I don’t think that word means what you think it means…

i-do-not-think-it-means-what-you-think-it-means

Yes, I’m quoting Inigo Montoya from the Princess Bride.

This line has been going through my mind all weekend as I was reading through David Brooks’ book, The Road to Character.  This book was assigned for a reading group that I am a part of, and it was challenging, and lead to great discussion.  In case you’re interested, here is my summary:

The gift of David’s Brooks, The Road to Character, is that the reader can get a glimpse into the struggle of a worldly man to improve himself using entirely worldly means.  Brooks gives the reader a gospel, albeit stripped entirely of the holiness of God, the destructive capacity of sin, the redeeming and saving work of Christ, and the transforming grace of the Holy Spirit. His is a secular, humanist, nihilist, and moralist gospel that, while using religious terms like holiness, sin, and grace, strip them entirely of their meaning and power. His biographies, while interestingly written, betray his own personality: a skepticism of faith, a fixation on sex, coupled with an unfounded optimism in human potential. The Readers Digest version would simply say: “We’re all messed up. Try harder.”

I think what bothered me most about the book was how close Brooks comes to the truth, but how far he lands from it in the end.  Like that one voice in a choir that is just off the note, slightly out of tune, that it makes the spine tingle.

Brooks talks of sin, but in very unbiblical terms.  We are not sinners, we are simply victims of sin.  “Sin is communal, while error is individual. You make a mistake, but we are all plagued by sins like selfishness and thoughtlessness… To say that you are a sinner is not to say that you have some black depraved stain on your heart”* (Page 54).  Brooks does his best to show that sin is something that needs to be addressed, but refuses to identify clearly what sin is. For Brooks, sin is a part of our soul that must be battled in moral decisions.

Our confession clearly teaches us that sin is “any want of conformity unto or transgression of God’s law,” and the Scriptures show us that the “wages of sin is death” (Rom 6:23).  We know futility of trying to wage the moral battle in our own strength, because we are “dead in our trespasses and sins” (Eph 2:1).  Our only hope is putting our faith in the sinless one, Jesus Christ, through whom we are counted as righteous in the eyes of God (Rom 4:23-25).

Throughout the book, Brooks also uses the term grace, but it is really hard to get an idea of what he means by that word.  In his conclusion, Brooks writes,*

We are all ultimately saved by grace,” but it’s what follows that makes me wonder if what he means by “grace” is what the Bible says about “grace.”  Brooks continues, “You are living your life and then you get knocked off course – either by an overwhelming love, or by failure, illness, loss of employment, or twist of fate… In retreat, you admit your need and surrender your crown… You are accepted. You don’t have to struggle for a place, because you are embraced and accepted. You just have to accept the fact that you are accepted (Page 265).

So close… and yet so far way.

Grace is that free gift of love, acceptance, and forgiveness that is the foundation of our hope for deliverance from sin, of security in this life and the next. I applaud Brooks in his insistence on grace as that which saves.  But any notion of grace that does not demonstrate the costliness of that acceptance, that is, grace without the cross of Jesus Christ, is a cheap, ineffective, and unsaving grace.

I read this and immediately thought of Bonhoeffer:**

Cheap grace is the preaching for forgiveness without requiring repentance; baptism without Church discipline, Communion without confession, absolution without personal confession. Cheap grace is grace without discipleship, grace without the cross, grace without Jesus Christ, living and incarnate.

Costly grace is the treasure hidden in the field; for the sake of it a man will gladly go and sell all that he has. It is the pearl of great price to buy which the merchants will sell all his goods. It is the kingly rule of Christ, for whose sake a man will pluck out the eye which causes him to stumble; it is the call of Jesus Christ at which the disciple leaves his nets and follows him.

It is costly because it calls us to follow, and it is grace because it calls us to follow Jesus Christ. It is costly because it costs a man his life, and it is grace because it gives a man the only true life. It is costly because it condemns sin, and grace because it justifies the sinner. Above all, it is costly because it cost God the life of his Son… and it is grace because God did not reckon his Son too dear a price to pay for our life, but delivered him up for us. Costly grace is the Incarnation of God (Page 45).

Ultimately, Brooks’ book makes me grateful. I am grateful for the blessing of having a Biblical Worldview, a God-centered perspective of the world and of myself.  I am grateful to stand in the Reformed Tradition, with the Westminster Creed and Confession that help me to define and articulate my faith. I am grateful for the saints of God who have gone before me, and who walk with me still, who help me to know the grace of God in Jesus Christ, and to rest in that grace as I continue to battle against sin in my own life, all the while relying on Christ who has conquered the power of sin and death for me.

Let us know what we mean when we say things like sin, holiness, grace, and salvation, so that we can be clear in our witness, and so that we can rest secure in the grace of God for us in Jesus Christ!

SDG

* Brooks, David.  The Road to Character. (Random House; New York, 2016)
** Bonhoeffer, Dietrich. The Cost of Discipleship (Touchtone; New York, 1959)

From the Pastor’s Desk

Here are some articles from the past week that have caught my eye:

Preaching the Gospel and the Law: As I continue to preach through the Letter of James, I try to maintain the balance between the Law and Gospel, between grace and obedience, faith and works.  These aren’t contradictory themes, but doctrines that, rightfully understood, go hand in hand.  This article came as a good reminder in the midst of the study.

10 Things to Know About Church Discipline: After a great time of fellowship and prayer with a group of fellow pastors, I was reminded of the importance of the ongoing, faithful, and prayerful practice of Church Discipline.  As this article points out, there are two main types of discipline, Formative and Corrective, and both need to be maintained for a healthy congregation, but also for healthy individuals within the congregation.

SmarterEveryDay: I try not to spend a lot of time on YouTube, otherwise I get sucked into a time-consuming vortex of videos.  Still, every now and then, you come across some videos that are terrific.  I love watching Destin with Smarter Every Day. His curiosity is contagious, and we all should have such a desire to learn and understand the world around us. I love that he involves his families in a lot of the videos too. Enjoy!

Savior and Lord

“Jesus answered him, “If anyone loves me, he will keep my word…
Whoever does not love me does not keep my words.”
(John 14:23–24)

There has been a bit of a brew-ha-ha percolating on the web among many of the “popular” reformed theologians lately, and while I will spare you the “he said – he said” trivium, I will give you the nutshell version:

Essentially, all the excitement comes down to the very old argument on the relationship between faith and works.  The writer at the eye of the storm has written a study on 1 John 5:3 arguing that the reason the commandments of God are not burdensome is that those in Christ don’t have to do them. When you are in Christ, you are free of the commands.

There have been countless responses to this teaching, pointing out that it cannot stand, especially in light of the rest of 1 John 5:3-4, “For this is the love of God, that we keep his commandments.  And his commandments are not burdensome.  For everyone who has been born of God has overcome the world.  And this is the victory that has overcome the world – our faith.”

I doubt that many of you who are reading this would go so far as to say that faith negates works, that being in Christ cancels all obligations to the call to obedience and righteousness.  We know that we are saved by grace through faith, and not by works (Eph 2:8-9).  But we also know that we are saved by grace through faith so that we may be set free for the good works God has given us to do (Eph. 2:10).

Still, I wonder how many of us, though confessing the truth, live the lie?  We know we are saved by grace through faith and set free for faithful service, but are we slow to obedience?  We are quick to claim Jesus as our Savior, and will even call Him Lord, but how ready are we to bend our knee and bow our head before Him?  Is He Lord, Sovereign over your life, the final authority on how you live and what you believe?

Sadly, many own a divided Christ.

And this is nothing new.

In the 1930’s Dietrich Bonhoeffer wrote, “Only he who believes is obedient, and only he who is obedient believes.”  Let me unpack that a bit – Faith produces obedience.  When you know and trust the one giving the command, you will obey.  Peter wouldn’t have gotten out of the boat had Jesus not already been standing on the water calling him to His side.  Faith in Christ produces obedience.  At the same time, if there is no obedience, there is no faith.  Disobedience stems from disbelief; if you are having trouble trusting Jesus it is because there is some point in which you are also disobedient to Jesus.

In the 50’s, A.W. Tozer wrote of this in his book, The Root of the Righteous:

It is altogether doubtful whether any man can be saved who comes to Christ for His help but with no intention to obey Him.  Christ’s savior-hood is forever united to His lordship.  Look at the Scriptures: “If you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved” (Rom 10:9).  There the Lord is the object of faith for salvation.  And when the Philippian jailer asked the way to be saved, Paul replied, “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and you will be saved” (Acts 16:31).  He did not tell him to believe on the Savior with the thought that he could later take up the matter of His lordship and settle it at his own convenience.  To Paul there could be not division of offices.  Christ must be Lord or He will not be savior.

Even more recently, R.C. Sproul, in his book, Essential Truth of the Christian Faith, wrote:

Antinomianism… asserts that once a person makes a decision for Christ or prays to receive Jesus as Savior, it is not necessary to embrace Him as Lord.  There are no requirements of law that bind the Christian.  There are a few Christian teachers, if any, who declare that one who embraces Christ as Savior shouldn’t also embrace Him as Lord.  Rather, they encourage the “carnal Christian” to become more spiritual and obedient.  But they shrink from declaring that embracing Christ as Lord is necessary for salvation.  Indeed, they insist that it is not necessary for attaining salvation.

Jesus Christ must be your Lord and Savior.  If you trust in Him for salvation, you will listen to His word.  If you believe in Him, you will obey His commandments.  If you love Him, you will obey Him.  This is not to say that our obedience is perfect.  Were that possible, the cross would have been unnecessary.  Each day we see anew our imperfection, our disobedience, our need for a perfect savior.  The beginning of obedience is the acknowledgment of our reality, the confession of the truth, that we are sinners in need of grace, rebels in need of restoration.  Those who do not obey, those who will not submit to Him, prove that they do not love Him, nor do they truly believe in Him.

If you will have Jesus as your savior, you must also have him as Lord.  He will not be divided, piecemeal, like so many offerings at a buffet.  We cannot take Jesus a la carte – picking and choosing what we think we like and need from Him and leaving the rest behind.  We are not given that choice.  He will be Savior and Lord to you, or He will be nothing to you at all.