Truth You Can Count On, Study Four The Word on the Word

This week we considered how Jesus looked at the authority of the Bible, both the Old and New Testaments. We seek, like Him, to live not on bread alone but by every Word that proceeds from the Father. So check it out, and get caught up.

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Truth You Can Count On, Study 3 No-et Alls

In this, our third study from Truth You Can Count On we consider the impact of sin on our capacity to know things. We affirm both that we err often, a lot, and for foolish reasons. We deny that sin makes us unable to know the truth. I’m thinking you might find this helpful. Why not give a listen?

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Truth You Can Count On, Study 2 Made in His Image

In our second study from our series, Truth You Can Count On we consider how God’s knowing relates to our own. We remember both that God is higher than us, and that we are made in His image. He knows all truly, we know some truly. Check it out.

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Truth You Can Count On, 1st Study- God Knows

A few weeks ago we began a new study Monday nights titled Truth You Can Count On. Below is the first of these studies, recorded January 19. This one explores the nature of God’s knowing. I think you’ll find it helpful.

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Two Cheers for Doubt: When And Where to not Be Sure

Do we not tend to see doubt as something negative? Something to avoid or overcome? Doubt is what we writers and editors, when we hang out together and tell stories about the rest of you, call a “transitive” verb. These are verbs not that suffer from gender dysphoria, but that require an object. You can run, or hum without an object. But you cannot throw, or love or hate without an object. Everybody, as the saying goes, needs someone to love.

Doubt too requires an object. You can’t just doubt; you have to doubt something. Some things we ought to doubt, others not so much. If you receive an email from the Namibian oil minister’s widow offering to give you millions if you help her, that you should doubt. We should never, on the other hand, doubt God’s Word.

When we doubt ourselves, we are likely in a good spot. We tend toward overconfidence in ourselves, in terms of our knowledge, our character and our calling. GK Chesterton put it this way:

What we suffer from today is humility in the wrong place. Modesty has moved from the organ of ambition and settled upon the organ of conviction, where it was never meant to be. A man was meant to be doubtful about himself, but undoubting about the truth; this has been exactly reversed.

Mark Twain demonstrated his own insight when he wrote, “What you don’t know can’t hurt you. It’s what you do know that just isn’t so.” We are a credulous people, believing anything and often its opposite. Consider how swiftly the polls change. I can see how 55% of those polled approve of the President. On the other hand I can see how 45% disapprove. What I can’t see is how those two numbers can flop with the same President in the space of a week. Who are the 10% who cheer on the President one day and turn on him the next?

Real truth exists, truth we can actually know. We should not doubt that. On the other hand we should be fearless in acknowledging we don’t know all of it. We should not race like Richard Petty on our way to a conclusion. Nor should we allow peer pressure to push us into embracing the party line. We should never convict others when we know we don’t know the whole story. Each of us should, at one and the same time, cherish and spread abroad far and wide these three words, “I don’t know.”

You may upset your friends. If, however, they get too upset, get new friends. The ones you have now are looking for allies and yes men, not friends. At least, that’s what I think you should do. I can’t say for sure.

The great thing about truth truth is that a. it is knowable and b. doesn’t require us to believe it in order for it to be true. It remains unfazed when we are certain and wrong, but also not insulted when we are unsure. This much I do know- my heart, like everyone else’s is deceitful and wicked. My Redeemer is not. We are not to doubt Him. He loves me.

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Study Tonight, Truth You Can Count On: The Word on the Word

We continue our Truth You Can Count On study. Tonight, 7:00, what the Word says about the Word. We stream it 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. Hope to see you there.

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Why are we so stupid? Examining Our Besetting Wrongness

It’s not at all unusual for us to shake our heads at the world, to bemoan the stupidity of the common man. Which is kind of weird, since we are all common men. We somehow think that we have risen above the hoi polloi. Which helps explain why we’re so stupid. We’re stupid because we are sinful. We look at the world through me colored glasses.

I want to believe what I want to believe, rather than what is true. What is true is that I am no less stupid than other people. I want to believe that I’m smarter than other people. Which is why we judge on a sliding scale. As with our own behavior, we are adepts at spying the speck in our brother’s eye while overlooking the log in our own. We think errors in our own thinking are tiny little things, not worth mentioning. And the other guy is a blithering idiot.

The difference between landing on the right answer and landing on the wrong is rarely a function of either less native intelligence or more study. More often than not it flows out of failures in our character. Pride keeps us from surrendering to a compelling argument. Prejudice hinders us from admitting we’ve erred. Desire blinds us from the obvious truth blocking us from our desired object.

We are stupid because we are the children of stupid people. Our first parents were given a one question multiple choice quiz:

The Omniscient Maker of Heaven and Earth said you ought not eat the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. A serpent said you ought to eat the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. Which of the following is correct?
A. The Omniscient Maker of Heaven and Earth is correct and the serpent is wrong.
B. The serpent is correct and the Omniscient Maker of Heaven and Earth is wrong.
C. Both the Omniscient Maker of Heaven and Earth and the serpent are correct and neither is wrong.
D. Neither the Omniscient Maker of Heaven and Earth or the serpent is correct and both are wrong.

We are the descendants of the man and the woman who chose B. They failed that test before the fall. We fail the test even after we’ve been born again and indwelt by His Spirit. A man fails the same quiz every time he sins.

How do we stop being so stupid? We fill ourselves with the Word, which is nothing but the truth. Also we pray to our heavenly Father that He would strengthen us to submit to what we know is true rather than give in to what we wish were true. We ask for a humility that realizes that we haven’t yet matured beyond stupidity. And the courage to do the same. First we ask for the wisdom to fear Him.

We may be dumber than a box of rocks, but we walk with Christ, Who is the unassailable rock. He will not be moved. Let us then cling to Him.

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Athens and Jerusalem, City of God and City of Man

What hath Jerusalem to do with Athens? Much in every way. On the negative side, we’d do well to remember that the citizens of God’s city, like those in the city of man, are still sinners. Though we are indwelt by God’s Holy Spirit, though we have been given hearts of flesh, we remain sinners. On this side of the veil, not unlike those around us. Thus Jesus, in His Sermon on the Mount, enjoins us not to do that which still comes all too naturally to us, to fret and worry about our food or our clothing. Such things, He tells us, the heathen worry about.

On a more positive note, Jerusalem and Athens have this in common: they are ruled by the same Man. That is, Jesus is Lord of both. There is no city over which Jesus does not reign. He is Lord over all of creation. We must be zealous to make this affirmation with boldness. We must, however, do so with care.

That Jesus is Lord of Athens does not mean that all is well with Athens. We cannot safely assume the city to be safe because our Lord rules over it. Instead, remembering the antithesis, the biblical truth that the seed of the woman and the seed of the Serpent will war against one another until the kingdom comes in its fullness, the reign of Jesus over Athens means Athens is in trouble. The city belongs to Jesus, and yet it rebels against Him. His lordship is less an imprimatur over the city and more a Sword of Damocles, a constant threat of judgment.

There is a third thing these cities have in common. Not only does Jesus rule both, not only are both cities populated by sinners, but both are populated by those who bear God’s image. Though the seed of the Serpent is at war with God and His people, they still bear His imprint. We see this theme repeated several times in the Bible. God calls His children to exercise dominion over the creation. The wicked line of Cain is not lazy with respect to exercising dominion. Bearing God’s image, it goes to work, turns mud into bricks, and builds a tower to make a name for itself.

That this line does not labor for God’s glory but its own is a sign of sin. That it builds at all is a sign of God’s image. The same is true with respect to worship. In Romans 1, Paul belabors both that all men everywhere worship and that outside of God’s active grace in our lives, we all worship creatures rather than the Creator. Because we are God’s image bearers, we worship. Because we are in rebellion, we worship falsely.

This ought to inform our understanding of how these two cities relate. We do not send out envoys of peace against the enemies of God, beating our swords into plowshares. Neither, however, do we allow our sense of antithesis to cloud our common humanity, or better still, our common bearing of God’s image.

Thus, we do not determine that piety demands that we who worship the risen Lord ought to walk on our hands, because the children of darkness walk on their feet. We do not assume that the right thing is for Christians to hate their children because unbelievers love their children. Instead, we thank the Lord of all for all that we still have in common. Instead, we encourage all that is good, true, and beautiful in Athens, knowing that, in the end, it all must belong to the Lord.

The Athenian Plato was not, contra those who would forget the antithesis, a sadly uninformed but brilliant man whose well intentioned philosophical meanderings can be richly gleaned for wisdom. He was instead, as we all were prior to the work of the Spirit of God in us, an enemy of God. His philosophical thoughts had as their end goal the denying of God. Plato was, with respect to wisdom, deaf, dumb and blind. He could not, according to the Scripture, even see the kingdom of God (John 3:3).

There is wisdom, however, in that nugget that suggests “even a blind squirrel finds a nut now and then.” Plato did not tell us anything we did not already know when he first suggested that the three high virtues are goodness, truth, and beauty. He did, however, speak well, truthfully, and beautifully in so saying. Plato, in drawing our attention to goodness, truth, and beauty, made manifest the image of God in his own life, and in turn taught us how to better recognize that image in others.

When unbelieving firefighters act heroically — when they exhibit the good — we have no reason for shame. Or when unbelieving scientists speak truthfully, we have no reason for shame. When unbelieving musicians create moments of beauty, we have no reason for shame. For these things neither belong in the end to Jerusalem nor to Athens. Instead, they belong to the One who is Lord of both.

Plato recognized the goodness, truth, and beauty of goodness, truth, and beauty. Jesus is goodness, truth and beauty, and every other perfection infinitely. If we would pursue goodness, truth, and beauty, we must pursue Him. We must seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things will be added unto us.

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Digital Directions: Caught in the Cattle Chute

I’m not a fan of Disney parks. And not because of increasing woke messaging. I didn’t care for them back when they really were family friendly. The message was fine. The method was not. That is, what I don’t like about the parks is the deep manipulation I feel when I am there. These people are masters at herding cats. I want to be free.

When you visit a park you can pick up a free pamphlet. It contains a map of the park letting you know where to find various attractions. The pamphlet also provides “tips” to help you maximize your time. It notes, for instance, that a strong majority goes through the park left to right. Go right to left and you’ll find shorter lines. Nothing wrong there. What creeps me out is they know if they put that type on the top left of the page, too few people will read it. If they print it in bold, too many people will read it, and the left to right people will find longer lines.

Social scientists, or civil human engineers, know just where to put this information to achieve balance. This is not a huge deal. It is simply an illustration of a big deal. The entire experience is planned down to that level. Distant and unknown people thought through very spot in the park, every moment of the day. All to get me to do what they wish.

Which is true not just of various Disney parks dotting the globe, but is true as well of the world wide web. Cyberspace, or at least vast swaths of it, operates through various algorithms and other AI chicanery to move us like cattle to the abattoir. Don’t believe me? Just start watching The Social Dilemma. I don’t have to coax you to finish it. Start it, and you will want to finish it. It peeks behind the curtain, talking to those who once pulled the levers.

We pay visits to Disney parks infrequently. Most of us enter cyberspace every day. Unlike Disney Parks, entrance to the world wide web is free. Which ought to be a clue to us. On the web we’re not the customers. We’re the attraction. We are gathered and kept there at the behest of the advertisers there, for the sake of data miners. As long as we keep coming back, our masters continue to get paid.

Am I a hypocrite? I post this piece on the web and share links to it on social media. My hope is that you will stick around, read to the end, and be changed. The difference is, I’m not doing an end-run around your consciousness. I’m actually trying to persuade you. Nothing hidden, no tricks. Just an ask that you think through these things. I don’t want your data. My desire is to change your mind.

Again, let me ask you to check out the movie. Let me, however, make one more suggestion. Go to your calendar and schedule a time to watch it again, maybe three to six months from now. That might help you to remember what they want you to forget.

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Sacred Marriage, Rachel & Leah; War in Iran? Bologna & More

This week’s all new Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

Lisa and I on Rachel and Leah, Hope and Charity, Lola and Lollipop, Faith and Fiona. Plus, is war coming in Iran? Whatever happened to bologna, jello and cheese fondue? And lessons from the book of Judges. Check it out.

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