Speaking The Truth In Love

My thanks to Jimmy Davis for this:

“Rather, speaking the truth in love, we are to grow up in every way into him who is the head, into Christ….”  (Ephesians 4:15)

T. M. Moore offers insight into how to speak the truth in love:

There are two obstacles to be surmounted in learning to speak the truth in love. The first is that you must love the truth. If you do not love the truth you won’t care enough about it to learn it or to defend it when it is called into question or denied. To love the truth you must court it continually, engage it in conversation, take it into your heart and mind, yield all your life to it, speak of it often with others who love it, and thank the One Who gives us His truth. Before you begin to speak out on behalf of the truth, make sure you love it well.

The second obstacle is that you must love those to whom you would speak about the truth. If you do not love them you won’t care whether they hear the truth or not. You won’t care, either, about how you present the truth to them, and may be just as content to bash and hammer them with truth as to speak with gentleness and love. Loving those to whom you would speak of the truth can be as difficult as loving the truth. Both take time and effort and a constant line of communication to our loving Lord. But both these obstacles can be overcome.

And think of the gain in overcoming them: the joy of truth day by day as we wait upon the Lord in His Word; the excitement of talking with other truth-lovers and reinforcing and edifying one another in truth; and the adventure and utter delight of helping those who do not know the truth begin, at the very least, to glimpse it at last.

Begin by loving the truth, and the truth will teach you to love others, and to be the bearer of truth to them, in love.

Help me, Lord, to love Your truth and to love those to whom I would proclaim it.

[HT:  T. M. Moore's daily email devotional Crossfigell. You can sign up to receive this devotional at www.myparuchia.com.]

Come to me… and I will give you rest

I love this from Todd Pruitt:

“A bruised reed he will not break, and a smouldering wick he will not snuff out.” – Isaiah 42:3

We all know what it is like to feel like a bruised reed and a smouldering wick. They are both images of weakness. Relationships, work, loss, and pain can all sap our strength and rob us of strength. It is in those times when we need to know the tender touch of God.

I am tired today. Certain burdens are weighing especially heavy. Too often I depend on the approval of others which always results in wounds and disappointment. I am a sinful man and I live among other sinful men. The reality can be overwhelming. But what I need is not more approval or to work harder. What I need is Jesus.

Thanks to Ray Ortland for the following post. I needed this today (and a lot of days for that matter).

“Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.”
Matthew 11:28

The sacred centre of Christianity is Christ himself. Coming personally to the Person. Coming directly to the Mediator. No one but Jesus can call us with such authority, and no one but Jesus can encourage us with such a promise. No one else can give us rest.

If our functional purpose in church is to connect with one another and build community, that’s what we’ll get — one another. And we’ll end up angry. Only Jesus gives us rest. If we will put him first and come to him first, we’ll have something to give one another.

If our functional purpose in church is outreach and mercy and justice and all those good missional things, we’ll end up exhausted and empty. Only Jesus gives us rest. If we will put him first and come to him first, we’ll be renewed for endless mission.

Only One has ever said and can ever say, “Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.” His offer stands. But he comes first.

Core sins

What is the core sin of the human heart? Is it pride? Is it the sin of unbelief? Theologians have debated this topic for centuries. But According to Dr. David Powlison, the sins of pride and unbelief are really “two doors into the same room.” And he adds a third door—the fear of man.

These three core sins are interrelated, and it’s not difficult to see how. Pride is the act of installing myself as the king of my own autonomous kingdom. Unbelief is the act of erasing God from my kingdom (functionally, if not deliberately). Fear of man is the act of installing other sinners as big players in my kingdom (When People are Big and God is Small).

And it’s no surprise that all of the lies and lusts of our hearts are to be found rooted in these three core sins. These lies and lusts are expressions of the three core sins.

(HT: Tony Reinke)

The one essential condition

dostoevsky

“The one essential condition of human existence is that man should always be able to bow down before something infinitely great. If men are deprived of the infinitely great, they will not go on living and will die of despair. The Infinite and the Eternal are as essential for man as the little planet on which he dwells.”

Fyodor Dostoevsky, The Possessed, chapter 7, section 3.

(HT: Ray Ortlund)

The persistent love of the Spirit

h bonar

“The Holy Spirit is no mere mechanical agent in the great work of a sinner’s deliverance, and of the Church’s up building, obediently doing the work appointed to Him. ‘I delight to do Your will’ is as true of the Spirit as the Son.

He loves the sinner; therefore He lays hold of him. He pities his misery; therefore He stretches out the hand of help. He has no pleasure in his death; therefore He puts forth His saving power. He is longsuffering and patient; therefore He strives with him day by day; and though ‘vexed,’ ‘resisted,’ ‘grieved,’ and ‘quenched,’ He refuses to retire from, or give up, any sinner on this side of eternity.

The extent to which we resist Him, and the amount of His forbearing love, we cannot know. This only we may say, that our stubbornness is something infinitely fearful and malignant, while His patient grace passes all understanding.”

—Horatius Bonar, “The Holy Spirit”

(HT: Of First Importance)

Comfort and the Victory of the Cross

JamesStewart

“True Gospel comfort never plays down to natural weakness: it lifts up to supernatural strength. There is nothing enfeebling or demoralizing about it, no flying to the drug of fantasy. It is essentially virile, bracing, reinforcing. And what gives it this character, preserving it from the risk of sentimentalism, is the Cross at the centre of it. In the last resort, the human heart is too big to find its comfort in any soothing anodyne of consolatory words. There is no comfort short of victory. And it is this, nothing less, that the preacher of the Gospel is empowered to offer to all who turn their faces to the Cross—the comfort of mastering every dark situation, and triumphing in every tribulation, through the grace of Him who conquered there.”

—James S. Stewart, Heralds of God (Hodder & Stoughton, 1946), p. 79.

(HT: Tony Reinke)

Mercy enough to cover ALL our sin

samuel-bolton

“…a Christian may be comforted, first of all, in respect of his former justification. His new sin does not cancel his former pardon, though it will interrupt and disturb his present peace and comfort from it. And secondly, he may be comforted in this, that there is mercy enough in God to cover all his sins, grace enough in Christ to cure this fresh sin. And further, in this he is to find comfort, that God does not suffer him to live in sin, but that He has revealed his sin to him, humbled him for it, and brought him back to Christ in whom he may renew his peace and regain his sense of comfort.”

Samuel Bolton, The True Bounds of Christian Freedom, p. 154

(HT: John Fonville)

Penal Substitution By Dr. Greg Bahnsen

If you have been following the conversation in the comments section you may be interested to read this article by Greg Bahnsen taken from Monergism.

bahnsenHow can a guilty sinner avert the just condemnation and wrath of God? How can he be set free from the penalty he deserves? Paul wrote: “When the fulness of time came, God sent forth His Son, born of a woman, born under the law, so that He might redeem them who are under the law” (Gal. 4:4). In order to fulfill all of God’s promises and accomplish His saving design for men, Christ came to do a work of “redemption.”

And in Paul’s theologically authoritative conception of this redemption, it carried an unmistakably judicial and substitutionary character: “Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law, having become a curse for us” (3:13). Redemption or liberation is a setting free from a dreaded judicial reality: “the curse of the law.” And this act of setting us free was accomplished by a Substitute who assumed the judicial condemnation in our place: “having become a curse for us.” Christ’s death upon the cross was not simply some “equivalently terrible event” which replaces the infliction of the law’s judicial penalty (as “governmental” theories maintain), but rather the very bearing of that curse itself….

The redemptive work of Christ was clearly more than an act of representation or mediation, even though Scripture does look upon Jesus Christ as the federal representative of His people and as the only Mediator between God and men. In human transactions, a mediator or negotiator between adversarial parties may facilitate agreement, but he need not also — as a substitute for one of the parties (or both) — be the one who performs the service or pays the price involved in the eventual contract or resolution. An attorney can represent his client in a court of law, pleading before the bar, without also as a substitute for that client becoming the one who undergoes the punishment imposed by the judge. Christ our Savior did more than represent or mediate for us to God. Isaiah the prophet was granted by God a clear and poignant vision of this truth: “But he was wounded for our transgressions; he was bruised for our iniquities…. Jehovah has laid on him the iniquity of us all” (53:5-6). How shall God’s Righteous Servant “justify many”? Isaiah wrote: “it pleased Jehovah to bruise him; He has put him to grief,” making his life (or soul) an “offering for sin…. He shall bear their iniquities” (vv. 10-11).

To this the words of the New Testament add decisive confirmation. Christ was manifested at the consummation of the ages, says the author of Hebrews, “to put away sin by the sacrifice of Himself,” being “once offered up to bear the sins of many” (9:26, 28). By taking upon Himself the sins of His people, Christ bore the penalty of death which sin deserves. Jesus said it Himself when He referred to His coming death and interpreted it as “My blood of the New Covenant poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins” (Matt. 26:28). Peter writes that this “precious blood of Christ” was the means of our “redemption” (1 Peter 1:18-19). Redemption required that He die as our substitute. Thus Paul describes the Mediator as one who “gave Himself as a ransom on behalf of all” (1 Tim. 2:5-6), using a Greek word for “ransom” whose prefix gives it the literal sense of “substitute-payment.” This conspicuously mirrors the saying of Jesus Himself that He came “to give His life as a ransom [release-price] in the place of many” (Mark 10:45).

The doctrine of penal substitution could be expunged from the Biblical witness only by a perverse and criminal mistreatment of the sacred text or a tendentious distortion of its meaning. What else could Peter have meant by writing to believers in the church that “Christ suffered for you”? The Greek preposition (“for”) has the sense of “in your behalf” or “for your sake.” Was it simply for the sake of a moral example, so that those who “suffer unjustly” (v. 19) might “follow His steps” (v. 21)? Is that the end of the matter (exemplary suffering) or is that not rather the moral application of the fundamental saving significance of Christ’s suffering? Surely the manner in which Christ died can be a model and even a motivator without at all securing forgiveness or securing ethical integrity; history is full of paradigmatic and pathos-engendering martyrs, while men familiar with them nevertheless continue under the bondage of sin and subject to God’s wrath. Peter’s explanation of the sense in which Christ, the innocent one, suffered “for” us extends to this precious truth: “who bore our sins in His body upon the tree” (v. 24). The substituting of the innocent in the place of the guilty, for the sake of rescuing the guilty from condemnation, comes out just a few verses later when Peter declares: “Christ also suffered for sins once, the righteous for the unrighteous, in order that He might bring us to God” (3:18).

We see from the above that Christ’s atoning death was intended to have an objective effect upon a wrathful Judge (God) and not simply a subjective reverberation in the heart of believers. “Moral influence” theories minimize the significance and uniqueness of the cross by making it merely a compelling example of God’s great love, emotionally moving men to live self-sacrificially by imitation. Other stories of martyrdom can evoke pathos, but Scripture sets forth the work of Christ as of unparalleled importance. If it was not important because it secured the favor of God, the crucifixion is debased into a senseless act of showmanship.

Similarly, “governmental” theories portray Christ’s suffering, not as a penal substitution, but simply a penal example of sin’s dreadful and tragic nature so that divine pardon (“bypassing” the demand for the sinner’s punishment) will not have the effect of weakening the honor or enforcement of God’s moral demands in the eyes of the public. Society would not take seriously the need to be morally governed by God unless, in the place of punishing sinners as He threatened, God substituted some great measure which was unpleasant and filled with grief. Such speculation, like the moral influence theory, also undermines the significance and uniqueness of the cross. In order to continue providing a deterrent against forgiven men lapsing into sin, God might occasionally repeat penal examples like Christ’s suffering throughout history (the more recent and relevant, the better after all) — which is utterly unthinkable in New Testament theology wherein there is absolutely no need for Christ “to offer Himself up often” since His redemptive work was performed “once and for all” (Heb. 9:12, 25-28). On the deterrent (“sin-prevention”) interpretation of the atonement, the crucifixion is debased into a distasteful act of manipulation.

The theological perspective of the Biblical writers, prophets and apostles both being witness, is that one who was perfectly righteous stood in the place of those who are unrighteous in God’s sight, bearing the curse or penalty of their sin by dying in their place, in order to set them free from condemnation and secure their eternal benefit. There is no other way, as Peter indicates, for sinners to be “brought back to God.” This makes maintaining the purity and truth of the gospel as the good news about judicial and substitutionary atonement a matter of infinite personal importance. It makes the self-conscious rejection of this central Biblical theme a matter of dreadful consequence. “For we know Him who said ‘Vengeance belongs unto Me, I will recompense’…. It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God” (Heb. 10:30-31). Our only hope is that Christ’s saving death is received by God precisely as a “sacrifice for sins” (cf. v. 26).

Experiencing The Daily Reality Of Justification

If there was one book I would put in every Christian’s hand it would be this one. This book has the potential to equip us to slay the giants of self-righteousness and guilt in our lives, through the gospel and the power of the Holy Spirit. I thoroughly recommend it. My thanks to Jimmy Davis for this quote:

“I have been crucified with Christ.  It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me.  And the life I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me.”  Galatians 2:20 ESV

bookends

For Paul, justification was not only a past event; it was also a daily, present reality. So every day of his life, by faith in Christ, Paul realized he stood righteous in the sight of God–he was counted righteous and accepted by God as righteous–because of the perfectly obedient life and death Christ provided for him.  He stood solely on the rock-solid righteousness of Christ alone…

We must learn to live like the apostle Paul, looking every day outside ourselves to Christ and seeing ourselves standing before God clothed in his perfect righteousness.  Every day we must re-acknowledge the fact that there’s nothing we can do to make ourselves either more acceptable to God or less acceptable.  Regardless of how much we grow in our Christian lives, we’re accepted for Christ’s sake or not at all.  It’s this reliance on Christ alone, apart from any consideration of our good or bad deeds, that enables us to experience the daily reality of [justification], in which the believer finds peace and joy and comfort and gratitude.

~ Jerry Bridges and Bob Bevington in The Bookends of the Christian Life, page 29.

It Is Well With My Soul

My thanks to Erik Kowalker this:

For those of you not familiar with the background of this famous hymn “It is well with my soul” by Horatio Spafford, take the next three minutes to listen and view the severely traumatic events that led Spafford to pen this influential hymn in 1873 that has stood the test of time. May God bring this powerful hymn to your remembrance when difficult seasons in your Christian walk come your way.

Beholding the Glory of Christ

john-owen-theologian

“How, then, can we behold the glory of Christ? We need, firstly, a spiritual understanding of his glory as revealed in Scripture. Secondly, we need to think much about him if we wish to enjoy him fully (1 Pet. 1:8). If we are satisfied with vague ideas about him we shall find no transforming power communicated to us. But when we cling wholeheartedly to him and our minds are filled with thoughts of him and we constantly delight ourselves in him, then spiritual power will flow from him to purify our hearts, increase our holiness, strengthen our graces, and sometimes fill us ‘with joy inexpressible and full of glory.’”

- John Owen, The Glory of Christ, abridged and made easy by R. J. K. Law (Carlisle, Pa.: Banner of Truth Trust, 1994), 115.

(HT: Of First Importance)

Bonhoeffer on the Difference Between the Counsel of Psychiatry and Christianity

Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Life Together (pp. 118-119):

dBonhoefferThe most experienced psychologist or observer of human nature knows infinitely less of the human heart than the simplest Christian who lives beneath the Cross of Jesus.

The greatest psychological insight, ability, and experience cannot grasp this one thing: what sin is.

Worldly wisdom knows what distress and weakness and failure are, but it does not know the godlessness of man. And so it does not know that man is destroyed only by his sin and can be healed only by forgiveness. Only the Christian knows this.

In the presence of a psychiatrist I can only be a sick man; in the presence of a Christian brother I can dare to be a sinner.

The psychiatrist must first search my heart and yet he never plumbs its ultimate depth. The Christian brother knows when I come to him: here is a sinner like myself, a godless man who wants to confess and yearns for God’s forgiveness.

The psychiatrist views me as if there were no God. The brother views me as I am before the judging and merciful God in the Cross of Jesus Christ.

(HT: David Powlison – via Justin Taylor)

Trust in Christ alone

dever

“Saving belief is not mere mental assent, but a believing in – a living in – the knowledge of that news. It is a leaning on, a relying on. We must come to grips with the fact that we are unable to satisfy God’s demands on us, no matter how morally we try to live. We don’t want to end up trusting a little in ourselves and a little in God; we want to realize that we are to rely on God fully, to trust in Christ alone for our salvation.”

-Mark Dever, The Gospel and Personal Evangelism (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books, 2007), 41.

(HT: Of First Importance)

How Do You Break Free from an Addiction to Entertainment?

John Piper answers this question, writing that “Recognizing [the problem] is a huge step in the right direction” and that ” ultimately it’s a gift of grace to feel the glory of God.” Here are some suggestions of what you should do:

john-piper 4

1. Seek the Lord earnestly about it. Pray like crazy that God would open your eyes to see wondrous things out of his law.

2. Immerse yourself in the Bible, even when you don’t feel like it, pleading with God to open your eyes to see what’s really there.

3. Get in a group where you talk about serious things.

4. Begin to share your faith. One of the reasons we are not as moved by our own faith as we are is because we almost never talk about it to any unbeliever. It starts to feel like a kind of hothouse thing, and then it starts to have a feeling of unreality about it. And then the powers of entertainment have more sway in our life.

5. . . . [T]hink about your death. Think about your death a lot. Ask what you’d like to be doing in the season of life, or hours or days, leading up to meeting Christ. I do that a lot these days. I think about the impact of death, and what I would like to be found doing, and how I would prepare to meet him and give an account to him.

(HT: Justin Taylor)

DeYoung: The Plague of Passivity and the Hyper-Spiritualizing of Decisions

From Kevin DeYoung, Just Do Something, pp. 50-51:

Passivity is a plague among Christians. It’s not just that we don’t do anything; it’s that we feel spiritual for not doing anything. We imagine that our inactivity is patience and sensitivity to God’s leading. At times it may be; but it’s also quite possible we are just lazy. When we hyper-spiritualize our decisions, we can veer off into impulsive and foolish decisions. But more likely as Christians we fall into endless patterns of vacillation, indecision, and regret. No doubt, selfish ambition is a danger for Christians, but so is complacency, listless wandering, and passivity that pawns itself off as spirituality. Perhaps our inactivity is not so much waiting on God as it is an expression of the fear of man, the love of the praise of man, and disbelief in God’s providence.

(HT: Justin Taylor)

Christ hath so perfectly satisfied


“The doctrine for which we contend is that Christ hath so perfectly satisfied divine justice for all our sins, by one offering of himself, and not only for our guilt but also for both temporal and eternal punishment, that henceforth there are no more propitiatory offerings to be made for sin, and that though, for the promotion of their penitence and sanctification, God often chastises his people, yet no satisfaction is to be made by them either in this or a future state of existence.”

Francis Turretin, The Atonement of Christ, page 68.

(HT: Ray Ortlund)

Interview with Vaughan Roberts

From Adrian Warnock:

Vaughan has been rector at St. Ebbes, Oxford since 1998. We spoke about how a few years ago it would have been surprising to see the heads of the Proclamation Trust and Newfrontiers together. He described meeting Terry Virgo and discovering that they both liked the same books. He spoke about how we all do need to learn from each other since the caricatures we have are not entirely without a grain of truth.

We then spoke about the parasitical nature of liberalism. A liberal gospel never converts anyone. People are saved into a context that is serious about what the Bible says, but then they sometimes drift into liberalism. He said he is looking for those who value the authority of the Bible over system and human reason. For some people within the evangelical tradition, the Bible doesn’t drive their ministry.

Vaughan said that whilst a new believer might not fully appreciate how the cross saves us, when someone has looked into it and is saying “I do not accept penal substitutionary atonement”, he believes they are departing from Scripture. Vaughan argues that this skews the gospel at so many levels. We have a problem, sin which leads to the wrath of God. The solution must match that. There is a simplicity and depth to classic explanation of the gospel.

“God himself gave himself to save us from himself.”

“According to the Christian revelation, God’s own great love propitiated his own holy wrath through the gift of his own dear Son, who took our place, bore our sin and died our death. Thus God himself gave himself to save us from himself.”

—John Stott, The Message of Romans (Downers Grove, Ill: InterVarsity Press,  1994), 115

(HT: Of First Importance)

Ralph D. Winter (1925-2009)

Justin taylor posts:

Missiologist Dr. Ralph D. Winter, founder of the US Center for World Mission and William Carey International University, has gone to be with the Lord. It is difficult to think of people more influential and strategic in the task of reaching unreached peoples for Christ.

John Piper pays personal tribute here.

Piper also links to this video: