Showing posts with label blogging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blogging. Show all posts

Monday, May 04, 2009

WAGING WAR AGAINST FELLOW BELIEVERS
...you need to read this

Fellow blogger and friend, Carla Rolfe, has posted an excellent article on this issue of confronting issues within the blogosphere with those we may disagree with in the household of faith. She mentioned me along with friend James White at the end of her post under the "update" section 

This is a must read article and I hope it will encourage you all in the how, what, why, where and whom we blog categories. Three key words for us all to remember when blogging, emailing, texting, etc. about fellow believers in the Lord: grace, charity, and humility.


The Apostle Paul deals with this subject very pointedly in his epistle to the Galatians. As Dr. MacArthur points out in his study bible on the following passage I quote below:
"The imagery is of wild animals savagely attacking and killing each other - a graphic picture of what happens in the spiritual realm when believers do not love and serve each other."
And may I add, attack and spread falsehood about each other. Listen to the Apostle's words:
"For you were called to freedom, brothers. Only do not use your freedom as an opportunity for the flesh, but through love serve one another. For the whole law is fulfilled in one word: “You shall love your neighbor as yourself.” But if you bite and devour one another, watch out that you are not consumed by one another." -Galatians 5:13-15
It has been said, that he who bites has exhausted his angry passions. But the one who seeks to devour is given over to extreme cruelty. 

Puritan divine, John Calvin, explains it as thus:
"slanders, accusations, reproaches, and every other kind of offensive language, as well as acts of injustice arising either from fraud or violence. And what is the end of them? To be consumed; while the tendency of brotherly love is to produce mutual protection and kindness. I wish we could always remember, when the devil tempts us to disputes, that the disagreement of members within the church can lead to nothing else than the ruin and consumption of whole whole body. How distressing, how mad it is, that we, who are members of the same body, should be leagued together, of our own accord for mutual destruction."
May we not excite a spirit of contention within the church and between brothers and sisters in the Lord, but provoke one another unto love and good works. Amen?

In His unfailing love,
Steve
1 Cor. 13:1

Wednesday, April 08, 2009

BLOGGING, WATCHBLOGGING, AND MINISTRY
...asking the right questions first can be more helpful than just debating the answer

Fellow blogger, Tim Challies, lit up the blogosphere yesterday with a controversial post of his called, "Evil as Entertainment." He was addressing the character and content of "watchbloggers" within evangelicalism. He states unequivocally that these are "blogs that specialize in sharing bad news" - and are doing so for entertainment.

Tim is a great writer. He is thoughtful, circumspect, kind and generous. He is obviously very well read, reformed, insightful, and we are all the better for his contribution on many issues he addresses in the blogosphere. But IMHO, I think that this recent article of his lacks some of those qualities he is most noted for. On one hand, he offered some fair and helpful analysis on the current state of watchblogging (code word for blogs that frequently take on doctrinal or pragmatic issues within evangelicalsim polemically). The money line: "filling our minds, our hearts, our computer screens, our blogs with all that is wrong in the church will do little to conform us into the image of the Savior." I agree... if that was all that watchbloggers were solely doing.

But on the other hand, I really don't know of anyone in the Christian blogosphere that only focuses on all that is wrong in evangelicalism. I know many of the watchbloggers personally and do not find that obsession in their person or character. What I do find is the need for more balance from us all as we "take on" difficult and doctrinal issues. It takes God's grace to balance outrage over the right things under the restraint of biblical truth.

Tim further explains his concern: "[they] offer a steady diet of negative content related to the church in general or perhaps related to just one person or one ministry." Again, balance is the key here beloved - not one extreme or the other. It takes grace and wisdom to weigh and discern things rightly and accurately, and ultimately for anothers spiritual growth and edification. As Paul says,
"until we all attain to the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to mature manhood, to the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ, so that we may no longer be children, tossed to and fro by the waves and carried about by every wind of doctrine, by human cunning, by craftiness in deceitful schemes. Rather, speaking the truth in love, we are to grow up in every way into him who is the head, into Christ,"
Tim's stinging conclusion?
"This is what I realized: these blogs are really little more than entertainment... They are really just a spiritualized form of YouTube or any other site that entertains by sharing what is gross and base and negative and that does so for the sake of entertainment. There is really no value in watching boys do stupid things on skateboards and laughing when they crack their ankle bones in half; there is really no value in watching the worst pastors in America preach to the worst churches in America. Such sites offer evil as entertainment."
(Boy, that sounds like something I would have said...)

Take note of the irony here: what we just read was a blogger concerned about watchbloggers watchblogging, issuing a very pointed criticism against watchbloggers in general, but in point of fact was watchblogging about other watchbloggers on his own blog. (Say quickly three times). 

What Are Watchbloggers - Confession Time 
I am a watchblogger; and as we just saw, so is Tim. TeamPyro, Slice of Laodicea, Justin Taylor, Apprising Ministries, Al Mohler, T4G, Voice of the Sheep, Fide-O, Tom Ascol, James White, Timmy Brister, myself, etc. all watchblog. The motive? We all have a desire to guard the truth, champion fidelity, protect and proclaim the purity of the gospel, encourage other believers to honor God's Word in their lives to the glory of Jesus Christ, as well as to sound the alarm to the body of Christ about the error that is quickly finding inroads and acceptability within the reformed and evangelical church of today. That is a good, noble, worthy, excellent and necessary work to be about. I am honored to be numbered among them and thank the Lord for each of their respective ministries.

So by definition, anyone in the blogosphere speaking from a biblical worldview who challenges trends, fads, the doctrines of demons, and other issues facing the body of Christ with sound doctrine, biblical theological, and the truth of Scripture faithfully can and should be considered a watchblogger. Therefore, I submit to you that watchblogger is not really a bad title after all; in fact, I think it is a very good title. Aren't we all to be Bereans examining all things by the Scriptures to see if they are so? (Acts 17:11) Aren't we all to "test all things, hold fast to that which is good"? (1 Thess. 5:21). 

Its clear to me that it is not enough 
that we all share the same vocabulary, 
if we all are carrying around different dictionaries.


The Apostle Paul on Watchblogging
The Apostle Paul states the balance we all so desperately need in this area of Christian blogging. He issues a charge to pastors (but a principle we may all learn from and employ in our blogging) found in Titus 1:9b, "instruct in sound doctrine and refute those who contradict." One positive aspect, one negative aspect. One that instructs; the other that confronts. Both are quite necessary. Faithful instruction in sound doctrine will have to by its very nature confront and address that which is unsound according to Scripture if one is clearly teaching "the whole counsel of God." And by mentioning that which is unsound biblically, means that you must also instruct in that which is sound doctrine for addressing error without the clarification and context of Scriptural truth can push our righteous indignation buttons and be very motivational, but in the end unprofitable. And one that seeks only to state that which is positive biblically and fails to refute error, is more like Norman Vincent Peal than like the Apostle Paul, Peter, or our Lord Jesus Christ (cp, Matt. 23; 2 Peter 2; Jude; 2 Cor. 10). 

Both are important beloved: we should first champion sound doctrine; and when the ugly head of heterodoxy or heteropraxy finds its way in the church, it needs to be refuted.

With that in mind, I humbly submit to you below a few questions I have been thinking about on this issue of watchblogging and how we all function in the blogosphere as fellow believers in Jesus Christ who with right motives want to contend for the truth and His gospel of sola fide while striving to be clothed in the humility and grace of our Lord.

So may we consider asking the following questions of ourselves before we debate someone's proposed methods or answers... 
1. How does my post glorify God and exalt Christ? Or am I seeking to only expand my daily readership by addressing controversial issues just for controversy's sake? (1 Cor. 10:31)

2. How does it equip the body of Christ biblically to be better Bereans on any issue they face? (Acts 17:11)

3. How does it convict and challenge me in my own life before I turn its truths on another? IOW, what do I need to learn, model, obey and repent of first before calling others to do the same? (Psalm 119:10-17)

4. How does it bring truth and foster change to the one I am disagreeing with? (Eph. 4:13-16)

5. How does it edify and encourage - not just exhort? (Eph. 4:1-3; 26-32)

6. How does it communicate real biblical resolve? (Roms. 12:1-2)

7. How does it enable others to live more like Jesus as salt and light in their communities, ready to serve their church and world? (Matt. 5-7)

8. Am I filled with the Holy Spirit as I write and unfold God's Word, or am I only giving knee-jerk reactions to what is the hot potato of the moment? (Eph. 5:17-21) 

9. And lastly, in what I have just written and confronted caused me to focus more clearly on the person of our Lord Jesus Christ and something He would find pleasure, delight and honor in? (Heb. 12:1-3)
In light of those things, what can we learn about watchblogging in confronting error and standing for truth in the blogosphere: 
Firstly, posting by generalization creates more confusion than clarity. By not naming those we are writing about with specific examples from their own blogs can breed confusion, foster suspicions, and in the end produce hurt feelings, apprehension, and angst. As often he does, when Tim goes the extra mile in graciousness, as well as in specificity of the issues he is burdened to write about, I don't view it as an attack on anyone because it helps bring real teeth to what he is saying. I appreciate that about Tim's writing.

Secondly, failure to include or examine oneself as being equally vulnerable may end up communicating avoidance of responsibility rather than to humbly accept it. Clearly, Tim in his very well researched and thorough book reviews alone, has taken on issues in the past that we have benefited from and say amen too. His watchblogging in that arena has rightly challenged our thinking to be discerning, caused us to reevaluate how we do ministry, and even has opened the eyes of many to the more dangerous trends in evangelicalism today (see his amazing review of The Shack). I thank the Lord for that aspect of Tim's ministry.

Thirdly, including biblical content in context on any issue presented through Christian watchblogging helps us all to become more discerning, informed and therefore, honoring to the Lord. Tim on his blog has championed the inerrancy and infallibility of Scripture faithfully. And as a reformed brother, he knows the importance of directing peoples hearts and minds to the truth of God's Word and not just to opinion.
Watchblogging is a necessary and unavoidable component of communicating in the blogosphere as believers in the Lord Jesus Christ. May we all strive to do so with balance, instructing first in sound doctrine and then refuting when necessary those who contradict. And may we do so with the boldness, courage, love, grace and humility befitting our Lord Jesus Christ.

I personally want to say how much I appreciate the watchbloggers out there who are faithfully guarding the truth: Ingrid, Ken, Phil, Dan, JT, Tim, Tom, Carla, Jason, Scott, Al, Brian, James, etc. May we encourage each other to love and good works; and to champion truth and unashamedly refute error; and to do so clothed in the meekness and gentleness of Christ (2 Cor. 10:1-2).

And lastly, thank you to all here who watch this watchblogger and hold me accountable to what I write. You are important and cherished in my life.

"Be strong in the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ." (2 Tim. 2:1)

His unworthy servant in His unfailing love,
Steve

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

A WORD OF APPRECIATION AND ENCOURAGEMENT
...to all the cyberspace yokefellows and co-laborers in Christ

"For this reason, because I have heard of your faith in the Lord Jesus
and your love toward all the saints, I do not cease to give thanks for you,
remembering you in my prayers, that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ,
the Father of glory, may give you a spirit of wisdom and of revelation
in the knowledge of him, having the eyes of your hearts enlightened,
that you may know what is the hope to which he has called you,
what are the riches of his glorious inheritance in the saints,

and what is the immeasurable greatness of his power toward us who believe,
according to the working of his great might that he worked in Christ
when he raised him from the dead and seated him at his right hand
in the heavenly places, far above all rule and authority and power and dominion,
and above every name that is named, not only in this age but also in the one to come."
-Ephesians 1:15-21


I wanted to take a moment and say a heartfelt thanks for all of you who contribute here faithfully at COT. It is a great joy to have you give of your time and energy to make this blog a place of biblical dialogue about a myriad of issues. I hope you feel encouraged and challenged by the articles I post here - for I know I do by your comments.

These past two weeks, the comment threads on several articles have been nothing short of phenomenal. Not just an obvious increase in activity, but the depth of the comments biblically and theologically has been a joy to be a part of. Doctrine matters... and I am glad that it matters to you. Even in the most controversial and spirited of threads, there was an excellent tone, uncommon discernment, and truths being discussed that was most rewarding. And through it all, maintaining a reverence for the Lord, a dignity for His Word, and respect for each other. SDG!

Thank you again for the privilege of allowing me to serve you each day through this blog. This is not a hobby to me, but an extension of genuine ministry.

His unworthy servant in His unfailing love,
Steve
2 Cor. 4:5-7


Update:
PS - I also hope you have enjoyed the cleaner, fresher look of the blog. Special thanks to Carla Rolfe and Andrew Jones for their assistance and advice in this much needed make-over that we embarked upon two weeks ago.

Peace.

Friday, October 19, 2007

You're so Vain, You Probably Think This Post is About You
or... learning to speak the truth in love

A Timely and Necessary Re-Post

The Christian blogosphere has recently morphed into a Geraldo-esque mentality as of late. Broadcasting the behind the scenes failings of others as verbal sport not only feeds the trolls, but at its foundation is anything but Christlike. There even seems to be an increased preoccupation today by some who relish in publicly declaring certain evangelical figures unbelievers when those leaders have not directly denied the gospel or the essentials of the faith. Enough already! Who do we think we are? Rather than use this powerful medium to speak from a biblical worldview about the issues facing the church and culture today, some blogs have adopted an insidious "Entertainment Tonight" - Christian celebrity guise and gossip approach. This trend is disturbing and unprofitable for the kingdom of God beloved. I realize that some call it cutting edge; others call it fair game; some say it is just the age-old problem of "foot in mouth" disease. Whatever you want to call it, at a minimum it is bad form and at worst it is malicious slander—it is sin.


Let’s be clear, it is one thing to fulfill the duty and command of Titus 1:9 where the Apostle Paul states, "...instruct in sound doctrine and refute those who contradict." We all have a responsibility, as faithful Bereans in the body of Christ, to examine what ANYONE might say in matters on doctrine and theology and hold them accountable to the teachings of Scripture as to their claims. There are no “Protestant Popes” (despite the supercilious stature of some evangelical leaders) who think that when they speak, we must obey with unquestioned "amens" and blind loyalty. Biblical scrutiny is not only necessary, but it is a command of God's Word (Acts 17:10-12; 2 Tim. 2:15, 3:16-17; 1 Thess. 5:18ff). NO ONE is exempt from being held to the standard of the authority of Scripture even though some Christian leaders, seminaries, pastors, authors, musicians, etc. get their ecclesiastical shorts in a knot thinking they are exempt from such inquiry by any of the laity. But beloved, it is quite another thing, however, to lower oneself to the stature of a "kiss and tell Enquirer" and publish exposés on others personal failings, sin issues, or doctrinal differences by responding with hyperbole, lies and unsubstantiated digs; and to do so as if it were fact. Matthew 18:15-20, Galatians 6:1-3 should govern these kinds of things rather than drive-by bloggers anxious to get the inside story. "Let's get someone in power" is poor motivation for any true Christian communicator.

What’s veery disappointing, is that when you do question some of "them", they will not just disagree with you, but they want to hurt you. It’s amazing how many links on your blog will suddenly vanish, opportunities for ministry will cancel, weekend church functions get indefinitely postponed, and phone calls from once close associates don’t get returned, etc…

So with that concern and burden, I offer the following article that I first presented at a theological symposium several years ago on the theme of worship, music and the CCM industry at Cedarville College. I hope that you will be encouraged, challenged, edified and shaken. Let’s all use this tremendous gift of the blogosphere to promote God’s Word, hold each other accountable to its truths, and if we come across knowledge of another’s shortcomings, doctrinal departures from orthodoxy, or one being ambushed by sin, let it be dealt with according biblically for the purpose of seeing another repentant, walking faithfully with the Lord, and restored to fellowship (the importance of the local church beloved) and not for the titillating reason of exposé.



Let the Redeemed... Say So!
“Thy statutes are my songs in the house of my pilgrimage.” - PSALM 119:54

In one concise statement David introduces us to the Hymnbook of Heaven elucidating the triumvirate of Christian service - doctrine, worship and life. Thy statutes (doctrine); are my songs (worship); in the house of my pilgrimage (life). Just as the doctrine of justification by faith alone is like Atlas bearing on its shoulders the entire evangelical knowledge of saving grace; so is doctrine, worship and life the three central pillars for music ministry. True Christian music is God-conceived (doctrine); Christ-centered (worship); and Spirit-controlled (life). Take away any one of these pillars and the building topples. For example: a powerful doctrine sung in glory to Christ with an impure life is noise to the ears of our holy God. Conversely, an obedient life given in worship to Christ absent of sound doctrine will be empty praise and on the path to error. Lastly, right theology sung out of the beauty of holiness but vacant in worship to Christ leads to pride or self-glory and the chastisement of the Father.

In Christian music we are missing the key pillar, the cornerstone, which the other two rely upon - sound doctrine! There has already occurred a much needed return to praise and worship in the church and we’ve observed that across the board in evangelicalism. There has also been, in recent years noted scandals with both tele-evangelists and Christian artists, bringing a heightened call for more personal integrity, holiness and ecclesiastical accountability. Though we have not arrived in those areas, we are on the path, nevertheless, the Achilles heel of our industry is the blatant absence of sound biblical theology which has effected every level of Christian music. This is most evident in it’s message. Christian music, originally called Jesus Music that once sang fearlessly about the gospel, now sings of a Christless, watered-down, pabulum-based, positive alternative, aura-fluff cream of wheat, mush-kind-of-syrupy God-as-my-girlfriend kind of thing. There is an obvious reason this has taken place: artists primarily feel; theologians primarily think. We need artists who will balance their zeal with knowledge to invest their lives in the daily discipline of Bible study, and then, to write with the fire, passion and enthusiasm which that study has illumined to communicate the glorious language of the church - the holy Word of God! Until this occurs, we are guilty of sentencing a generation of Christians to simply “feel” their God, rather than to know their God! In the early days of my own music ministry I wrote songs that neither represented good music or precise theology. It is out of the crucible of those experiences that God convicted me, which drives me to speak passionately to these issues.

In Greek mythology there is portrayed a villainous son named Procrustes, of his father Poseidon, who would arbitrarily prescribe ruthless, torturous phenomenon for patrons of his hostel. He would force his travelers to fit into his "procrustean bed" by stretching his victims or severing off their limbs. In much the same way, there have been men throughout the ages that have tailored the truth of God's Word , having laid it upon the "procrustean beds" of deceived, depraved minds stretching its truth or lopping it off to suit their itching ears. The Apostle Paul says, “we are not like, as so many, peddling the Word of God for profit.” Though others did, he would not succumb in making retail of the truth - selling it as cheap merchandise for whatever worldly prominence or power might be bought. Truth to the Apostle was a non-negotiable. Paul’s commitment to the truth wasn’t for sale.

In 1 Timothy 3:15, Paul says that the church is the "pillar and support of the truth.” How we handle the truth of God’s Word determines and defines everything - our worship, our fellowship, our missions outreach, our music, our daily walk with the Lord, our effectiveness in ministry and ultimately our eternal destiny! You see, no one ever lives greater than their view of God! And our view of God is formed by what He has revealed in His Word. We may see His invisible attributes, eternal power and Godhead revealed through general revelation (Rom. 1:18-23), but the self-revelation of who God is and His redemptive plan for man is solely revealed in special revelation - the Word of God (Psalm 19:7-11)! Therefore, if in our worship we pervert His Word, we pervert the truth about God. If in our songs we distort His doctrine, we distort a right view of Him. If in our preaching we misrepresent the Scriptures, we misrepresent the Savior. And if in our worship we twist His truth, we dishonor His character. (2 Timothy 2:15)

What’s at stake here is not desired shelf space at Target or Wal-Mart; but actually the gospel, the authority of Scripture, the life of the church and the character of God! That is why a proper, systematic theology consistent with the totality of Scripture must saturate our musicology. Under the banner of Soli Deo Gloria, this must be the predominate purpose of all our psalms, hymns and spiritual songs, to preserve, promote, proclaim, protect and preach the Word.

History is a lucid teacher and we can learn from her. Give ear to the account of one man’s battle against the roaring lion of modernity in his time:
Charles Hadden Spurgeon spent the final four years of his life at war against the trends of early modernism which he rightly saw as a threat to Biblical Christianity. Spurgeon wanted to warn his flock about the dangers from moving away from the historic positions [of the truth]. ‘Biblical truth is like the pinnacle of a steep, slippery mountain,’ Spurgeon suggested. ‘One step away, and you find yourself on the down-grade. Once a church or individual Christian gets on the downgrade,’ Spurgeon said, ‘momentum takes over. Recovery is unusual and only happens when Christians get on the ‘up-line’ through spiritual revival.’ History has vindicated Spurgeon’s warnings about the down-grade. In the early part of the twentieth century the spreading of ‘false doctrine and worldliness’—theological liberalism and modernism—ravaged denominational Christianity throughout the world. Most of the mainline denominations were violently if not fatally altered by these influences. A hundred years later, we are seeing history repeating itself again…. ‘False doctrine and worldliness’—the same two influences Spurgeon attacked—always go hand in hand, with worldliness leading the way. Christians today tend to forget that modernism was not first of all a theological agenda but a methodological one.
We are seriously close, beloved, to being on the down-grade in Christian ministry, if, in fact, we have not already begun the slide. Though we are seeing an unprecedented interest by the secular arena with more press, publicity, and ownership of Christian publishing and CCM entities, I believe there are some danger signs we can’t ignore:
  • an absence of biblical truth;
  • a reductionist gospel;
  • lascivious living;
  • being unequally yoked with the unbelieving industry;
  • syncretism;
  • pragmatism;
  • aberrant and heretical themes accepted;
  • worldliness in business practice;
  • relativism;
  • moral pluralism;
  • experientialism;
  • and the justifying thread in it all - the love of money producing all sorts of evil.
Much like in Spurgeon’s era or in the days of Paul, sound doctrine is at wholesale rates and godly character is at bargain bin prices. The question still confronts us, why is biblical theology vital for the life of the church and the spiritual health of the believer? Why is it essential for the future survival of Christian ministry? Answer: because sound doctrine clearly taught and obeyed will always produce godly living and bring glory to God; but unsound doctrine disseminated will be nothing more than gangrenous words to the body of Christ - producing nothing but poisoned, sinful lives. Even if expressed through the most gifted of orators or sung through the most stirring of melodies, in the end, it weakens the entire church!

When our grip on the sword of the Spirit is loosened and our spiritual muscles have atrophied, the “once for all delivered to the saints faith” (a term synonymous referring to Scripture) is hastily replaced by a saber of our own carnal invention. We cannot fight the good fight of faith with fleshly weaponry!

We can see the effects of the dumbing-down of doctrine by the pervasive tolerance of another gospel which has resulted in redefining Biblical language. Sin is no longer called sin, but sickness; disobedience is now called disease; and adultery is simply referred to as addiction. This psychological sanctification has replaced the Scriptures and the work of the Holy Sprit in the predetermined work of God to conform us daily to Christ. “Sanctify them by Thy truth, [Jesus said,] Thy Word is truth.” Only the truth of God’s Word is sanctifying truth for all matters of life and godliness! “The sum of Thy Word is truth.” We are to be “ handling accurately the word of truth.” We are to proclaim “The word of truth, the gospel.” Why? For God has “exalted His Word even above His name.”

It is infinitely hazardous when the church embraces a Freudian anthropology justifying oneself for the purpose of abandoning personal responsibility (the abuse excuse) and allowing one to attach the blame outwardly to one’s environment, or on Mom and Dad, rather than finding solutions that come from only God Himself. Giving people a sense of becoming and belonging, addressing felt needs instead of real needs is the “theology” of the hour. Churches now hire full time psychological counselors fortuitously replacing faithful pastors and elders who are the ones called by God to shepherd His flock! “Preach the Word…” is no longer the mandate of men of God but rather, “Go ye into all the world and relate!”

Os Guinness is spot on in his analysis when saying, “This… sea change is a particularly important precedent because it was not so much from Calvinism to Arminianism as from theology to experience, from truth to technique, from elites to populism, and from an emphasis on ‘serving God’, to an emphasis on ‘serving the self’ in serving God.”

He is devastatingly correct! Even at the seminary level that change is evident. Men are no longer being taught today to preach expositionally, but experientially. They are not taught to shepherd, but to be students. The object of faith is no longer Christ but self-esteem; the goal of faith is no longer holiness, but happiness; the source of faith is no longer the Scriptures, but experience. Spurgeon says it right:
“A new religion has been initiated, which is no more Christianity than chalk is cheese; and this religion, being destitute of moral honesty, palms itself off as the old faith with slight improvements, and on this plea usurps pulpits which were erected for gospel preaching.” “An aversion to doctrinal Christianity has been growing for several decades, along with an increasing intolerance for doctrinal and confessional accountability. Evangelicals have embraced the technologies of modernity, often without recognizing that these technologies have claimed the role of master rather that servant.”
Church growth expert, George Barna, arguing for how the church must find new ways to reach a post-church generation with the gospel, says,
“Busters do not believe in absolute truth. This means that they, for the most part, reject the Bible as having any real answers. Thus, proposing Jesus Christ as the solution to a person’s sin problem is not likely to make any significant impression.”
Did you hear that? Dear people, the gospel never begins with man and his need but with God and His glory! Truth by definition is exclusive. When we declare the Scriptures to be the truth and Jesus Christ as the way, the truth, and the life, who is full of grace and truth, we are declaring that every other claim to “the truth” is false. Every other way is a dead end. Every other faith system asserting eternal life is a path leading to death. Crossover that! Make that seeker-friendly! Commercialism won’t tolerate a God-conceived, Christ-centered message! You can crossover an artist or an author into the pop world, but you can’t crossover the message - there is an offense to the cross!

In a culture where absolute truth is considered obsolete it’s only inevitable that people will sink to the lowest common denominator to try to make sense of the extremes between depravity and salvation. Again, Barna gives evidence to this:
“It is critical that we keep in mind a fundamental principle of Christian communication: the audience, not the message, is sovereign.”
This is very dangerous.

Where the audience, the seeker, is sovereign there is only one plumbline that governs our worship, forms our theology, determines our effectiveness—does it work? And this is measured only by numbers! In order to build an entire ministry, music or otherwise, on a seeker-friendly premise, a few critical things have to modified. First and most critical is the gospel. Jesus Christ will no longer be proclaimed but masked. We’ve seen this change take place gradually over the last ten years. Instead of saying Jesus Christ is Lord we now say I believe in God. Then we no longer referred to God as God but as He or in some liberal circles as she. That was modified to say that love is the answer—after all who can argue with love. This digressed from calling God, God, to our higher power or the man upstairs or the boss or the chairman of the board, or my friend or the force, etc. This is what I refer to as "theological ebonics.” (translation: theological ebonics - the trivialization of Christianity.) What is eternal is being traded for what is temporary with a helter-skelter recklessness. God has created man in His own image and it has been said today that man has now returned the favor! As the Lord said to a wayward Israel, “You thought I was just like you.” God’s commentary on modernity is direct and clear, “Every man is doing what is right in his own eyes.” Brethren, that philosophy is not just in the world, but heartbreakingly that is the pervading fundamental principle governing the minds of many in the church today as well.

What does all this have to do with the responsibility of the musician to Biblical Theology? The answer is - everything. You see, the arts very rarely set the course for the church or society, but most times it mirrors what is already taking place. To encapsulate, if there be a famine of God’s Word in the pulpit, then the music that we are hearing in the pew will be just as weak, just as diluted and just as compromised.

J.I. Packer saw this trend many years ago,
“The outside observer sees us as staggering from gimmick to gimmick and stunt to stunt like so many drunks in a fog, not knowing at all where we are or which way we should be going. Preaching [and singing] is hazy; heads are muddled; hearts fret; doubts drain strength; uncertainty paralyses action…. Unlike the first Christians who in three centuries won the Roman world, and those later Christians who pioneered the Reformation, and the Puritan awakening and the Evangelical revival, and the great missionary movement of the last century, we lack certainty.”
Sadly, that is evangelicalism's current autobiography.

We need to be pounding on Wittenburg’s door again - back to the foundation and convictions of the Reformers - back to the truth of Sola Scriptura… Scripture alone! Packer again demonstrates uncommon insight when asserting:
“Theologians are called to be the church’s water engineers and sewage officers; it is their job to see that God’s pure truth flows abundantly where it is needed and to filter out any intrusive pollution that might damage health.”
At one time the great singer/songwriters were the great theologians. Martin Luther; John and Charles Wesley; Isaac Watts, to name a few, have given the church a wealth of tremendous music that feeds our minds and enriches our souls because they wrote out of the depth of God’s truth. That’s the distinguishing mark missing today: His Word - our music; His theology - our doxology; His lawbook - our songbook; His statutes - our songs!

The songs that we compose and the ministries that we forge must square with the Word of God: “Thy statutes are my songs in the house of my pilgrimage.” Also in verse 172, “Let my tongue sing of Thy Word, for all Thy commandments are righteousness.” Here we have the content and theme of David’s song before the Lord, “Thy statutes…and Thy Word… for all Thy commandments are righteousness.”

The subject matter is crystal clear, it is God’s Word. Is there any greater message to sing or preach? Is there any greater love to proclaim? Is there any greater desire in our hearts than to do what Psalm 69:30 says, “I will praise the name of God with song, and shall magnify Him with thanksgiving.”

Truth should always result in praise!

The greatest declaration found anywhere in the Bible on the sufficiency of Scripture is in a song: Psalm 19:7-9. The Psalmist again reminds us that the redeemed people of God are to sing a new song to the Lord. “God gives His new creation a new song, a different song, a distinctive song, a purer song, and a more beautiful song than anything the world can produce.” It is the sweet song of salvation that new creations delight to sing to their Redeemer! We “sing with the Spirit and [we] shall sing with the mind also.” (emphasis added). Doctrine leads to the overwhelming joy of doxology for all true worship is first cognitive and begins in the mind, which ultimately finds expression in shaping and transforming the life!

Great doxology is born out of the depth of theology! Doxology comes from two Greek words: doxa, meaning glory; and logos, meaning word. A doxology then is a word of glory, a note of praise, a saying ascribing worth. The reason why we study theology, which is the summation of His Word, is to know Him deeply and more fully; and it is out of that knowing which comes the humble and joyous utterance of worship, melody and praise!

Doxologies in the New Testament are abundant. One example is Jude 24, a majestic doxology of our future glorification with Christ:
“Now to Him who is able to keep you from stumbling, and to make you stand in the presence of His glory blameless with great joy, to the only God our Savior, through Jesus Christ our Lord, be glory, majesty, dominion and authority, before all time and now and forever. Amen.”
This is the language of overflowing gratitude - the good theme of the King’s glorious works inherited from the wisdom of the Scriptures. We are pilgrims on a journey to the Son and in this journey the Lord has given us a heavenly song to sing!

Music is powerful and must be used wisely not frivolously. No one ever buys a book, takes it home and memorizes it in its entirety; but with music just after a few listens, it can be imbedded in your thoughts for a lifetime. That is why biblical truth needs to permeate the very fabric of our music. Still under the constraint of God’s Word, surely there is room for artistic license, when it comes to personal testimony about everyday life, relationships and common experiences. But we can never take artistic license when it comes to His person-hood, acts, gospel, truth for fear that we might trivialize what is profound and sentimentalize what is holy. In other words, we should never unwittingly play marbles with diamonds.

We should heed Colossians 3:16: "Let the word of Christ richly dwell within you, with all wisdom teaching and admonishing one another with psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with thankfulness in your hearts to God.” Biblical theology in music honors the Lord when rendered with thankful hearts to Him, in response to His Word dwelling richly in our lives.

Spurgeon again confronts us with a riveting story of the importance of the Word of God:
"In the days of Nero there was great shortness of food in the city of Rome, although there was abundance of corn to be purchased in Alexandria. A certain man who owned a vessel… noticed many hungry people straining their eyes toward the sea, watching for the vessels that were to come from Alexandria with corn. When these vessels came to the shore, one by one, the poor people wrung their hands in bitter disappointment, for on board the galleys there was nothing but sand which the tyrant emperor had compelled them to bring for use in the arena. Then the merchant… said to his shipmaster, ‘Take thou good heed that thou bring nothing back with thee from Alexandria but corn; and whereas aforetime thou hast brought in the vessel a measure or two of sand, bring thou not so much as would lie upon a penny this time… for these people are dying, and now we must keep our vessels for this one business of bringing food for them.

Alas, I have seen certain mighty galleys of late loaded with nothing but mere sand of philosophy and [entertainment], and I have said within myself, ‘I will bear nothing in my ship but the revealed truth of God, the bread of life so greatly needed by the people."
May the ship of Christian music and publishing bring to the shores of a drowning world, its galleys full of nothing except the life-preserving hope of God’s Word—through the gospel of Jesus Christ!

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Don't Tase Me Bro!
...or IOW, blog but verify

Updated

There is one whose rash words are like sword thrusts, but the tongue of the wise brings healing. -Proverbs 12:18

Blogging is an excellent tool to be used in the kingdom. It is a great resource for teaching truth, expositing God's Word, sharing life experiences, discerning trends and happenings in culture, and to encourage each other in our daily walk in the Lord. Interaction is a key element in any blog and that can be used to promote the some 50 one anothers in the Scriptures that affect our lives daily in the Lord. But it can also be used to confront error and warn other believers of movements that claim to be Christian of their unbiblical moorings (Titus 2:15; 2 Peter 2; 1 Tim. 4:1-4). But this privilege in blogging needs to be guarded as well. I know that I have fallen short many days in blogging, and therefore, this post is for my sanctification as well.

LONGSUFFERING AND CIRCUMSPECT
Anyone who has been in public ministry for any length of time has at some point been a victim of enthusiastic questioning. Being zealous for the truth is a noble thing; but it must tempered with the restraint of accurate documented research and biblical scrutiny. If we are to honor the Golden Rule, the law of Christ, and seek not our own agenda but the defense of His gospel and name sake, then seeing others corrected in their unsound doctrine or even won for the kingdom requires us to be longsuffering, diligent, and circumspect in the manner in which we confront others and their questionable teachings (Read 2 Tim. 2:23-26).

The Apostles never did a drive-by of any false teacher. They named their false teachings and the sinful character that marked them specifically; and they also demonstrated biblically what the genuine gospel or doctrine they departed from as well (consider: Matt. 23, 2 Peter 2; Jude; 1 Tim. 1; 2 Cor. 10, 2 Tim. 3-4; etc.).

REFUTING UNSOUND DOCTRINE
No question that error must be rooted out and exposed (Eph. 5:11); unsound doctrine refuted (Titus 1:9); and a departure from orthodoxy confronted (2 Tim. 2:15-18). This is especially important when it comes to the gospel (Gal. 1:6-9). And many of those things currently exist within the EC--no question. BUT personal invective waged against those we love and respect is not sufficient reason to abandon biblical propriety in confronting others who are advancing the leaven of errant beliefs and practices.

Another issue facing us as bloggers is the notion that blogging to shame someone else. It is not profitable nor does is resemble Christian charity, apologetics, polemics, and doctrine. Carefully measuring what anyone stands for or teaches by the standard of Scripture rightly divided is always beneficial. That is why I respect godly men (and some are dear friends) like James White, John MacArthur, Jerry Bridges, Ravi Zacharias, Al Mohler and others who care to take the time to rightly divide the Word and rightly analyze what others teach so they can rightly apply the canon of God's Word. No casual drive-by posting in their camps; they take the time to do the hard research so that those they are confronting know that they are not about straw-man arguments, but the nature of what it means to really "guard the truth." Christian humility, charity, grace and longsuffering demand we do so.

HOW TO GUARD AGAINST DRIVE-BY BLOGGING
In general, many Christian bloggers don't invest the time and energy necessary to research thoroughly and accurately what some, for example, in Emergent Church leadership really believe (though it is very difficult to determine sometimes what the EC actually believe). When what someone believes is not clear and even chooses to be ambiguos in their assertions, we need to exhaust as many resources as possible so that we can apply the biblical standard of the truth of Scripture so that it may be rightly applied with integrity as to measure what anyone in or out of the EC may represent as orthodox or not.

Here is a brief blogging prescription in working toward integrity when confronting error:

1. take the time to do the homework--read voraciously, listen to sermons, podcasts, visit their blogs and websites so that you really know their beliefs well;

2. get the facts correct - verify, verify, verify; don't react hastily, but act circumspectly;

3. and lastly, always examine everything through the grid of Scripture and not by sectarian allegiance.

Let's do all that we can to be careful, truthful, and accurate on the when, where and how of what others believe before we pull the trigger with those we disagree with doctrinally. Context is everything and that sometimes takes time to know and discover.

The Christian blogosphere can be an excellent place to instruct in sound doctrine and refute those who contradict... amen?

Steve
James 1:19-21


The Tongue is a Fire


James 3:1 ¶ Let not many of you become teachers, my brethren, knowing that as such we shall incur a stricter judgment.
James 3:2 For we all stumble in many ways. If anyone does not stumble in what he says, he is a perfect man, able to bridle the whole body as well.
James 3:3 Now if we put the bits into the horses’ mouths so that they may obey us, we direct their entire body as well.
James 3:4 Behold, the ships also, though they are so great and are driven by strong winds, are still directed by a very small rudder, wherever the inclination of the pilot desires.
James 3:5 So also the tongue is a small part of the body, and yet it boasts of great things. Behold, how great a forest is set aflame by such a small fire!
James 3:6 And the tongue is a fire, the very world of iniquity; the tongue is set among our members as that which defiles the entire body, and sets on fire the course of our life, and is set on fire by hell.
James 3:7 For every species of beasts and birds, of reptiles and creatures of the sea, is tamed, and has been tamed by the human race.
James 3:8 But no one can tame the tongue; it is a restless evil and full of deadly poison.
James 3:9 With it we bless our Lord and Father; and with it we curse men, who have been made in the likeness of God;
James 3:10 from the same mouth come both blessing and cursing. My brethren, these things ought not to be this way.
James 3:11 Does a fountain send out from the same opening both fresh and bitter water?
James 3:12 Can a fig tree, my brethren, produce olives, or a vine produce figs? Neither can salt water produce fresh.
James 3:13 ¶ Who among you is wise and understanding? Let him show by his good behavior his deeds in the gentleness of wisdom.
James 3:14 But if you have bitter jealousy and selfish ambition in your heart, do not be arrogant and so lie against the truth.
James 3:15 This wisdom is not that which comes down from above, but is earthly, natural, demonic.
James 3:16 For where jealousy and selfish ambition exist, there is disorder and every evil thing.
James 3:17 But the wisdom from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, reasonable, full of mercy and good fruits, unwavering, without hypocrisy.
James 3:18 And the seed whose fruit is righteousness is sown in peace by those who make peace.