The Watcher
The eyes of the Lord are in every place,
keeping watch on the evil and the good.
(Prov 15:3)
What else do you need to know? God sees. God knows. This is an act of the divine nature which everyone understands by nature: the Creator is everywhere and sees everything.
He sees the evil. This is a terror to the wicked. He sees all they do, even all they think and intend to do. Everything is laid open to the eyes of him with whom we have to do. Our only move is to confess our sins to a loving Creator and receive mercy by his Son.
He also sees the good. This is an encouragement to believers who do good in secret, as Jesus instructed us. He who sees in secret will reward. It is also a comfort to the afflicted and oppressed. God sees and knows, and he will repay.
Let us trust the God who sees us today.
The Reformed Doctrine of Keeping It Cool
A fool gives full vent to his spirit,
but a wise man quietly holds it back.
(Prov 29:1)
It is often said that love isn’t something you feel, but something you do. We can say the same thing about the elusive quality of keeping it cool. The fast-paced modern world, with all its many advantages, does have some downsides. For one, it promotes stress. And if we’re not careful, we can express that stress in anger.
What is the secret to staying calm under pressure? It’s not a breezy, nonchalant feeling, but a decision to hold our peace when we are full of emotions. With Christ, we can do this. The moment of chaos shall pass, and we will be glad we didn’t speak out in passion. It need not reach beyond our own hearts to others. And when we do vent our angry feelings at others (which we all do at times), Christ is there to purify our lips with the live coal of his cross, which cleanses our sin.
The Reformed Doctrine of Messy Houses
“God is a God of order.” How many times this truism has been deployed to get kids and grandkids to clean their rooms is a number known only to the Almighty. It reminds me of another well-known proverb, “Cleanliness is next to godliness.” The problem with both is that neither are found in the Bible. The Good Book does, however, say this:
Where there are no oxen, the manger is clean,
but abundant crops come by the strength of the ox.
(Prov 14:4)
In other words, where there is life and productivity, there is messiness.
Today’s ideals are more along the lines of selfish sterility, what we might call the doctrine of easy cleanism. It doesn’t spark joy. It exalts sleeping around in the place of nuptial commitment. It fuels mass abortion. It encourages willfully childless marriages. The quickest way to a spick and span home, office, life, etc. is not to live or work or share it at all. But where there is life and productivity and relationship, there is mayhem. This is the way.
I Only Believe in Science
This Friday our church is having a Nacho Libre viewing party. That classic Christian tale of conscience, conversion, and courtship rumbles the belly with laughter and draws a sweet tear from the eye. Among countless classic lines, Nacho’s sidekick Steven (Esqueleto) has a standout. When Nacho expresses concern that he had not been baptized, he replies, “I don’t know why you always have to be judging me, because I only believe in science.” Brilliant.
Believe in science. That’s the religion of the day. But those who believe the Scriptures need not fear the often-changing findings of the natural sciences. The realities after which they grasp are, in themselves (at the bottom), perfectly consistent with all that the Bible teaches. Why? Because the same God who inspired the Scriptures created the world. The psalmist exhorts us to this knowledge: “Know that the LORD, he is God!” In other words, the God of the Bible is the God of nature. So let us learn about him from all that he has made without fear.
Why Can’t We Get Enough?
“More, more, more!” is the cry of the day. Materialism, sensuality, social media reaccs…we want everything and plenty of it. But will it ever be enough? Of course not. Because satisfaction is not found in the amount experienced but in the eye of the experiencer. Consider the Proverbs:
The righteous has enough to satisfy his appetite,
but the belly of the wicked suffers want.
(Prov 13:25)
But wait a second. If you have read the Bible (or lived for that matter) you know that the wicked often have more than the righteous…more wealth, more power, more pleasure. So how can it be that they suffer want while the righteous are satisfied?
To be sure, in the age to come (come quickly Lord Jesus) God’s people will enter into the plenteous joy of their Master and taste the cosmic fruits of Christ’s victory over sin and death, while those who refuse to bow before his loving rule will suffer want forever and ever.
But that’s not all folks. Even now God’s children enjoy satisfaction in the simplest pleasures and modestest (it’s a word) portions while the wicked, for all their extravagance, are never content. “It is not how much we have,” said Spurgeon, “but how much we enjoy, that makes happiness.”
Let us then, whether we eat or drink, or whatever we do, do all to God’s glory.
That Hideous Hemorrhage
Some years ago I was driving on the interstate and came up to a huge dump truck with the clear message STAY BACK, STAY ALIVE written on the back. I did, and here I am.
It reminds me of Proverbs 13:3:
Whoever guards his mouth preserves his life;
he who opens wide his lips comes to ruin.
More dangerous than crashing into a mountain of avalanching gravel at high speeds is speaking any and all words that suggest themselves to us. Once that hideous hemorrhage begins, there is no stopping it. In any given social or professional setting, letting our words go unchecked quickly reduces us to situational ruin. Let us set a guard upon our mouth today that we may speak wisely.
STAY SILENT, STAY ALIVE.
The Clue of Christ
The knowledge of Jesus Christ is the very marrow and kernel of all the Scriptures...the right knowledge of Jesus Christ, like a clue, leads you through the whole labyrinth of the Scriptures.
John Flavel
The Bible can be hard to understand. It’s easy to get disoriented, especially in the Old Testament. The remedy is to take a step back and view the whole sweep of the Bible. What’s it all about? When we zoom out, we see that the Bible is a fairly simple story about God saving his fallen world through his Son Jesus Christ. In other words, the Bible is all about Jesus. Every smaller story in the Bible, every gem of wisdom, leads the believing reader to him. He is the key to understanding the Scriptures and obtaining the eternal life they offer freely to all. Let us follow the Clue of Christ in all our readings of God’s word.
Rooting For You
No one is established by wickedness, but the root of the righteous will never be moved.
Proverbs 12:3
Why are we tempted to evil? Sometimes it is the lure of sin itself. Other times, wickedness offers itself to us as a tool to achieve our dreams or escape our fears. But the wise man Solomon observes that it never works: no one is established by wickedness.
On the other hand, righteousness is not a means but an end. As such it is forever. Although the righteous will face difficulties in this life, their roots in Christ will remain. When the fiery floods of judgment sweep over the earth, the godly will remain, sprouting again unto eternal life. And there we will flourish like green leaves in the Garden of Eden.
Daily Bread
Give us this day our daily bread.
These are the famous words of the Lord’s Prayer, which Jesus modeled for us to pray. Of course, the point is not the repetition of the words, but the engagement of the heart. The Prayer offers us tracks to run upon in our prayers to God, areas of focus: his glory, the advancement of his kingdom, provision, forgiveness of sin, and deliverance from temptation.
The Lord calls us to pray for our earthly sustenance, symbolized here by bread, the universal biblical symbol for food. And yet we know that earthly food isn’t the only provision we need, for “man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God.” Therefore, within this prayer we may also find room to pray for our daily spiritual bread.
What is the spiritual bread of the Christian? It is the gospel. That same food that saves us sanctifies us. Tim Keller observes, “The gospel of free, gracious justification and adoption is not just the way we enter the kingdom; it is also the way we grow into the likeness of Christ.” Believer, what you need most today is to eat upon the good news of Christ’s death and resurrection for you. Rest in the finished work of your Savior and be fed. “I am the bread of life,” says Jesus. This is the Bread God loves to give most.
William Perkins on the Trinity
William Perkins (1558-1602) is known as the Father of the Puritans. I commend the following quote of his to our contemplation of our Triune God. Notice that, as a Reformed theologian, Perkins stewarded the truth as it was handed down from the Early Church—in this case, the Nicene Fathers. In particular, he is handling the doctrine of the eternal generation of God the Son:
The manner of this generation is this: the Son is begotten of the substance of the Father not by any flux, as when water is derived from the head of the spring to the channel; nor by decision, as when a thing is cut in pieces; nor by propagation, as when a graft is transplanted into a new stock; but by an unspeakable communication of the whole essence or Godhead from the Father to the Son, in receiving whereof the Son does no more diminish the majesty or Godhead of the Father than the light of one candle does the light of the other from which it is taken. Whereupon the Council of Nicea has said well that “the Son is of the Father as light of light, not proceeding but begotten.”
William Perkins, An Exposition of the Creed