Romans Study Tonight, 7 best, Ch. 14 Redux

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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The Purpose Driven Write

My father wrote and published over 100 books in his lifetime. What may be even more impressive is how he coaxed me into writing my first. I was 17 years old and a freshman at Grove City College. We were talking on the phone and he asked me a weird question. “Son,” he said, “do you think you could write a ten-page paper on inflation?” “Sure,” I replied. Though I was young I spent most of my spare time reading Austrian economists. I had chosen Grove City College in order to study under Hans Sennholz, one of only two scholars to earn a Ph.D under Ludwig Von Mises himself.

“What about a biblical view of profits? he continued. “Yes, I could do that.” “How about caring for the poor? Could you write one on that?” I was terribly puzzled by this point. Hesitantly I responded, “I suppose if I had enough time I could.” “Do you think you could do ten such papers?” “Yes.” “Well if you did, then you’d have a book. That’s what I think you should do this summer as your job. When you are done I’ll go through it and then we’ll find a publisher.”

That book, Money Matters, with various updates and revisions, under various titles and publishers, has been in print just under forty years. And that is how one gifted and accomplished author got an uncertain teenager to write his first book.

Since that time I’ve published more than a dozen books of my own while helping others do the same. I’ve edited other books, and served as editor-in-chief of multiple magazines. I’ve published in magazines as well, poetry and fiction, Christian and secular. I’ve been a columnist for World magazine, Tabletalk, Homeschooling Today, Family Reformation and more. I’ve had pieces in Chronicles, The Freeman, Decision, Homeschooling Digest and more.

I love writing. Which is why I love helping others to do the same. Five years ago I started The Purpose Driven Write. My purpose is to help writers get their writing polished brilliant enough to earn and find an audience. I’ve been blessed to do everything from taking others’ ideas and putting them in book form to laying out the broad outline to actual coaching writing to substantive editing to buffing a final draft to a sparkling sheen.

The hard truth is there is much more to getting a book in the hands of a reader than writing enough words and hiring someone to fix whatever typos there may be. The other truth, on the other hand, is that it can be done, with help from the right person. I want to be that person.

If you have a message you want others to find, if you have a story you want to tell, I can help you, just like I’ve helped others. To talk more about this, please feel free to contact me via email at hellorcjr@gmail.com or leave a comment. Let’s get this started. Let’s get this done.

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Every Man a Churchman

It is no surprise that a culture with a low view of theology would in turn have a low ecclesiology (doctrine of the church). The theos, after all, is rather tightly bound together with the ekklésia. Dismiss one and you will have a hard time not dismissing the other. If you have little interest in studying the person and work of the Groom, you will likely have little interest in studying, much less serving His bride. You need not study the Groom long to learn that He commands us to love His beloved.

Nathan Hatch proposed an interesting perspective on how, at least in America, we have come to such a low view of the church in his landmark work The Democratization of American Christianity. He observed a correlation between the spread of America into the Western frontier and the spread and growth of the church. In each instance, it seemed what was called for was a pioneering spirit and a willingness to embrace the practical, to leave aside niceties that had little to do with survival. As our forefathers moved west seeking more elbow room, the church likewise sought more elbow room. Unwilling to be bound by the traditions of Puritan New England, they, in and through the Great Awakening, took on new methods, new convictions, new liberties.

The literary heroes of the age— Natty Bumppo, Daniel Boone, even Huck Finn— embraced an ethic built on individual effort, courage, and drive, thereby shaping how we understand ourselves not just in the face of the Western wilderness, but in the spiritual wilderness. Lone wolves ceased to be something to fear and became something to aspire to. We began to forget that we are a we.

The Romantic spirit came across the pond and fit in quite well. Romanticism isn’t a worldview built on candlelit dinners or walks on the beach, but on the premise that institutions are the root of all evil, that man in his natural state is pure and clean. The telos (goal) of Romanticism is authenticity, spontaneity. I become what I am meant to be when I am most free of any restraints, when my emotions are my guiding star. I am what I feel. And I am an island.

The Bible, on the other hand, while profoundly concerned with the individual— the individual soul, the soul made right with God— never leaves us alone. Indeed, it warns us regularly of the danger of being a lone ranger. We have been brought into the assembly. We are a part of the body. We are, together, the bride of Jesus Christ. It is not good that man should be alone. We are a corpus, a body, a part of something much bigger than ourselves.

Our fathers in the faith understood this, and we have sought to forget. They understood that when they confessed together the Apostles’ Creed, they were doing something more than giving a personal confession of faith. They understood even that their local body was doing more than describing the bounds of its own confession.They understood that they were confessing the faith once for all given to the church, that they were standing in a stream that began well before them and that would continue long after them. When they sang the Psalms, they understood that they were doing more than merely singing what was safe, because it came from the Holy Spirit. Rather, they grasped that they were retelling their own family stories, indeed, that the whole of the Bible isn’t others’ history from which we might draw moral lessons, but rather it is our history from which we should draw our identity.

In like manner, our fathers understood that the Christian life is so much bigger than merely waiting for personal rescue. Their goal was not simply to protect and guard their own souls, but to hold fast to the faith, to tell their children and their children’s children of the great works of God in space and time. In our day, we may know our Father in heaven, but we have forgotten our mother, the church.

Our Lord Jesus tells each of us that we must seek first the kingdom of God, and His righteousness. That kingdom is bigger than just me, bigger than just you. It is us, along with our fathers, and as many as are afar off. It includes those whose musical tastes annoy us, whose weak theology frustrates us, whose sins shame us. We are called not just to identify with all those with whom we are in union, but to seek their good, to pursue their blessing. We are called to love them just as the One who has bound us together loves them. That doesn’t mean we’ll never disagree— it means we will disagree. Because that’s what fallen people who love each other do. That is one way that we are able to serve each other.

We have, each of us and all of us, been given the righteousness of Christ. Not one of us has earned it. Not one of us can keep it on his own. But we all together have been purchased by the blood of Jesus Christ. As such, our heavenly Father doesn’t just love me, but He loves you and every one of us even as He loves His only begotten Son. We have together the same Father. We have Him because we have together the same Elder Brother. And both of them call on us to love our common mother, blemishes and all, because she gave birth to us and because she nurtures us, cherishes us.

Our Father is perfect. Our mother is most assuredly not. But just as the Spirit is perfecting us, so is He perfecting our mother. Our calling is to love her, to honor her, to submit to her, that it might go well with us in the land He has given us.

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One More Reason To Read Your Bible

Some years ago I got into some hot water for noting that the Bible nowhere says we are required to read our Bibles daily. I certainly didn’t advise against reading the Bible daily, nor did I deny that we are commanded in Scripture to meditate on His Word, to hide it in our hearts, to love, cherish and obey it. I had two goals in making this point. First, we should not add to God’s Word. God is not impressed when we do so. Second, we need to beware of taking a posture of seeing Bible reading as a sacrifice we make to demonstrate our piety.

How many of us have either felt burdens placed on us by others, or placed them on ourselves that God hasn’t given us? How many of us wear our spiritual accomplishments like merit badges? We are to delight ourselves in the Lord, which is something far different from performing duties.

The truth is that God delights in us, which ought to delight us. How often do we ask Him for this thing or that, because we don’t believe He’s already given it to us? “Hear me O Lord,” “Deliver me O Lord,” “Draw near to me O Lord.” These are good things to pray, as long as we also pray, “Than you O Lord that you hear me, deliver me, draw near to me.” We need less for Him to do more for us, more for us to know more what He is always doing.

Which is where we find one more reason to read our Bibles. It’s not that in reading our Bible we prove ourselves worthy of His attention and care. It is instead that in reading our Bible we find Him always proving Himself the One who give us His attention and care. The Bible is the story of God’s faithfulness. On every page we see people just like us failing Him, and He loving them. On every page we seem Him walking with people who were conceived in iniquity through the valley of the shadow of death.

The Bible is where we see men being men, to our shame, and God being God, to His glory. We seem Him execute judgment against His and our enemies, and manifesting His grace on we who were by nature our own and His enemies. It is where we see the end that awaits us, the fullness of His promises spoken against the backdrop of His perfect record as THE promise keeper.

Reading the Bible does nothing to prove how good we are. What it does is remind us of how good He is. Which is why reading it feeds our souls, renews our minds, equips us for every good work, rebukes, corrects and instructs us in righteousness. It is the very story of our joy, revealing that He is able, sovereign, and that He is for us, filled with grace. That’s a story we ought to hunger to read, delight to read, need to read.

Posted in 10 Commandments, assurance, Bible Study, church, kingdom, Kingdom Notes, RC Sproul JR, wisdom | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Doreen Virtue; Campus Unrest; My Inner Pharisee & More

This week’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Accommodating the Public (Schools)

Wouldn’t it be great if there a platform existed, a medium that was accessible by all, where differing opinions could be expressed? Where no ideology was privileged and no ideology suppressed? A kind of Mars Hill. One question though. Should this forum be public or private? If it’s private we have a problem. The owner would have the right to determine what, if anything crosses his line. If he allows people to agitate for genocide, if he leaves room for Neo-nazis, conspiracy theorists, child trafficking apologists, his customers might abandon ship. If, on the other hand, he doesn’t allow such things, suddenly the medium isn’t accessible by all.

Maybe then it would be best if this platform was owned by the government. That way no owner could determine what crosses a line and what doesn’t. But then you have this problem- the taxes I pay are being used to help propagate ideas I find reprehensible. Now Holocaust survivors’ taxes are building a platform for Holocaust deniers. Atheists are being taxed to pay for Christians to promote the gospel. Christians are being taxed to pay for atheists to evangelize their own unbelief. Child trafficking victims are being taxed to finance the propagation of the ideas of child trafficking apologists. Now what?

This conundrum, you may think, is being brought to you by the raging controversy over the Sith Lords of Social Media. This controversy has revealed differing perspectives. A few of us want to do away with foolish public accommodation laws altogether so that decisions about who we want to do business with can be made freely. Crazy I know, letting people make up their own minds. A few of you believe the government should make all such decisions. Most of you hypocritically believe others should be forced to do business against their will and that you should not.

My point, however, is not about social media, or bakeries being forced to bake cakes for faux marriages. Rather it is about the largest platform in the country, which is controlled by the government, that actually exercises iron-clad control over content that is deeply offensive to many and that taxes citizens to pay for it all. It is the government school system. It is as if conservatives, fed up with Twitter’s silencing of opposing views are told “If you don’t like it, build your own social network.” And “Oh, by the way, we’re still going to make you pay for this social network.” Only this platform costs three-quarters of a trillion dollars every year. Trillion, with a t.

Conservatives are outraged over social media’s heavy-handed control over content, and at peace with the far more damaging iron-fisted control over education exercised by the government. We clutched our pearls some years ago over the President, the President I tell you, losing his posting privileges but think nothing of millions of little children being taught they are nothing but sophisticated germs, the fruit of random collisions of time, space and energy, being taught that they can decide for themselves whether they are little boys or little girls, being taught, by the mere failure to mention His name, that Jesus doesn’t matter.

The Dark Lords of Silicon Valley are not to be trusted. They are disingenuous and diabolical. They are, however, mere teacup poodles nipping at the heels of liberty while the state is a rabid, steroid fueled Bull Mastiff. And we, fools that we are, think we can pet it into submission, train it into obedience, feed it into domestication. While its jaws descend upon our throats.

Posted in Devil's Arsenal, Economics in This Lesson, Education, ethics, kingdom, Kingdom Notes, persecution, politics, RC Sproul JR | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Romans Study, Chap 14 at 7 eastern 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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Why won’t unbelievers come to church?

Sin. The real question is, our sin or theirs? It has become fashionable, and perhaps always was, for some believers to blame other believers for unbelievers choosing to be unbelievers. When Bill Hybels, building Willow Creek into one of the first mega-churches, sent pollsters door to door through Chicago neighborhoods asking people why they didn’t go to church they found a fairly narrow list of objections. Church, many said, was not relevant. Church was always asking for money. Church was boring. People in church were hypocrites and judgmental. They’d been hurt by someone in church in their past.

Do you notice anything missing? No one answered, “Because there I’d encounter the God I am in rebellion against.” There are at least two possible reasons that answer never came up. Either they’d never encountered God in church, or they had, and in their rebellion, didn’t like it.

The church is indeed full of sinners. It is crawling with hypocrites and the judgmental. The reason for that is simple enough- all people are hypocritical and judgmental, and the church is full of people. The church hurts people for the same reason, because people hurt people and the church is full of people.

Because we are all sinners the solution isn’t to no longer sin. Instead the solution is to recognize that the message of the church is the solution to our sin. The church is that place where sinners gather to learn about, celebrate and praise the one sinless man who gave us, as we acknowledge our sin and His life and death for us, peace with the living God. It is where we meet with Him.

Could there be anything less boring, or anything more relevant? On the other hand, could there be anything more useless than seeking to bring unbelievers into church through mimicking their music, their language, their ideologies? Unbelievers don’t need more of what they already have. The last thing they need is to be made to feel comfortable. Welcome, yes. Loved, of course. Comfortable? By no means.

The silly trope that the problem with the church is that it’s just not hip enough is a lie from the pit. Big screens, skinny jeans, and fog machines are not only not the gospel, but are distractions from it. More swear words, more wokeness, more comedy do not reveal the glory of Christ but expose the hunger for approval of His pathetic sheep.

Should the church seek greater obedience to the Lord? Of course. Our sinfulness is something to be repented of, turned from. What we ought not to do is flaunt it, to make unbelievers feel more welcome. Should we act better than we are? Of course not. We repent of our sin. We don’t deny it or hide from it. We confess it, in shame. May unbelievers come to know that church is where sin is exposed, and when repented of, completely and utterly forgiven. The only freedom anyone has from condemnation is at the foot of the cross.

Why won’t unbelievers come to church? Because as yet they don’t believe. What they need is not a comfortable place to stay in their sin, but the proclamation of the blood of Christ to cover our sin.

Posted in Ask RC, Biblical Doctrines, Big Eva, church, communion, Devil's Arsenal, evangelism, grace, kingdom, preaching, RC Sproul JR, repentance, worship | Tagged , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

We Thirst

Our sins leave scars. First, they not only wound others but hurt us, damage us. Then, by His grace, and by His scars, they are healed. They are forgotten by the One who knows all things, the beginning from the end, but not by us. Because we are healed, our past sins cannot hurt us. However, because we are scarred, we do not forget.

David rightly bewailed that his sins were ever before him. How much more so must James’ sins have ever been before him? We, as James tells us, have His Word as a mirror, telling us who and what we are. James, the whole time he was growing up, had the mirror beside him at breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Every moment of his youth, there was his elder brother, not merely preferred, not merely more accomplished, but the One who literally never sinned. Not once. The comparison could not have been more stark.

James responded just as I would have, not by admiring his elder brother, not by aspiring to be like Him, but by rejecting Him, despising Him, by raging against his own exposure. Like his first elder brother, Cain, James, seeing how his brother pleased His heavenly Father, was filled with envy. And James murdered Him in his heart.

The Scripture tells us nothing of James’ rebirth. We know that on the cross, Jesus placed His blessed mother under the care of the Apostle John rather than her natural son, James, suggesting that James was brought to faith sometime after the resurrection, though this is merely conjecture. We cannot help, however, but imagine that his conversion must have been a dramatic one. To have known Jesus for so long, to have rejected Him for so long, to have not just a common life of sin but to be burdened by a seething cauldron of jealousy, only then to be awakened, was likely more unexpected and disorienting than even Saul’s conversion. Which is where the scars come in.

James did not enter the kingdom having thought himself a fine fellow who had a few minor weaknesses for which Jesus had to die. After a lifetime lived before the mirror, he knew his sin, which is why he is such a strident watchman against our own sins. As he carried his scars with him, he was unashamed to name what we are outside of His grace. He did not dance around sin, but named it— and its ugly fount.

What causes quarrels and what causes fights among you? Is it not this, that your passions are at war within you? You desire and do not have, so you murder. You covet and cannot obtain, so you fight and quarrel. (James 4:1–2a)

How did James know this about us? Because he first knew it about himself. He did not fail to see his own scars because he looked to the scars of others; rather, he saw the scars of others because he was all too familiar with his own. We want. We hunger. We desire. And when those desires are left unfulfilled, we quarrel, fight, and murder. At this point, it would seem that the solution would be to suppress our desires, to put them to death, to mortify them. If the desires are the root of the problem, we would be fools to merely lop the top off the noxious weeds. That leaves the root still there.

Which is why James gives us the wisdom of God rather than the folly of man. James 4:2 doesn’t end with stoic indifference, counsel on how to reach a point of imperturbability. Instead, he says, “You do not have because you do not ask” (v. 2b). All this hunger that leads us to hate our brother is wrong not because we are hungry, but because we consume what does not satisfy. If we are drinking water from the ocean, we will not slake our thirst by demanding the whole of the ocean for ourselves. Neither will we solve the problem simply by denying our thirst. Rather, the solution is to thirst after the water that satisfies, living water.

James’ envy of his brother, in turn, was not solved either by surpassing or by suppressing Him but by embracing Him. All the guilt that weighed him down, all the envy, they only go away when we become one with Him. The only way to be praised with Him is to be raised with Him, and for that, we have to die.

Jesus put it another way. When He spoke of all that we desire, He didn’t tell us to stop desiring. Rather, He told us to seek first His kingdom, His righteousness, and then all these things would be added to us. Everything we think we want, every petty thing we pursue to satisfy us is but a mirage, choking hot sand that we, in our madness, mistake for water. He, however, is that water by which we will never again thirst. The promise of God in Christ is not that He will take away our thirst—it is that He, and He alone, will satisfy it.

My elder Brother is everything I am not. He is everything, and I am nothing. My scars remind me of my lack. His scars remind me of His provision. My heavenly Father is satisfied. My longing is satisfied. And the miracle of it all is that Jesus is satisfied with James, with you, and with me. For He is beautifying us into His bride. Because the day of the marriage feast is coming, let us be satisfied. The Spirit and the bride say, “Come.” And let the one who hears say, “Come.” And let the one who is thirsty come; let the one who desires take the water of life without price.

Posted in 10 Commandments, assurance, Biblical Doctrines, church, communion, Devil's Arsenal, grace, kingdom, Kingdom Notes, RC Sproul JR, repentance, resurrection, wisdom | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

Trans Sport Nation or, Who You Gonna Call?

There are myriad reasons conservatives lose so many battles in the culture wars. Among them are the hunger for approval, the desire to find a middle way, ignorance on the issues, lack of backbone. We should not overlook, however, our propensity to miss the forest for the trees, our dandelion lopping failure to get to the root of the issue.

Consider the recent outrage over President Biden’s executive orders bringing the sexually confused under the protection of Title IX legislation. Among other things Title IX came into being a generation ago to ensure “fairness” to women at universities and colleges across the country. It sought to ensure that women’s collegiate athletics received as much institutional support at a given school as men’s collegiate athletics. Now it is being used to require schools to open up their women’s athletics programs to men. Cowardly, unmanly and confused men to be sure, but men nonetheless.

As is to be expected, since there are votes to be won among the sane middle, conservative heroes donned their armor and have gone out to meet this dragon in battle. Texas Governor Greg Abbott has led the charge. Five states have already begun the process of filing suit against the federal government. For which I give two cheers.

Why not three? I’m aghast and appalled at the notion of men competing against women. I reject trans ideology, along with every letter and symbol wrapped in the rainbow flag. I also, however, reject the unconstitutional notion that the federal government has any right to say anything to anyone about education. The 10th Amendment from the Bill of Rights explicitly states that if the Constitution doesn’t explicitly grant the federal government jurisdiction over something then it has no jurisdiction. What does the Constitution say the role of the federal government is with respect to education, college education, college athletics, or competitors in college athletics? The same thing war is good for, absolutely nothing. Huh.

The issue isn’t what rules Title IX adopts under this president or that. The issue is Title IX. If Title IX forbad a college from allowing men to compete against women it would still be wrong. It’s simply none of their business.

Wait, you say. I’ve left something out of the equation. Title IX only applies to colleges and universities that take federal funds. Yeah, well, what about that? Doesn’t that give them jurisdiction? I’m so glad you asked. Let me remind you of something you may have forgotten since two paragraphs ago- the 10th Amendment. The federal government, violating the Constitution by writing checks to colleges, is not now exempt from the Constitution’s prohibition against intrusion into college athletics. Biden’s rules are out of line because Title IX is out of line. Federal subsidies change nothing because, you guessed it, federal subsidies are out of line.

When my alma mater, Grove City College, refused to affirm its compliance with Title IX back in the 1980s, the feds took our case all the way to the Supreme Court. There Grove City emerged victorious on 10th Amendment grounds. We refused to king’s money and were thus free of his dictates. In the end who controls the government is far less important that what the government controls.

Posted in Economics in This Lesson, Education, ethics, kingdom, Kingdom Notes, logic, persecution, politics, RC Sproul JR, sexual confusion, sport | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments