How Adam Prepares Us for Jesus

370px-Jan_Brueghel_de_Oude_en_Peter_Paul_Rubens_-_Het_aards_paradijs_met_de_zondeval_van_Adam_en_EvaThe first Adam of Genesis has a lot in common with the second Adam of the Gospel.

A.W. Pink helpfully shows a few ways the First Adam prepares us for the second.

Adam and Jesus Entered the World Miraculously. “Adam…entered this world in a manner that none other ever did. Without being begotten by a human father, he was miraculously produced by God; so with Christ.”

Adam and Jesus Entered the World Without Sin or Corruption. “None but Adam of the human family entered this world with a pure constitution and holy nature; so was it with Christ.”

Adam and Jesus Both Had Their Wives Come from Them. “(Adam’s) wife was taken out of him, so that he could say, “This is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh” (Gen. 2:23); of Christ’s bride it is declared, “We are members of his body, of his flesh, and of his bones” (Eph. 5:30).”

Adam and Jesus Came Alongside Their Fallen Brides. “Adam voluntarily took his place alongside of his fallen wife. He was not deceived (1 Tim. 2:14), but had such a love for Eve that he could not see her perish alone; just so Christ voluntarily took on Himself the sins of His people (cf. Eph. 5:25).”

Adam and Jesus Bore the Curse of God. “In consequence of this, Adam fell beneath the curse of God; in like manner Christ bore the curse of God (cf. Gal. 3:13).”

Adam and Jesus Are Both the Heads of Their People. “The father of the human family was their federal head; so is Christ, the “last Adam,” the federal head of His people.”

Adam and Jesus Imputed Their Works to Their People. “What Adam did is imputed to the account of all those whom he represented; the same is true of Christ. “For as by one man’s disobedience many were made sinners, so by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous” (Rom. 5:19).”

This list is taken from Divine Covenants by A.W. Pink.

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Three Bearded Men Offer Help to Those Who Have Trouble Praying

man-prayingDo you have trouble praying? Do you find yourself distracted when you get yourself to finally come and pray? Are your prayers lacking?

Allow three godly, bearded men help you take heart and motivate you to continue approaching God’s throne of grace in prayer.

Paul the Apostle once wrote:

The Spirit helps us in our weakness. We do not know what we ought to pray for, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us through wordless groans. Romans 8:26

Richard Sibbes later commented:

A Christian complains he cannot pray. “Oh, I am troubled with so many distracting thoughts and never more than now!” But has (God) put into your heart a desire to pray? The He will hear the desires of His own Spirit in you (Romans 8:26; Psalm 38:9).

God can pick sense out of a confused prayer. These desires cry louder in His ears than your sins. Sometimes a Christian has such confused thoughts that he can say nothing but, as child, cries, “Oh, Father!” not able to express what he needs…These stirrings of the spirit touch the heart of God and melt Him into compassion towards us, when they come from the Spirit of adoption and from a striving to be better. (Taken from The Bruised Reed, p. 50-51).

J.C. Ryle summarized it:

Do not fear because your prayer is stammering, your words feeble, and your language poor. Jesus can understand you. Just as a mother understands the first babblings of her infant, so does the blessed Savior understand sinners. He can read a sign, and see a meaning in a groan. (Taken from Practical Religion).

The greatest motivation to a life of prayer does not come by focusing on our failures, but on God’s fatherly love. When we come to pray, we come as children to our Father. Even when our prayers are weak, His love is still great to hear us. When we cannot lift up our heads to speak, He still bends His ear to listen (Psalm 116:1-2).

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If You Want to Marry My Daughter You Must Be a Christian

Dad & Daisy

Dad & Daisy

If you haven’t heard, I am the father of the most beautiful little girl ever, Daisy Jane. These past (fast) seven weeks have been amazing. New feelings. New experiences. Lots of new thoughts.

One of the reoccurring thoughts I have had as I look into the eyes of my little one has been, “If God calls you to marry, I wonder what your husband will be like?” From there, I began changing my question from passive, “I wonder what he will be like,” to the active, “What kind of man will I teach you to look for?” After all, as her father, it is my job (along with her ever wise mother) to train Daisy up in the love, knowledge, and wisdom of the Lord. A part of that wisdom is knowing what kind of man God calls her to marry.

So what kind of man will I teach my daughter to see as a potential husband? What standards will I set before her?

Man, being a daddy is hard stuff.

So, over the next 18+ years, I will slowly contribute to this blog series which I will title, “If You Want to Marry My Daughter…” For the first installment, I lay down the most basic and essential requirement a man must meet if he wants to marry my Daisy:

If you want to marry my daughter, you must be a Christian.

It does not matter if you are rich, handsome, educated, or kind; it doesn’t matter if you are a Chargers fan (go Bolts); it doesn’t matter who your mom and dad are or what your political views are; it doesn’t matter your race, nationality, or tradition; if you want to marry my daughter, you must be a Christian man.

Pastor Voddie Baucham says it well:

In many areas I am willing to give and take when it comes to young men to whom I will give my blessing in pursuit of my daughter’s hand.

I am willing to abide a short man,

a poor man,

an unattractive man,

even a man who is not a Texan (Lord, forgive me).

However, I cannot give my consent to a man who is not a follower of Christ. That would be absolutely unthinkable. (Taken from What He Must Be If He Wants to Marry My Daughter, 67)

Adding to the pot, I think the London Baptist Confession clearly shows that this isn’t just one dad’s hangup, but it is God’s command. Christians are forbidden from marrying non-Christians.

It is lawful for all sorts of people to marry, who are able with judgment to give their consent (Hebrews 13:3; 1 Timothy 4:3); yet it is the duty of Christians to marry in the Lord(1 Cor. 7:39); and therefore those who profess true religion, should not marry with infidels, or idolaters; neither should the godly be unequally yoked by marrying with such as are wicked in their life, or maintain damnable heresy (Nehemiah 13:25-27). (LBC, XXV, 4)

But, alas, it is not only God’s command to be obeyed, but it is God’s command to be delighted in. The command to marry only believers is a command that will bring joy, not sorrow. Again, Voddie said it well,

“As followers of Christ, our greatest delight will always be found in our obedience to His Word…How can a father who does not impress the importance of this principle (i.e. marrying a believer) on his daughter ever expect her to find delight? God has spoken clearly on this issue. There need be no confusion. And apart from our obedience in this matter, there will be no delight.”

God’s commands are the believers duty to obey and the believer’s joy to experience. So, in obedience to God’s command and in trust that His commands always lead to joy, if someone wants to marry my Daisy, he must be a Christian. If he wants to be united with my daughter, he must first be united with Christ.

 

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I Am a Weak Father

cbf806b092be5ccc0e110345bf999847Fatherhood is ripe with challenges in itself. When I add my own weaknesses as a man into the equation, the feeling of inadequacy become overwhelming.

However, although knowing my weaknesses as a man can be disheartening, it doesn’t have to be. In fact, knowing my weaknesses and owning them can be a strength.

Andy Farmer does a good job explaining.

We will make our share of mistakes as dads do. But another factor we have to account for is our human weakness—our limits, our foibles, our character deficiencies that affect every aspect of our lives. Let me give you an example.

My girls used to love to stage plays while they were growing up. Elaborate multi–act performances involving friends, puppets, stuffed animals, Barbies, whatever they could cast for effect. There was one performance I’ll never forget. On a lazy Sunday afternoon the girls came up to the living room where we were hanging out and announced that they were going to do a play about mom and dad. We were naïve so we said we’d love to see it and film it for them. From a dramatic standpoint the play was not one of their better efforts. It was a kind of improvisational satire with little dramatic arc. Basically it consisted of Jill’s character running around in a cleaning frenzy while my character spent the entire play snoring on the couch with a newspaper over his head. As a work of art, I found the drama unmoving and my character entirely too one– dimensional.

However, in retrospect their performance was a great lens to see how my kids viewed me. I know snoozing was not the only experience they had of me, but it was a wake–up call that has kept me alert over the years. My ability to detach while at home and to find ways to indulge historic laziness is officially documented in the video of that performance.

Their little drama became a morality play revealing to me that my weaknesses are not private things. Nor are they inconsequential. The book of Proverbs is about weakness. It assumes weakness as a starting point for everyone—a lack of understanding that speaks of immaturity and limited insight. The first ten chapters of Proverbs are essentially one long appeal for us to grow—to seek wisdom and insight. Immaturity is not a permanent condition. Instead, it is the starting point to either wisdom and insight or foolishness and blindness. A father who is not seeking to address his weaknesses by the pursuit of wisdom will become blind to them and foolish in them.

We all have weaknesses. Here’s what I’ve learned about my weaknesses: they usually affect other people far more than they bother me. At times I’ve grown accustomed to them, made provision for them, coddled them where I can, compensated for that where I must, and ignored them wherever possible. But in some ways they define what others know about me.

How do you identify weaknesses in your life? Here’s a clue: your weaknesses are what others who really know you have to endure while living with you! If you can’t describe your weaknesses and how they affect others, you don’t really know them. Talk to those who are affected by your weaknesses. Ask your kids. Ask your wife. Ask your coworkers. Ask your heavenly Father. Asking God to open our eyes to our weaknesses is a scary prayer! But I’ve found that he answers those kinds of prayers with great mercy and abundant grace for change. It is a healthy family where dad gets real and gets wise about his weaknesses. (Taken from A Father’s Guide to Raising Girls).

Our weaknesses are the places where Christ’s strength is on greatest display. Acknowledge your weakness in repentance so you may see Jesus’ power by faith.

HT: Tim Challies

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A Short Sexual Catechism

1648251Douglas Wilson recently penned a brief sexual catechism to aid Christians to think clearly about what the Scriptures teach about sex and things attached to it. Also, this is something for parents to keep in the back pocket whenever the birds and bees conversations begin to happen with your little ones.

1. How was mankind created?
We were created by God in the image of God, male and female together (Gen. 1:27).

2. Who is the author of marriage?
When God presented the first bride, our mother Eve, to Adam, He was establishing the first marriage (Gen. 2:22).

3. After the first marriage, how are marriages to be formed?
A man should leave his father and mother, be joined to his wife, so that they might become one flesh (Gen. 2:24).

4. What is the biblical standard for marriage?
One man devoted to one woman for life.

5. How do we know that such monogamy is the normal biblical standard?
We know this because God created one man and one woman for each other as a pattern (Gen. 2:24), because Christ is the ultimate bridegroom and He has only one bride (Eph. 5:23), and because Christian leaders are required to set the example of devotion to one woman only (1 Tim. 3:2).

6. What elements are necessary to bring a marriage into existence?
The two elements that are necessary are sexual consummation (Gen. 2:24) and a public covenant of marriage (Gen. 2:22).

7. What is it called if there is sexual consummation but no covenant?
It is called fornication or adultery (1 Cor. 6:16-18).

8. What is it called if there is a covenant but no consummation?
Anything but marriage.

9. What is the relationship of being “one flesh” to the existence of a marriage?
There can be no marriage without it, but the fact of a one flesh union does not mean that a marriage exists.

10. Can genuine marriages be formed in disobedience?
Yes. One example would be remarriage after unjustified divorce (Deut. 24:1-4). Another example would be found in societies where polygamy is legal.

11. Can the disobedience become profound enough that the end result is not marriage at all?
Yes. Homosexual “marriages” would be an example of this.

12. Why are these marriages not marriages?
Because they are physically incapable of becoming one flesh, which requires a male and a female.

13. But sexual activity does occur.
Yes. But not the kind of sexual activity that can ever culminate in a one flesh union.

14. But the law declares that they are married.
The law declares a lot of things.

15. How should we treat those in homosexual “marriages?”
We should treat everyone we know with love and respect, speaking the truth to them in love. But because they are demanding our approval above all, we must take care that our compassion and care never be confused with such approval.

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For Dads Without Godly Role Models

Paul Tripp shares some helpful advice for dads who didn’t grow up with good role models in their own fathers.

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What About Those Who Have Never Heard About Jesus?

francis-schaeffer-contemplatingAn illustration from Francis Schaeffer:

If every little baby that was ever born anywhere in the world had a tape recorder hung about its neck, and if this tape recorder only recorded the moral judgments with which this child as he grew bound other men, the moral precepts might be much lower than the biblical law, but they would still be moral judgments.

Eventually each person comes to that great moment when he stands before God as judge. Suppose, then, that God simply touched the tape recorder button and each man heard played out in his own words all those statements by which he had bound other men in moral judgment. He could hear it going on for years—thousands and thousands of moral judgments made against other men, not aesthetic judgments, but moral judgments.

Then God would simply say to the man, though he had never head the Bible, now where do you stand in the light of your own moral judgments? The Bible points out . . . that every voice would be stilled. All men would have to acknowledge that they have deliberately done those things which they knew to be wrong. Nobody could deny it.

We sin two kinds of sin.

We sin one kind as though we trip off the curb, and it overtakes us by surprise.

We sin a second kind of sin when we deliberately set ourselves up to fall.

And no one can say he does not sin in the latter sense. Paul’s comment is not just theoretical and abstract, but addressed to the individual—“O man”—any man without the Bible, as well as the man with the Bible.

. . . God is completely just. A man is judged and found wanting on the same basis on which he has tried to bind others. (Taken from Francis Schaeffer, The Church at the End of the Twentieth Century, 2d ed. (Wheaton: Crossway, 1985), 49-50.)

HT: Justin Taylor

 

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The View, $135,000, & Some Oregon Bakers

So, The View recently hosted a discussion about the Christian bakers in Oregon who are being fined $135,000 for refusing to participate in a lesbian wedding.

Here’s the clip.

Denny Burk takes the opportunity to make a needed clarification in hopes to fight against a common misunderstanding of the situation at hand:

A recent discussion on “The View” is a case in point (see video above). The panel was discussing the Christian bakers in Oregon who were recently fined $135,000 for refusing to participate in a lesbian wedding.

Raven-Symoné argues that these Christians deserve to be penalized because they discriminated on the basis of sexual orientation. Symoné argues further that this behavior is no different than racial discrimination in the Jim Crow South. The Christian bakers won’t serve gay people just like white racists refused to serve black people. At least that’s how Symoné explains it.

But this is a terrible misunderstanding of the situation. These Christian bakers are not refusing to serve gay people because they are gay. They had in fact already served this lesbian couple in their bakery. These Christians have always been happy to serve gays and lesbians, and they did! They simply cannot in good conscience participate in a lesbian wedding. Their Christian beliefs prohibit them from doing that…

It’s important for people to stop giving the impression that Christians are trying to institute some new regime of Jim Crow style segregation. That is not what is going on here.

Christians want to do business with all kinds of people no matter their sexual orientation. Christians are simply asking not to be coerced by the state into participating in gay weddings. Candace Cameron Bure did a great job explaining that in the video above. I hope that message gets through.

Disagreements are OK as long as both parties know what is actually is going on. With misunderstandings like this, we are doomed to create only heat and no light.

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How to Lose Your Soul

LostFound_Logo“What does it profit a man to gain the whole world and forfeit his soul? For what can a man give in return for his soul?” Mark 8:36-37

J.C. Ryle comments:

Any man can lose his own soul. He cannot save it, Christ alone can do that, but he can lose it and that in many different ways.

He may murder it by loving sin and cleaving to the world.

He may poison it by choosing a religion of lies and believing man-made superstitions.

He may starve it by neglecting all means of grace and refusing to receive into his heart the Gospel.

Many are the ways that lead to the pit. Whatever way a man takes, he, and he alone, is accountable for it. Weak, corrupt, fallen, impotent as human nature is, man has a mighty power of destroying, ruining, and losing his own soul. (Taken from Expository Thoughts on Mark, p. 171).

There is one way of keeping your soul and ten million ways of losing it.

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The Saturday Post(s)

Saturday PostA Theology of Singleness. “One of the things I think the gay-marriage debate has revealed is that many evangelicals do not have a robust theology of singleness.”

You Don’t Know Who Your Friends Are Until… Hmmmmm. Yes. “You don’t really know who your friends are until their relationship with you becomes a liability instead of a benefit.”

40 Questions for Christians Now Waving the Rainbow Flag. “If you consider yourself a Bible-believing Christian, a follower of Jesus whose chief aim is to glorify God and enjoy him forever, there are important questions I hope you will consider before picking up your flag and cheering on the sexual revolution.”

Baptism & a Theology on Children. Should we baptize our kids? If they are baptized, should we have them think they’re saved?

40 Questions Around the World Wide Web. Kevin DeYoung recently posted a piece titled, “40 Questions for Christians Now Waving the Rainbow Flag.” His piece was then countered by Matthew Vines (popular proponent of homosexual practice within Christianity) with his own, “40 Questions for Christians Who Oppose marriage Equality.” Then, Matthew Vine’s 40 questions were answered by Christian pastor/apologists Dr. James White here and Douglas Wilson here. I recommend you read them all and see how both sides approach the issue. It’s educational to say the least.

Building a Marriage: Pastors (Parents too!), Teach Your People. Three huge calls for Pastors everywhere to answer. Also, check out this part too: Building a Marriage: Fathers, Love Your Children.

You Will Be Persecuted with Words. “It isn’t right to say that Christians in the United States are free from persecution. We should be more precise: we are free from physical persecution.”

A Fresh Take on the Fresh Prince of Bell Air Theme Song. Oh goodness. This is goodness.

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