Blood in Our Streets and the Blood on Our Hands

September 11, 2001, was, in many respects, a rather ordinary day. I began the day working at my desk, writing. But my plans quickly changed. Many of us spent hours staring not at our computer screens but at our television screens. We were stunned, staggered, overcome with disbelief.

But others still managed to put in a full day’s work. American business continued on. American culture, though shocked, continued on. We were dismayed, terrorized, but we kept on. Because the business of America is business, we kept going.

Among those keeping on, having productive days, were those who brutally murdered more than three thousand innocent people. It was all in a day’s work for them — an ordinary day’s work. The police were there, representing the full force and power of the government, protecting these men. On September 10, 2001, these men also took more than three thousand innocent human lives. On September 12, they did the same.

Today, 25 years later, they are still about their grisly work of butchering babies. Today, more thousands will die. Just like yesterday, and like tomorrow. That Muslim terrorists took more than three thousand lives on one day causes us to wring our hands, to weep and mourn, to implore heaven for answers. That abortionists do much the same each and every day doesn’t even register with us. It is business as usual.

It was Joseph Stalin who cynically quipped that one death is a tragedy, but a million deaths is a statistic. He touched on a hard truth. We have a finite amount of compassion, a finite ability to enter into the suffering of others. It is the diabolical art of the propagandist to tap into and direct our compassion for his own purposes.

What happened on September 11, 2001, was reprehensible, tragic, evil — a vile, unprovoked attack on civilians. We need not diminish this evil in order to better see the evil of every day. Neither, however, can we let that momentary evil distract us from everyday evil. We cannot, in fact, allow the evening news to establish our priorities, the shape of our thinking.

My fear, however, is that the stunning gap between the time and energy Christians devoted to 9/11 and the amount of energy we don’t devote to the evil of abortion is not a function ultimately of main stream media’s priorities. Neither is it, I fear, due to the very ordinariness of abortion.

My fear is that we are at ease about abortion and up in arms about militant Islam because, having already been born, we are not afraid of abortion while we are afraid of terrorist attacks. Our outrage is doled out not on the basis of the moral evil but on the basis of how likely we are to be victims. When others are in danger, we murmur about what a shame it is and move on. When the target is on our own backs, that’s when we know that something must be done.

The evil of abortion, then, isn’t just something out there, something sinister abortionists and ignorant women are guilty of. We’re all guilty. The evil that drives terrorism and the evil that drives the abortion industry is the same evil that drives us to be more concerned for our own safety than for the least of these.

Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount reminds us of at least three important truths. First, God is intimately involved in the smallest details of life. The hairs on our heads are numbered, and indeed it is He who knit us together in the womb. Second, God cares about the littlest things. He controls all things precisely because all things matter to Him. Because all things exist for the sake of the one thing — His glory — there are no small things. If He cares for the sparrows, and He does, how much more does He care for each of us, even those who are yet unborn?

The third point is a little more difficult. Jesus doesn’t tell us that because God is concerned about everything, we can therefore be assured that He is concerned with what concerns us. Instead, He tells us that because God is concerned about everything, we are called to be concerned with what concerns Him. He is to set our agenda, not the world around us.

The problem, rightly understood, with Muslim extremists isn’t that they kill us. No, the problem is they go to hell when they die. The problem with abortion isn’t that those involved in that grisly trade are so wicked but that we are so wicked. Our solution, then, is to seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness.

We weep like the Pharisees prayed — to be seen by men. Contorting our faces over one evil, we smile our way through the greater evil. We wring our hands over Islam and its bloody scimitar. We fail to notice the blood on our own hands and the bloody scalpels in our midst. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereunto. May He daily grant us the grace to see the evil, to repent, and to seek His kingdom, His righteousness.

Posted in 10 Commandments, abortion, church, Devil's Arsenal, kingdom, Kingdom Notes, RC Sproul JR, repentance, sexual confusion | Leave a comment

LDSQ2BA Latter Day Saints Questions to Be Answered

I have questions for my Latter Day Saint friends. While I believe the distinctive doctrines of Latter Day Saints are unbiblical and false, I likewise am grateful for my LDS friends over the years. I ask these questions less as “Gotchas” and more in an attempt to be sure I understand. My hope is that any answers I receive will come from those competent to give them, either LDS experts or non-LDS LDS experts.

1. Are historic Christianity and LDS compatible? That is, since the LDS now claims to be Christian, despite Joseph Smith saying in his day that all existing churches were wrong and their creeds an abomination, is LDS just another denomination, or a different religion? If the former, why the urgency to “convert” Christians? If the latter, how can they be compatible?

2. Who is God’s Father? And for that matter, who is God’s mother? Who are the grandparents of the Father? If I understand correctly we who are men will, at least if we are LDS, become gods. We have parents and grandparents. Who are God’s parents and grandparents?

3. Where in the Bible do we have any hint that Jesus and Lucifer are brothers? Why did not God reveal this until nearly two thousand years had passed after Jesus’ earthly ministry?

4. Similarly, where in the Bible are we told there would be another book yet to come? Why did God allow roughly 1500 years to pass between the purportedly erroneous and heretical Nicene Creed and its “correction” in the Book of Mormon?

5. Similarly, had the Council of Nicea been attended only by LDS theologians, how might it read? What would be different?

6. Have any prophets in the history of the LDS erred in their prophetic ministry? Have these prophets consistently taught the same understanding of dark skinned people? Has the understanding of dark skinned people taught in the Book of Mormon been disavowed?

7. Which among all the writings of Joseph Smith are considered to be canonical? What standard determines which of his writings are canonical and which not?

8. Did Joseph Smith perform miracles attesting to his authority to speak for God? What evidence is there for these miracles? Did Joseph Smith deliver any prophecies that did not come to pass?

9. Does the LDS organization teach the penal, substitutionary atonement of Jesus? If not, what is its doctrine of atonement? If so, how is that atonement brought to bear in the life of a sinner?

10. With respect to the Reformation, does the LDS doctrine teach that grace is infused in the believer through his or her cooperation with the sacraments, as Rome teaches, or that the righteousness of Christ is imputed to the believer by faith alone? What does the LDS teach about how we escape God’s wrath for our sins?

11. Why the secrets? While various gnostic religions hide doctrines from adherents as they climb to different levels, Christian churches keep no doctrines hidden from unbelievers or initiates.

12. I am a Bible believing trinitarian, orthodox Protestant, resting in the finished work of Christ alone. I believe LDS doctrine to be false. Were I to die with these beliefs, what can I expect my eternity to look like?

I thank all in advance for good faith answers to any and all of these questions.

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What It Means to Be a Christian II; Vrabel & Russini; & More

Where is our hope? Our outrage? Where is His good Hand? All this is found where? In today’s podcast. Find it, and then share it.

This week’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

Posted in 10 Commandments, appeal, assurance, Biblical Doctrines, Books, ethics, evangelism, grace, interview, Jesus Changes Everything, justification, RC Sproul JR, repentance, sovereignty, theology | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The Pharisee Pharisees and the Way Back Home

Dear Exvangelicals,

I’m probably the last person you’d want to hear from, an old school evangelical. I’m more conservative politically than the most ardent President Trump fanboy. Reformed, head of my home, still affirming that marriage is only between one man and one woman, and, here’s the kicker, only people married to each other should be naked together. Add to that the stench of hypocrisy sticks to me like white on rice given my very public failures.

Maybe you believe the best person to call out to you to come home would be a nice neo-evangelical, a gentle progressive evangelical, or even a friendly Anglican charismatic. I believe, however, that the best equipped person is the one who knows best how ill equipped he is. Like me. I need His grace, just like you do.

The truth is I haven’t devoted sufficient study to your deconstruction tales to write a dissertation. I can say that one prominent feature is that you don’t much care for people like me. You looked at the evangelical church and found there people who not only believe sexual sin is what the Bible says it is, but who are willing to say so, out loud, without embarrassment.

You’ve found there people who treated those under their care as sexual toys, and others who, for the shame of it all, covered up and enabled. Inside the evangelical church found people who not only believe that husbands are to be the heads of their homes, that elders should be men but also who have treated some women less than respectfully. You found porn addicts, mansion dwellers, prideful academics, bullies and brand builders. You found all manner of sin, which surprises me not in the least. It’s how we got in the church to begin with, confessing our need for grace.

You have, in pointing fingers, forgotten what we all are, sinners in need of His grace. You express in your “I thank you Lord that I am not like other men” diatribes against the siblings who loved you all along the way that you are ashamed of what you once were. And so communicate your pride in what you now are. You think yourselves so humble for confessing your complicity with those you are now leaving behind when what you’re really saying is, “I used to be like the rest of you evil monsters, but I got better.”

You haven’t gotten better, but worse. The love and humility, the doubt and uncertainty reveal their true nature when you hate people like me, when you pridefully separate yourself from people like me, when you know for certain that people like me can’t be the beloved of Jesus, because we aren’t good enough. We aren’t good enough, that’s true. But Jesus not only can love us, but does love us. You too aren’t good enough. Washing off yourself all the stench of your brothers’ sins, real and imagined, will never make you clean. It will just make a stench that is distinctively your own.

There is only one thing that washes us, the blood of Jesus. Not a one of us are worthy of it. Not the racist, sexist, homophobic, patriarchal, Confederate flag wavers that Jesus loves but you will not, nor you, the Pharisee. The first man, however, as he cries out, “Lord be merciful to me, a sinner” goes home justified. As will you, if you will cry the same prayer, and walk home with him. Come home. Leave your pride behind. There’s a ring, a robe, and a fattened calf waiting for you.

Posted in Biblical Doctrines, Big Eva, church, communion, evangelism, grace, justification, kingdom, Kingdom Notes, RC Sproul JR, repentance, scandal, sexual confusion, wisdom | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Study Tonight- Parables: The Rich Man and Lazarus

Tonight we continue a study exploring the parables of Jesus. Last week we considered the Good Samaritan. We serve dinner at 6:15, and begin the study at 7:00. We also livestream on Facebook Live, on the account I share with Lisa, RC-Lisa Sproul. Typically, a day or so later, we post the study right here. Scroll down for previous studies. We’d love to host you in our home, or out in cyberspace.

Posted in announcements, apologetics, Bible Study, Biblical Doctrines, evangelism, parables, RC Sproul JR, theology | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Should marijuana be legal? Are Christians free to use it?

Our immediate impulse to pass a law against that which we oppose suggests we see the state as our god. It alone, we seem to reason, has the power to curb this evil or that. In God’s economy, however, there are many things we ought to oppose which at the same time we ought to oppose laws against those things. God did not give the state the power of the sword to punish all evil doings. We want our children to eat right. Do we, however, want to pay a fine for giving them too many cookies? We oppose coveting. We don’t call 911 when our neighbor confesses he envies our F-150 truck.

Civil laws, as God designed them, are not created to keep us from harming ourselves. Nor do they exist to police our feelings. It is not just or righteous for the state to prohibit its citizens from harming themselves with substances designed to impact their feelings. Some might wish for a world where alcohol is prohibited. Surely one can make a strong case that lots of bad things can be traced back to alcohol as a contributing factor. I get that. I’m not, however, arguing that marijuana use is a positive good for a given culture.

The same would be true, however, of tobacco, or nicotine. Precious few of us want to see tobacco outlawed. Whether we poll current users, former users or never users. A nasty habit? Yes, I believe most would agree. Unhealthy, to be sure. A leading contributor to millions of deaths, no doubt. A net cultural negative? Absolutely. A reason to put people in jail? I think not.

A different substance stands atop the heap of mood altering drugs around the world. Caffeine. Cue the sound of millions of toes being stepped on. Christians are expected to laugh when someone makes note of their caffeine withdrawal symptoms. Worse still, few of us behave in a Christ-like manner when going through caffeine withdrawal.

I’m not suggesting that the impact of illicit drugs like marijuana is equal to the impact of coffee and cigarettes. Rather I’m seeking to unpack and apply principles. We should be able to agree that a. “bad for you” is not sufficient reason to outlaw something and b. “bad things indirectly happen to other people” is not a sufficient reason to outlaw something. For all the destruction wrought by it, legal or otherwise, marijuana doesn’t meet the standard. Behaviors influenced by it often do. Which is why it is right to outlaw behaviors destructive to others, not outlaw the consumption of a plant.

Should Christians partake? We can’t argue that any substance that impacts a person’s mood makes that substance biblically illegitimate. The Scripture itself tells us that wine gladdens the heart (Psalm 104:15). It forbids drunkenness, but not a gladdened heart. Marijuana, on the other hand, I would argue, while relative amounts may create relative highs, doesn’t come with the kind of gentle heart gladdening that wine does. One can enjoy a glass of wine and be well clear of drunkenness. One cannot get stoned while being well clear of being stoned.

I take both of these positions, no, marijuana should not be illegal and no, Christians should not use it, loosely. While I do not partake of marijuana, alcohol, nicotine or caffeine I do confess that ice cream alters my mood, always in a positive direction. On the other hand, I hold fast to the truth that it is not a biblical function of government to make sure people don’t harm themselves. A little wisdom goes a long way.

Posted in 10 Commandments, abortion, Ask RC, Biblical Doctrines, ethics, philosophy, politics, RC Sproul JR, wisdom | Tagged , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

We Are Family: All My Brothers and Sisters and Me

Conservative Christians seeking a way to encapsulate our most fundamental political commitments came up with “family values.” We vote “family values.” We support “family values” candidates. Even the left has noticed, countering our language with this bit of bumper-sticker wisdom: “Hate is not a family value.”

We are indeed seeing an assault on the family from the left and are rightly troubled. They want to be able to redefine the family at will and by law, forgetting that the family is a gift from God and He retains the right to define it as He wills. Yet we know what a family is supposed to look like and don’t like it when others twist and distort that image.

That said, though I am a conservative Christian, though I do indeed believe in “family values,” my family doesn’t look like most because of our two at home. Reilly and Donovan are just the right size. But they do stick out. Or perhaps my dear wife Lisa and I stick out. Our two boys, at their births, came through the blessing of adoption. Their genetic ancestors hail from Africa. Our family, then, includes two genders, multiple ages, multiple eye colors, multiple abilities, multiple skin colors. However, we are, together, Sprouls. We have, by the grace of God, been made into a family, a forever family.

The kingdom we seek is the same. Our familial identity is found not in our skin color, our socio-economic strata, or our genetics. The kingdom we seek is populated not just by citizens or by soldiers, but by family. We are servants of the King, soldiers of the King, but most of all we are children of the King. We become children of the King not based on where we are born but through adoption.

It has been said that Sunday mornings are the most segregated hours of the week. Some in the evangelical church are so troubled by this that they have sought out people of color like trophies. Others, sadder still, prefer the segregation. Were we paying attention, we would be guilty of neither.

There was, after all, once a great Man. He gave a famous speech, a sermon if you will, that came to be known all over the world. There He suggested to the gathered masses that we ought not to worry about such things. He encouraged us to have such a single-minded passion for one thing that issues of skin color would be moot. He told those who assembled that they should seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness.

Fraternity is a wonderful thing. It is the theological left, however, that teaches the heresy that proclaims the universal fatherhood of God and the universal brotherhood of man. If everyone is my brother, then no one is my brother. If ties of kinship extend to all humanity, then there may as well be no ties at all.

Wisdom requires that we learn how to recognize our brothers. I must confess that here I am not colorblind. My brothers are not those with black skin. Neither are they those with white skin. My brothers are those whose skin is red, covered by the blood of Christ. My loyalty is grounded in the kinship that I have in Christ, not the “kinship” that is coded into my genes.

In God’s good providence, I have been blessed to meet my brothers around the globe. Naing is my brother in Myanmar. Geoffrey is my brother in Kenya. Hiro is my brother in Japan. Oleg is my brother in Russia. Mykola is my brother in Ukraine. Jaime is my brother in Colombia. I have Kiwi brothers, Canuck brothers, Israeli and Palestinian brothers, and Scottish and Irish brothers. In Christ’s kingdom is every tribe and tongue. When we enter, we lay aside every petty loyalty, every insignificant tie that binds.

We fail when we are fools enough to believe that there is something of value in our own ethnicity. Paul, a Hebrew of Hebrews, saw his pedigree as something to be cast aside, tossed overboard. Can we do any less? We are by nature children of our father, the Devil. But while we— me, my wife, my children, all the saints of history, and all the saints around the globe—were yet sinners, Christ died for us. He has together seated us, red and yellow, black and white, in the heavenly places. There we rule the nations. There we will judge angels. And there we are, and will forever be, a family.

Posted in "race", 10 Commandments, Apostles' Creed, Biblical Doctrines, church, Devil's Arsenal, ethics, kingdom, Kingdom Notes, politics, post-modernism, RC Sproul JR, scandal | Tagged , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

The Ground and the Beginning of Our Knowing

Which are two things, not one. The ground of our knowing is a question of ontology, or being. The beginning of our knowing is a question of epistemology, or how we know what we know. To understand the ground of our knowing we have to go back to the beginning. All the way back to the actual beginning, “In the beginning, God” (Gen. 1:1a). This verse, filled to overflowing with meaning, tells us that once there was God, and nothing else. He is the groundless ground of all other things.

Everything else that is, is because of Him. Including everything else that is true. Just as we live and move and have our being in Him, so does truth live and move and have its being in Him. Without Him there is no truth to know. There is no way to know. There is, without Him, no one to know anything. Truth is dependent on Him.

Which is not at all the same thing as saying that God is the beginning of our knowing. He is not. This in no way diminishes His power, His glory, or anything I highlighted above. It simply acknowledges what should be obvious, that our knowing must begin with us. Many times I’ve had friends try to plant their knowing flag in heaven itself by claiming, “I begin my knowing with God.” To which I, hopefully not too cheekily, reply, “’I begin with God’ begins with whom?”

When we claim that we begin our knowing with God we confess that we begin our knowing with us. No, I’m not beginning to equivocate on “begin.” “God is the one I begin with” doesn’t escape the problem. It’s not what goes in the front of the sentence; it’s where we start knowing.

When Rene Descartes coined his famous expression, “Cogito ergo sum,” “I think, therefore I am” he wasn’t merely affirming that thought meant a lot to him. It wasn’t the philosophical equivalent of bikers whose jackets say “Live to Ride; Ride to Live.” Rather he was making the same point I am making. His goal was to find a truth that could not be doubted. He discovered that were he to doubt even his own existence, it would require of him that he exist. Our own existence is indubitable.

The thinking then is not the ground of his existence. It was, however, the indisputable proof. In like manner, in order to affirm anything, including “I begin with God” one must first affirm, overtly or implicitly, but certainly first, “I am.” To put it a mite pithily, “I AM precedes I am but “I am someone who” precedes “knows I AM is.”

As with most philosophical considerations, most of us respond in one of two ways. Either we are bored because all we’ve done is affirm what we all already knew, or we are intrigued because we discovered some background on what we already knew. There are important implications that flow from all the above. They will have to wait for another day.

Posted in apologetics, kingdom, Kingdom Notes, Latin Theological Terms, logic, philosophy, RC Sproul JR | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Check Out This Week’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

An interview with friend and author David Knight on his new book What it Means to Be a Christian. Plus, all the president’s memes, Hosea the prophet and lessons learned from falling towers. Tune in, and come out the other side the better for it. Or your money back, no questions asked.

This week’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

Posted in Biblical Doctrines, Books, Devil's Arsenal, evangelism, friends, grace, Jesus Changes Everything, prophets, RC Sproul JR, repentance | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Last week’s Parables Study: Treasure & Pearl of Great Price

Posted in 10 Commandments, Bible Study, Biblical Doctrines, church, communion, hermeneutics, kingdom, parables, RC Sproul JR, theology, wisdom | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment