Monday, September 27, 2021

Evangelicalism in Crisis Part 5: The Fundamental Misdiagnosis of the Human Condition

I will begin with seven passages of Holy Scripture.

God is love. (1 John 4:8)

God demonstrates his love for us in this: while we were still sinners, Christ died for us. (Romans 5:8)

God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish, but have everlasting life. (John 3:16)

In this is love – not that we loved God, but that he loved us, and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins. (1 John 4:10)

We love because he first loved us. (1 John 4:19)

Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or danger, or sword? As it is written, “For your sake we are being killed all the day long; we are regarded as sheep to be slaughtered.” No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. For I am sure that neither death nor life, nor angels nor rulers, nor things present nor things to come, nor powers, nor height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord. (Romans 8:35-39)

There is no fear in love, but perfect love casts out fear, because fear has to do with punishment. Whoever fears is not made perfect in love. (1 John 4:18)

The Word of God.

All Christians love these verses for what they tell us about God and what he has done through Jesus Christ. We love these verses for the assurance that they give.

If, however, you take these verses and a few others like them, ignore ten thousand others, refuse to consider the audience to whom they were written, and absolutize them as a message for all people for all times, then four things, among others, will follow. (1) You will contradict other passages of the Bible; (2) You will preach a false gospel that dishonors Christ; (3) You will give false assurances to the damned, and (4) You will find no obstacle whatsoever to the prospect of becoming a prominent voice in modern evangelicalism.

I will give you now a one-paragraph summary of the gospel as I frequently hear it in evangelical hotspots. That would include places like WMBI radio, Wheaton College, and I think the vast majority of megachurches.

"God loves you. He loves you unconditionally. Nothing you can do can make God love you more. Nothing you can do can make God love you less. It’s not about what you do. All other religions of the world tell you what to do. Christianity tells you what God has done. He has forgiven all your sins by putting them on Christ. God is not mad at you. Don’t be afraid of him. Perfect love casts out fear. Your biggest problem is that you don’t realize how much God loves you. You are always trying to do good things and not do bad things in an effort to earn God’s love and try to get him to like you. He already likes you. He loves you. And he invites you into a personal relationship with him."

Before getting into specifics, I would like to submit that paragraph to a smell test. This is for those of you who have actually read the Bible. Not “heard a sermon about the Bible” from a megachurch preacher or a professor of evangelism at Wheaton College. No, if you have read the Bible on your own, this one is for you. Does the paragraph I just related sound like any sermon, any sermon at all, implied or explicit, on the pages of Holy Scripture?

That is, would Noah have said to his contemporaries, “God is not mad at you – he loves you unconditionally”? Would Lot have said to his neighbors in Sodom, “Stop thinking you can earn God’s favor by doing all these good works – you just have to accept God’s free grace”? Did Jonah say to the Ninevites, “Fear not! I bring you good news. Nothing you can do could possibly make God love you more”? Is that the kind of thing that Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel or any of the minor prophets said to their fellow Israelites when preaching to them?

Now switch over to the New Testament. Did John the Baptist say to his contemporaries, “All the other religions of the world tell you what to DO. Not me – I bring you the gospel, I’m telling you what God HAS DONE (or will do pretty soon, anyway.)”? Did Jesus preach like that in the Sermon on the Mount? Did Peter’s sermon have that flavor when he addressed the crowd on the day of Pentecost? Did he say, “God loves you, his love is unconditional, your biggest problem is that you don’t get how much he loves you, and he invites you into a personal relationship with him”? Is that what his sermon in Acts chapter 2 sounded like? Did Stephen speak that way in the sermon he gave in Acts 7 just before he was executed? I don’t think he would have been executed if only he had had the sense to speak like a modern evangelical. Does the book of Hebrews - the first 12 chapters of which sound like an extended sermon - have that relentlessly sunny, warm, encouraging, unthreatening flavor to it?

I’ll provide the answer to my all rhetorical questions. No, no, no, no, no, a thousand times no. Much of what passes for evangelistic preaching today miserably fails the Scriptural smell test. And people whose minds are bathed in Scripture get that right away. But such people are getting harder and harder to find. That was part of what I had to say last week.

What I hear presented as the gospel in countless evangelical forums today reminds me of fake movie trailers. I don’t know if you have seen any of those. They’re fascinating. They’ll take a horror movie like The Shining and splice together a few clips, put in some uplifting music and inspiring narration, and make it look like a feel-good family film. Or they’ll take a broad comedy like Back To The Future and make it look like a deep melodrama of forbidden love between Marty and Doc. Those can be very funny. The humor is crucially dependent upon the assumption that you have seen the movie and you know its tone, but the trailer deliberately takes you in a completely different direction despite the fact that it is showing accurate short clips.

What I would like to do now is take you through just four of the slogans and soundbites that have come to dominate evangelical preaching. I started with a lot more but for time’s sake had to whittle it down to four. I hope I picked the right ones.

1. “God’s not mad at you.”

I remember the first time I heard that from a pulpit. It was 1988. My immediate thought was, “How do you know that? How do you know that God is not mad at me, or at anyone else seated here?” Since that moment I have heard that phrase spoken to general audiences many times. There is even a daily speaker on WMBI, Steve Brown, who has made a career of saying it. If you go to his website “Key Life,” you will see that its subtitle is, “God’s not mad at you.”

But if you read the Bible, you will see that no less than 600 times it speaks of the wrath of God. And that wrath is not only upon the damned but sometimes upon his saintliest saints. Three times Moses says, “The Lord was angry with me.” (Deuteronomy 1:37; 3:26; and 4:21). If someone claimed, “God is never angry with me,” I would want to say, “Do you think you are better than Moses?”

Someone might respond, “Yeah but Moses is Old Testament. In the New Testament God stopped getting angry, because, you know, Jesus.” That is not correct. Colossians 3:5-6 says, “Put to death, therefore, whatever belongs to your earthly nature: sexual immorality, impurity, lust, evil desires and greed, which is idolatry. Because of these, the wrath of God is coming.” Is coming. That is not past tense. Sin still provokes the wrath of God. In Revelation 14:10 worshipers of the beast “drink the wine of God’s fury, which has been poured full strength into the cup of his wrath.”

Many people can quote John 3:16, which speaks of God’s love. Far, far fewer people can quote John 3:36, which speaks of his wrath. John 3:36 says, “Whoever believes in the Son has eternal life; whoever does not obey the Son shall not see life, but the wrath of God remains on him.” If you do not obey Jesus Christ, God’s wrath remains on you.

2. “Don’t be afraid.”

Something I have noted that evangelical preachers love to say is that the most often-repeated commandment in the Bible is “Fear not.” I don’t know if that is true. It may be. I haven’t counted all the commands of the Bible and sorted them into categories. Such an attempt strikes me as intrinsically impossible because of all the overlap. (For example, does a commandment against slander count as a command against deception or are those two different commands? You can go on with that forever.) But for the sake of argument, let us suppose that the Bible has a most common commandment, and that it is in fact, “Fear not!” I still would find that datum spectacularly uninteresting and uncompelling because I know that that command is always bound to a particular situation and even to a particular person.

For example, an angel said to shepherds in the field on the night of Jesus’ birth, “Fear not!” (Luke 2:10). But no angel said that to Herod the Great that night. Herod the Great was a butcherer of toddlers and other innocents. He would not have been told “Fear not!” but rather “Fear yes! This is a good time for you to start fearing.” Jesus said to his followers, “Fear not, little flock, for it is your Father’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom.” (Luke 12:32). But he certainly didn’t say that to Caiaphas, or Herod Antipas, or Pontius Pilate, or a host of other bad people. It seems clear to me that commandments like, “Don’t make idols, don’t be greedy, don’t covet your neighbor’s wife, love the Lord your God” apply across the board to everybody at all times. But you can never generalize “Fear not.” That command always depends crucially on whom you’re talking to and what the situation is.

Of particular concern to me is that many evangelical preachers are absolutizing the verse “perfect love casts out fear” (1 John 4:10) and instructing us to apply it to God - don’t be afraid of God. But Jesus explicitly commands us to fear God. Luke 12:4-5: “Do not be afraid of those who kill the body and after that can do no more. But I will show you whom you should fear: Fear him who, after your body has been killed, has authority to throw you into hell. Yes, I tell you, fear him.”

The Bible says the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom (Proverbs 9:10). Romans 3:18 says about sinners, “There is no fear of God before their eyes.” That’s a bad thing. The penitent criminal on the cross next to Jesus rightly challenged his scornful counterpart with the question, “Don’t you fear God?” (Luke 23:40). Since Jesus commanded the fear of God, the refusal to fear him is disobedience to Jesus Christ.

Allow me to go outside the Bible for an illustration of the humble believer’s appropriate attitude and posture before God. This is from The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame, a passage cited by C. S. Lewis in his book The Problem of Pain. Mole and Rat are about to appear before the god Pan. Mole speaks: “‘Rat.’ He found breath to whisper, shaking, ‘Are you afraid?’ ‘Afraid?’ murmured the Rat, his eyes shining with unutterable love. ‘Afraid? Of Him? O, never, never. And yet – and yet – O Mole, I am afraid.’ Then the two animals, crouching to the earth, bowed their heads and did worship."

3. “All your sins have been forgiven.”

Easter Sunday morning, April 20, 2014. The church I was attending, Bethany Chapel in Wheaton, had a guest speaker, a professor noted for his intellect and for his zeal in evangelism. He alarmed me when he said in the course of the sermon, “I have yet to see an apologetic more powerful than these two: The God of the universe loves you, and he forgives you.” Now an apologetic is a defense of the faith whose purpose is to persuade unbelievers to believe. It seemed that this professor was saying that a powerfully persuasive point was to tell unbelievers that they were already forgiven. But he could not have meant that, right? It turns out that is exactly what he meant. Because he gave an example from his own life where he was trying to evangelize a young man, and he said to him, “It boils down to this: the God of the universe knows you. He knows all about you. And he loves you. And all the goofy stuff you’ve got clogged in you – he has forgiven every bit of it. He’s forgiven your every sin. And he welcomes you into a relationship with him.” Then he asked him, “Is there any reason why you wouldn’t want to trust him right now?”

Had I been that young man, knowing my penchant for precision and rigor and contentiousness, I would have said, “Yes, I have a very good reason for not trusting him now. I don’t have to. I’m already forgiven. You said so yourself. You didn’t say I had to confess my sins or turn from them or trust Christ or anything like that to be forgiven. You said he has forgiven my every sin. Well, good. Thank you for that great news. I think we’re done here.”

The speaker then proceeded to generalize his approach for all of us and said, “The world needs to know that they’re loved and forgiven.” No they don’t. It is not true. The world is not forgiven yet. That is a false gospel. The people of the world need to know that they now stand under condemnation. Jesus said in John 16:8 that the Holy Spirit would "convict the world of sin and righteousness and judgment.” Not “acceptance and love and forgiveness” - but sin and righteousness and judgment. And the Apostle Paul said in 1 Corinthians 14:24-25 that if unbelievers or seekers came into our worship services he wanted them to be convicted of sin and brought under judgment by all so that they would fall down and worship God saying “God is really among you.”

But though people stand condemned for their sins by God and their own conscience, they can be forgiven if they confess, repent, and trust in Jesus Christ. The Bible says “If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins” (John 1:9). Note the condition if we confess. The Bible also says, “Whoever believes in him (Jesus) is not condemned, but whoever does not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the only Son of God” (John 3:18). That text does not say that unbelievers are forgiven already but rather that they are condemned already. That is the starting point for humanity. Not forgiven, but condemned. People need to be saved. They don’t start out saved. They need to be forgiven. They don’t start out pre-forgiven.

After Jesus’ resurrection he told his disciples that repentance for the forgiveness of sins would be preached in his name to all the nations (Luke 24:47). Please hear those words. “Repentance for the forgiveness of sins.” Again, Jesus did not say, “Tell them they are already forgiven,” but rather, “Tell them that upon repentance they will be forgiven.”

From what I have observed, the heresy that everyone is already forgiven has so overtaken my alma mater, Wheaton College, that I would not recommend that a young person seeking a Bible-based education go there. You can’t imagine how much it pains me to say that.

Of course, it’s not just Wheaton College. I mentioned earlier Steve Brown, who has a daily one-minute devotional on Christian radio. This past Friday, September 24, his devotional involved a story about a little boy who shot his grandma’s duck with a slingshot. (I guess it must have been on a farm.) When some days later he confessed to her she said. “I know. I was standing by the window. I saw the whole thing. I forgave you then.” Brown concludes by saying, “Run to Jesus. You’re already forgiven.”

“Run to Jesus” is very good. “You’re already forgiven” is a heresy that holds the Bible, including Jesus’ own words, in contempt. You are not already forgiven. Trust in Jesus Christ. Confess, repent, and you will be forgiven.

4. “God loves you unconditionally.”

For many years now, it seems to me that the majority of evangelical preachers have been saying that God’s love is unconditional. They keep using that word “unconditional.” I do not think it means what they think it means. With some preachers, the conviction is so powerful that they seem unable to speak of God’s love at all without specifying that it is unconditional.

About 10 years ago a related line of rhetoric caught on like wildfire in popular evangelicalism. It goes like this: “Nothing you can do can make God love you more. Nothing you can do can make God love you less.”

I actually heard that line from three different megachurch pastors over the course of just a few days. Here are the exact quotes.

J. D. Greear: “In Christ there is nothing I can do that would make You love me more, nothing I have done that makes You love me less.”

Pete Briscoe: “There’s nothing I can do to make him love me more, there’s nothing I can do to make him love me less.”

Andy Stanley: “Do you what the root, the heart, the pull-back-the-layers is when it comes to following Jesus? This is uncomfortable, but it will change you. And it will change us. I think it will change the world. God could not love you more. And there is nothing you will do and nothing you could do that will cause him to love you less. And the corollary is this: Every person you’re ever eyeball-to-eyeball with God could not love more. And there is nothing they could do to cause God to love them less. Nothing.”

Perhaps this will sound shocking, but I suspect that these megachurch preachers do not read the Bible at all. I know for a fact that if they read it, they don’t pay attention when they do so. Because if they did pay attention they would not be regurgitating astoundingly unbiblical slogans and clichés that they have plagiarized from one another. I would like to think that somewhere along the line one of them would scrutinize the rhetoric and say “Wait a minute! The Bible doesn’t say that. It says the opposite!” But I’m afraid that such scrutiny is not happening in our megachurches.

And not just the megachurches. Many of our mid-sized and smaller ones too. About that time, a decade or so ago, I was in the process of joining a church. In a group meeting with the pastor one of the other prospective members said, “I’m so glad to find a church where they teach the true gospel, that nothing you can do can make God love you more, nothing you can do can make him love you less.” I almost spoke up, but the moment passed, and they went on to other things. But I thought, Well, she will soon find out otherwise. I’m sure they don’t teach that nonsense here.

Boy was I wrong. In a short period of time, the former pastor of the church said just that in a sermon. Then the current lead pastor of the church said it. Then an elder (who later became executive pastor) also preached that from the pulpit. Then a few years later, (after my wife and I had left because we couldn’t stand it any more), the church hired a new lead pastor, and I listened online to a few of his sermons and, yep, he said it too.

Can it get worse? Yes it can. My wife and I looked for a new church, and for a few weeks we attended a small start-up church plant. That pastor, bless his heart, had us stand together and recite in unison, as though it were the Lord’s Prayer or Apostles’ Creed, “Nothing I can do can make God love me more...” etc.

Such experiences make me sympathize with sincere, devout followers of Jesus Christ who love the Scriptures and who wind up saying, “I don’t know where to go to church anymore.”

Let me take you through some Scripture passages that overtly specify the conditionality of God’s love.

Psalm 5:5-6. King David says to God: “The boastful shall not stand before your eyes; you hate all evildoers. You destroy those who speak lies. The LORD abhors the bloodthirsty and deceitful man.”

David did not believe in a God who loved everybody unconditionally. David believed in a God who hated evildoers - who abhorred bloodthirsty, deceitful men.

Psalm 86:5: “You are forgiving and good, O Lord, abounding in love to all who call upon you.” Hear the words “to all who call upon you.” That is a condition. If God’s love were unconditional, the verse would need to say something like, “you abound in love to all who call upon you and equally to all who don’t call upon you, because you love everybody just the same and nothing they do can make you love them more or less.” That is SO ridiculous. To read unconditionality into that verse and many others like it renders all such verses senseless and absurd.

Psalm 103:11: “For as high as the heavens are above the earth, so great is his love for those who fear him.” There is a condition. And ultimately it is a very comforting one! Fear God, and he will love you to the heavens. (Refuse to fear God, and I’m afraid we can’t say that about you.)

Psalm 146:8: “The Lord gives sight to the blind, the Lord lifts up those who are bowed down. The Lord loves the righteous.” I don’t know how that can get much clearer. God’s love is not unconditional. The Bible says, “The Lord loves the righteous.”

Proverbs 15:9: “The Lord detests the way of the wicked, but he loves those who pursue righteousness.” I must admit I like that verse a lot better than the one that says that the Lord loves the righteous. Because I would never say that I am righteous - except insofar as there is credited to me an alien righteousness that belongs to Christ. But perhaps I can say that I (sort of) pursue righteousness, and that I honestly hunger and thirst for it. And if that is true of me, then I have Jesus’ assurance that God blesses me (Matthew 5:6), and Solomon’s assurance that God loves me.

The verses I have cited are from the Old Testament. But the conditionality of God’s love is repeated many times in the New Testament as well. Here’s a few:

2 Corinthians 7:9: “God loves a cheerful giver.” That verse can only make sense if God loves a cheerful giver in some way or to some degree that he does not love a grumpy giver, a cheerful non-giver, or a grumpy non-giver. I have had many many pastors tell me that nothing I could do could make God love me more, and one of them even tried to get me to say that out loud. But the Bible says – awfully clearly, I think - “Give cheerfully, and God will love you more.” I mean it’s right there.

Jude 21: “Keep yourselves in the love of God.” What??? Keep yourselves in the love of God??? If God’s love were unconditional, it would be impossible not to keep yourself in the love of God. Jude does not tell us there how to keep ourselves in the love of God. But that's ok because Jesus already told us how in John 15:10: “If you obey my commands, you will remain in my love.” Again, the condition is just siren-blaringly explicit.

Two more, quickly, before I summarize and wrap up this point.

John 14:21: [Jesus said] “He who loves me will be loved by my Father.”

John 16:27: [Jesus speaking to his disciples] “The Father himself loves you because you have loved me and have believed that I came from God.”

That last verse is interesting because elsewhere we learn that we love because he first loved us. So which is it? Do we love God because he first loved us, or does God love us because we have loved Jesus? The answer is both. In physics, light is both a particle and a wave, and we just have to learn to affirm both, deny neither, and live with the paradox. Likewise, the Bible says both that we love because God loves us and God loves us because we love Jesus. It just plain says both, so we have to accept that and deny neither proposition.

In the meantime, the Bible affirms the conditionality of God’s love so often, so relentlessly, and so explicitly that only someone who isn’t reading it could possibly say, “God’s love is unconditional - nothing we could do could make him love us more or less.” That demonstrates jaw-dropping ignorance of the Bible, and I shake my head in disbelief over the number of times I have heard it from evangelical brothers and sisters over the past 10 years.

I began this series four weeks ago by saying that evangelicalism is in crisis and in desperate need of reformation both in its practice and its preaching. In the opening message I outlined just a small portion of the scandals that have swept through evangelicalism like a category 5 hurricane. In the next two messages I focused on just two of the vices that have plagued our community of faith, pride and greed. That list could have been a lot longer - I capped it at two. Last week I talked about the lack of focus on the Bible, biblical illiteracy, and a failure to cite Scripture that characterizes our most influential churches and institutions. And today I have tried to show how that ignorance of the Bible in pew and pulpit has spawned a skewed, truncated, twisted version of the gospel that I don’t think our forerunners in evangelicalism would have tolerated, and that goes a long way toward explaining why so many of our leaders have behaved so badly. Why not? They know that God loves them unconditionally. They have drilled that into our heads and they have drilled it into their own heads.

What we have today is what I am calling a fundamental misdiagnosis of the human condition. All people are being addressed now as though they are saved saints who are in no peril, who need not fear, who will be loved unconditionally, and who primarily need hope and encouragement on a Sunday morning so they can leave the house of God feeling refreshed.

To this end, believers and unbelievers alike are fed a steady diet of, “You’re accepted, you’re loved, you’re forgiven, your problem is trying too hard to be good in an effort to get God to love you when he already loves you to the max and couldn’t love you anymore. It’s not about what you do, it’s about what God has done” and so forth.

But the Bible more typically describes the natural human condition as lost and needing to be found, condemned and needing to be saved, sinful and needing to be remade in the image of Holy Jesus. The good news of the gospel is that you do not have to remain condemned, unforgiven, under the shadow of God’s wrath that in your most honest moments you know you deserve. There is a pardon available, there is a welcome that God offers into his fearful presence, and a love from God that grows – it does NOT stagnate, it GROWS to the extent that your obedience creates room for it. That is available for you because Jesus, God’s Son, died for you – you wretch, you sinner, you rebel against the good will of God. Bow the knee to him, he who died for sinners and rose from the dead, beg his forgiveness and renewal, and you will have it forever. And some day you will see the face of God.

Sunday, September 19, 2021

Evangelicalism in Crisis Part 4: The Simple Neglect of Scripture

Last week my wife and I watched the movie Walk the Line about Johnny Cash. He had an older brother, Jack, who as a boy was very devout and was planning to be a preacher until he died in a tragic accident. There is a scene early in that film where Jack is reading the Bible and little Johnny asks him about it, and Jack says, “If I’m going to be a preacher one day I got to know the Bible front to back. I mean you can’t help nobody if you ain’t telling the right story.”

Those are compelling words of wisdom from some perceptive screenwriter’s take on Johnny Cash’s fondly remembered brother. “If I’m going to be a preacher one day I got to know the Bible front to back. You can’t help nobody if you ain’t telling the right story.”

The Word of God is living and active, sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing to the division of soul and of spirit, of joints and of marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intentions of the heart. Hebrews 4:12.

All Scripture is inspired by God and is profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, so that the man of God may be complete, equipped for every good work. 2 Timothy 3:16-17.

Your Word have I hid in my heart, that I might not sin against you. Psalm 119:11.

To the law and to the testimony! If they do not speak according to this word, it is because they have no light of dawn. Isaiah 8:20.

These were more noble than those in Thessalonica, because they received the Word with eagerness and searched the Scriptures daily to see if these things were true. Acts 17:11.

And one more:

Meanwhile a Jew named Apollos, a native of Alexandria, came to Ephesus. He was a learned man, with a thorough knowledge of the Scriptures. Acts 18:24.

Older versions of the Bible say that Apollos was “mighty in the Scriptures.” That reflects a literal rendering of the Greek dynatos from which we get our word dynamite. I like the old phrase “mighty in the Scriptures.” While it is perfectly accurate to translate the Greek as “thorough knowledge of the Scriptures”, it seems to me that “mighty in the Scriptures” packs a better punch.

A hallmark of the evangelical tradition of Christian faith is that its leading lights and influential voices have always been individuals mighty in the Scriptures and eager to produce others mighty in the Scriptures. When the Bible was first translated into English by morning lights of the Reformation John Wycliffe and William Tyndale, both men emphasized that they wanted to get Scripture into the hearts and minds of even common peasants. John Wycliffe (1320s-1384) said, “I will cause that every ploughboy in the fields shall be able to read it.” His successor William Tyndale (1494-1536) took up that same rhetoric, and wrote to some priests who opposed him, “If God spares my life, I will take care that a ploughboy shall know more of the Scriptures than you do.” It is as though Wycliffe and Tyndale could see 500 years into the future and hear ploughboy Jack Cash saying, “If I’m going to be preacher one day I got to know the Bible front to back. You can’t help nobody if you ain’t telling the right story.”

But even if Wycliffe and Tyndale could not see ahead 500 years, they could certainly look back 1500 years and see what the Apostle Paul wrote to his young protégé Timothy: “From your childhood you have known the Holy Scriptures, which are able to make you wise for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus.” (2 Timothy 3:15).

My parents, thank God, were mighty in the Scriptures. When they were teenagers in the 1930s they were blessed to sit under the teaching of a man who had soaked his brain in the Bible since childhood. Harry Ironside of Moody Church had read through the entire Bible by the age of 10, and then once a year thereafter for the remainder of his life. It showed. His messages were full of Scripture.

Preachers like Harry Ironside remind us of something Charles Spurgeon said about John Bunyan. John Bunyan is best known for writing The Pilgrim’s Progress (1678) which for centuries was the world’s number 1 bestseller outside of the Bible. In addition to The Pilgrim’s Progress Bunyan wrote many sermons. Spurgeon had this to say about Bunyan:

“Read anything of his, and you will see that it is almost like the reading the Bible itself. He had read it till his very soul was saturated with Scripture; and...he cannot give us his Pilgrim’s Progress...without continually making us feel and say, ‘Why, this man is a living Bible!’ Prick him anywhere—his blood is Bibline, the very essence of the Bible flows from him. He cannot speak without quoting a text, for his very soul is full of the Word of God.”

Spurgeon may have been too modest to say that about himself, but I’ll say it for him. I have read a number of his sermons. If you cut Spurgeon he would bleed Bible verses. Whatever you eat eventually finds its way into your bloodstream. So you can only bleed Bible verses (metaphorically speaking) if you eat a lot of Bible. Prominent evangelical preachers of yesteryear – John Bunyan, Jonathan Edwards, George Whitefield, John Wesley, Charles Spurgeon and Harry Ironside etc. feasted on the Word of God. They would be able to say with the prophet Jeremiah, “Your words were found, and I ate them, and your words became to me a joy and the delight of my heart, for I am called by your name, O LORD, God of hosts.” (Jeremiah 15:16).

How is the evangelical tradition doing today with regard to knowledge of, and focus upon, Holy Scripture?

What I want to say about that might be best supported by exhaustive, quantitative analysis of evangelical sermons and books and songs. To prove my point I suppose I would need an armload of statistics rigorously researched and fairly presented. But I don’t have that, and I don’t know how to get it. What I do have are anecdotes, vignettes, personal observations and highly subjective impressions. That is what I am going to share with you.

One thing I have seen in evangelical preaching in recent years is an absolute explosion of simple factual mistakes. I am not talking here about interpretation or bad theology or viewpoints that I oppose. I mean just simple, in-your-face, easily discoverable errors that result from carelessness and brutal unfamiliarity with the Bible.

Before I give examples, I should clarify that everybody makes mistakes - especially when speaking off the cuff. I get that. The Bible is a big book, and I don’t know anybody who has memorized all of it. The best expositors have occasional slip-ups. I once heard James Montgomery Boice, who knew the Bible as well as any contemporary, refer to Philemon (the man, not the book) when he clearly meant Onesimus, Philemon’s servant. Oops. One time I saw online a video of D. A. Carson answering a question and he was unable to call to mind the name of the individual whom the Apostle Paul left sick at Miletus. Carson had to appeal to the audience to the supply the name, and of course I’m shouting at the computer screen “Trophimus!” Somebody say ‘Trophimus’!” Well, that happens, and we extend grace to one another because of the frailties and limits of the human brain. I myself once hastily prepared a handout for a Sunday School lesson, printed it up, and somehow did not notice that I had reversed the fates of the Egyptian cupbearer and baker in Genesis chapter 40. I still cringe at that.

But I have in mind mistakes that I consider to be less pardonable than that. Google the name Ed Litton, current head of the Southern Baptist Convention, and you will come across quite a few side-by-side videos of him plagiarizing his sermons. The plagiarism is extreme – often word for word, paragraph for paragraph, even repeating parenthetical asides and puns and telling other people’s stories as though they happened to him. Ed Litton is a liar with zero integrity and the fact that he has a job in the ministry is an indictment of his church and his elders, and the fact that he still leads the Southern Baptist denomination is a sign that our nation’s largest evangelical denomination is an ungodly disgrace and laughingstock.

But that’s beside the point. My topic of the moment is factual errors. One of the sermons that Litton plagiarized was from his predecessor as head of the Southern Baptists, J. D. Greear. In a sermon Greear related the iconic story of the unmerciful servant in Matthew 18 and said that that man’s servant owed him just one denarius and couldn’t pay it back. Greear emphasized how little one denarius was. But it wasn’t one denarius. It was a hundred denarii (Matthew 18:28). This is not an obscure text. It’s in a Gospel, and it has been preached on and treasured by Christians constantly for generations. I’ll bet you that 12-year-old Jack Cash could have told you it was a hundred denarii, not one. But when Litton plagiarized that sermon, he didn’t even notice the mistake – he repeated it, nearly word for word. It makes you wonder if he had read it at all. He certainly didn’t review it or study it. In sharp contrast to the noble Berean laymen of Acts 17 who searched the Scriptures daily to see if what the Apostle Paul said was true, we have an ignoble clergyman who can’t be bothered to crack open the Bible that he’s preaching from. And the largest evangelical group in America puts him at their head and leaves him there even after his biblical illiteracy and dishonesty have been thoroughly exposed.

Not long ago I saw a list of the largest churches in America. Number 2 on that list, just after Joel Osteen’s House of Mammon in Houston Texas, is an evangelical church, North Point Community Church near Atlanta, Georgia. Andy Stanley is the pastor. When he was speaking of the disciples’ discouragement following Jesus’ crucifixion, Stanley said, “There were no Jesus followers after the crucifixion. And there was no one on planet earth that believed Jesus was the Son of God when they saw him die.” That is an exact quote.

For any of you who have been a Christian for a few years, and have read through the Bible once or twice, and have been to church, what do you think of the statement, “There was no one on planet earth that believed Jesus was the Son of God when they saw him die”? I think at one time it would not have been hard to find a 12-year-old Sunday School student who would say, “Wait a minute, wasn’t there a centurion who saw Jesus die and said this was the Son of God?” Yes, there was. Mark 15:39: “And when the centurion, who stood there in front of Jesus, saw how he died, he said, ‘Surely this man was the Son of God!’” (You can see a parallel verse in Matthew 27:54 and Luke 23:47). It amazes me that one of the best-known preachers at one of the biggest churches in the world can so easily spew out to his congregation the opposite of what the Bible says.

There was a church I was connected to some 10 years ago. When I saw that they got a new pastor a few years ago I decided to listen online to some of his messages and was immediately stunned because his sermons had a steady, constant drizzle of factual errors. For example he said that the Philip who spoke with the Ethiopian eunuch in Acts 8 was the disciple Philip who spoke to Jesus in John 14. “Same guy!” he said. No it wasn’t. It’s a different Philip. The Philip who baptized the Ethiopian is the deacon Philip whom we first meet in Acts 6. This preacher also said that his favorite Bible story was the one where Gideon had to reduce his army of thousands to just 300 men by picking out just the left-handed men. No. His favorite Bible story said nothing about left-handedness. The army was reduced (at the end) according to the manner in which they drank water (Judges 7:4-7). He said that the 10 sons of Haman who were hanged in Esther chapter 9 all had a particle attached to their names which meant “self” which indicated that they, like their cursed father, were selfish and self-directed rather than God-directed. That is just idiotic. There is a particle connected to each name, but all it does is indicate the word is a direct object.

The pastor said in a Facebook post that he knew Greek and Hebrew, but in a sermon he said he liked Greek better because Hebrew had weird things like the fact that it had no word for "cow" or "goat", but substituted phrases like (here he improvised) “that animal over there that stands on four legs and chews grass.” Actually the word in Hebrew for bull is par; cow is para; male goat is tayish and female goat is ez. It is pretty straightforward.

Do I sound like I’m being picky on this poor guy? Well the mistakes get non-trivial pretty quickly. He said repeatedly in his sermons that in the Great Commission that Jesus gave to his disciples (Matthew 28:18-20), there is only one imperative in the Greek, and it is the word “Go”. It’s plural, he said, “Y’all go!”, and everything else - making disciples, baptizing them and teaching them – all fall under the main category of “going”. This understanding informs a church policy that he has called “Go to grow”. That is, don’t wait until you are a mature believer grounded in the Word before you go on a mission trip. No - just go, get out there, and you’ll grow along the way. I regard that as a recipe for missional disaster.

Anyone who has had one semester of Greek or who has paid attention to a minimally competent sermon on the Great Commission will know that the one imperative in it is the phrase “make disciples,” – not “go” or “baptize” or “teach”; those are all subsidiary participles. They’re dependent on the main verb which is “make disciples.” (One word in the Greek: “Disciple!” as a verb)

This pastor has described himself online as “a global teacher, speaker and consultant on leadership, culture and mission.” Something he said that I actually believe to be accurate is that his church had made it onto a list of the fastest-growing churches in America. And for me to know that such a church is led by a biblical illiterate brings to mind words famously sung by Jack Cash’s musically gifted younger brother: “I hang my head and cry.”

Now there are two ways for a preacher to avoid making factual mistakes about Scripture – a good way and a bad way. The good way is to read the text, do your homework, and produce results that your humble, prayerful research has yielded. The bad way is one that I’m hearing with increasing frequency, which is, don’t mention the Bible at all. Or refer to it as little as you can.

That is the great scandal in much of what passes for evangelical preaching today. The Bible, in many places, is barely heard.

Again, my evidence is anecdotal, personal, and highly subjective. Here is some of it. You can hardly imagine how many times when I am driving in my car alone and listening to a sermon on WMBI, I find myself yelling at the preacher on the radio, “WHAT IS YOUR TEXT???” That's when I’ve been listening 5, 10, 15 minutes and haven’t heard a Bible verse.

Recently I was listening online to Reformed theologian James White give a critique of one of Andy Stanley’s messages in the form of an open video letter to Stanley. At one point, in complete exasperation, White says to Stanley, “Could you give us a Bible verse once in a while?” And that hits the nail of my complaint against much of evangelical preaching on the head. Could you give us a Bible verse once in a while? In preparation for next week’s message I forced myself to start to listen to one of Stanley’s abominations. 14 minutes into the sermon, and he still hasn’t read his text of Scripture.

Some years ago a friend gave me a written copy of a sermon from a popular associate minister at his church, a teacher who went on to have a prominent ministry elsewhere. I was asked for my response. I was horrified by this message, which was a full-throated exaltation of Sandemanism (also known as easy believism or cheap grace). But that’s not the point I want to make about it. Among the things that leaped off the page at me was the fact that apart from his principle text (one of Jesus’ short parables), the entire sermon referenced no Bible verses at all until the very last page when there was a passing reference to one verse.

Even if you are honestly in no position to evaluate the worthiness of a sermon, let this thought at least suggest itself to you: In a sermon, a preacher should quote more Bible passages than Satan did when trying to tempt Jesus. (For the record, Satan quoted Psalm 91:11-12 when tempting Jesus in Matthew 4:6). If a preacher can’t reference more than one Bible verse in a 30-minute sermon, you know that something is wrong. Really really wrong.

Just as something is really wrong when a man who is tasked with leading a church seems incapable of bringing Scripture to bear on questions and matters of importance and crises that come before him.

Forty years ago when I was a freshman at Wheaton College, my roommate, Doug Schmidt, told me that he happened to be present at an informal gathering where some student asked a question of college president Hudson Armerding. I don’t know what the question was. But Doug told me that in the course of Armerding’s answer he brought up Scripture after Scripture after Scripture. It just flowed out of him. I wish I could have been there to partake of that delight.

On May 26 of this year, congregants at Willow Creek gathered and passed on to pastors Shawn Williams and Dave Dummit some questions they had written down. One question was, “Why is Bill Hybel’s name rarely mentioned?” You can see online a video of their response. It’s 8 minutes and 47 seconds long. Commentators jumped all over their response because of their failure to acknowledge the victims that Hybels left in his destructive wake.

Maybe you can already guess my other objection to their response. Neither man referenced anything in the Bible. It would be good if the malnourished, Scripture-starved sheep of Willow Creek bleated out the James White question: “Could you give us a Bible verse once in a while?”

I took upon myself the liberty of providing a Bible-based answer for Willow Creekans to the provocative question, “Why is Bill Hybel’s name rarely mentioned?” Here it is. (The pastors of Willow Creek are free to use this if they find it. I even give them permission in advance to plagiarize it without attribution. Take it!)

We do not mention Bill Hybels here – except as a byword, and as a warning – because he was a false brother. Jesus said that the pure in heart will see God (Matthew 5:8), but Bill, by anyone’s standards, has been impure in heart for decades. If we confess our sins, God is faithful and just to forgive us our sins (1 John 1:9), but Bill has refused to confess even when faithfully confronted. Instead he has stuck to his lies and slandered those who spoke the truth. Followers of Jesus Christ cannot do that, because no one who is born of God continues to sin (1 John 3:9). Sexually immoral people (like Bill) will not inherit the kingdom of God (1 Corinthians 6:9-10; Galatians 5:19-21; Ephesians 5:5). Revelation 21:8 says concerning sexually immoral people, liars, and other evildoers that “their place will be in the fiery lake of burning sulfur.” As your pastors who will one day give an account to God concerning the watch that we have kept over you (Hebrews 13:17), we solemnly warn you that without holiness you will not see the Lord (Hebrews 12:14). So, for the love of God and the sake of your souls, stay away from Bill Hybels and people like him. Bad company corrupts good morals (1 Corinthians 15:33.) Until he repents or openly acknowledges that he is an unbeliever, you can’t even eat at the same table with him (1 Corinthians 5:11). We don’t want any of you to go to hell. Along with our God, we want all people to be saved and to come to a knowledge of the truth (1 Timothy 2:4). We don’t want any of you to arrive with false confidence before the throne of Christ only to hear him say, “I never knew you. Depart from me, you workers of lawlessness” (Matthew 7:23). If you are now in the condition that Bill Hybels proved himself to be in, repent, for kingdom of God is near (Matthew 4:17). It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God (Hebrews 10:31).

Those of us who belong to the evangelical tradition already know, we should already know, that we must keep our eyes on the pages of Holy Scripture. Read it, listen to it, learn it, and absorb it into your soul that it might do its work of warning you, comforting you, taking you apart and putting you back together in the image of Jesus Christ. And as that Word does its work in us, so also it is to come out of us in our words and our speech so that by holy viral spread it might accomplish the same work in others. God said, “My word that goes out from my mouth will not return to me empty, but will accomplish what I desire and achieve the purpose for which I sent it” (Isaiah 55:11).

The Bible is full of stories of the Bible itself, written to that point, being used to accomplish God’s good work. I think of Nehemiah 8, where Ezra read the book of the law to the returning exiles. The people paid close attention, and other Levites helped to explain the meaning.

Or Luke 24, where Jesus himself, right after his resurrection, conducted a Bible study with two disciples while on the way to Emmaus. Luke 24:27 says, “beginning with Moses and all the Prophets, he explained to them what was said in all the Scriptures concerning himself.”

Or Acts chapter 2, the first public Christian sermon preached after the resurrection is a message by Peter where he expounds upon three Old Testament texts and relates them to Jesus: Joel 2:28-32; Psalm 16:8-11; Psalm 110:1

Or Acts chapter 8, one of the first gentile conversions takes place where two heads are bowed over a scroll of Isaiah and deacon Philip tells the Ethiopian what the text means and Whom it is about.

I think that in light of the ignorance and casual neglect of Scripture that has multiplied in our day and plagued our churches, it is appropriate to close with Paul’s words to young Timothy in 2 Timothy 4:1-3:

I charge you in the presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who will judge the living and the dead, and in view of His appearing and His kingdom: Preach the word; be prepared in season and out of season; reprove, rebuke, and encourage with every form of patient instruction. For the time will come when men will not tolerate sound doctrine, but with itching ears they will gather around themselves teachers to suit their own desires.

Let us pray.

God, by your mercy, awaken and revive your church by means of your Word. May we who preach it be faithful to it, earnest about it, and handle it with reverence, care and awe. And may your people listen and verify with solemn diligence and love. In the name of Jesus your Son, to whom all Scriptures point, amen.

Sunday, September 12, 2021

Evangelicalism in Crisis Part 3: Those Who Want To Be Rich

Greed is bad.

The Bible says that a million times. The 10th commandment has within it a condemnation of greed when it says “You shall not covet.”

Jesus said, “Do not lay up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy and where thieves break in and steal, but lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust destroys and where thieves do not break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also” (Matthew 5:19-21).

The apostle Paul wrote,

"[I]f we have food and clothing, we will be content with that. Those who want to get rich fall into temptation and a trap and into many foolish and harmful desires that plunge people into ruin and destruction. For the love of money is a root of all kinds of evil. Some people, eager for money, have wandered from the faith and pierced themselves with many griefs" (1 Timothy 6:8-10).

Greed is so bad that it will keep you from Jesus Christ. And that is bad because you cannot be saved apart from him. The Bible says, in Acts 4:12, “There is salvation in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given to humanity whereby we must be saved.”

Greed will keep you from coming to Christ in the first place, or it will turn you away from Christ at the very moment you are about to give your life to him, or it will cause you to wander away from Christ having once professed faith in him, or it will blind you to the horrible truth that you’re just a damned fool.

Here are four Scripture passages that speak to those four conditions that I just mentioned.

(1) Greed will keep you from Christ. The Bible says in Luke 16:14 that the Pharisees loved money. When Jesus said that you cannot serve both God and money, the Pharisees scoffed at him. They were never favorably inclined toward Jesus. They did not like him from the get-go. No man who loves money is favorably inclined toward Jesus. Such a man may have a soft spot in his heart for religion, and he may even love a Jesus of his own imagining. But he cannot love the Jesus who actually exists and who is faithfully presented on the pages of Holy Scripture. Pharisees love money. Pharisees hate Jesus.

(2) Greed will turn you away from Christ at the very moment you are about to give your life to him. That is what happened to the rich young man whose story is told in Matthew 19, Mark 10, and Luke 18. That man was no Pharisee. He did not hate Jesus or scoff at him. In fact, he trusted Jesus to tell him how to inherit eternal life. For some reason Jesus raised the bar very high for him. In his conversation with the man Jesus said, “Go, sell everything you have and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven. Then come, follow me.” (Mark 10:21).

The man did not do that because he was rich and he wanted to keep his things. The Bible says he walked away sad. He was ready to become a Christian, and probably would have done so, but greed got in his way.

Before I go on to number 3, I think I should speak to the matter of whether all of us should sell everything we have and give to the poor. My short answer is “No.” I agree with countless Bible teachers who have pointed out that Jesus only said this to one man. Jesus met lots of other rich people and did not make the same demand of them. Even Zacchaeus only pledged to give half of his stuff to the poor, and Jesus did not say, “Where’s the other half?” (Luke 19:8-10).

I think it is best to note that in this case, Jesus was laying his finger directly upon that man’s besetting sin. That man’s sin was greed, and it had to go. We may see rough parallels in Jesus’ conversations with Nicodemus in John 3 and the woman at the well in John 4. The sin of the woman at the well was not greed. It was promiscuity. Jesus said to her (and only to her), “Go call your husband.” That dagger of a sentence exposed her loose lifestyle. But a chapter earlier Jesus had not said to Nicodemus, “Go call your wife.” If Jesus had said that, I suppose Nicodemus would have shrugged his shoulders and said, “Ok, I’ll go call my wife.” That was not an area of embarrassment for him. He would not have needed to respond with an evasive deception like “I don’t have a wife.” It seems that Nicodemus’s besetting sin was neither greed nor promiscuity but rather the greatest, most fundamental sin of all: pride. So Jesus said to him, the great teacher of Israel (I paraphrase), “You have to start all over again like a newborn baby. You can’t even see the kingdom of God until you do.”

Jesus had the annoying habit of calling people to repentance in the area where they most needed it and where they were perhaps least willing to give it.

(3) Greed will cause you to wander from Christ even though you once professed faith in him. The apostle Paul said that himself in the passage I quoted earlier from 1 Timothy 6:10 where he says, “Some people, eager for money, have wandered from the faith and pierced themselves with many griefs.” Jesus had earlier warned that the lure of riches would eventually draw some followers away from him. In the parable of the seed and the sower, the weeds that choke out a promising plant are identified as “the cares of the world and the deceitfulness of riches and the desires for other things” (Mark 4:19). Someone who probably fit in that category was Demas. I don’t think we can be 100 percent sure, because we don’t have all the details, but 2 Timothy 4:10 suggests this kind of falling away when it says, “Demas, because he loved this present world, has deserted me and gone to Thessalonica.” It sounds like Demas preferred riches to the rigors of serving Christ.

(4) Greed can blind you to the horrible truth that you’re just a damned fool. In Luke 12, Jesus tells the story of a man who has done very well for himself financially. He has done so well that it looks like he can take an early retirement and spend the rest of his days just enjoying life. He makes plans to build bigger storage facilities for all his stuff, and then says to himself, “You have plenty laid up for many years. Take life easy; eat, drink, and be merry.”

For many people, that sounds like the American dream. Work only as long as you need to and then spend the rest of your days enjoying your stuff. But Jesus concludes that story by saying, “But God said to him, ‘You fool! This very night your life will be demanded from you. Then who will get what you have prepared for yourself?’” And then Jesus says, “This is how it will be for everyone who stores up things for himself but is not rich toward God.” (Luke 12:16-21)

That story hits too close to home for me. Earlier this week I was talking to my wife about the prospect of retirement. I am 58, and anticipating the day - perhaps 8 and a half years from now - when I can retire from my labor job in a chemical plant. And I think it is no sin to yearn for rest. But it is a sin to be self-indulgent - to think only in terms of one’s things and how one might best enjoy them at leisure, and to give no thought to how our resources might best be used for the glory of God and the benefit of people. The truth is, I may not have 8 and half years. Or I may have a lot more than that. But on whatever day God says to me, “Paul, this night your life will be demanded from you,” I don’t want him to preface that announcement with the words, “You fool.”

In order not to be fools, we must not be greedy. We must give with wise generosity, for the Bible says, “God loves a cheerful giver” (2 Corinthians 9:7). We must not be self-indulgent, because Jesus sternly warned people not to store up things for themselves. And we must not even want to be rich, because the apostle Paul said those who want to be rich fall into temptation and a trap and into many foolish and harmful desires that plunge people into ruin and destruction. And Jesus said it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle then for a rich person to get into the kingdom of God (Matthew 19:24). No devout soul who takes those words seriously would ever want to be rich. What sane individual would want to make it harder to get into heaven? What rational person would want to fall into temptation and a trap that could drown him in destruction and perdition?

Now, what I have just shared with you is, in my mind, a very straightforward, pedestrian, old-hat Christian presentation on the subject of greed and its danger to the soul. I do not think that I have tried to provoke you with any extreme language or hyperbole. My goal here has been to set forth very simply, in measured tones, what the Bible says about greed.

And this leads me to a disturbing question to contemplate. For those of you who have some familiarity with mainstream evangelical preaching today – how often have you heard a condemnation of greed or a warning about greed along the lines of what I have just shared?

I have not heard it at all in recent years. Zero. And for what it’s worth, I do listen to sermons quite a bit. That’s what I do. Nearly every day I listen to at least parts of several contemporary evangelical sermons. There are gazillions of them online, and they’re also on Christian radio, and I listen to those when I’m driving. In today’s evangelical world, exhortations about and warnings against greed are nonexistent.

While condemnations of greed are absent, exhortations to give are plentiful. (Those two are not the same, of course.) I hear exhortations to give every day. In fact, there are preachers on evangelical Christian radio who, at end of every sermon, give a little presentation where they ask for money. Some don’t even wait for the end of the sermon. Some of them now have a commercial break in the middle of the sermon where they promote their ministry, hawk sales of their book, and ask you to give generously. Or, they offer you something free to get you on their mailing list. Such mailing lists, you should know, are lucrative cash cows for those who know how to exploit them.

I have a word of counsel for my fellow evangelicals. Don’t give money to millionaires. That’s stupid. And when I say that, I don’t even have in mind those obvious, outrageous frauds who masquerade as Christians. You know the type: Joel Osteen, T. D. Jakes, Joyce Meyer, Kenneth Copeland, Benny Hinn, Steven Furtick of Elevation Church, Brian Houston of Hillsong. Those people live cartoonishly lavish lifestyles, and their intoxication with greed is open, unapologized for, and actively promoted. Brian Houston, to pick one example, actually wrote a book with the title You Need More Money. On YouTube you can find a clip of him saying, “There is no one person in this building who doesn’t need more money. And if you say, ‘Well I don’t need more money,’ then I would say, ‘You have a very poor outlook on life.’” That is straight from the mouth of antichrist.

Frauds like the Hillsong founder Brian Houston - who clearly believed that St. Paul had a poor outlook on life for being content and not wanting more money - are beyond the fringe of the category of evangelical that I have in mind this morning. Greedy villains like Brian Houston and Joel Osteen will not be invited any time soon to speak at Moody’s Founders’ Week, or address the student body at Wheaton College, or serve as chancellor of Dallas Theological Seminary, or join Keith and Kristyn Getty on the stage of a “Sing!” concert. Anyone who has a minimal familiarity with the Bible and a minimal familiarity with the teachings and lifestyles of Osteen, Joyce Meyer, Brian Houston, etc., will see very quickly that those people have nothing to do with Jesus Christ.

Again, my concern strikes much closer to home. Because I am speaking as an evangelical Christian to other evangelical Christians.

So here is an example of the kind of thing that concerns me. In 2010, I heard, a few months apart, a couple sermons by two well-known mainstream evangelical preachers. These were not TV charlatans but serious, influential expositors of the Word. Both sermons disturbed me, and I wrote essays at the time that referenced them. One preacher gave as a sermon illustration an incident where he said he really wanted to see a Monday night football game in person at Lambeau Field. Tickets were impossible to get at face value, so he instructed his son to go online and bid whatever exorbitant sum was necessary to get 12 tickets. He paid the ungodly price to get those tickets, and then a wealthy parishioner gave him 6 more, and the preacher concluded those were the tickets God wanted him to have. What you have there are thousands upon thousands of dollars, all derived ultimately from the sacrificial tithes of God’s people, to see a stupid football game. Of course there were a lot more shenanigans where that came from. Some years earlier that pastor had bought a house for 2 million dollars. He also had a serious gambling problem and he was known for giving away Harley Davidson motorcycles and automobiles to buddies like Ed Stetzer.

The other sermon I heard that year was by a younger preacher who boasted of having 40 pairs of shoes, and said his wife had more than that. He spoke contemptuously of modestly-priced wine and said he would only drink the premium stuff. Again, there was more, but I’ll stop there. You get the idea. He said these things without any remorse, repentance or shame - just as matters of fact.

The first preacher was the since-utterly-disgraced James MacDonald and the second preacher was the since-utterly-disgraced Mark Driscoll. Eleven years later we all know how evil these men are now that their jaw-dropping depravity in multiple areas has been unveiled for the world to see. All their former elders have at long last found the courage to denounce them. And that’s good. But my question is, “How did these men of such transparent, demonic greed flourish for so long in a community of people that supposedly value the Bible, and read it, and love the Lord Jesus Christ?” That is incomprehensible to me. How did MacDonald keep his radio show on WMBI? How did he get invited to speak to Bible students at Moody and to seminary students at Trinity? How did that fiend Mark Driscoll manage to plant his name, face and influence on every nook and cranny of the evangelical world? Part of the answer is that evangelicals of influence stopped caring about, identifying, denouncing, and repenting of greed. Gargantuan self-gorging greed is just out there all the time in plain sight, and we as a community have winked at it and let it slouch on by.

And we’re still doing that. It is part of the ongoing crisis in evangelicalism today. For example: David Jeremiah is still on evangelical Christian radio. Some years ago his chief financial officer, George Hale, resigned in protest and disgust over the unethical, deceptive practices Jeremiah was using to artificially inflate numbers on his book sales. Jeremiah doesn’t even write his own books – he employs ghostwriters. But with his celebrated name on the covers of these books, he was able to get a 3 million dollar check from Faith Words, a Nashville-based publisher, and soon after that, in January of 2010, he bought a 2 million dollar condominium in a resort community on Coronado Island.

Of course that’s wrong, of course that is indicative of blatant, self-indulgent, godless greed. But how can the megachurch evangelical preachers of our day condemn such a vice when so many of them are awash in it themselves?

Thank God there are exceptions to the rule of greed that has so poisoned our evangelical culture. I’ll mention two that I know about, though I’m sure there are others.

John Piper could be very rich and live very lavishly if he wanted to. He need only say the word. The royalties on his books would have him set for life. But for years Piper has kept his relatively modest house in a troubled neighborhood in Minneapolis where the syringes of drug addicts litter his doorstep. It is as though there is a golden apple before his eyes, and yet for the love of Christ and fear of God he refuses to lay hold of it. He values as something far greater his treasure in heaven, and refuses to forfeit that for the sake of earthly comfort. When his elders wanted to raise his salary beyond what he knew he needed, he refused. They tried to pressure him with the argument that it would throw off the salary structure of the whole staff, because of course they would have to be paid less than the senior pastor, and that wouldn’t be enough for them. Piper was mystified by that argument and said, “Where is it written that the senior pastor has to be the highest paid? Why should that be case? Just pay them what you need to pay them. If it’s more than what I get, who cares?”

I’m so thankful to God that there are some people who get it.

Someone of a previous generation who got it was C. S. Lewis. The converted atheist and greatest mind of his generation actually had trouble comprehending some things that other people seem to manage without difficulty. Algebra was beyond him. He was never able to learn how to drive a car. And he had no knack for understanding money management. In fact, his first publisher ripped him off royally and Lewis had no clue. Lewis didn’t really understand money, he just knew that as a Christian he had to be generous with the money that came his way.

I have to stick in a parenthetical note here. When I said that he was the greatest mind of his generation, it will seem that I immediately contradicted myself by referring to areas where he was, shall we say, special. Lest that remain as the dominant impression, please let me encourage you to read just the first six chapters of his book Miracles. Serious engagement with that book alone will have you staring open-jawed at the page and wondering why you never realized till that moment that you were an utter simpleton.

But I digress. When the money came rolling in from Lewis’s bestselling books, he just gave it away to widows and orphans and other needy people. He actually gave way too much of it, because he didn’t know he still had to pay taxes on it as income. Once he got back on track financially from having given his way into tax debt, he established a charitable fund with the help of a lawyer friend, Owen Barfield, and for the remainder of his days he never saw most of the royalties from his books because two-thirds of it went directly to charity.

And no, he did not buy a two million dollar condo in a resort community. In fact, the house he lived in near Oxford didn’t even have central heat. It was cold in the winter. He felt he had to warn an incoming American guest, Walter Hooper, that the accommodations he could offer would probably be a lot less comfortable than what an American would be used to.

Among the many gems that Lewis left behind is this statement concerning how much we, as Christians, should give. It is so encouraging to know that he not only wrote this, but he lived by it. He wrote:

“I do not believe one can settle how much we ought to give. I am afraid the only safe rule is to give more than we can spare. In other words, if our expenditure on comforts, luxuries, amusements, etc, is up to the standard common among those with the same income as our own, we are probably giving away too little. If our charities do not at all pinch or hamper us, I should say they are too small. There ought to be things we should like to do and cannot do because our charitable expenditure excludes them.”

Amen. Let us pray.

Our Father in heaven, give us this day our daily bread. Wait a minute. Scratch that, God. You already gave me my daily bread. And tomorrow’s bread too, and the day after that. They’re in my refrigerator and freezer and cupboards at home. So let me start again. Thank you God for the overabounding material blessings that I, a rich spoiled brat, take for granted as an entitlement and mostly don’t even notice. Deliver me from the greed that rules my culture and renders me senseless to the ways in which, perhaps, my own heart has been taken captive to it. Thank you for the example of saints like Paul who conquered greed and enjoyed contentment in the confines of a prison cell. Teach me to live with that generosity of spirit so that when the moment comes for you to say that my life is demanded of me, you will not call me the fool that I am by nature, but the child and servant that I have become by grace. In Jesus’ name and for his sake, amen.

Sunday, September 5, 2021

Evangelicalism in Crisis Part 2: My Glory I Will Not Give to Another

The Bible says, “God opposes the proud, but gives grace to the humble.” It says that frequently. With some variation in wording, it says that in Proverbs 3:34, Proverbs 138:6, Matthew 23:12, Luke 1:51-52, James 4:6 and 1 Peter 5:5.

God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble.

God’s opposition to pride may be observed in the lives of three kings and one apostle. The pagan king of Babylon, Nebuchadnezzar, despite being solemnly warned one year earlier, swelled up with pride and said, “Is not this the great Babylon I have built as the royal residence, by my mighty power and for the glory of my majesty?” (Daniel 4:10). Instantly God judged him with a humiliating and degrading condition that rendered all kingly functions impossible for seven years.

More than 600 years later, another king, Herod Agrippa I, received with approval accolades from people who shouted, “The voice of a god and not a man!” The Bible says, “Immediately, because Herod did not give praise to God, an angel of the Lord struck him down, and he was eaten by worms and died” (Acts 12:23).

Nebuchadnezzar and Herod Agrippa were bad men to begin with, but could a good king succumb to pride? We know of at least one who did. Hezekiah was one of the best kings that Israel or Judah ever had. But listen to these sad words in 2 Chronicles 32:25: “Hezekiah’s heart became proud and he did not respond to the kindness shown him; therefore the LORD’s wrath was on him and on Judah and Jerusalem.” Thankfully that grievous development gave way to grace in the next verse which says, “Then Hezekiah repented of the pride of his heart, as did the people of Jerusalem; therefore the LORD’s wrath did not come on them during the days of Hezekiah.” Even so, the damage wrought by good King Hezekiah’s pride turned out to be extensive and horrific beyond anyone’s imagination.

Pride is so bad and so dangerous that God allowed an apostle to be tormented by the devil just to keep pride at bay. In 2 Corinthians 12:7 the apostle Paul wrote, “to keep me from becoming conceited because of the surpassing greatness of the revelations, a thorn was given me in the flesh, a messenger of Satan to harass me, to keep me from becoming conceited.” Twice Paul says in that verse: “to keep me from becoming conceited” as though to remind himself that it was far more important that his pride be kept in check than that he should experience deliverance, comfort, fulfillment, or success.

Pride has always been regarded by Christian teachers as the greatest sin. The unanimity on that goes back centuries. In C. S. Lewis’ book Mere Christianity he has a chapter titled “The Great Sin” where he writes this:

“According to Christian teachers, the essential vice, the utmost evil, is Pride. Unchastity, anger, greed, drunkenness, and all that, are mere fleabites in comparison: it was through Pride that the devil became the devil: Pride leads to every other vice: it is the complete anti-God state of mind.”

Lewis was right. I have read that Augustine and Aquinas also identified Pride as the essence of all sin. There is a good reason why Pride is mentioned first among the seven deadly sins.

A parenthetical note: this universal Christian consensus about Pride being the great sin has been challenged and denied in just these past few years by – of all people! – evangelicals. Even C. S.-Lewis-loving evangelicals. About seven years ago I was part of a team tasked with preaching through the book, The Sacrament of Evangelism by Jerry Root and Stan Guthrie. There is much good in this book. But one of the things that is not so good is that in chapter 6 the authors take pains to reject the Christian tradition and received wisdom that pride is the greatest sin. They see pride as a consequence of a deeper, more fundamental sin which they call “our unwillingness to receive God’s love.”

That rhetoric about “not receiving God’s love” has gripped the evangelical mind in recent years and diffused its influence through our sermons and books and training of young Christians. I hear it a lot, for example, on Christian radio or in Christian college chapel services. In such settings you will hear things like, “Our biggest problem is that we don’t understand how much God loves us, and we just really need to learn how to appreciate and receive his love.” I plan to return to this point in my fifth and final message in this series which I have titled “Evangelicalism and the Fundamental Misdiagnosis of the Human Condition.” But for now I will just state – crudely, baldly, and with all the conviction that my meager authority can muster – that Augustine and Aquinas and C. S. Lewis and a million other wise teachers through the centuries had it right in the first place. Pride is the great sin.

And, in my judgment, modern popular western evangelicalism has fueled pride, rewarded its manifestations among our key leaders, and failed to see (much less discipline) even the least subtle, most egregious expressions of it. The result has been an avalanche of corruption and scandal and disaster in the evangelical world that has put Christianity in a bad light and given opponents of the faith a reason to rejoice.

Let me tell you about an experience I had in 1985 that became pivotal for me in my understanding of some of these issues. I happened to spend two months in southern California. My fiancé and I went to a big church one Sunday morning. I scarcely remember anything about the service. The regular preacher was out of town. Same thing the next week. The third Sunday, an odd thing happened. When we pulled into the parking lot, it was so full of cars that we had to park a good distance away. I thought that was strange – it wasn’t Easter or Christmas. Then as we joined the throng of people going in we saw that the doors between the narthex and the sanctuary were closed. They had been open the previous two weeks and you could just walk right in. But now there were designated individuals managing crowd control, letting in groups of people at intervals so that the numbers would not overwhelm.

I was puzzled until suddenly a thought jumped into my head: “Oh - I bet Chuck Swindoll is back from vacation.” I was right. The crowd had materialized because people were there to hear their celebrity pastor. An alarmingly high percentage of that congregation had determined in their hearts that God was not worthy of their worship on a Sunday morning unless Chuck was preaching. I know that they would not have put it in those terms, but I am deliberately putting it in those offensive, cynical terms in order to awaken and wound the consciences of those who have succumbed to a shallow, celebrity-driven Christianity. The feeling of disgust that I had that Sunday morning has not diminished in 36 years. We who love Jesus Christ and who are eternally grateful for his death and resurrection on our behalf gather to worship him, remember him, and learn from him in the company of brothers and sisters in the faith who bear our burdens and whose burdens we bear. We do not go to church to hear an inspiring talk from a Christian star. That is an abomination.

I believe that the megachurch model that has come to dominate so much of evangelicalism in the past few decades has nourished that abomination. It has inflated the egos of alpha males in the pulpits of such places, and has attracted new generations of men who thirst for that acclaim. These are ambitious men who are not so much willing to lay down their lives in painful self-sacrifice and anonymity in obscure places, taking up their crosses to follow Christ, but who want, more than anything, to be the next Chuck Swindoll.

Here is an example of how that dynamic begins, festers, and ends in horror. In 2017, Joshua Harris gave a TED talk in which he said, “I could take you to the exact spot in my parents’ living room in Gresham Oregon where I knelt down and I prayed this prayer: “God, let me write a book that will change the world.”

That’s the kind of prayer that C. S. Lewis nailed to the wall of humanity’s great sin when he quoted the Roman poet Juvenal who spoke of “Enormous prayers which heaven in anger grants.”

Joshua Harris did not pray for the glory of God but for the glory of himself. It did not even seem to matter to him what his book would be about – just something, some topic, whatever – just something that would sell unbelievably well and strike its influence like a thunderbolt across the land, which, of course, could not help but redound to Harris’s honor and fame. He was 20 years old.

He got his wish. In 1997 he wrote the national number 1 bestseller “I Kissed Dating Goodbye.” It was a very well-timed book that scratched the itch of Christian purity culture and skyrocketed him to evangelical fame. I never read the book myself for the simple reason that the title struck me as asinine. I mean, I am against fornication and adultery - but what’s wrong with dating? I think dating is just great.

Having been catapulted into evangelical fame, Harris at the age of 28 was handpicked by C. J. Mahaney to succeed him as lead pastor of Covenant Life Church in Maryland. Covenant Life was a megachurch with 20 full-time pastors and 30 full-time staff members. And just like Willow Creek and Harvest Bible Chapel that I mentioned last week, Covenant Life sent out its tentacles of corruption in all directions through its international organization Sovereign Grace Ministries. Sovereign Grace Ministries has since imploded under the scandals of rampant, unchecked, undisciplined sexual abuse.

But that’s another story. Here I’m just focusing on Harris. The ambitious young Joshua Harris was handed this influential evangelical empire in September 2004. Fast-forward to 2019, Harris announced that he was no longer a Christian. Of course he dissolved his marriage – apostates almost always do that. And now that he is out of the ministry, Harris has not gone out to get a regular job (I can testify that they are hiring over at Flavorchem - I’d be willing to put in a word for him), but rather he seeks to monetize his loss of faith just as he once monetized his embrace of it. For a hefty fee he’s willing to coach you through the ins and outs of rejecting Christ.

The Harris saga began not with the glory of God but with barely concealed diabolical pride, and now it ends with a middle finger thrust openly into the face of God for everyone to see. And what drives me nuts is the fact that so many of my fellow evangelical brothers and sisters have gotten sucked into these maelstroms of one man’s ambition and taken for a ride only to be left with bitter disappointment and disillusionment, wondering, “Gee, how did that happen?”

Well, among other things, we the evangelical public have been guilty of stoking pride-driven Christian celebrityism and its partner in crime megachurchianity. And perhaps one area where I might be able to render some small service to my evangelical brothers and sisters is to indicate a cluster of red flags and warning signs that keeps getting ignored.

Before going on to that, though, I believe I would be negligent in my duty as a steward of the Word of God if I did not give you some relevant Scriptures that speak to the apostasy of men like Joshua Harris.

Hebrews 6:4-6:

It is impossible for those who have once been enlightened, who have tasted the heavenly gift, who have shared in the Holy Spirit, who have tasted the goodness of the word of God and the powers of the coming age and who have fallen away, to be brought back to repentance. To their loss they are crucifying the Son of God all over again and subjecting him to public disgrace.

Hebrews 10:26-31:

If we deliberately keep on sinning after we have received the knowledge of the truth, no sacrifice for sins is left, but only a fearful expectation of judgment and of raging fire that will consume the enemies of God. Anyone who rejected the law of Moses died without mercy on the testimony of two or three witnesses. How much more severely do you think someone deserves to be punished who has trampled the Son of God underfoot, who has treated as an unholy thing the blood of the covenant that sanctified them, and who has insulted the Spirit of grace? For we know him who said, “It is mine to avenge; I will repay,” and again, “The Lord will judge his people.” It is a dreadful thing to fall into the hands of the living God.

2 Peter 2:20-22:

If they have escaped the corruption of the world by knowing our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ and are again entangled in it and are overcome, they are worse off at the end than they were at the beginning. It would have been better for them not to have known the way of righteousness, than to have known it and then to turn their backs on the sacred command that was passed on to them. Of them the proverbs are true: “A dog returns to its vomit,” and, “A pig that is washed returns to her wallowing in the mud.”

The word of the Lord.

Joshua Harris was just one of many who found within contemporary evangelicalism a structure that was well-suited - designed in advance, so to speak, to satisfy the ambition of glory-seeking charismatic individuals. When we fan the flames of Christian celebrityism, when we file by the hundreds into stadium-like churches only if the star performer is there, then we are at least in part to blame for creating monsters. Or we share the guilt of attracting men who already are monsters but who have managed, for the time being, to cloak their true nature in the garb of humanity.

Consider for a moment whether celebrities in the secular realm ever tend to be virtuous. They’re not. Fame and power drag in their wake a sense of entitlement. Celebrityism creates a mindset that says, “I am so accomplished and adored that I deserve to have things that please me.” For men, if I may speak with grotesque bluntness, that usually includes a harem of some sort. How many men of fame – be they actors, sports figures, rock stars or politicians – how many of them are morally chaste? Hardly any. And now, among Christian celebrities, the occurrence of sexual transgression has become so pervasive that it hardly shocks us anymore.

And there is something else that I have noticed among Christian A-list celebrities who have not fallen sexually, at least as far as it is known publicly. An alarming number of them seem to find ways of signaling to us that women find them irresistible. Of course, they do somehow manage to beat them off with a stick, but, my oh my, random women sure do throw themselves at them a lot.

Mark Driscoll, whose open ambition was to have the biggest church in the world (and was well on the way to achieving it till his own elders sickened of him and insisted that he step down), claimed that while he was serving holy communion women would stick a note in his pocket, saying “Pastor Mark, you look tired, let me come over and help you. No one else has to know about this. It can just be between us.” James Dobson, founder of Focus on the Family (sorry, DOCTOR James Dobson – he always insisted on being called Dr.) claimed that once after he had had a fight with his wife he went for a drive, and some woman in a car next to him at stop light gave him the eye, smiled, and then pulled off down a side road as though beckoning him to follow. Of course, noble Dr. Dobson resisted, and kept driving on the straight and narrow highway. (Incidentally, I do not believe either Driscoll’s or Dobson’s story.) Chuck Swindoll tells the story of getting into an elevator at a hotel where two women got on and indicated that they would get off at whatever floor he got off on. Once again, our hero escaped the clutches of a foul temptress who could barely keep her hands off him (in this case, TWO foul temptresses). I heard Tony Evans tell of the time when a woman noticed his wedding ring and said to another woman, “Aww, he’s married!” He smiled and said, “What can I say?” Even if that happened, a humble man of God cannot tell that story. That’s something you bury in the sea of forgetfulness. Then there’s Paul Tripp. He founded a ministry with a unique, catchy name: “Paul Tripp Ministries.” (I’ll get back to that.) In a promotional video for one of his books, he tells how, dissatisfied with his wife’s lack of appreciation for him, he said to her, “95% of the women in this congregation would be happy to be married to me.” She retorted, “Count me among the 5%.” Even granted that he told the story in humorous self-deprecation, I still think, how much self-regard must a man ingest before he can allow himself to think that thought?

Our cult of megachurch celebrityism attracts and breeds the kind of man who will insist on being addressed with an honorific title, or who will name a ministry after himself, and who will casually assume that women all over the world are eager to launch themselves at him.

If I were to assemble the red flags indicative of pride and gather them into a single container labeled with one word, I would pick the word “Name.” Watch for the name. Pay attention to whose name is prominent.

A number of years ago WMBI had a short daily feature, just a minute or so, that opened with these words: “This is George Barna of the Barna Research Group with 'The Barna Report.’” That man was able to get his name out on to the airwaves three times in the space of three seconds. His books would feature full-length pictures of himself. Many years ago when I was pastoring a church I got a brochure in the mail that featured his materials. I actually counted the number of times the name “Barna” appeared. It was dozens, but, significantly, the name of Jesus did not appear.

Listen: you cannot put your own name forward when you represent Jesus Christ. I will repeat that for emphasis’ sake. You cannot put your own name forward when you represent Jesus Christ.

Last week I referred to a lying, sexually abusive fake Christian scoundrel from hell by the name of Ravi Zacharias. Before Ravi’s patterns of lies had been revealed, before his sexually abusive nature had been revealed, before it became known that he had pressured his brother’s girlfriend to get an abortion – before all that, he founded an institute. Do you know what he named it? "The Zacharias Institute." He also founded a ministry. He called that "Ravi Zacharias International Ministries". My point here is that his glory-seeking self-aggrandizement was right out there in the open the whole time, and we the evangelical public didn’t see it, pushed past it, apparently didn’t think it was a big deal. It was a big deal. You cannot name a Christian ministry after yourself.

Before going further with that I should make a careful distinction. If you own a business upon which your livelihood depends and to which your reputation is attached, it is completely appropriate that you stamp your name on that. If your name is "Schwartz" and you own a bakery, by all means call it “Schwartz Bakery.” Your name will rise or fall on the quality of your cakes, and that is as it should be. Christian journalist Julie Roys has no bigger fans than my wife and me, and her site is called “The Roys Report.” That’s fine – that’s her livelihood, her business, and the nature of her reporting and opinion pieces demands that it not be anonymous. Her name should be on that.

But when it comes to proclaiming the gospel of Jesus Christ, and caring for souls, and training disciples – though someone may earn a living through that, it is never a business. We who are called to such work are not proprietary owners of it. We don’t even rise to the level of "local franchise owner" like someone who controls a Burger King or Subway. The Bible’s term for us is “steward”. In 1 Corinthians 4:1, Paul writes, “This is how we should be regarded, as servants of Christ and stewards of the mysteries of God.” A steward is just a manager, or maybe only a servant. We stewards do not get to stamp our name on ministry. We hide, we must hide behind the cross and ensure that the name of Christ be paramount. Colossians 3:17: "Whatever you do, whether in word or deed, do it all in the name of the Lord Jesus." John 3:30: "He must become greater; I must become less."

Paul Tripp and Ravi Zacharias are not the only Christian celebrities who have dared to name ministries after themselves. Locally we have "Ron Zappia Ministries" out of Highpoint Church in Naperville. Weekdays at 6PM on WMBI you can listen to J. D. Greear of "J. D. Greear Ministries." He is the former president of the Southern Baptist Denomination, which in my mind is the most corrupt denomination in the U.S.

Although not everything that Paul Tripp and Ron Zappia and J. D. Greear say is wrong, let me warn you - you are skating on thin ice, you are swimming in treacherous waters, if you go learn your biblical wisdom from men who are so foolish, so egotistical, so alien to the spirit of Christ and blind to what the Bible teaches that they would name a ministry after themselves. It is simply outrageous. But now I will tell you something even more outrageous.

There have multiplied in our day celebrity Christian megachurch men who have stamped their names not just on a ministry but on the Bible itself I regard that as sacrilege. This is the Holy Word of God. It is good that we have study Bibles with copious notes and cross-references that help us understand it better and learn how to apply it. But it is not good that proud men have seen to it that their names will be on bold display every time a humble Christian opens the Word of God. Today we have the John MacArthur Study Bible. The David Jeremiah Study Bible. The Chuck Swindoll Study Bible. And the Tony Evans Study Bible.

That is not right. You can write about the Bible and seek to unfold its truths to a spiritually needy church, but you can’t have your name printed on the cover. How dare any man contaminate Holy Scripture by linking it so tightly to his own unholy name! And how can the Christian evangelical public support that? It is shameful.

In 1769 a deeply troubled poet, William Cowper, wrote a wonderful hymn, Oh For A Closer Walk With God. That hymn contains the words, “The dearest idol I have known, whate’er that idol be, help me to tear it from Thy throne and worship only Thee." For some of us, the dearest idol we have known is our own miserable self. The sooner we see that and repent of it the better.

I conclude with a couple lines from another hymn, one I got to sing many times during my college days. The hymn is framed as a petition, a wish. The opening stanza is:

May the mind of Christ my Savior
Live in me from day to day
By his love and power controlling
All I do and say.

And then it concludes like this:

May his beauty rest upon me
As I seek the lost to win
And may they forget the channel,
Seeing only Him.

A Christian’s great joy is not to be remembered, upheld and valued by others, but rather to be a means by which others remember, uphold and value Jesus Christ. And for that to happen most effectively, we, the servants and stewards, must get out of the way. Let us pray.

God, since you oppose the proud, deliver us from pride. Awaken us to its presence within us and root it out by force if necessary. Thank you for those thorns of pain and humiliation and incapacity by which our pride is gouged out and kept from exerting its power to alienate us from you and your holy Son Jesus Christ. Humble our hearts so that we might receive your grace, and rejoice to give you glory forever. Amen.