Thursday, July 31, 2008

Our Present Needs Part 3: The Need for Guidance of the Best Use of Our Time





I have been using notes I took from this year's Banner of Truth Conference during Iaian Murray's talk "Our Present Needs." This last section I found most helpful and the cause for much reflection.


1 Corinthians 3 teaches us that what we do in our own flesh will be burned up, but what Christ does in us will last. So let's be careful how we build:

6 Suggestions:

1) Have a regular time of looking at your life with no distractions. In his book, Between Two Worlds, John Stott described how he would regularly take a weekend away by himself to reflect on where he has been and where he is going and to work out a long-term calendar. My wife has forced me to break away and take a few retreats of that sort myself and I have found them most helpful.

2) Watch your temperament. If you are naturally outgoing, you probably need to purposefully spend more time in the study. If you are naturally introverted, you probably need to be out more telling others about your faith.

3) Read only the best books. There are so many books out there that you could read, but most are not worth reading. There are enough great books to keep you busy. Only read great books.
And read these books with pencil in hand. Take notes so that you can recall what you have read. Murray would create an index on a piece of paper as he read, that he would later tape into the back of his book- he does not like the idea of marking books up. At least, he suggested, use a pencil so you can later erase your marks. I see the wisdom of that now that I read notes I wrote years back in the margins of my books that, at the time, I thought profound, and which I now find utterly ridiculous. What I have grown fond of is taking notes as I read in a Moleskine notebook which I index in the back.

4) Be sure not to let e-mail and websites to control your day.

5) Do not lose time on controversies. There are some controversies which you simply cannot remain silent on. But most you can let pass by- they are simply not worth it. Soon they will pass without you wasting your precious time on them.

6) Do not see in your churches what you can not change. Murray shared how, while working at Lloyd-Jones' church, he and his fellow workers noticed that the children's program there was severely lacking and Jones wasn't doing anything about it. Jones' motto, they found out to "not see in your churches what you can not change." At the time, Murray was frustrated, but now he sees the wisdom in it. There was nothing that Jones could have done that would have ended well. Too many feelings would have been hurt and nothing good could have come of it. So he simply chose not to see it, and entrust it all to God.

Now that is some advice I could have used many a times in my past!

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Our Present Needs Part 2: The Need for Increased Persevering Faith...


...of Scripture as the Word of God.


Iaian Murry says: "It used to be simple in church. You had a minister, a few deacons, a simple service, and it changed the world. Today we have "ministers of this or staff of that" and we have all this apparatus on Sundays and to what effect? All the apparatus is to make up for a lack of confidence in the Scriptures."


This is the best-kept secret of a successful and fulfilling ministry. I can't tell you how revolutionary it was for me to not simply recite that the gospel is "the power of God for salvation" (Romans 1:16) and that "neither he who plants nor he who waters is anything, but only God who gives the growth" (1 Cor. 3:7) but to have faith that these things are true.


....in the Goodness of God. God is friendly minded and our spiritual happiness depends on our understanding this. We must be burdened with a sense of God's goodness. This is a recovery of orthodox faith.


We need to have faith in these things- and there is a difference between knowledge and faith.


I "knew" that these things were true, but my faith in them was severely lacking. Why? Because while I knew what the Scriptures said, I had faith that what the church growth books said must be true because they were written from "experience in today's world." There was sense in which I thought, "well, in an ideal world, it would work like the Bible says, but the reality is...." I would never have articulated it like that or even admitted that is how I felt, but I must confess that my heart said otherwise.


One of my problems was that I "studied" but I didn't "meditate" on these things.


We must meditate on these truths. Don't just inform yourself, meditate upon them, seek to have faith in them.


"Study is like the winter sun. It shines brightly but it does not warm you. Meditation is like a burning fire." - Martin


M.Lloyd Jones used to tell his interns that they studied like "grammaphones of the Puritans." In other words, they repeated the truth but there was no fire.


That is all too often the truth. I don't want to be a record (or Ipod for you youngsters), I want to be a preacher on fire with the truth of God's Word, trusting in Him for all things good. "Neither he who plants nor he who waters is anything, but only God." Wow, far from being depressing, this is a glorious truth that enables me to rest in God's plans and not fret over mine.

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Our Needs Part One: Less Self Confidence


At the Banner of Truth Conference earlier this year, Iaian Murray shared some thoughts concerning our present needs. I'd like to share some of those with you intermixed with some of my own thoughts.

The first need that he articulated was that of "the need for less self-confidence."

The truth is that we do not know ourselves. Our hearts are deceptive and opinions of ourselves are much too lofty. The way we get to know who we really are is 1) in the Scriptures, 2) from failure.

Spurgeon warned his ministerial students that early success in ministry could be a great disaster. He said: "Censure prepares a man for usefulness" and that "praise intoxicates you." I can see that clearly in my own experience. We are now working on our third church plant. The first church plant that we (meaning my wife and I) worked on came right out of seminary and was our first "full time" ministry experience. Fortunately (and unfortunately) it was a great success. We went from zero to approaching the 200 mark in morning worship during our stay there, had quite a few baptisms and are growth was mostly from conversions and church dropouts as opposed to transfers.

When we felt that the Lord was calling us on to our second church plant we were taking with us the gained knowledge and wisdom from our experience in the first one- and our pride (maybe I should stop saying "we" and "our" now and say "me"!). Okay, so I took MY pride with me. I remember clearly thinking that, if we did as well as we did in our first plant with no prior church planting experience, just think of what we could do now with one under our belt! Rehoboth Beach (where we were heading) better look out because we were coming and we were going to turn that place upside down for Christ! Now, understand that, all the while, I was, at least verbally, acknowledging that God was the one who built our first church and would be the author of the next....but how lucky He was to have me as the planter!!

Well, the next church didn't ever grow wings and fly. Despite the greater knowledge, despite the experience, despite the larger capital at our disposal, despite a number of things that we had going for us that we did not have in our first plant, it went nowhere. We tried everything. And while we did see God move in and change some folks hearts, the church as a whole was dead in the water. I wept, I pleaded, I shouted. I didn't see it then, but I see it clearly now, God was shutting that thing down, at least in part, to teach me a lesson. No finger pointing needed to happen except in my own direction. The one thing that we did not have in the second plant that we had in the first, was humility. Maybe that was the most important ingredient that brought life to that work.

Now working on our third plant, I pray that God will remind me of Who it is that builds the church and that I will be faithful to trust in Him alone (that would explain my-sometimes admittedly over the top-aversion to church growth methodologies- they are simply too man centered for me to stomach and I don't want to go there again).

Iaian pointed out that there is a sad discrepancy between what we believe about prayer and what we actually do. Why? Well Psalm 10:4 says that "in the pride of his face the wicked to not seek Him; all his thoughts are, 'There is no God.'" We have the same affliction that non-believers have: our lack of prayer comes from (and is a sign of) pride. We do not pray because our pride is not dead.

When Jacob wrestled with the angel, it was not until his hip was knocked out of socket that he grasped the angel and really prayed.

I now pray two prayers: 1) that I do not come to the place where my hip needs to be knocked out of socket- I want to learn the lesson without having to go through the pain if at all possible; 2) that when the pain does come, that I do not resent it, but that I have the wisdom to say to God: "do not allow the pain to depart until I have learned the lesson that you intend to teach me through it."

Friday, July 25, 2008

Deep Ploughing versus Top-soil Skimming


The constant activity that comes with Backyard Bible Clubs has kept me away from the blogosphere here lately, but things will be getting back in the groove here now. I appreciated this excerpt from a sermon by C.H. Spurgeon which was highlighted by the pyromaniacs blog recently. As a Baptist preacher, there are certain assumptions that are placed on you, not the least of which is that you be someone who gears his sermons to crescendo at the "invitation." This is the place on a Sunday morning where you invite people to respond to your sermon by placing their faith in Christ. I have never been much of an "invitation man" myself because of the reasons outlined below by Spurgeon. I have always been more apt to invite people to meet with me in their homes or at a coffee shop, wherever, and to discuss the stirrings of their heart with me there. That way I have a better opportunity to hear what their new found "faith" consists of, and to either affirm them in it, or steer them in the right direction.

I once had a church planter friend tell me of how he had 11 baptisms scheduled for the upcoming Sunday. I told him that was great and encouraging to hear. He then added, much to my dismay: "Well, we'll see if they show up, you know how that is."

No. Sorry. I don't know how that is. When I schedule a baptism, it is not based upon a 3 minute interview after my sermon with someone who is on an emotional high. I have sat down with them for a good hour, poking and probing and making sure that they know what it is that they are saying and making sure I don't give them the false hope that comes with false conversions.

Many have said estimated that about half of those who attend churches are unbelievers, and any pastor knows that is true. I tremble to think of the judgment that will fall on the shepherds who falsely lead these goats to believe that they are sheep because they rely on "Top-soil Skimming" to puff up their membership rolls.

Spurgeon said:

"Though I rejoice in sudden conversions, I entertain grave suspicions of those suddenly happy people who seem never to have sorrowed over their sin. I am afraid that those who come by their religion so very lightly often lose it quite as lightly. Saul of Tarsus was converted on a sudden, but no man ever went through a greater horror of darkness than he did before Ananias came to him with the words of comfort.

I like deep ploughing. Top-soil skimming is poor work; the tearing of the soil under surface is greatly needed. After all, the most lasting Christians appear to be those who have seen their inward disease to be very deeply seated and loathsome, and after awhile have been led to see the glory of the healing hand of the Lord Jesus as he stretches it out in the gospel.

I am afraid that in much modern religion there is a want of depth on all points; they neither deeply tremble nor greatly rejoice, they neither much despair nor much believe. Oh, beware of pious veneering! Beware of the religion which consists in putting on a thin slice of godliness over a mass of carnality. We must have thorough going work within; the grace which reaches the core, and affects the innermost spirit is the only grace worth having.

To put all in one word, a want of the Holy Ghost is the great cause of religious instability. Beware of mistaking excitement for the Holy Ghost, or your own resolutions for the deep workings of the Spirit of God in the soul. All that ever nature paints God will burn off with hot irons. All that nature ever spins he will unravel and cast away with the rags. Ye must be born from above, ye must have a new nature wrought in you by the finger of God himself, for of all his saints it is written, "Ye are his workmanship, created anew in Christ Jesus."

Oh, but, everywhere I fear there is a want of the Holy Spirit! there is much getting up of a tawdry morality, barely skin deep, much crying "Peace, peace," where there is no peace, and very little deep heart-searching anxiety to be throughly purged from sin. Well-known and well-remembered truths are believed without an accompanying impression of their weight; hopes are flimsily formed, and confidences ill founded, and it is this which makes deceivers so plentiful, and fair shows after the flesh so common.

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Just Stop It!

If renowned minister D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones (if you are not familiar with him-you must be! start here) had used videos during his sermons as illustrations, I think he might have used this one:


Why so? Here is what he had to say on our struggles with sin. Yes, you guessed it, "stop it!" Jones says:

I do not know of a single scripture—and I speak advisedly—which tells me to take my sin, the particular thing that gets me down, to God in prayer and ask him to deliver me from it and then trust in faith that he will.Now that teaching is also often put like this: you must say to a man who is constantly defeated by a particular sin, “I think your only hope is to take it to Christ and Christ will take it from you.” But what does Scripture say in Ephesians 4:28 to the man who finds himself constantly guilty of stealing, to a man who sees something he likes and takes it? What am I to tell such a man? Am I to say, “Take that sin to Christ and ask him to deliver you?” No, what the apostle Paul tells him is this: “Let him that stole, steal no more.” Just that. Stop doing it. And if it is fornication or adultery or lustful thoughts, again: Stop doing it, says Paul. He does not say, “Go and pray to Christ to deliver you.” No. You stop doing that, he says, as becomes children of God.

God, Make Me More Persuasive

”Eloquence may dazzle and please, but holiness convinces.”

R. L. Dabney

Friday, July 11, 2008

Bucking The Trend of Returning to the 1930's Dull Sensationalism


Today’s churches too often are trying to be “sensational” but prove to be rather dull.

(note: I write as someone who, I confess, once fit this group. Thinking I was being 'relevant,' I pulled out all the stops at putting together a 'creative' worship experience. Thankfully I now place my trust elsewhere than in my own creativity as I will explain).

In our new church brochure I tried to address that situation by stating:

"The word 'church' has come to be associated with that which is boring and anything but 'full of life.' We believe that this is the ironic result of churches which sought to entertain rather than build up. If I want entertainment I'm certainly not going to church- we are, admittedly, very poor entertainers. On the other hand, if I want hope, I'm not going to watch Jay Leno."

But the Tonight Show seems to be what many churches seek to emulate.

I watched a commercial for a church in Texas posted on YouTube that was supposed to be hip and cool but which struck me as really odd. Several commenters said that they found it to be "creepy." One person who had been to the church responded:

It does seem a little creepy, if you'd never been to Fellowship Church.
Having been there myself, you can tell it's supposed to be very tongue-in-cheek. That's their style... not taking themselves too seriously.

Doesn't that about say it all?

Someone told me of a conversation he had with a pastor who was frustrated that his co-pastor who had preached that previous Sunday had used the movie clip he intended to use for his upcoming sermon. He explained that the way he went about writing sermons was to find a movie clip, look for a relating biblical passage, and then write his sermon. Not wanting to use the same clip twice left him with no message to preach.

How tragic.

In a message entitled “The Issue in the Church,” J. Gresham Machen (preaching sometime before his death in 1937) said some things as relevant and important for us to hear as they were in his day. He said:

“The world of today is hoping for something new. Things that seemed to be new have proved to be old; the newness of modern inventions has been found not to touch the depths of life. New situation, it has been discovered, do not make new men; a man is not made over by ascending in an airplane to the sky. Novelty has been sought in every sphere, but it is not so easy to find; rebellion against accepted forms does not produce a new style, but sometimes only reveals a pitiful lack of invention; sensationalism has proved to be rather dull. In the epistles of Paul one finds that joyous freshness which modern men are seeking in vain; the first Christians were evidently in possession of something really new. The conditions of life, it is true, were not greatly changed; social institutions in the early church were left very much as they were before. But beneath the outward sameness was a mighty inner change. The novelty of the early church was very different from the novelty of today. Today we have changing circumstances and humanity itself in a rut; then there was outward sameness, but underneath it there were new men. ‘Wherefore if any man is in Christ, he is a new creature: the old things are passed away; behold, they are become new.’”

The pressure to become sensationally dull is heavy however.

I recall going to seminary and then into ministry, wanting to do the will of God and to preach and teach, but being taught, directly and indirectly, that man’s methodologies were the only way to reach our culture. Especially within the denominational structures I found myself working in to plant churches, we never talked of the power of God’s Word it was all about the power of our own inventiveness and creativity. At first there is an excitement that comes with the creativity, but then comes the crash as you realize that depending upon your own creativity and strength is a burden that you were not called to bear. What happens is a sense of failure, despair, burn out, which then turns into competitiveness as pastor’s vie for the “creativity crown” because it is the only way that they can find worth out of what they are doing.

How I wish I had always held to the conviction that “the Gospel is the power unto salvation” and not been turned to the left and the right by the methods of man.

James White and Thom Ascol discussed some of these issues sometime back and they really nail it:

James White:

I teach in a Southern Baptist Seminary and I see young men whose spirits are crushed because they are put under such a burden to use unbiblical methodologies and, in essence, to edit the gospel- to get rid of those things which are offensive to the natural man. And there is a tremendous liberty when you come to realize that the Gospel is ours to proclaim, not to edit and we can trust the Spirit of God to apply His truth to His people. we don’t have to hold back, we can speak the whole counsel of God and the only reason that any one of use can go to bed at night with a clear conscience is because, we like Paul, have not held anything back, we have proclaimed the whole counsel of God and that way we can say I am innocent I am clean of the blood of any man because I have fulfilled my duty as an ambassador for Christ I have proclaimed His truth. I see what happens in churches when, because of a push to have artificial numbers, get a bunch of people through the baptistry, 90% of them you will never see again, you’ve just turned them into religious hypocrites, but you get ‘em through there. I’ve seen what happens when that kind of methodology crushes the spirits of young men. Somebody has to stand up and say “enough, no more!”

Thom Ascol

Everyone wants to be successful evangelistically, every Christian wants to see evangelistic success. What we need to do is redefine success in terms James just laid out that the Bible teaches when the Gospel is proclaimed accurately, honestly passionately representing Jesus Christ’s call to repent and believe, that is success. However, I think that the hook that exists in so many church growth strategies and all the new techniques that come out is just this one point- look how many people can be decisioned, brought out or reach decisions or whatever terminology is used and everybody wants to see people come, so the confidence comes in the technique or strategy or program.

Please pray for us pastors that we will put our confidence in the right place and buck the trend to become sensationally dull. This is a great temptation that many of the younger pastors are falling into and simply assuming it is how church "needs" to be done in order to be effective.

Please pray for the churches that they will not pressure their pastors into succumbing to such a temptation.

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Put Down the Whaa Burger and French Cries



A Reflection on Psalm 73, A Psalm of Asaph

Recently, I came across an article in a Christian woman’s magazine which was dealing with depression. In identifying the problem the article says: “What is surprising is how quick we are to accept another person’s judgment and how serious our lack of faith in ourselves can become.”

Question: Is a lack of faith in ourself the real problem?

I'll make the usual disclaimers that I recognize that there are real medical causes behind some of the episodes of depression that people face, and that depression does not necessarily mean that you are not leaning upon Christ- great men of faith such as Charles Spurgeon openly battled with depression as did missionary David Brainard.

That having been said, we would not be honest if we did not confess that, while these real episodes may be numerous, they are the exception to the rule and not the rule. Most everyone experiences bouts of depression at one time or another- I doubt anyone is excluded here. And by and large, these bouts are not caused by some physical malady. These episodes comes as a result of how we cope, or fail to cope, with circumstances in our lives. And while one person's loss may send them into a tailspin of depression, another, facing identical or even worse problems, experiences peace, determination and even joy in the midst of that loss. How can that be?

Puritan pastor Charles Bridges who hits the question head on as he counsels those in the ministry:

“Admitting that we are called to difficult and costly service; yet have we abundant cause to be satisfied with the sustaining support and consolation provided for every emergency. All indeed may be included in the single promise- “Lo, I am with you alway, even to the end of the world.” ...While he stands with you, there can be no just cause for fear or faintness. You need no other encouragement. This you shall never want, if you continue faithful: and hereupon you may conclude- “The Lord shall deliver me from every evil work, and will preserve me unto his heavenly kingdom.”

Is this a promise for minister's only or for all of us?

I'm reading John Paton's autobiography (and you should too!) and early on in the story his young wife and child die on the island that he is trying to reach for the Gospel. He records that while on her deathbed his wife said of her coming to the island: "If I had the same thing to do over again, I would do it with far more pleasure, yes, with all my heart. Oh, no! I do not regret leaving home and friends..." Her dying words were: "Not lost, only gone before to be for ever with the Lord."

Paton then writes: "It was very difficult to be resigned, left alone, and in sorrowful circumstances; but feeling immovably assured that my God and Father was too wise and loving to err in anything He does or permits, I looked up to the Lord for help, and struggled on in His work. I do not pretend to see through the mystery of such visitations,- wherein God calls away the young, the promising, and those sorely needed for His service here; but this I do know and feel, that, in the light of such dispensations, it becomes us all to love and serve our blessed Lord Jesus so that we may be ready at His call for death and Eternity." (p. 85)

What was Paton feeling? He lost wife and child. He had to bury them by himself, digging the grave next to his hut on this island alone. He was, understandably, full of grief.

But what made him endure? Faith in self? Feelings that he could do it if he just tried hard enough? No, it was the assurance that "my God and Father was too wise and loving to err in anything He does or permits."

So what does the doctor prescribe?
Good theology.
Good theology, my friends, is the key to overcoming depression.

Asaph learned this lesson.

Asaph describes how he almost "stumbled" in his faith - his "steps had nearly slipped." How so? He had become envious of the wicked people around him.

Asaph was busy trying to live a holy God-honoring life and what did he get in return (take note Mr. Osteen) "all the day long I have been stricken and rebuked every morning" (vs. 14).

What were the wicked experiencing? They were prospering, they were "always at ease, they increase in riches" (vs. 12) - and they were prideful and arrogant because of it(vs. 3-4).

This led Asaph to conclude that "All in vain have I kept my heart clean and washed my hands in innocence" (vs. 13).

Can you feel Asaph's pain? I can. Kind of makes me depressed........

But wait! What did Asaph do next?

He says that understanding all of this "had become a wearisome task, until I went into the sanctuary of God" (vs. 17). What happened in God's sanctuary?

Good theology: "Then I discerned their end."

After putting down his "whaaa burger and french cries," Asaph bit into some good theology and was reminded that, while the wicked may be prosperous now, their end is destruction. Yet, this is not so for him: "nevertheless, I am continually with you; you hold my right hand. you guide me with your counsel, and afterward you will receive me to glory" (vs. 23-24). Alright, that's more like it.

This change of thinking changed Asaph's desires. Now, he was no longer envious of them (see vs. 2), but declared: "Whom have I in heaven but you? And there is nothing I desire besides you. My flesh and my heart may fail, but God is the strength of my heart and my portion forever....For me it is good to be near God; I have made the Lord God my refuge, that I may tell of all your works" (vss. 25, 26, 28).

Now, go feast on the Word and cheer up.

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Florida SBC Church Seeks Members Who "Don't Want to Deal With Church"


David Wells is absolutely right- the church today is beyond parody.

One News Now reports that a Southern Baptist Church in Florida is growing through an internet membership. Full article is here.

Despite concerns that those who are members via internet will not be able to connect with the church, Flamingo Road Church is determined to make it work. They insist that they do indeed have "faithful members" who interact with the church by watching videos and through online giving.

What is the demographic that Flamingo Road is targeting to make up their "faithful" membership? "They just don't want to deal with church, [they] don't want to go to church, Grandma went to church, that was her little thing. [But] 94 percent of South Florida does not attend church and could care less."

Maybe they could call up Saddleback and have them make a "Flamingo Flunkey"or "Flamingo Forgettaboutit" visual that they can show during their membership classes to represent their target group.

Unbelievable.

Addressing the attitude held by these type of "members"in his own day, Charles Spurgeon, said:

"I know there are some who say, 'Well, I have given myself to the Lord, but I do not intend to give myself to the church.'

Now why not?

'Because I can be a Christian without it.'

Are you quite sure about that? You can be as good a Christian by disobedience to your Lord's commands as by being obedient? What is a brick made for? To help build a house. It is of no use for that brick to tell you that it is just as good a brick while it is kicking about on the ground as it would be in the house. It is a good-for-nothing brick. So you rolling-stone Christians, I do not believe that you are answering your purpose. You are living contrary to the life which Christ would have you live, and you are much to blame for the injury you do."

Josh Harris, in his book "Stop Dating the Church," quotes Mark Dever who said that he often begins talks at college campuses with the line: "If you are not a member of the church you regularly attend, you may well be giong to hell. I don't mean for a second that you literally have to have your name on a membership card in a church somewhere to go to heaven. I believe in justification by faith alone in Christ alone by God's grace alone. At the same time, in the New Testament it seems that the local church is there to verify or falsify our claims to be Christians. The man in 1 Corinthians 5 who was sleeping with his father's wife thought of himself as a Christian." pg. 55

Of course, neither Spurgeon nor Dever are our authorities, the Scripture is. All we need to do is listen to it when it says and our response to this absurdity would be clear:

"Let us consider how to stir up one another to love and good works, not neglecting to meet together as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day drawing near." Hebrews 10:24-25


Perhaps the real shame belongs not to those who want to do church via internet but to the church which indulges them in their wayward desires. If I were one of the pastors at this church, Hebrews 13:17 would make me tremble.

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Franklin Graham on Why John Calvin Should Have Had a Talking Cow


“We have become so performance oriented that it is hard to see how compromised we are.”
-D.A. Carson, The Cross and Christian Ministry

(This is a republishing of a post I did last year on another blog)

The December 13, 2006 New York Times had on its front page an article titled A Family at Cross-Purposes by Laura Sessions Step. The article concerns the family of Billy Graham and begins: “It is a struggle worthy of the Old Testament, pitting brother against brother, son against mother, and leaving the father, the Rev. Billy Graham, trapped in the middle, pondering what to do.”

What is all the fuss about? It concerns a dispute over where the final resting place of Billy and Ruth Graham will be. Ruth, Billy’s wife, desires to be buried in the mountains of North Carolina near where she raised her 5 children. Franklin Graham, the eldest son and heir of his father’s ministries, has a different idea.

Franklin designed the barn-shaped “Billy Graham Library” which is being built in Charlotte, North Carolina where “visitors will pass through a 40-foot-high glass entry cut in the shape of a cross and be greeted by a mechanical talking cow. They will follow a path of straw through rooms full of multimedia exhibits. At the end of the tour, they will be pointed toward a stone walk, also in the shape of a cross, that leads to a garden where the bodies of Billy and Ruth Graham could lie. Throughout the tour their will be several opportunities for people to put their names on a mailing list.” A8

Why in the world would Franklin want to do this? “I wanted to show to another generation of pastors and evangelists what God did thorugh a man who was faithful and who communicated it simply.”

But what about the cow? “One of my concerns is how do you engage a child.” His solution is to have a cow which might say something like: “”Hello. I bet you didn’t know milk comes from a cow. Well, let me tell you about that.” The cow will later introduce Billy: “When Billy was young, we cows knew there was something special about him…”

Reactions?

Patricia Cornwell, novelist and friend of Billy and Ruth who took a tour of the “library” (there aren’t actually any books there) says: “I was horrified by what I saw…It’s a mockery.”

Billy Graham Evangelistic Assocation Board member Graeme Keith said of the cow: “It truly is tacky.”

Ned Graham fears that it will belittle Billy’s ministry.

Ruth Graham responds: “It’s a circus, a tourist attraction.”

Now compare all of this to the way John Calvin’s supporters treated his death and burial (from “John Calvin: His Life and Work):

The enormous work accomplished by the Reformer from Geneva had drastically affected his health. In fact, he had been ill all his life. Nevertheless, from 1556 his health deteriorated to the point of causing worry to those around him. From that time he was continuously ill. At the beginning of 1564 his friends were convinced that the end was rapidly approaching. Calvin, realising his state, never ceased working. On February 2 he gave his last sermon and on the afternoon of the same day his last theology lesson. From that moment on he refused treatment. Had his illness been prolonged, he would fallen into a wretched state.

Already unable to walk on his own, he asked to be carried to the City Hall and said farewell to the Councillors. The entire Council went to his home to visit him - a gesture unique in Switzerland’s history.

During his long period of suffering, so many people came to visit him that they eventually had to be denied entry to his house.

He passed away peacefully and was able to talk to those present until he breathed his last breath. On May 27, 1564, an improvement seemed to be coming about, but, at eight o’clock in the evening, the signs of death suddenly appeared on his face. He passed away peacefully and was able to talk to those present until he breathed his last breath.

“That, ” said Bèze, “is the way the greatest light in the Church was extinguished at a time when the sun ceased lighting up the universe.”

As soon as news of Calvin’s death spread, a crowd of people went to the Rue des Chanoines to see his face for the last time. To his friends, such veneration seemed exaggerated. In order to avoid the charge of idolatry on the part of Romanists, the body was placed in its coffin the following morning and, at two o’clock in the afternoon, he was carried to the cemetery called that of the Victims of the Plague in Plainpalais. The entire city joined in the funeral procession. No monument marked his burial place. It was not until the nineteenth century that a headstone was added with his initials at the spot traditionally regarded as his tomb.

Notice the difference: Franklin Graham wants a talking cow to guide people through a cross-shaped walkway which leads to the graves of his parents while the friends of John Calvin, fearing that they could be charged with idolatry, didn’t even mark his gravesite.

Why the difference?

I think D.A. Carson nails it in his book “The Cross and Christian Ministry.” He says:

Western evangelicalism tends to run through cycles of fads. At the moment, books are pouring off the presses telling us how to plan for success, how ‘vision’ consists in clearly articulated ‘ministry goals,’ how the knowledge of detailed profiles of our communities constitutes the key to successful outreach. I am not for a moment suggesting that there is nothing to be learned from such studies. But after a while one may perhaps be excused for marveling how many churches were planted by Paul and Whitfield and Wesley and Stanway and Judson without enjoying these advantages. Of course all of us need to understand the people to whom we minister, and all of us can benefit from small doses of such literature. But massive doses sooner or later dilute the gospel. Ever so subtly, we start to think that success more critically depends on thoughtful sociological analysis than on the gospel; Barna becomes more important than the Bible. We depend upon plans, programs and vision statements-but somewhere along the way we have succumbed to the temptation to displace the foolishness of the cross with the wisdom of strategic planning. Again, I insist, my position is not a thinly veiled plea for obscurantism, for seat-of-the-pants ministry that plans nothing. Rather, I fear that the cross, without ever being disowned, is constantly in danger of being dismissed from the central place it must enjoy, by relatively peripheral insights that take on far too much weight. Whenever the periphery is in danger of displacing the center, we are not far removed from idolatry.” pps. 25-26

I am not for a moment suggesting that I have a right to judgmentally critique Franklin’s heart- for I know my own heart, the path I have followed, my own tendency to lean on my own ingenuity, and my own pride. I am a weak man who often fails to do what he knows he ought to do and too often succumbs to the “spirits of the age.”

Though entering into seminary wanting to know nothing but Christ crucified, I too, came under the spell of the “cult of Barna.” Rick Warren had unlocked the key to success and I would “go and do likewise.” “Bill Hybels did it, why can’t I?”

My personal theology convicted me of my oftentimes results-driven motivations which did much to entertain but little to proclaim, but I reasoned this way: “I know what I think I ought to do, and what I wish I could do, but I guess that is really a dream world and I must resign myself to doing what works.” I am ashamed of that, and wish that was an overstatement of where I was, but I think it is thoroughly accurate. Now I am not saying that I don’t believe that we should not strive to grow our churches. I’m simply saying that all that we do must be Christ-centered not man-centered, that we must do everything realizing that the Gospel is the power unto salvation, not our creativity and that we need to say “If the Lord wills” more often than we do.

Reflecting on my own experience I can relate so well to what James White and Thom Ascol each said at a recent conference (transcribed from a downloaded recording):

White: I teach in a Southern Baptist Seminary and I see young men whose spirits are crushed because they are put under such a burden to use unbiblical methodologies and, in essence, to edit the gospel- to get rid of those things which are offensive to the natural man. And there is a tremendous liberty when you come to realize that the Gospel is ours to proclaim, not to edit and we can trust the Spirit of God to apply His truth to His people. we don’t ahve to hold back, we can speak the whole counsel of God and the only reason that any one of use can go to bed at night with a clear conscience is because, we like Paul, have not held anything back, we have proclaimed the whole counsel of God and that way we can say I am innocent I am clean of the blood of any man because I have fulfilled my duty as an abassador for Christ I have proclaimed His truth. I see what happens in churches when, because of a push to have artificial numbers, get a bunch of people through the baptistry, 90% of them you will never see again, you’ve just turned them into religious hypocrites, but you get ‘em through there. I’ve seen what happens when that kind of methodology crushes the spirits of young men. Somebody has to stand up and say “enough, no more!”

Ascol: “Everyone wants to be successful evangelistically, every Christian wants to see evangelistic success. What we need to do is redefine success in terms James just laid out that the Bible teaches when the Gospel is proclaimed accurately, honestly passionately representing Jesus Christ’s call to repent and believe, that is success. However, I think that the hook that exists in so many church growth strategies and all the new techniques that come out is just this one point- look how many people can be decisioned, brought out or reach decisions or whatever terminology is used and everybody wants to see people come, so the confidence comes in the technique or strategy or program.”

Billy Graham says that he will “just think and pray” about the conflict within his family over where he and his wife will be buried. My prayer is that he will, indeed, provide an example to be followed by letting Christ take center stage and by leaving the talking cow to Disney World.

More than that, I pray that I will learn from this and recognize that, too often, that cow is a metaphor for the types of activities I have engaged in “in the name of the Lord” and that I will too, let the foolishness of the cross take center stage over and above my own “wise” ingenuities.

Part 2:

I realize that in light of Ruth Graham’s recent death, discussing this again (see earlier post) could be seen in bad taste- but I hope not. I just find myself fascinated by the “cult of personality” that we as evangelicals create as we condemn it in the world around us. The Dove Awards fascinate me- I’d love to talk with whoever came up with the idea and and try to understand their motivations (I did have a chance, by the way, to talk about it with Dove Award winner Paul Baloche and he said that he and the fellow artists that he knows are not focused at all on winning awards but when they are offered, accept them out of genuine gratitude and thankfulness that what they have produced has been a blessing to so many people- he seemed quite humble about the whole affair).

Anyhow, I’m reading “The Forgotten Spurgeon” and came across this tidbit:

“Spurgeon’s legacy is neither his oratory nor his personality- these things have gone the way of all flesh- but his testimony to the whole counsel fo God and his utterance of the great Reformation principle that he Lord alone must be before our eyes and His honour the ultimate motive in all our actions. In this connection it was no coincidence that, like John Calvin who desired no epitaph to mark his grave, Spurgeon wished for nothing more than the letters ‘C.H.S.’ to mark his tombstone.”

Jesus' Continuing Work


In 1991, I had my own "Luther Romans 1:17" moment while sitting alone in a pew on a Wednesday night listening to a British missionary explain the true meaning of justification by faith. How I had gone 23 years growing up in Baptist churches (13 of those as a believer) without having it taught to me is a subject for another time. But there I sat, tears rolling down my cheeks, finally recognizing that I was indeed, as the missionary put it: "Clean! You are clean!"

Since then, I have made explaining justification by faith to whomever will listen my personal quest.

Well, this morning when Drew and I met for our weekly meetings to discuss John Owen's "Communion With God" the question came up as to why, when we share the Gospel, we tend to emphasize Christ's death in the past and yet fail to explain His continuing ministry in the present. The question was especially puzzling in light of a passage we were looking at: Romans 4:25 which tells us that Jesus was "delivered up for our trespasses and raised for our justification" (ESV). Clearly the job was not done at the cross but continued in His resurrection.

We discussed how we tend to focus on the finished redemptive work of the cross because we want to be sure that people understand that they can be freed from past sin and the bondage of guilt for it. But then we lamented that we often fail to continue the discussion with the ongoing work of Jesus in our lives and the responsibilities leveled upon those who would call Him "Lord." Drew wryly noted that our explanations of the Gospel may owe more to a culture which is quick to free people from their responsibilities and is fearful of placing any sort of expectations upon anyone than to the Scriptures themselves. But we digress.

There is clearly a real lack of understanding of the continuing work of Jesus in our lives.
The cross we get, His continuing work- not so much.

So what did Paul mean when he said that Jesus was "raised for our justification"?

Well, we know that Paul does write in 1 Corinthians 15 that the resurrection of Christ demonstrates the validity of the gospel and, without it, our faith would be in vain. But that is not what Romans 4:25 is talking about. It is not saying that Jesus' resurrection proves the fact that you have been justified, but that His resurrection plays an actual part in our justification.

How so?

We find in Hebrews 9:24, after describing the practice of sacrifice under the first covenant, that: "it was necessary for the copies of heavenly things to be purified with these rites, but the heavenly things themselves with better sacrifices than these. For Christ has entered, not into holy places made with hands, which are copies of the true things, but heaven itself, now to appear in the presence of God on our behalf. Nor was it it offer himself repeatedly, as the high priest enters the holy places every year with blood not his own, for them he would have to suffer repeatedly since the foundation of the world. But as it is, he has appeared once for all at the end of the ages to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself."

So, just as the high priest under the old covenant had to carry the blood of the sacrifice from the altar into the holy place and sprinkle it upon the mercy seat, so it was not enough that Christ should hang upon the cross, but He had to rise again, and ascend, entering into heaven before God presenting himself as the once and for all sacrifice for sin. It was through this act that the benefits of His sacrifice (i.e. justification) are applied to us just as the sprinkling of blood upon the mercy seat applied the benefits of the animal sacrifice to the people of Israel.

But that is not all. It is by His continued presence with the Father that He intercedes for us:
Hebrews 7:23-25: "The former priests were many in number, because they were prevented by death from continuing in office, but he holds the priesthood permanently, because he continues forever. Consequently, he is able to save to the uttermost those who draw near to God through him, since he always lives to make intercession for them."

Jesus' continuing ministry for us is as an intercessor- as one who approaches God on our behalf. Jesus acts as our permanent advocate. I'm reminded of John Bunyan's wonderful testimony (which we, by the way, print in our church bulletin every week). Bunyan writes:

One day as I was passing through a field…this sentence fell upon my soul. “Thy righteousness is in heaven.” And I saw with the eyes of my soul Jesus Christ at God’s right hand; there, I say, was my righteousness; so that wherever I was, or whatever I was doing, God could not say of me, “he lacks my righteousness,” for that was just before Him. I also saw, moreover, that it was not my good frame of heart that made my righteousness better, nor yet my bad frame that made my righteousness worse, for my righteousness was Jesus Christ himself, “the same yesterday, today, and forever.” Now did my chains fall off my legs indeed. I was loosed from my affliction and irons…now I went home rejoicing for the grace and love of God.

Amen!

So, although Jesus' redemptive purposes were completed in His earthly ministry (e.g. He paid the price for our salvation through His life and death on the cross), His work is not done. Jesus continues His high priestly work for us at the right hand of the Father even till today.

Kim Riddleberger encourages us to consider the ramifications of Christ's present ministry when he writes:

"Jesus Christ presently intercedes for us when we sin (1 Jn 2:1-2). While we are correct to focus on what Christ has done for us as our high priest, we must not forget those things he is doing for us even now. He prays for our sanctification (Jn 17:17). He is now our'great high priest who has gone through the heavens,' so too we can now'approach the throne of grace with confidence, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help us in our time of need' (Heb 4:14-16). Even now, our great high priest is building us'into a spiritual house to be a holy priesthood, offering spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ' (1 Pt 2:5). What comfort we can take, knowing that our Lord is in heaven, preparing for us to see his glory (Jn 17:24). For the great high priest who intercedes for us never sleeps nor wearies, he never prays without full effect, and he is ever mindful of our continuing struggles with the world, the flesh, and the devil (Heb 2:18). Jesus Christ is both the author and the finisher of our faith (Heb 12:2). He is our great high priest and the good shepherd, who even now guards his flock. No one shall ever snatch us from his hand (Jn 10:28-29), and nothing will ever separate us from his love (Rom 8:37-39). "

What a comfort and what a joy to know the ever present love of Christ!

So next time we speak of the work of Christ, lets not speak of it only in the past tense. Jesus is alive! Jesus is our intercessor and it was for our justification that He was raised!