Who Are God’s People?
The Messiah came not only as the glory of Israel but also as a light to the gentiles.
Once again, the gospel takes center stage. It is (and always has been) the gospel—and nothing else—that defines the people of God. The good news of Galatians is that the gospel formerly promised to Abraham has now been realized in Jesus Christ. For as many of you as were baptized into Christ have put... Continue Reading
What is the Biblical Significance of the Number “Six”?
Man in God’s image is a creature of both 6 and 7; the number six without the number seven becomes the symbol of man’s rebellion.
God created man in his image and gave him dominion over the creatures (Gen 1:26–28). Although God made man on the same day as the other creatures, man is clearly higher than the animals. Part of man’s call is to set aside the seventh day. To worship and have an intimate relationship with God is... Continue Reading
Is Christian Bias the Solution to Secular Bias?
A Review of "Against Worldview: Reimagining Christian Formation as Growth in Wisdom," by Simon P. Kennedy
Kennedy’s book is a welcome contribution to the critical discussion of worldview, especially as it affects Christian educational institutions. It provides a substantive history of worldview in German idealism and Dutch Neo-Calvinism. It offers guidance toward a Christian epistemology that is objective, rather than subjective in orientation. And while it does not answer all the... Continue Reading
Every person is a tree. Every tree tells stories.
Psalm 1 has beautiful imagery that's worth our meditation.
To those reborn by the Spirit of God and hidden in Christ, God says, “You are like a tree.” And not just any tree. You are a tree with three defining features: (1) you are planted by the source of life—God himself; (2) you yield good fruit in season; and (3) your leaves never wither. You are... Continue Reading
Lost in God’s Providence
How He Works Our Wanderings for Good
Trusting God to govern our lives quiets many anxieties and affords much peace. Think of it: isn’t the unfolding of our lives wrapped in mystery? One small step this way and not that, one thoughtless act, one unexpected conversation, one small tilt in the rudder, and all is changed. Saul stands as a controversial... Continue Reading
Are You Scattering Bad Seed?
We are in every moment influencing the people around us with our words and deeds, with our actions and attitudes.
In every moment and every situation our sacred calling is to promote good growth instead of poor growth, to scatter good seed rather than bad. It is to do all we can to foster the kind of growth that will spring up into a bountiful harvest of love, joy, grace, and peace. It was... Continue Reading
Preaching with Weight
A preacher’s job is to offer Christ, but in so doing to comfort the afflicted, and afflict the comfortable.
The one thing we really need to be doing in our preaching is offering Christ, unadulterated. He came to get us. He is the King of the cosmos. He became nothing, stooped low enough to scoop even us up and lift us to the heavens. We’re at the confluence of a few different currents... Continue Reading
Book Review: “God Made Me for Worship,” by Jared Kennedy
Helping Children Understand Church
God Made Me for Worship is Scripturally rich, gospel-centered, and accessible for children aged 4-12. My hope is that God Made Me for Worship will encourage Christian parents to see the preciousness, dignity, and necessity of Sunday worship for their families. Lately, I have been giving thanks to God for the recent influx of... Continue Reading
Do You Know What an Identity Is?
When we sit down to a discussion of identity, there is a lot on the table.
In Understanding Transgender Identities: Four Views, five authors, all identifying as Christians, engage in respectful, mostly irenic dialog about transgender identities and how they relate to Christians and Christianity. The book is a window into the many areas of dissent among believers and nonbelievers alike regarding identity, gender, sex, and sexuality. It is well worth your... Continue Reading
What Exactly is “Sola Scriptura” Protecting Us Against?
More than you think.
It is often forgotten that Sola Scriptura was designed to battle more than Rome. For Luther, he was equally concerned about the opposite problem. Many in the so-called “radical” Reformation had taken a posture of individualism, disregarding the history of the church, the classical creeds, and the church fathers. We might think here of Menno... Continue Reading
The New Business Model of Planned Parenthood
The abortion colossus is now the leading provider of hormone treatments for teens.
It is odd that an organization named “planned parenthood” does so much that has nothing to do with pregnancy. In reality, abortion and trans ideology are about sexual autonomy. This is why Planned Parenthood tells teens they can put puberty on hold: “You should be the one to decide what change you want to make... Continue Reading
The Dangers of Emotive Vagueness
On David Platt’s Radicalism.
Rev. Platt speculates that there are only two reasons why there are not more missionaries in the area from which he was filming. The first reason he offers is that Christians don’t know that there are billions of unsaved people across the world. Most Christians I know do know this. That fact drives them to... Continue Reading
Jesus is More Than Our High Priest
A mere priest does not make laws, command obedience, or rule—that is a king’s domain.
We might ask what difference it makes that Jesus is both priest and king. I suspect the readers of this letter were wondering the same thing. It makes a massive difference! The Word of God became flesh and dwelt among us (John 1:14). This profound truth leads an honest reader to ponder what Jesus’... Continue Reading
The First Artists, Part 1: Consciousness and Imagination
Like the artists of the cave paintings, Falk’s book paints a beautiful picture.
Falk is not attempting to pin down the GPS coordinates of the Garden of Eden. Instead, he argues that, in the mindset of the original author of Genesis, Eden is “not located somewhere on Earth but represents the whole earth.” If Eden is reimagined as the whole earth, then the artistic spirit may have awakened on opposite... Continue Reading
He Set Forth his Good Pleasure in Christ (Eph 1:9)
The relation between God and his good pleasure is that he proposes it to himself in himself, setting before himself a plan; on this basis he sets it forth in action in the world.
In Rom 1:13, Paul says that he “often intended to come” to the Romans. In that report of his (frustrated) travel plans, the pro- in protithēmi may have a temporal sense (projecting a plan for the future) or an imaginative sense (proposing an idea, setting it out there for consideration), or both. On this model, Eph 1:9 teaches that... Continue Reading
God Brings Us Bad to Give Us Best
As long as the Lord has us here on this Earth, it will continue to be hard; but knowing Jesus is worth it.
Stop concentrating so much on what God is asking of you; start focusing on what he’s already given you. When Christ endured the brutal whip, the jeering and fist-striking — when he suffered more than any of us have, he was standing in your place. You and I deserved the bloodlust torture Christ endured, for... Continue Reading
Mankind Is God’s Business and Ours
A society where faith-fueled stewards in the marketplace demonstrate their faith in the products, processes and people they manage will be a flourishing one by all measures.
A flourishing society and prosperous economy require values unlikely to germinate in a schizophrenically partitioned society, where faith is somehow excluded from the public square. We don’t need a secular marketplace devoid of faith. Our nation needs more authentic faith expression throughout the marketplace, with followers of Jesus effectively demonstrating the policies and priorities of... Continue Reading
The Bible and the Reformation
We must open the Bible and declare the truths of Scripture. The Reformation is not over.
At the heart of the Reformation was the Bible, but not just the Bible translated, it was the Bible preached, taught, and explained. This was Luther’s commitment. According to Luther, “The Word of God is the greatest, most necessary, and most sublime part in Christendom.” The Reformer went on to say, “We can spare everything,... Continue Reading
Making Sense of Christ’s Two Kingdoms
One of the central doctrines of Protestant political theology is pervasively misunderstood.
All Protestants acknowledged that there must be a mutual subjection of ministers and magistrates, as ministers submitted to magistrates in affairs of the temporal kingdom, while magistrates bowed to the authority of the Word as proclaimed by the ministers. But there were bound to be gray areas, especially in a society where nearly all citizens... Continue Reading
The Politics of Love
Why loving our neighbors cannot contradict God’s creational design.
Christian confusion about the meaning of neighbor love spills over into confusion about how we should view our nations. Faithfulness to God obviously trumps all else. Nations are earthly goods, just like families are. But they are not for that reason to be dismissed as nothing more than sources of evil or idolatrous temptation. The... Continue Reading
Onward in the Service of God
There is not an aspect of church life where help is not needed.
I often hear the elderly in our congregation (and in others) lament that there is nothing left for them to do. Their strength is meagre, and they sigh in dissatisfied resignation, “I guess I can still pray”. One main thing needs to say to those who are victims of this attitude. It is that we... Continue Reading
Synod 2024: An Appraisal and a Vision
My hope is that the CRC would be a home for refugees of the sexual revolution, a place where God’s grace abounds but the boundaries don’t budge.
My prayer is that everyone in the CRC will be able to articulate the gospel and would unashamedly spread this good news. While the evangelical world has the gospel, they are adrift without a confessional tradition to ground them. Many have floated in the directions of the prosperity gospel or Christian nationalism or pastoral personality... Continue Reading
This Is How Religious Liberty Dies
Kamala Harris says it out loud in asserting a false right to abortion.
Religious liberty, which is among the fundamental rights explicitly recognized in the Bill of Rights and is the foundation of all other rights, is rejected in favor of abortion rights, which are invented rights without a historic foundation. Harris rejects the actual fundamental right, religious liberty, and asserts a false right, abortion, claiming it to... Continue Reading
The Good News About the Bad News
A dark backdrop for bright gospel light.
Our sinful estate is bad news, and thinking about bad news isn’t pleasant. But here’s the good news about the bad news: by remembering the horror of sin, and by reflecting on our helpless and spiritually ruined estate, we are able to celebrate the rescuing grace of God all the more. The bad news reminds... Continue Reading
Pietism vs. Piety — What’s the Difference?
Christians should be known for their piety.
The practice of pietism, either seeking personal encounters with God or practicing asceticism (another form of pietism that involves denying oneself of physical pleasures for the sake of spiritual advancement), can be appealing to people because they feel like they are being more religious and, thus, closer to God. Yet, Paul specifically states that such... Continue Reading
(Corporate) Worship
When we gather to worship, we are gathering as a body of believers.
When we gather together to worship, God pours out His grace on His people. We should love the gathering of the saints. We should value the corporate nature of the weekly worship of God’s people. Let it drive away our sinful individualism and let us learn to highly value the gathered church. I was... Continue Reading
Pastoring People Through Slow Change
The process of change in Christians is usually very, very slow.
Part of the pastor’s job is to help Christians regularly refocus on the gospel. To a friend who is bitter, we encourage them to, “…forgive, as God in Christ forgave you,” (Eph. 4:32). To the husband who is passive: “Husbands, love your wives as Christ loved the church and gave himself for her,” (Eph. 5:25).... Continue Reading
Teasing Out Idolatry in Narcissism
Instead of worshipping the God of the universe, narcissists make themselves the god of their own universe, creating a reality centered entirely on them.
For those living with or around a narcissist, while there are ways to minimize harm, the greatest need is the transformation of the narcissist’s heart—not a change in how you relate to him. By the Lord’s grace, the true God has been known to change self-worshipping people at least a time or two: consider Manasseh... Continue Reading
Lost – Minister’s Letter Oct 24
Our world thinks that it knows better than previous generations.
Luke 15 is a chapter for our day. It speaks to the religious, and irreligious; the one who knows he’s lost, and the one who doesn’t. It makes us face up to the reality of our lives. It shows us the terror of what it is to be lost and the glory of what it... Continue Reading
Why Psalm 23 Is My Favorite Psalm
Psalm 23 paints a vivid picture of the tender loving care of my Lord.
We don’t wander the wilderness, left to our own devices to find food, rest, and safety for ourselves. We have a faithful Shepherd who is watchful over all of these details in our lives. These are things everyone longs for, and it’s important to remind ourselves often that these are realities for Jesus’ sheep. The Lord is my shepherd;... Continue Reading