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Attempts at Honesty

Reflections on the interplay of the Bible and Culture

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Martyn Lloyd-Jones on the Gospel

Posted on November 18, 2013 Written by Mark McIntyre 2 Comments

Martyn Lloyd-JonesLet us therefore remind ourselves before we go any further that the gospel announces, at the very beginning, that man is absolutely helpless in the matter of his salvation, he can do nothing at all about it. The gospel is not a scheme or proposal to enable men to save themselves, nor is it a program which God has outlined, an example of which has been given in the person of the Son of God, telling us how we can raise ourselves and lift ourselves into heaven. No, it starts by telling us that we cannot do it, we are all dead in trespasses and sins, we are utterly helpless, we are quite powerless, and while we were yet without strength Christ died for the ungodly. It was while man was in a state of complete bondage to sin and Satan and hell that God did something. Now this is the very essence of this message.

-Martyn Lloyd-Jones in The Assurance of Our Salvation

Filed Under: Quotation Tagged With: Gospel

The Greatest Apologetic?

Posted on November 16, 2013 Written by Mark McIntyre 6 Comments

When John the Baptist was sitting in prison wondering if he got it all wrong about Jesus, he sent a delegation to Jesus to get the answer to one important question. “Are you the expected one?” was that question. (Matthew 11:3)

Jesus’ response is instructive:

And Jesus answered them, “Go and tell John what you hear and see: the blind receive their sight and the lame walk, lepers are cleansed and the deaf hear, and the dead are raised up, and the poor have good news preached to them. And blessed is the one who is not offended by me.” (Matthew 11:4–6, ESV)

Greatest Apologetic

I have always thought of this response as pointing to the power behind the miracles. Certainly only God can do the kind of things that are listed here. Blind, lame, lepers and deaf are healed. The dead are raised. These are miracles beyond the power of mere humans.

But perhaps all of these things are pointing beyond the manifestation of the miraculous.

Imagine the impact that these miracles had on those who were recipients of healing. They would never be the same again. To encounter the living God in the form of Jesus was to make an eternal difference in their lives. Do you think that a leper that was healed would ever forget the change that Jesus made in him? Could the blind man ever take his vision for granted after having it restored? Could the lame man ever forget that his ability to walk and earn a living was a gift from God?

The point is that all of those who received tlhealing would be forever changed on the inside as well as on the outside. Their changed lives would be an ongoing testimony to the power and the truth of the Gospel. Perhaps a changed life is the greatest apologetic in defense of Christianity.

This is not to say that we should not study and sharpen our skills at presenting reasons why faith in Jesus makes sense. We are called to offer a reasoned response to those who question us (1 Peter 3:15).

But a reasoned response alone is not enough. People need to see in us that the good news we proclaim has been good news for us. They rightly demand evidence that the change we talk about has been made in us.

I’ll borrow an illustration that I first heard from Howard Hendricks. Like Howard, I have much less than a full head of hair. If I let my hair grow out, I would have what I call an inverse mohawk. There is nothing on the top and a little on the sides. That being said, would you buy hair restoration oil from me if I came knocking on your door? You would have every reason to question the efficacy of the oil since I no hair on my head.

In the same way, no matter how well we argue for the claims of Christ, if we are not showing evidence of God’s grace and work in our lives, perhaps we argue in vain. It is the changed life that puts us in the position to be salt and light.

If we claim to be spending time in fellowship and service of Jesus, like those he healed in the Gospels, we should be eternally affected and it should show to those around us.

Perhaps the effect that Jesus has had upon us is the greatest apologetic.

Filed Under: Apologetics Tagged With: apologetics, changed lives

Dealing with apparent failure in apologetics

Posted on November 9, 2013 Written by Mark McIntyre 5 Comments

The apparent failure

It is my guess that just about everyone who is interested in Christian apologetics is aware of 1 Peter 3:15 in which Peter encourages believers to be ready to make a defense (apology) to everyone who asks about our hope. Yet, when we make that defense, not everyone responds to the claims of the Gospel.

Admittedly, sometimes the lack of response is because of a poor presentation on our part. When this is the case, it should spur us on to further prayer, study and reflection so that we are better prepared the next time.

But, there are other times when the lack of response is not due to inadequate answers or a defective presentation. How then should we respond?

Don’t be surprised

Watering CanIn the first place, it should not be a surprise, nor should the lack of response be a source of inordinate frustration. I read this morning in John:

“Though he had done so many signs before them, they still did not believe in him,” (John 12:37, ESV)

The lesson that I learn from this verse is that in some cases, a rejection of the Gospel is not due to lack of evidence or understanding. I am reminded of the little ditty, “a man convinced against his will is of the same opinion still.”

If some could witness the miracles of Jesus and remain unconvinced and unconverted, we would be foolish to think that everyone will respond to our presentation and defense of the Gospel. The will overrides the intellect when dealing with matters of faith and world view. If the lack of response is an indication of failure, it is a failure that Jesus also experienced.

Leave the result in God’s hands

Secondly, we are not called to produce a result, we are called to provide the defense to the best of our ability. God is the only one who can change hearts and the only one who takes the responsibility for the result. As Paul reminded the Corinthians, it is God who produces the growth:

“I planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the growth.” (1 Corinthians 3:6, ESV)

We are complicated beings who operate within the overlap of the sovereignty of God and the free will of men. While God remains in control of the process, we each make choices along the way. Some of those choices move us away from God, yet God can use even those choices to bring us back to him.

As indicated above, even Paul acknowledged that the best he could do was plant seeds. If the man who wrote a large part of our New Testament could not guarantee the growth of the seeds, we would be foolish for us to expect to do better.

Make a defense, plant a seed wherever you can and let the result in God’s hands.

Filed Under: Apologetics Tagged With: apologetics, defense, failure, miracle

Oswald Chambers on being in the hands of God

Posted on October 31, 2013 Written by Mark McIntyre 5 Comments

Oswald Chambers
Oswald Chambers

The appeal made in Christian work nowadays is that we must keep ourselves fit for our work, we must not; we must be in the hands of God for God to do exactly what He likes with us, and that means disentanglement from everything that would hinder His purpose. If you want to remain a full-orbed grape you must keep out of God’s hands for He will crush you, wine cannot be had in any other way. The curse in Christian work is that we want to preserve ourselves in God’s museum; what God wants is to see where Jesus Christ’s men and women are. The saints are always amongst the unofficial crowd, the crowd that is not noticed, and their one dominant note is Jesus Christ.

Filed Under: Quotation

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