You Will Know Them by Their Fruit: The Fruit of the Hatmakers Laid Bare

Last week I posted about Jen Hatmaker endorsing homosexual marriage as being holy. In that post I called Hatmaker a wolf in sheep's clothing and that it was clear that she and others like her who claim to be Christian actually practice a different religion. As I stated last week, I hope and pray Hatmaker repents, this is still my prayer, but her husband, Brandon Hatmaker, has joined the conversation this week and he has doubled down on his wife’s statements.  Brandon, unlike his wife, did offer some of his “biblical” reasons for supporting homosexual marriage here

At this point I would like to direct you to some great responses by solid Christians. You can find a response from Kevin DeYoung I wholeheartedly endorse here. You can also find a response by Rosaria Butterfield, a former lesbian, here. Both are excellent and better than anything I will write on the subject.

Nonetheless, I have received a request to respond to Brandon Hatmaker’s arguments so I will continue my small part of this discussion. I plan on responding to what I view as some of the more important errors in his brief statement. Time does not permit me to respond to every error in his brief statement.

While I hope the Hatmakers will repent,  the more they defend themselves the more it becomes clear they are indeed wolves in sheep's clothing. Consider that statement for a second: a wolf in sheep’s clothing.

This analogy warns of the danger of this type of wolf because  they will look like sheep, talk like sheep, and even think they are sheep, yet are inwardly “ravenous wolves”  (Matt. 7:15-23). They are dangerous precisely because so much of what they say and do is exactly what a sheep would do. I find this to be true in much of Brandon’s statement. He sounds so Christian, yet the core of what he is saying is anti-gospel and anti-Christ.

The question becomes for us sheep, “How are we to tell if someone is a sheep or a wolf?” Thankfully Jesus tells us how when he shifts analogies in Matthew 7 saying we will know a tree by its fruit—a good tree will produce good fruit and a bad tree, bad fruit (Matt. 7.15-23).  It is my assertion the Hatmakers are showing the type of tree they are by showing us their bad fruit. Bad fruit cannot come from a good tree according to Jesus.  This means they are wolves. I pray they repent, that is my heart’s desire. But the goal of my post is protect true sheep from being deceived and devoured. This is one of the jobs of a shepherd after all. Please note this post is entirely too long, but there was much for me to correct. Therefore, I have included section headings for your convenience. 

What’s at Stake: The True Jesus and True Salvation

One of the wonderful (and horrible) things about posting on social media is you get to see how people respond to your beliefs. To me it is often in these posts that a lot of light and clarity is brought to how our culture thinks. That is the good news. The bad news is if you read many comments sections you know our culture is not prone to sound thinking anymore.

I saw one response to my article last week which called me hateful and divisive, and yet in doing so the author insisted we were all united. This is an odd contradiction to assert that we are united but to then separate yourself from being like me. Then the author inadvertently proved my point by writing:

“This article puts us vs them, for example ‘In the end, we are not united. In the end, we are opposed to each other like wolves and sheep.’ That couldn't be further from the Christ I know.” (Emphasis mine)

The hypocrisy of this statement is so deafening it is amazing that the author failed to recognize it. First, I am rebuked for doing an “us versus them” and then the author says the very same thing I said in my article that we don't know the same version of “Christ""— this isn’t the Christ she knows… Exactly. That is the point. You and I believe in different Jesuses and this means we believe in two different religions. Her own statement proved that despite us both claiming the name of Christ we are in fact talking about different people.

What also escaped her was the idea of division between the wolves and sheep, good trees and bad trees,  is taken directly from the words of Jesus in Matthew 7. The Jesus of the gospel of Matthew, by her own admission, is not the Jesus she knows. This is the problem—many have fashioned an image of Jesus which has no basis in Scripture. They have made an idol that looks and sounds an awful lot like our culture. What is at stake here is who Jesus really is and thus how we are really saved. 

While my tone may at times sound harsh it is my goal to bring light to the situation so that these things become clear.

To that end Brandon Hatmaker in his post encourages us to be careful about what we post online in response to him because, “There is a real human on the other end of every Facebook post…” These words are true, but his encouragement falls short.

Our goal must not be to not offend or hurt people’s feelings with our posts (nor should we go attack people unjustly).  We know that the gospel is offensive and is by nature a stumbling block to many (1 Cor. 1.23).

There is more at stake here than hurt feelings over a disagreement. If 1 Corinthians 6:9-11 is correct that no homosexual will inherit the kingdom of God, then eternal human souls are at stake. If 1 Corinthians 6 is true, then the Hatmakers are deceiving people into thinking they are going to heaven when in fact they are going to Hell. Salvation for many people is at stake in this disagreement. Either we or they are driving people away from God and away from salvation. The stakes could not be higher and as such our responses must have the proper tone and weight.  Let’s turn to the heart of Hatmakers’ argument.

The Bad Fruit on Full Display

Brandon Hatmaker starts by comforting us who say they have abandoned Scripture.  In fact, he assures us, they arrived at this position by the diligent study of God’s Word. They claim to be representing the Bible accurately and that they are submitting to it. Their proof? They studied a lot. Well then, case closed. 

At this point it must be noted that every heresy attached to Christianity would say  the exact same thing. They all claim to respect and revere Scripture from Jehovah’s Witnesses, to Mormons, to Protestant Liberals. Almost no one says, “I came to this decision on whim and ignored the Bible completely by twisting it to my own desires.”

Personal assurances of hard study do not guarantee fidelity to Scripture. A wolf who acts like a sheep and thinks himself to be sheep would say they respect Scripture and are faithful to it. But their fruit tells us a different story. This is what occurs later in Matthew 7 when people claim to have done the work of the Lord and yet Jesus denies ever knowing them because of their lawlessness (7:21-23). This is what I believe to be occurring here. The Hatmakers are claiming the name of our Lord Jesus, yet they are promoting lawlessness. This is a very rotten bunch of fruit. 

The heart of the Hatmakers’ argument is found in the following quotes:

“The historical view [of Christianity] is that scripture is clear on homosexuality. What we found is that it’s not as simple as traditionally taught.”

“Every verse in the Bible that is used to condemn a “homosexual” act is written in the context of rape, prostitution, idolatry, pederasty, military dominance, an affair, or adultery… not one of these scriptures was written in the context of marriage or civil union (which simple did not exist at this time).”

There are so many inaccuracies in these quotes it is hard to know where to start. Let’s first work out the logic of their argument.

The Hatmakers later concede that all sexual activity outside of marriage, gay or not, is sin. They also claim that homosexual  marriages and civil unions did not exist in the ancient world.  So one has to wonder, “Since according to the Hatmakers gay marriage and civil unions did not exist at that time, then it must be true that all homosexual activity was sinful until it was endorsed by the state in the last generation?”  That would be odd wouldn’t it? All expressions of homosexuality were sinful throughout human history until the last 30 years. This conclusion is simply breathtaking;  yet I doubt they would hold to such a conclusion despite the fact that their argument demands it be true.

I do applaud the Hatmakers for acknowledging the historical position of the church for the last 2000 years has been that all homosexual acts are sinful. This though leads to further issues for their position.

We must ask following question, “What has changed?” I mean it takes a massive amount of arrogance to insist, without clear biblical support, that for 2000 years the whole of the Christian church got this wrong. That all of sudden now we have arrived and know better than all those simpletons who cam before us!

To make such an argument rests on an assumption of one’s own superiority in thinking and in culture. This argument boils down to asserting that those who were closer in both culture and language to the New Testament, those who actually spoke Greek as their primary language, didn’t understand the language being used to prohibit homosexuality as well as our 21st century eggheads do. This type of arrogance is staggering when one takes a step back and sees it in historical context.

So again we must ask, “If for 2000 years this teaching remained the same, what could possibly be driving this change? Could it be that the pressure culture is placing upon us, instead of Scripture itself, is driving this change?” If you think you found something new in Scripture that everyone else has missed for 2000 years, you are probably wandering into heresy.

Let’s turn to the core of their argument. The Hatmakers insist that all of the verses used to condemn homosexuality are in essence not written in the context of homosexuality as it exists today. Namely, the context of all the passages in Scripture about homosexuality are about bad forms of homosexuality like rape and adultery and thus have have nothing to do with  loving and committed same-sex unions. Is what the Hatmakers assert true? No, not even close.

There are two false premises of this argument. First, the belief that the Bible’s references to homosexuality are qualified and are thus talking about types of “bad” homosexual activities like rape, domination, pederasty, etc.  Second, that the writers of Scripture knew nothing about long-term, committed homosexual unions and ceremonies. The belief that these types of homosexual relationships did not exist in biblical times. I will address these both.

Are the Bible’s References to Homosexuality Limited to Rape, Idolatry, Pederasty, Adultery, etc.?

In this section I would like to point you to Kevin DeYoung once again. He wrote a book called, “What Does the Bible Really Teach about Homosexuality?” In this book he addresses this argument (and the other ones) thoroughly and biblically. I will be relying on this book and quoting from it often in this section.

When one looks at the passages in Scripture which deal  with homosexual acts it is clear the texts leave their condemnations open-ended. By this I mean the texts are not narrowed to only bad types of homosexuality like rape, pederasty, domination, adultery, etc. How the Hatmakers arrived at the conclusion that these texts are only in reference to bad types of homsexuality has no basis in the actual passages. 

The authors of the various could have used more specific wording like adultery or pederasty to label such things as sin yet none of them did. Instead the authors used broad language to condemn homosexual acts in general. Why would Paul and others in an attempt to condemn pederasty, rape, or adultery use only broad language about homosexuality when they could have been more specific?  If that was their goal then the authors did a terrible job communicating a limited condemnation of homosexuality. I will give two examples from Scripture that leave little doubt.

Leviticus 18 is the first example. In this chapter we are told of many sexual practices which were prohibited. This list of unacceptable sexual relations includes relations with: close relatives, your father’s wife, your sister, your mother’s daughter, your aunt, your brother’s wife, animals, and to not marry your wife’s sister. It is crystal clear that this list is not in the context of just adultery, rape, idolatry, pederasty, etc. If it is, then we can use the same arguments the Hatmakers use for justifying incest, bestiality, polygamy, etc. If their interpretation is correct there is no basis to be against any of these sexual acts. 

It is in the middle of this list, in Leviticus 18.22 where we read, “You shall not lie with a male as with a woman; it is an abomination.” There is no hint whatsoever that this command is anything but broad and universal to include all forms of male homosexuality. You shall not lay with an animal and you shall not lay with a man like a woman. It is pretty clear and it is not narrowed at all by talk of rape or any other sexual sin.

Any person who would assert the prohibition against homosexuality in this passage is not universal can only do so by in essence saying, “It isn’t because I say it isn’t.” The text itself does no such thing. It says men are not to have sex with men just like they are not to have sex with their aunt, their father’s wife, their wife’s sister, or animals. The text is clear.

It is here where the screaming starts, “Well you eat shellfish don’t you? You’re breaking the Levitical law too!” To that I say, “No, I don’t eat shellfish. I hate seafood.”

In all seriousness, many will make this vaunted and critical error. The Hatmakers didn’t, so I will not address it here. Instead, I will move to a New Testament example to demonstrate the continuity between the Old and New Testaments as they both stand against all forms of homosexuality.

In Romans 1:18-32 Paul has his famous discussion of God handing people over to the wicked desires of homosexuality. This handing over is an act of God’s judgment.  All of this is a result of people rejecting God and following false gods. In this passage both male and female homosexual relations are condemned (1.26-27). The wording here is very particular and should sound familiar to what our culture promotes today as good homosexuality:

…For their women exchanged natural relations for those that are contrary to nature; and the men likewise gave up natural relations with women and were consumed with passion for one another

There are several things to note here. The natural sexual relations are exchanged for that which is “unnatural.” Anyone familiar with human biology knows what this means—they have left behind heterosexuality for homosexuality. Such actions are against nature, they defy biology. 

 But the Holy Spirit through Paul does not stop there; he says these people are “consumed with passion for one another.” This could hardly more clear—their desire is for one another. It is a mutual desire for homosexual acts.  The two parties in this same-sex union desire and have sexual passion for their homosexual partner. This is a willing and mutual relationship where both parties are consenting and getting exactly what their unnatural passions want. Is that not how homosexuality functions today---revolving around the freedom to "love" whoever I was "born" to love? It appears Paul knew of this type of homosexual behavior. 

So not only is this text not limited to only "bad" forms of homosexuality, it it clearly about those who were wanting and mutually engaged in homosexual relations. 

The text is clear and it is not just conservative Christians who can see this. Here is a quote from lesbian historian Bernadette Brooten about Romans 1 “I See Paul as condemning all forms of homoeroticism as the unnatural acts of people who had turned away from God” (quote taken from DeYoung’s book).

For the Hatmakers, one must conclude that despite all their assertions that they are taking Scripture seriously, that it is their chief authority, and that they have done a lot of studying, that their position is decidedly anti-Scripture. It cannot stand up against even a cursory examination of two texts.

Couple this with there being no historical support of homosexuality found in the church and that there is not even a single positive verse in Scripture about homosexuality, we must conclude it cannot be a respect for the authority of Scripture which is driving the beliefs of the Hatmakers about homosexuality. Something else is. 

This leaves them with one final out, perhaps the authors of Scripture knew only about homosexuality that was deformed. The Hatmakers insist that gay unions like civil unions and marriages didn’t exist back then. The authors of Scripture must not have known about things like sexual orientation, committed marriages and unions which were homosexual as we do today. The reasoning goes, that if this is true then all of the verses in Scripture just assume rape, pederasty, domination, etc. when discussing homosexuality.

This argument could possibly have weight to it if it had any historical validity to it, but it doesn’t. Any study of the ancient world shows us that homosexuality like we have today is nothing new. The Greeks and Romans in particular had every form of homosexual practice we have today. Yes these existed, and to some extent were popular, during biblical times. The LGBTQ movement knows this to be true and has used this historical reality often to show they are not something “new” or “strange.”  They assert contrary to the Hatmakers that their sexual appetites have existed for centuries. And they are correct.

Nero, the emperor of Rome during much of Paul’s ministry, was married twice to men in public ceremonies. Once he was married as the bride and once as the groom! It is believed that 13 of the first 14 Roman emperors were either homosexual or bisexual.  Homosexual practice was very common in Roman society so much so the society was sharply divided over whether it was a good thing or not. Sound familiar?

According to Thomas Hubbard, a non-Christian expert in Greek and Roman culture, and author of the book, “Homosexuality in Greece and Rome,” homosexual behavior in that time was wide ranging and complicated. Some homosexual lovers swore lifelong attraction, some were lifelong partners, some of their ‘marriages” were gender nonspecific. Some homosexuals even identified themselves by their sexual desires and saw homosexuality as antithetical to heterosexuality. In terms of scope and practice homosexuality in Rome and Greece had everything we have today (see Deyoung's book).

It goes farther back than that as well. In Plato’s Symposium there are several sections on homosexual love in specific. In these sections homosexual love is praised for being natural and long-lasting. These statements are given in the context of two grown men who are mutually consenting and devoted in their ‘love’. There is even a speech given which suggests that these homosexual desires may be a result of our genetics, or how we put it, “They were born this way.” Plato’s work was written in the 300’s BC. Over three hundred years before the New Testament. Clearly our type of homosexuality did exist in biblical times. 

The assertion the Hatmakers made about Homosexuality being different in biblical times is nothing short of either ignorance or a lie. History tells us a different story then the Hatmakers tell.

Our modern homosexual movement readily recognizes that their type of sexual behavior is nothing new and for once I agree with them. This means though that liberal-minded Christians need to study history a little more thoroughly before they use such easily debunked nonsense. 

In fact, it wasn’t until the Roman Emperor Constantine converted to Christianity in the 300s AD that homosexual acts, all of them, were outlawed in the Roman Empire. Why? Because the early Christians knew this is exactly what Scripture taught—all forms of homosexuality are sinful.

An examination of both history and the text shows us there is no argument for the Hatmakers' position left. Therefore, we must acknowledge they believe the way they do because that is what they want to believe. Their affirmation of homosexuality cannot be attributed to Scripture.  

The End of the Matter

So the fruit of the Hatmaker’s tree is laid bare for all to see. This is bad fruit which is evidence of a bad tree. There is no scriptural or historical reason to claim committed homosexual relationships are holy. To suggest so is to show towering ignorance of Scripture, church history, world history and a breathtaking amount of arrogance.

This is the foundation the Hatmakers and others are building upon to tell millions they are fine, that they aren’t sinning and they're going to heaven. If I were to make that argument, I would want at least one leg to stand upon.

These are wolves, and the sheep need to take notice so that no one is caught off guard by their tactics. The fruit is plain for us all to see and the stakes are high as millions are being deceived into thinking they are at peace with God when in fact they are in need of salvation.

“Or do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived: neither the sexually immoral, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor men who practice homosexuality, nor thieves, nor the greedy, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor swindlers will inherit the kingdom of God.”- 1 Corinthians 6.9-11

 

 

 

christianity or the new liberalism: wolves being unmasked

In 1923 J. Gresham Machen published his famous work, Christianity and Liberalism, in which he contrasts biblical Christianity with the beliefs of liberal theology showing them to be two utterly different religions. Despite both religions claiming to be Christian they actually held different beliefs about God, Jesus Christ, Scripture, and Salvation. Machen rightly asserted these different foundational beliefs meant they were actually two different religions.

In Machen’s time liberalism was spreading as a halfway house between traditional Christian beliefs and the beliefs of a modernistic culture. Machen rightly pointed out that two belief systems were incompatible. If one chooses to mold Christianity in the likeness of the culture’s demands then the culture is the highest authority and God is thus subservient to culture.

The ramifications of this rift have been on full display over the last century as liberal protestant churches have withered and died and evangelicalism has grown. This shouldn’t be surprising that an attempt to make Christianity relevant and plateable to culture by making it more like culture actually makes the church unnecessary and thus utterly irrelevant. If the church and the culture are the same, then there is no need for the church at all.

Unfortunately, the same thing is happening today with as a new liberalism is spreading within evangelicalism. This new liberalism is revealed most clearly when it comes to the issue of sexual ethics. It hardly seems a day goes by without us hearing of someone claiming the name of Christ but also affirming the rightness of homosexual behavior. The latest example is Jen Hatmaker. I must admit, I knew nothing of Hatmaker before reading her interview with Jonathan Merritt, but her interview demands a sharp response. In it she affirms many troubling things including that homosexual relationships can he holy. Her reasoning is exactly what you would expect from a piece written by Jonathan—anti-Christian  nonsense garnished by hip sounding language to make it go down easier all-the-while claiming to be Christian. In other words, this is exactly the type of pieces Merritt is known for.

In her interview, Hatmaker  not only affirms that homosexual relationships are holy but she also believes that those practicing homosexual marriages are Christians in need of the church’s support and encouragement in their “holy” marriages. To demonstrate her open-mindedness she explains she would attend a gay wedding to celebrate it and enjoy the “champagne.”

Hatmaker’s statements fly in the face of Scripture’s clear teaching, this is probably why there is little to no reference of Scripture in them. But hey if it sounds good and feels good why not?

We must come to terms with the reality that what Hatmaker said is not uncommon, she was not the first and she will not be the last to reveal her true self. Yet this incident illustrates something for us—her beliefs are an entirely different religion then biblical Christianity. Now by saying that I am not saying Hatmaker is not a Christian, I hope she is, but what she said in that interview is not Christian. What she said is anti-gospel and even anti-Christ. I pray she repents of it. If we take her words with due respect that she actually meant them, then the evidence suggests she is not a Christian. She has been unmasked as a wolf.  

The new sexual ethic in our culture is driving much of this new liberalism. Yet this sword has two-edges, and it cuts both ways. Christ warned us that there would be “wolves in sheep’s clothing” who are false prophets (Matt. 7.15-20). It these people who are so self-deceived that they think they know God and are serving him, but on the last day Christ will cast them out (Matt. 7.21-23). Here we see a biological identity crisis that rivals our own day! If a wolf says he is sheep, and really feels deep down that he is a sheep, who is Jesus to say he isn’t?

Christ wanted us to know there are people who believe themselves to be serving God, who believe themselves to be sheep, even great sheep who do mighty things in Jesus’ name. These people  they look like sheep, they act like sheep by talking a good game about peace and quiet, but eventually as their fruit comes to the surface we start to hear their howling. This is the two-edged nature of the current sexual revolution, in its attempt to cut the church down for its morality it reveals for us sheep who is actually a sheep and who is a ravenous wolf bringing about destruction.

Jen Hatmaker, Jonathan Merritt, and others like them are showing us their fruit. They do not believe the same things we believe about God, about scripture, about Christ, about salvation, about sin, etc. They follow a wholly different religion then we do despite the fact they read the same book and use the same terms. In the end, we are not united. In the end, we are opposed to each other like wolves and sheep.

As more and more wolves are unmasked it becomes clear to us sheep  that not only are they wolves who do not know God,  but they are in reality serving this world and this world’s master.

We cannot have friendship with God and this world. To be a friend of the world is to be an enemy of God and vice versa (James 4.4). You must make the choice yourself. You can follow the path of this new liberalism away from God and toward the world, or you can follow God and turn away from the world. There is no middle road. No third option.  There is no halfway house. It did not work for liberal protestants and it will not work for this new liberalism either.

I pray you choose God. I pray that Hatmaker and Merritt choose God over this world. I pray that all the wolves may repent and become real sheep. I also pray that those wolves who don't repent would be unmasked and driven far from the herd so that no more sheep may be maimed or killed.

If what I have written sounds harsh, I assure you it is. So are Christ’s words in Matthew 7 directed at false prophets.  He had no love for the destruction brought by wolves to his sheep. And we must not either.

These wolves do not believe the same things we do, and it is time for us to recognize that.  Once we see the differences it is clear there is nothing Christian about this new onset of liberalism. I wish it would just abandon the name of “Christian” altogether.

Like the times of Machen, it is time for us evangelicals to go our separate way from this false religion. May we have nothing to do with this idolatry. And just like the old liberalism, the new liberalism will wither and die in search for relevancy as the halfway house between Christianity and the world. When the church becomes the world, the church becomes an unnecessary redundancy.

If Scripture is right, that no unrepentant homosexual will receive salvation, then this is a major issue which will bring division. If Scripture is right then Hatmaker and all who agree with her are wrong. If Scripture is right then Hatmaker’s actions are not loving, understanding, or helpful. If Scripture is right, then Hatmaker’s beliefs and actions are hateful, deceitful, and destructive toward homosexuals. But hey at least she got to enjoy the champagne at the wedding. 

When Jesus Didn't Answer Questions (and When We Shouldn't Either)

Sometimes in our culture we are faced with tough questions asked by people with bad motives. These people may want to belittle Christ and desire to make Christianity appear absurd, outdated, and backward. What are we as Christians to do when faced with such questions? Must we answer all questions asked of us?


As Christ ministered and taught on earth he was asked often by many people who had different motives. More often than not Jesus blew away all expectations as he answered questions. The result was that his opponents were often stunned, even shamed, as he answered their questions with precision and truth.


Yet there were times when Christ refused to answer questions posed to him. In Luke 20:1-4 the chief priests and teachers approach Jesus to ask him, “Tell us by what authority you are doing these things…Who gave you this authority?” 


Note Jesus could have answered this question, “I am God in the Flesh! The Father has sent me! I am his Son!”  It would appear on the surface that all the chief priests wanted was the truth, all they wanted to know was more about Jesus. Who of us if asked this question about Jesus would hesitate to answer clearly?


But Jesus knew these people were not seeking truth, they were not seeking to believe—they were out for blood. This question was a trap, the leaders were seeking for Jesus to declare himself either God, which would be blasphemy, or the Christ, which would make him a threat to Rome. They wanted to legitimize their opposition to Jesus while at the same time discrediting him. 


So Jesus responded by asking them a question about John’s baptism—did it come from heaven or from man? Jesus pressed them to declare what their hidden allegiances are. Instead of playing along, Jesus turns the table on them. 


When the religious leaders refused to answer, Jesus in turn refuses to answer their initial question. Was Jesus being dishonest? Or course not. He was unwilling to play their twisted game.  Jesus conducts himself in the same way elsewhere (Matt. 15.1-3). The question for us is, “What should we take from Jesus’ refusal to answer loaded questions?” 


Christians in our culture are faced with similar situations. The secular world wants to ask us “trick” questions in an attempt to marginalize us. Most of these questions today have to do with human sexuality—the acceptability of homosexuality and transgenderism. The world goes out of its way to ask us loaded questions in order to lead us into a trap of their own making. When doing so they are not seeking truth, they are not seeking to understand our position, they have an agenda which is anti the gospel. 


It is in such circumstances we should consider Jesus’ actions here. When someone comes to us with a clear agenda of trapping and ensnaring us through their system of thinking, we would be wise to answer their question with our own questions. 


If someone is truly seeking to know more about God and what we believe, we should answer them eagerly. Yet when someone is only seeking to malign Christians, to trample us under the foot of the new mob-morality, we can choose to not play their game.  Now to be clear, such a choice should not be driven by fear or self-preservation; rather, it is driven by a desire to not partake in the false reality being established by the opponents of God.


How can we tell the difference? By asking them probing questions to see why they are asking us and to see if they are actually willing to enter into an honest dialogue. 
Let me give an example of such a conversation:


Non-Christian: “Why do you hate homosexuals? Isn’t all love the same? Jesus only cared about love, and to not judge? Why are Christians so hypocritical?”


Christian: “Why is it wrong to hate? On what foundation do you judge the beliefs of others as being wrong at all? How is that not intolerant and judgmental?"


Now the initial question asked in this scenario is very loaded and it is very close to much of the dialogue our culture has on sexuality.  We know Christians do not “hate homosexuals” yet the world has labelled it as hateful to say that homosexual acts are wrong. So how do we proceed?


Instead of answering the question according to their agenda and terms, we should respond by asking them how and on what basis they are making their own moral judgments. It is clear they think it is wrong for Christians to hold the moral position that homosexuality is wrong, yet at the same time they themselves are declaring that their morality superior to ours. They are making moral judgments which discriminate against the Christian position. 


In my experience, most non-Christians fail to realize how inconsistent they are being. They fail to see that they themselves are making moral claims and being intolerant. This is what prompts the response of the Christian. 


We want the unbeliever to think carefully about why they believe what they believe. If they truly want to have dialogue with us they will answer this question. If all they want is prove themselves to be self-righteous according to their cultural morality, then they will just continue in their insistence that we are the hate-filled bigots they have already assumed us to be. If that is the course they choose, we need not answer them. We do not have to play their game according to their unbalanced scales. 


Jesus told us that there will be occasions when we should not engage with belligerent people who are aiming only to make fools out of us and the gospel. Jesus says in in Matthew 7:6, “Do not cast your pearls before swine. If you do, they may trample them under their feet, and then turn and tear you to pieces.”

We are not always obligated to answer questions which are clearly designed to lead us into a trap. Christ recognized this and it is time Christians recognize this as well. We do not answer, not out of cowardice, but out of wisdom. We refuse to play an unbalanced game on an unbalanced field. 

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Sorrow & Hope

The past three Saturdays I have attended three funerals. I know as I get older and continue in ministry that such things will become more common. Nonetheless, during this time I have had time to reflect on death, sorrow, funerals, and hope. All three funerals I attended were for  believers, which is an encouragement, but I cannot help but think that we have a tendency in our culture, and in evangelicalism, to not take death seriously enough. Because of this treatment of death, our funerals may come across as trite, shallow, and in the process so does our display of the gospel.


Now to be clear, for the families and loved ones who have lost someone, their pain is real and their sorrow is deep at death, yet our funerals often do not communicate this reality.


By this I mean we do not talk about death seriously at a funeral. If we even mention death at all, we are quick to move past it to get to the good news. I understand this tendency, who wants to talk about bad news when you can talk about good news? Yet it is in the severity of the bad news that we can better see the glory of the good news.


We have the same tendency when it comes to sin. We don’t really talk about it, and when we do we only talk about its cure. Yet if we do not establish there is a problem, and that it is a severe problem, then there is no need for to have a cure at all. 


When I have attended funerals of unbelievers I have noticed that no one will talk about death at all, they simply cannot or will not process it—because it is final. In this way they ignore death and its ominous nature. They don’t talk about it because they know one day death will find them and there is nothing they can to do about. It is unfortunate that Christian funerals tend to  the same thing by minimizing death, while not realizing that this also minimizes the gospel. 


So what I am proposing? I am not sure. But here are some thoughts on what we should be able to say about death as Christians:

  1. Death is a tragedy- Death is not natural. The world was created and there was no death. Death came about because of sin and it still exists because of sin.  This means man was not originally meant to die. We have eternity ingrained in our souls and this is why death is so daunting to us. Our very being cries out for eternity, and death appears to cut this short. So while through Christ there is victory, death remains a tragedy, a terrible thing which needs to be dealt with. 
  2. Death should be taken seriously, even wept over- As Christians we are so quick to get to the good news that we often cut short the process of weeping over the evil of death. It is here that Jesus’ raising of Lazarus in John 11 is instructive to us. Jesus goes to the tomb of Lazarus, being himself the Resurrection and the Life, with the plan to raise Lazarus to life. Jesus comes to conquer Lazarus’ death.  Yet before he does this,  we read how Christ was impacted by Lazarus' death, a death he is about to overcome, “He was deeply moved in his spirit and greatly troubled… Jesus wept.” We too should be deeply moved and troubled by death, weeping over its influence and power, all-the-while knowing that Jesus will overcome it. In order to do this we must not gloss over death with trite and shallow slogans, or by ignoring its seriousness. We should mourn death, as Christ did. 
  3. Death is not yet finally defeated- While Christ overcame death on the Cross, and we do through his resurrection, death is not yet fully and finally defeated.  1 Corinthians 15:26 reminds us of this, “The last enemy to be destroyed is death.” This destruction of death has been consummated, but it not yet complete. This means our enemy still has some power over us and that is not a good thing. Death will not be cast out until the new creation, until then we must not pretend that it is just a minor inconvenience. Death is our enemy, and in his goodness Christ shall end it once and for all. 
  4. We are nothing in comparison to death- There is nothing you or I can do of our own power to overcome death. We ignore death, even at funerals, because of its fullness in comparison to our smallness. When we stare into the abyss of death,  we see clearly there is no hope for us in us. Death will overcome us if we are left to ourselves. Our tendency is to push that thought out of our minds and to focus on the trivial things of life as a distraction from our dire state. A funeral is the perfect place to let the full weight of death sit upon us. It is good for us to see that we can nothing to stop death and that we need someone greater than us to defeat it. It is this all-consuming nature of death which shows how great a savior we have in Christ. 


Christians need to simultaneously treat death with more gravity while at the same time not losing hope. If for a moment we can say that Christianity is not true, what would be the consequence of that? Death would be a truly devastating reality we cannot avoid. The world needs to be confronted with the gravity of what death is and how it is inescapable.  We need to show them that without Christ, if Christianity is false, there is no hope at all.


Then we need to point them to the gospel. Once we see how terrible, unnatural, and all-consuming an enemy death really is, then we can see how great and good the news of the gospel truly is. This is what a Christian funeral should be marked by sorrow, gravity, weeping, and hope. When we see death clearly we can then see the overwhelming beauty of the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. 

 

He Gives and Takes Away: In Memory of a Friend, Father, and Missionary

I woke this morning to the news a friend of mine, his wife, and their three children died in car accident last night. They were travelling as a family to their final training before departing to be full-time missionaries in Japan. Just short of nine years ago Jamison was a groomsman in my wedding. This week Emily and I will celebrate our anniversary, but we will do so with heavy hearts. Jamison was a dear friend of mine, and more importantly a co-laborer in the kingdom of God. I have many fond memories of him, and a lot of grief at this unexpected news. I must admit, I don’t know what to think, let alone what to write in the face of such a devastating loss. My grief though cannot be compared with the sorrow of the family impacted by this tragic loss.

I am not sure why I am even writing this, probably because writing helps me to process what is going on, and I have a lot to process today. I met Jamison freshman year at Northwestern, he had known my wife Emily in high school, and in a short time we became good friends. I remember the hours we spent playing football, basketball, and volley ball and just hanging out and growing in our faith that first year.

Today many of the conversations we had are running through my mind as I think of Jamison and what made him the man he was. He was a man of God. He cared for people and he loved God. Jamison was a true friend who helped me through a difficult time in my life and who helped to shape me into the man I am today. What I remember mostly is his passion for God and his deep belief in God’s sovereignty. One night junior year, Jamison and I had a discussion about Calvinism. Jamison was explaining to me why Calvinism was true and how his class with Dr. Helseth had shaped his thinking on this topic.  My response was typical; in my obstinate tendencies I explained why Calvinism didn’t make any sense at all. God does have a sense of humor as it wasn’t long before I admitted my errors and adopted Calvinism (also after having a class with Dr. Helseth). Jamison was shaped by this view of God, his sovereignty, and that true joy could be found in the gospel alone. That is what motivated Jamison to be a missionary, a friend, a father, and a godly man.  

It was this trust in the sovereignty of God that led him to desire to be a missionary in Japan. He wanted to dedicate his life in service to God. He had a passion to bring glory to God by living in dependence on God’s sovereignty. That was who Jamison was. Last year, we sat down and talked about his upcoming ministry and what stood out to me was his dedication to sacrifice what he knew and loved here in America in order to follow God’s call for his life to Japan. He wanted others to know the God he knew.

Jamison and Katheryne trusted in the sovereignty of God.  They lived that out without regret. They died in service to God’s kingdom and I do not believe they would change a thing if given a chance.

Picture from Jamison's blog

Picture from Jamison's blog

It is at times like this that we who are left behind start to question God’s goodness and his sovereignty. Why now Lord? Why on the eve of seeing all that his family worked and sacrificed for to serve you that you would take them? It simply doesn’t make any sense to me at all.  I have no capacity to get my head around it today. This though is not what Jamison would want for me or for us. He would look at me and remind me that God is good and that he is sovereign, even when this sovereignty is bittersweet and makes no earthly sense.  

Here are some thoughts on what I believe Jamison would want from us this day:

  • Jamison would not want us to question God’s goodness and his sovereignty. In the face of this suffering, he would remind us to trust in who God is even more. To draw near to God when we don’t understand why this is all happening. He would want us to turn to God in faith and trust especially when it’s difficult. He would encourage us to continue to praise God for who he is. 
  • He would want this tragedy to somehow and some way further God’s kingdom. Jamison and Katheryne dedicated their lives to bringing God glory and to expanding his kingdom through reaching the lost. As they are now in God’s presence, that desire has surely only increased. They would want us to share the gospel knowing it is the only hope for a world full of tragedies. They would want someone else to pick up where they left off by bringing the good news to Japan.
  • Finally, Jamison would remind us there is no balm and no healing for tragedies like this found in the world apart from the gospel. What comfort and what hope is there offered in secularism in the face of such an unthinkable tragedy? None. There is only trite sayings and an avoidance of the all-consuming nature of death. Yet in light of God’s sovereignty and the gospel of Jesus Christ, we may mourn, but we do not mourn without hope.  In the cross of Christ death has been overcome and a new creation is coming where there will no longer be such tragedies. The Pals family is with the sovereign Lord who they love and they are now at peace. There is hope alone in the gospel of Jesus Christ.

Jamison, Katheryne, Ezra, Violet, and Calvin have entered that rest which is promised to God’s people. It is days like today that I long for that rest to come to this earth with a renewed vigor. Come Lord Jesus, quickly! The Lord truly does give and take away, but his name remains blessed.  God remains sovereign, and in the cross even this terrible tragedy is overcome by the blood of the Lamb. That is our anchor in times like these.

“Though Satan should buffet, though trials should come,

Let this blest assurance control,

That Christ has regarded my helpless estate,

And hath shed His own blood for my soul

It is well, it is well with my soul”

Maranatha!

 

Levi Secord