Please take a moment to read our church's statement of faith, the New Hampshire Confession of 1833. Our pastor is Gordan Runyan. If you are in need of spiritual advice or encouragement, or just need to pray with someone, please call toll free 1-888-JESUS20.

Monday, August 9, 2010

Here's a Fun Surprise

And that surprise is....there are still a few non-violent, non-disobedient options open to us as American citizens that have the potential teeth in their heads to really beat back the encroaching tyranny that is taking over this Obamanation.

Read about them here.

Then come back and let me know what you think.

Note: I said the options didn't involve violence or law-breaking. I didn't say I could really see them being exercised, although I'd love it.

Thursday, August 5, 2010

An Illustration of the Ordo *

We affirm loudly that salvation is by grace alone, and that there is nothing a sinner can do to earn it. You can't perform some task, or series of tasks, to insure your salvation. Christ has done it all.

Okay, so then the argument sometimes comes at us like this:

"Oh yeah? I've heard you say a million times that a sinner has to trust in Christ and turn from his sins in order to be saved. Sure sounds to me like you think there's a couple of tasks there that a sinner must do to insure his salvation! So you don't really believe sola gratia, grace alone, do you? You believe in salvation through repentance and faith."

Well, no, that's not right, but I can see how you might need the process to be explained to you a bit more fully. Try this illustration:

Let's say I buy my college-bound girl a car. She's not been employed at a job for a day in her life. Never earned a single penny of legitimate income. She doesn't contribute a slim dime to the purchase of the car. I do that for her. I do it because of a small host of motivations within me.

When I spring the suprise on her, and hand her the keys, I expect that she will react in a certain way. Specifically, I expect her to be very excited. Ecstatic, even. And, it might be nice if she was genuinely thankful and promised to drive defensively and all that.

Let's say that she does all those things, in spades. She has done what was appropriate, considering the news and the gift she's been given.

But, here's the crucial part: Her good reaction does nothing to pay for the car. That bill will still come addressed to me. My anticipation of her reaction is not why I bought the car, either. I knew we, as a family, needed the car, and she especially needed reliable transportation to school and back.

Now, like all analogies, this one can be stretched too far, or in an illegitimate direction. But the point is, as touching the original argument, this is much like the relationship of faith and repentance to evangelical, saving grace.

When you respond appropriately to the news of salvation in Christ's work on your behalf, you do not thereby add anything to the merit of His sacrifice and resurrection. Your faith and repentance do not contribue a whit to His payment of your debt. And, they are not the reason He decided to pay it.

Your appropriate response to the Gospel is just that, a response. Faith and repentance result organically from the work of Christ in your life, not the other way around. Just like my daughter's thankfulness.

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* What's the Ordo? Wasn't he that shape-shifter from Deep Space Nine?

No, the Ordo spoken of here is the Ordo Salutis, or the Order of Salvation. It refers to the attempt to specify which acts and events in a man's salvation come first, and in order to the last. The illustration is meant to show how we can believe that faith and repentance are necessary if a man is to be saved, while at the same time affirming that they contribute nothing to his salvation. Salvation is of the Lord!

Saturday, July 31, 2010

On Giving Your Testimony, part 1

One tradition that has developed especially in conservative Baptist circles, is that of Testimony Night. It's customary on that occassion for folks who are not normally preachers or teachers, or even pulic speakers, to rise and "give their testimony." The theory is that as we come together to share "what Christ has done for me" then this re-telling of our individual conversion story serves as a vehicle for spreading the Gospel. Meaning, when people hear our testimony, and how Jesus came and set us free, they themselves will be induced to be converted to faith in Christ.

Before we begin to analyze this practice of "testifying" in the light of the Scripture, let me say at the outset that I absolutely love hearing the stories of how people came to saving faith. I find it terribly thrilling and encouraging. In fact, my favorite Christian radio program ever is one that we heard routinely when we lived in Idaho, but sadly have not been able to find again since. It was called "Unshackled," and the concept was to create radio theater, complete with actors and sound effects, to dramatize real-life conversion stories.

I find that each conversion story from a genuine believer is like a fingerprint that says, "God has been here." Conversion stories (done rightly, as we'll discuss below) are like snowflakes. At one time, they are uniquely individual, and yet they share enough in common that they are all unified in kind. Each snowflake differs from snowflake, but they're all easily recognizable as snowflakes. There are common elements that demand we group them together.

What gets me thinking about Testimony Night specifically these days is the sad, nay, frankly depressing, story of Ergun Caner, the former President of Liberty University, a Southern Baptist seminary that has enjoyed something like celebrity status since its founding by the late Moral Majority honcho, Dr. Jerry Falwell. I will not go into details of the story here, but any internet search will make these available to you instantly.

Basically, the incontrovertible evidence is that Ergun Caner invented a fictional former life for himself, for the apparent purpose of making his own conversion story seem more robustly dramatic. This is reminiscent of the case of Mike Warnke back in the 80's. Warnke made a name for himself, and raked in quite a load of cash along the way, by also inventing a conversion story. Warnke spun a tale that had him completely immersed in the shadowy, enigmatic world of secret Satanic occultism and witchcraft. His mythology was eventually uncovered, and the name of Mike Warnke is now only invoked as the modern model of the Hyper-Inflated Testimony. When somebody invents an outlandish "back story" for the purpose of duly impressing folks on Testimony Night, they're doing what Warnke did. And now, they're doing what Ergun Caner has done. Warnke falsely claimed to be Satanist. Caner has claimed (but only after the events of 9/11, note well) that he came to America as a teenager, having been fully trained as a muslim Jihadist, and prepared to prosecute acts of terror on American soil. All of which is patently false. He came to America at the age of 3, and though his non-custodial father did his best to raise Ergun and his brothers as muslims, the evidence is that they actually lived pretty normal, boring American lives in Ohio.

Why would a man do this, invent this sort of story? I think the answer is pretty easy. Within the Christian world, an exciting conversion story can take you places, if that's what you want. It can sell books, and get you invited to speak at conferences all over the place. It can even get you employed as the President of a seminary, in spite of the fact that you may demonstrate merely the most tenuous grasp on Bible doctrine.

But we do this. We, Christians, who enjoy Testimony Night and find conversion stories rightly thrilling and inspiring. We set this environment in place. We make it possible, and even easy, for a charlatan to come up with a piece of pulse-pounding fiction and get fame and fortune for his trouble.

Now, having said all of that, I repeat: I love hearing conversion stories!

But here is where we have gone wrong. We have lost sight of the true miracle it is, when God turns the heart of any sinner to repent of their sins and trust in Him. That's become commonplace and frankly boring to us. And the reason for that, demands a whole 'nother post; but, it hinges on the Evangelical obsession with the lie of Decisional Regeneration. We have dumbed down the Gospel so much, and found so many ways to manipulate and steer our listeners, that getting people to make a decision for Jesus is no miracle at all. Deciding for Christ is no longer a case of a rebellious, poisonous God-hating heart being miraculously raised to new life: it's about convincing this rebel that he can have Jesus (or, really, all the benefits of Jesus) without inconvenient things like genuine repentance getting in the way; and, having raised his hand during the Revival Meeting, may walk out of said meeting completely unchanged, and yet completely assured of a glorious eternal life in heaven.

"Getting saved" has become an anti-climactic event in many Evangelical circles, therefore. So we look for something more, something that still has the power to thrill and entertain us. Satanic High Priest, you say? Wow! That's great! Childhood victim of Ritual Satanic Abuse? Marvelous! Mafia enforcer? Cool! Former Presidential cabinet member, privvy to the inner workings of government? Nice. Islamic radical bent on destroying America! Well, praise God!

We see this sort of thing on a smaller scale in our own, local Testimony Nights. Hopefully no one's making things up, of course, but still, you find many Christians who are convinced their testimony is too boring to share with anyone. They were pretty normal before Jesus saved them. Or, they were even a goody-two-shoes. How lame!

We have come to despise the miracle of being Born Again through the sovereign grace of God in Christ.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Brethren in Chains

Dr. James Galyon is an internet friend of mine, and a chaplain in the US military. He is always rightly concerned about the persecution of Christians worldwide.  He has three short articles up on his blog today. Here is the latest. You ought to read it and the two that came just before it.

We like to think that we are radical, counter-culture Christians because of our bumper-stickers; and we fail to share our faith because we'd hate for people to think that we are some sort of religious fanatics. Your brothers and sisters around the world are being harassed, raped, sold into slavery, and executed for no reason other than their faith in Jesus Christ. Please pray for them...and for us.