Lots to Talk About Tuesday

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Hear Hear to the whole thing. But you could have added an explanatory sentence that one of the nefarious things the husband in the play did was to turn down the GAS slightly, so the LIGHT was dimmer. When the wife would comment, the husband would say that it wasn’t getting darker. Hence gaslighting. Just thought if you were going to explain the term you might want to take the final step to make the connection unmistakable.

I sent you the same email last week. Don’t you remember?:-)

Jeffrey

Jeffrey, thanks. You thought that explaining the term meant explaining it, did you?

Debating the King James With James?

Would you consider discussing the matter of modern textual criticism in a future episode of the sweater vest dialogues? Along with the growing interest in textual criticism, many are realizing its inability to produce a definitive text. As you know, textual critics have made disparaging remarks toward those who favor the received text (and vice versa). I would like to hear this disagreement discussed in a more congenial manner.

Blessings,

Joe

Joe, sounds like a good idea to me.

R2K and the OPC

RE A Brief Rejoinder to Preston Sprinkle. In reading another interaction with a Revoice-supportive pastor, I find myself agreeing with your take though not having much contact with that world, I must say I find it a little difficult to maintain interest in yet another engagement.

I am a young man from the Midwest who came to Presbyterian conviction with help from your own writings, so many thanks for this. Having joined a congregation in the OPC to put these convictions more into practice, I find myself extremely frustrated with the seemingly comprehensive subscription to radical 2-kingdoms theology, expressing itself from denominational literature to the points of sermons.

Recently, the denominational magazine, New Horizons, ran back-to-back pieces by DG Hart with another by Richard Gamble, who together with David VanDrunen appear to be the de-facto church-culture prophets for the denomination. Dr Gamble’s piece specifically addressed the mistake of prominent Presbyterian support for early-20th century Prohibition, highlighting the misplaced fervor of Presbyterian involvement. From my experience, OPC members are generally the last citizens to come out for activism, and I find myself wondering what purpose such a piece serves if not to reassure us in cultural indifference and irrelevance.

No consideration is given to the possibility that such a stance was simply theonomy with all the details falsely applied. A review of the OPC’s officially listed works on cultural engagement features works by both VanDrunen and Hart, though prolific and influential former OPC pastors Rushdooney and Bahnsen are conspicuously absent, perhaps suggesting they are beyond the pale. See here.

I feel the zealous distinction of a secular-sacred divide leaves those of us who work in places that would pressure us to move along with the secular pressures (for myself, a large secular university) without support from our shepherds or church.

Is my concern overblown or do you think this is significant? I feel that the opposing views have pretty much settled their camps in opposition, but living in areas with limited Reformed worship options; it is difficult to know what should be brought to leadership attention and made into an issue of importance. Do you have advice for those of us worshiping in places that speak of an emphasis on general-equity theonomy as a false teaching.

Thank you,

Grant

Grant, no, you are not making a big deal out of nothing. These issues are of great importance.

Four More and Et Cetera

Re: An Evangelical Case for Four More Years

“Unless something drastic changes, like the Democratic convention going completely off the rails, becoming the Mother of All Brokered Conventions, and resulting in them nominating Ted Cruz on the 28th ballot, I intend to vote for Donald Trump in the fall, as I did not do in 2016.”

I would love to see a “The Mother of All Brokered Conventions” short story from you with this plot. Reminds me of Flags Out Front. Good humor to be mined there.

The thing that really makes it funny is that it would not be even slightly more absurd than what happened in 2016. The idea “Donald Trump is the president of the United States” still floors me with its authorial audacity, but even that pales next to “after 3 years, my main reaction is profound gratitude”.

Thanks for your work, as always.

Blessings

Keith

Keith, authorial audacity is the perfect phrase for it.

My Dear Friend

I think if we search the archives of your blog, we will find you made the case that, to use the idiom of your current volley, to vote for either the one who will not tear down the high places or to vote for the one who will set up new high places is in both cases to vote for sin, and we can’t vote for sin. Before I ask my actual question, let me say frankly that I agree with your conclusion in your current “case for 4 more years” and abhor the alleged moral purity (thank God I am not like that republican) and high-handedness of the old reasoning which says that we can’t vote in an election in which we are choosing the lesser of two evils. The reality of human life is that we are always choosing the lesser of two evils because we can never in a circumstance where all the outcomes of our moral choices are known to us and are all without the stain of this world. The choice not to vote is actually the least of 3 evils, yes? If our choices are actually to vote for Jezebel, or to vote for Saul, or to not vote so that those who can’t tell the difference between Jezzy and Saul decide, we have to see that we are actually still choosing what we see as the least-evil choice.

So then my question: what gives? Why have you suddenly come to the public square ready to make a choice which is not good, but not hardly as bad as the other one — and are ready then to abandon the “sin is still sin” paradigm of which you have made a lot of hay in the past?

Frank

Frank, thanks for the push back. I don’t think there has been any radical sea change in principle in my thinking. I have always been about direction, not perfection. To modify the illustration from above slightly, we have been routinely given a choice between those who would build the high places slowly and those who would do it quickly. I have not wanted to vote for continued corruption, “so long as it was slow.” I didn’t vote for George W either time, even though he was plainly not as bad. But the issue for me has regularly been “what kind of ‘not as bad”? So if I remember correctly, I voted for Reagan, because of Reagan, and for McCain, because of Palin, and for third party candidates the rest of the time. Knowing what I know now, I would take back my vote for McCain (I misread that narrative), and I would take back my write-in vote in 2016, having misread that narrative. Knowing what I know now. I would say I misread those narratives — but I don’t feel bad about it either. They were reasonable misreads. Made by a reasonable guy!

An Evangelical Case for Four More Years Just curious.

I have heard N.D. Wilson mention two different times on Cross Politics that he has routinely voted for the comedian Dave Barry. I wish he would elaborate more on this position i.e. would his position be different if he lived in a swing state, etc.

I am curious what you think about his position. I picture lively family debates as both of you are well trained in the art of persuasion. Perhaps I am wrong about that? Do you as a family tend to stay out of these types of discussions?

Chadd

Chadd, we actually don’t have those sorts of discussions, but not because we are avoiding it. We are all very like-minded in the whole political realm. Nate voting for Dave Barry has never harmed the chances of anybody that I ever voted for.

Books for Seminarians

I appreciate your helpful thoughts on voting, especially your warning against treating the vote as a sacrament or confession of faith. We should treat the vote simply as a practical way of loving our neighbor. Is my neighbor’s well being (as defined in the Bible) better served by a vote for Trump, or for Bernie, or by some sort of protest vote? Seeing it through that lens simplifies things.

Brad

Brad, amen, and thanks.

I asked a question at the end of NQN about accreditation and seminaries; so I am sure that you remember my situation exactly and replay the fond memory of answering my question often in your mind.

Anyhow, here is a follow up: I pulled the trigger, and I am an in seminary. However, I am located in a fairly theologically starved area of Alabama, and I own very few commentaries to aid me in my research. I am also married; the economical implications often all of this are obvious. But with all of that said, here is my question: If you were stranded on an island, what is the one commentary set that you would want to have with you. Or, to ask it in another way, what commentary set to you find yourself returning too more often than any other? Thanks,

Gage

Gage, distilling your question down to the basics, I would encourage you to get Calvin’s commentaries.

Does This Debate Make Me Look Fat?

Re: A Brief Rejoinder to Preston Sprinkle: I hoped you would address Dr. Sprinkle’s admittedly effective and witty sarcasm regarding the testosterone level of his detractors, and I was not disappointed . . . at first. You give him (deserved) credit for his polemic skill, but you didn’t actually deal with the point of his observation: most sound churches (my own is no exception) are led by men who devote massive energy to their spiritual state while seeming to completely neglect their physical conditioning. To use an O.T. analogy, before you can do battle with the enemy, you have to get to the battlefield in a timely manner . . . with the energy to fight. Surely the scope of 1 Tim 4:8 does not include ignoring everything your doctor says about exercise at the annual check-up . . . Is this physical neglect simply a respectable sin in our age, or is it just the least critical subject to address? I remember hearing Albert N. Martin address this . . . once, a long time ago.

Brett

Brett, Preston was referring to the fact that I look like a retired football player, who owns a chain of restaurants in the town he used to play for, and who perhaps has enjoyed eating in those restaurants perhaps a tad more than he ought to have. To this jab, I replied as one ought to have.

But to the serious side of your question, and thus balancing the next letter on this topic, I do believe that the warriors of a nation ought to be effective, and conditioning is an essential part of this. And the general citizenry of a nation ought to be healthy as well, provided they can do this without chasing after health and fitness fads, which to this point we have not been able to do. For further reading . . .

“Wait! Is this pointed sarcasm I detect? Even more . . . I would even say that it is pretty good sarcasm. Not only that, but I suspect that — and I am actually kind of proud of him for it — he was attempting to body shame me. “

So . . . . . . do you suppose that Preston Sprinkle is a “flat girther”?

Jason

Jason, thank you for sharing.

Re: A Brief Rejoinder to Preston Sprinkle.

Well done, Mr. Wilson.

So I read Preston’s response before reading yours, per your advice. And I should note I also read his original CT piece just before reading your initial response. All that to say I’m chronologically and logically in sync with you both.

I think your latest response is fine, I particularly enjoyed the “body shaming me” snark; well played, Sir, well played.

But I do have a couple complaints or points I think you failed to make and should have. The first is, Preston’s response reminds me of the Times printing their wild accusation under the malicious headline on the front page, then printing a half-hearted, lame non-apology apology retraction deep in the birdcage flooring a week or so later. Preston: man up and do another CT article.

The second is, Preston failed to address what was arguably the most honestly revealing thing they said in their original piece:

“And in churches that idolize marriage and the nuclear family, polyamory’s focus on hospitality and community can be an attractive alternative. “

And yes, you called him out on it in your original response, but you let him slide here. This is the nub of it, imo, he thinks the traditional family is passe and upholding it or reinforcing it is a problem. My appeal is, don’t let him get away with it, don’t ignore that.

Love your work and appreciate your keen mind. Keep on keeping on.

David

David, you are right. This repeated refrain about idolizing the natural family is something that is coming from both attackers and defenders of biblical sexual ethics. It is mystifying.

Sprinkle Rejoinder response:

This exchange has the feel of the debate between RC Sproul and Greg Bahnsen about apologetic method or for that matter any debate over world views in conflict. Two people looking at the exact same facts and coming to conclusions that are diametrically opposed. The only way to proceed is to identify and call out, as necessary, the presuppositions of each position.

In our emotion driven society (Christian or secular) to take a hard (Biblical) line where warranted will be subject to immediate and in no uncertain terms pushback. Just try using language such as “Our God is a consuming fire” or “Don’t fear him who can hurt the body but fear Him who can put body and soul in hell.” You will swiftly get the response that you are being “judgmental” or be asked “Where’s the love?”

The second layer of objection in their one-two punch approach will be to question what your reasons are for this harsh “tone.” Could it be that you are secretly wrestling with the very issue you are opposing? Do you have homosexual thoughts that are driving your “hardline” attitude? Maybe you should join with us in our acceptance approach and put down your armor so love can find its way into your heart. You see, ultimately, you don’t actually have a different, maybe legitimate, point of view, you are the problem. If we could all come to see that, next stop, Utopia. This convoluted reasoning is reminiscent of a conversation in a garden a longtime ago. Ah, come on, you want to be enlightened, don’t you?

Thank you for sticking to your guns and not only calling sin sin but being one of the few voices willing to openly and seasoned with salt state the consequences of sin as portrayed in Scripture. The warfare on culture never starts with atomic weapons but with the proverbial camel’s nose in the tent. You have more “hardliners” supporting you than you realize.

David

David, thanks much.

It was a nice gesture for Preston to offer a response. I wonder if he has any sense of the difference in your pastoral voices? Comparing your respective “tones,” his exhibits a wholesale capitulation to the triumph of the therapeutic, to borrow Philip Rieff’s phrase, and equates making sure no one’s feelings get hurt with being “pastoral” and even being gracious. This seems like a serious blind spot, and he is definitely not alone in this. His failure to register and express shock is clearly a virtue in his own eyes. His initial response was so carefully couched and cushioned that any sense of the horror and shock of the sin was deeply buried in layers of therapeutic goo. For all that your own tone can be bracing at times, I appreciate the clarity and zeal with which you seek to awaken the sleepy and decadent church in America, slumbering as we are on innumerable therapy couches.

Michelle

Michelle, amen to that. I actually think we are getting a lot of good REM sleep on those therapy couches.

Just War Theory

I’m listening to episode 8 of your Plodcast and chewing on your just war theory analysis. Perhaps I’m being nit-picky, but it seems to me that the soldier is given too much slack in committing acts of violence. Take the war in Yemen for example; the US govt is assisting the Saudis in this horrible war (thousands have died/are dying for seemingly no just cause that I can see). Is the US or Saudi soldier not responsible for killing these people? Is claiming ignorance really a good enough excuse?

If we as Christians rather held hired killers to hire standards perhaps the military industrial complex would fall apart? How would wars of aggression continue if Christian soldiers understand they were responsible for their actions?

Thank you! I really appreciate your podcast and your new show on Amazon Prime (full disclosure, I’m a paleo-libertarian influenced by the Austrian school of economics so it is great to hear a reformed pastor push against the progressive push that is infiltrating the church).

Darrell

Darrell, ignorance is a defense unless you ought to know, or if you pretend to know when you manifestly don’t. So my take is that a diligent Christian soldier, who knows what a war crime is, and what the rules of engagement are, is in a far better position to judge what lines he must not cross, than are the civilians back home reading government (or libertarian) propaganda. The first casualty in war is the truth, and the first lies that are told are always atrocity stories. And those tricks are more likely to work on us than they are on a godly Christian soldier.

You Say Credo, I Say Paedo

Doug, In your response this week you said:

———————–

“In whom also ye are circumcised with the circumcision made without hands, in putting off the body of the sins of the flesh by the circumcision of Christ: Buried with him in baptism, wherein also ye are risen with him through the faith of the operation of God, who hath raised him from the dead” (Col. 2:11–12).

So the circumcision “without hands” corresponds to the baptism of the Holy Spirit, also accomplished without hands. Imagine a square, with spiritual circumcision at the lower left and spiritual baptism at the lower right. You can draw a line from one to the other, each representing heart regeneration. But you can also draw a line from spiritual circumcision straight up the left side to physical circumcision. The Jews were told to circumcise their hearts, meaning that the internal reality ought to line up with the external sign. And Peter, when he sees the household of Cornelius baptized in the Holy Spirit, asks, “Who can forbid water?” So we draw a line up the right side of the square also.

Now, why should we not be allowed to draw a line from the upper left to the upper right, completing the square?

————————-

So if you’re saying that the right side is spiritual baptism and leads to a physical manifestation of physical baptism, which of course I would agree since regeneration and spiritual baptism are coincident. But does that mean that you think that young Presbyterians are regenerate in the womb like John the Baptist? While I know there are some paedobaptists that believe that I didn’t think it was the majority, and wasn’t thinking that was your take.

Lance

Lance, no. I don’t think the sacrament works ex opere operato. But regeneration is something both sacraments point to. That is what they mean. And so I believe that a young baptized Presbyterian has a covenantal obligation to be regenerate.

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Gray
Gray
4 years ago

Pastor Wilson, In your response to (a) David above, you wrote: “This repeated refrain about idolizing the natural family is something…It is mystifying.” Considering that you are often not perplexed by the current zeitgeist, I suggest a different term rather than “mystifying”. Ballistic trajectories are (with proper accounting for ambient influences), quite predictable and repeatable. I highly doubt that you are truly mystified (if you mean in the sense of puzzlement) because that would indicate a naivete that does not correlate with your normal comportment. I will advance that the attackers know (or operate orchestrally) that the natural family is… Read more »

Gray
Gray
4 years ago
Reply to  Gray

DCL,

I want to clarify that my response toward Pastor Wilson is one of honorable respect; I think that he is both gracious (much more than me) and very capable. I do not think for one second that he is naive.

The point I am attempting to make (and maybe not so well) is the distinction that he has made in the past between apostles (of evil) and refugees. I see anyone advancing (the current perversity) or carrying the water for those who do as being in the apostle category; either complicit or a useful idiot.

nathan smith
nathan smith
4 years ago
Reply to  Gray

Its not always November, I guess.

Robert
Robert
4 years ago

Baptism is an act of obedience. The question is the whether it is the obedience of the parent or the Believer?

Nathan Smith
Nathan Smith
4 years ago
Reply to  Robert

Baptism is an act of obedience. But it is more than merely obedience. And the question may not be parent vs believer, but of the individual vs the covenant community.

Baptism also says something. What does it say and who is saying it, is the question. There are different understandings of the answer.

Jane
Jane
4 years ago
Reply to  Robert

More fundamentally, it’s an action of God. The question is, upon whom and on what basis does God act, so that we can obediently present the right people to Him?

John from Kansas
John from Kansas
4 years ago

Greetings with the chi of the first letter of our Lord’s name. I X my pasty tan arms across the blue-grey sky in a warrior’s pose. When James Bissett sent young Theodore “Chai” Teasdale home a handful of minutes before the setting of the equatorial sun, he would say, “Hairs yer hot, and thairs thee duir.” It was decades before Ted, (my wife’s Pappa) knew that his Dad had given James strict instructions that his son should be home before dark. I remember that in spite of my little bump on the head twenty five years ago! I have to… Read more »

Jane
Jane
4 years ago

And this, folks, is where we get the expression, “Don’t try this at home.”

nathan smith
nathan smith
4 years ago

I have a question.

What?