word will surely feed their souls and adorn them with beauty, but how will they find food, clothing, and shelter? We are not the first to struggle with such worries. Nor are we likely to be the last.

Jesus says, “Therefore do not worry, saying, ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’ For after all these things the Gentiles seek. For your heavenly Father knows that you need all these things. But seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things shall be added unto you” (Matt. 6:31–33).

Jesus’ truth here must set me free. May I never lose sight of the truth that our daily bread, to mix a metaphor, is the fruit of God’s provision through hard work. It is not the result of my wisdom in pursuing specialized training. Better still, may I be free enough to know that I am, with my children, a slave of Jesus Christ. He, and not the priests of higher education, is my Master. Such means that I am free.

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What Have You Told Them? A Thought Experiment

Imagine, if you would, that you know something immeasurably important. Then, imagine that you have been charged with the task of telling as many people as possible about this immeasurably important thing that you know. The one who gave you this charge has warned you that many will not only not like the message, but won’t like you if you deliver it. They’ve even been known to kill people who told others this message.

This next part won’t be too difficult to imagine. Imagine you like you. Not that you think you’re all that. It’s just that you like to see yourself happy, healthy, and well-liked. If that’s the case, and I suspect it is, you might face this temptation- to gather a crowd. You might zero in on the “as many people as possible” part of your assignment. Or at least you might start there. Eventually, you reason, you’ll get around to the message.

You notice, however, that, well short of delivering the message, any time you get even in the neighborhood of the message, your crowd not only shrinks, but many of them turn against you. As long, however, as you deliver a message that doesn’t offend your audience, your audience continues to grow. In fact, many of them grow to love you. Some of them even want to be like you.

So you teach them how to gather a crowd. The message, after all, is supposed to be delivered to as many people as possible. You warn them about what happens when you say things the crowd isn’t eager to hear, how they get mad, start hating you, and leave. This person you’ve trained has gathered a big crowd, and joined you in training others to do the same.

Soon there is an army of crowd gatherers. You all share your crowd gathering ideas with each other, what works and what doesn’t. You throw parties for those who have gathered the biggest crowds. Books are written. Conferences are held. Alliances are formed. You are a member in good standing of the crowd gatherer crowd.

Now suppose that the boss shows up. You get the memo he’ll be arriving soon. Everyone goes all out to gather the biggest crowd ever, to show the boss what a great job you’ve done. You drive him down to local gathering place, and pull up to your reserved parking space. A grin covers your face as the boss takes in the gathering crowd, pouring into the gathering place. You explain that the little ones have their own gatherings within the building. Then you talk about how much the crowd loves the band that plays each week. You show him all the events.

Your heart begins to race as the band heats up. The gathering is swaying to the beat, eyes focused in the distance. Your team’s logo hangs from the building’s cross beams, shrouded in fog. There isn’t an empty seat in the house. Indeed there are multiple gathering places where you are streamed, you explain.

The boss, however, has just one question for you as you stand to make your way onto the podium- “But what have you told them?”

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This week’s Truth You Can Count On Bible Study

“What is truth?” Pilate asked. Too often believers ask the same. In this study we dive into the encounter between Pilate and the Truth, wondering if we would have done any better. Check it out.

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Moses’ Mom; Tariff Toppling Tariffs; Battling Believers

Lisa and I discuss the faith and courage of Jochabed, Moses’ Mom. I consider the case for tariffs as a means to tear down tariffs, remember the prophet Ezekiel and explore the dynamics of church politics. If that’s not sufficient reason to tune in, I don’t know what is.

This week’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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