Our Plans to Hire a Full-Time Worship Director

Our Plans to Hire a Full-Time Worship Director

Our heritage is a heritage of the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ, which reconciles sinners to God and to one another. Proof is in the singing.

The purpose of this post is to share our thinking behind the search for a full-time Worship Director and to unite our church in those plans. We may not begin a public search for many months or perhaps another year or two—more on the budget and timing later in this post. But now is a good time to lay some groundwork for when that time comes.

If I had to boil our purpose in this search down to a sentence, I would. But I’m glad to borrow one from the Apostle Paul instead: “Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly, teaching and admonishing one another in all wisdom, singing psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, with thankfulness in your hearts to God” (Col. 3:16).

We don’t need a full-time leader to sing together, among the other things we do—not hardly. Our joy and our unity come from our full-time gospel and it’s already good and paid for. And as we all know, we are well served by our lead musician and pianist, Deanna Moore, Pastor Abe who leads us vocally, and many other church-loving brothers and sisters. In Deanna’s words, “I love to help our church sing her faith.” That is happening. I thank the Lord often for our team and for how well you sing.

But there are some good long-term reasons to prioritize this role for our church. What follows is more than an informational update, but biblical instruction for a healthy transition when the time comes. We’ll work this out with four questions.

The Only Thing on God’s Calendar

The first question is this: What is the role of our Sunday Gathering in God’s plan? We have lots of things on our calendar as a church. But there is only one thing God put there for the new covenant community: church on Sunday. Like a ripple from a rock landing in water, the church’s repeated movement together for worship and out to the world gives evidence to the power of the resurrection (Lk. 24:1; Acts 20:7).

The gathering plays a central role in God’s plan to magnify his name among us. Gathering together is not a practical efficiency in our pursuit of personal piety. For Christians in other lands, it would be far safer to stay home and pray. For American Christians it would be more convenient to podcast sermons and listen to playlists. But there is a reason we come together: because God brings things together that would otherwise stay apart because of sin, selfishness, alienation, and every other effect of sin’s curse.

People come together for all kinds of reasons: sports, a political rally, or a good movie. The bonds in each case are as strong and as lasting as the thing that binds them. When the church comes together on the Lord’s Day, we make visible the invisible and unbreakable bond that we share in the gospel.

In this, our coming together previews the great coming together of all things in the age come. Our coming together says there is life and love in this world of death and destruction. We gather as living stones being build up into a spiritual house, to be a holy priesthood, to offer spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ. In all of this we proclaim the excellencies of him who called us out of darkness into his marvelous light (1Pet. 2:5, 9).

The gathering plays a central role in God’s plan to magnify his name among us, but also through us. The whole point of preaching the gospel where Christ has not been named is to establish worshiping communities. As Matthew Ellison puts it, churches that have big passion for worship have big passion for missions. Churches established for God’s worship is why we go to the nations.

Here’s what all this means: the Lord’s Day gathering isn’t just a central part of God’s plan; these meetings are the central point of God’s plan. Worshiping communities are why God sent Jesus into the world, and worshiping communities are why we send one another to the end of the earth. Everything God does flows to and from this item on our calendars.

How God Works

If the gathering is central to God’s plan, then the Word is central to the gathering. So, what is the role of the Word of God in the church’s gathering? The Word of God on the lips of his people of God is how God calls, creates, sustains, sanctifies, comforts, encourages, and preserves us to the end.

One delivery system for the Word is preaching. Paul boiled Timothy’s job down to one task: “preach the word; be ready in season and out of season; reprove, rebuke, and exhort, with complete patience and teaching” (2Tim. 4:2). At Heritage our pulpit anchors our church to the Word and directs our ministry by the Word. We let the shape and aim of the text direct the shape and argument of our sermons. We work through books of the Bible as the wisest way to keep the Holy Spirit in the driver’s seat and our ourselves out of the way. We trust that the balance of Scripture will address the balance of our life and mission over the long-haul.

But there are other delivery systems. Paul told Timothy, “devote yourself to the public reading of Scripture” (1Tim. 4:13). To two churches he told them to sing:

And do not get drunk with wine, for that is debauchery, but be filled with the Spirit, addressing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody to the Lord with your heart —Ephesians 5:18, 19

Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly, teaching and admonishing one another in all wisdom, singing psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, with thankfulness in your hearts to God —Colossians 3:16

Singing isn’t just for the birds. How kind is our Lord to create us as singing beings and then to give us a reason to sing! Singing is the sound of Christ’s victory over the grave. Singing is spiritual warfare. It’s the sound of hearts filled with truth in a world filled with lies. It’s the sound of thankfulness in an ungrateful age. It’s the sound of sinners who get along in a world that doesn’t know how. It’s the sound of heaven on earth. It’s an invitation to search out where this sound is coming from that leads sinners to an empty tomb.

Now, we’re ready to answer a third question: what is the role of the Worship Director in our Church?

In Search of The Right Man for Our Church

There is always the temptation at this point to start thinking about music and instruments and genre. But that is getting things in the wrong order. It’s like hiring a chef with a priority on the presentation before the substance. The texts we speak, the prayers we pray, and the songs we sing are a deeply theological and pastoral responsibility. These are the truths that set us up for the sermon and get us home to heaven. We want to start with the priorities given to us by God and trust him to bless that. At our best, this has been our desire as a church, so let’s keep it.

For most of Heritage’s history we have had two staff roles devoted to the design and leadership of our Sunday gatherings. The Pastor for Preaching and Teaching oversees the service with responsibility for what we hear and sing and say together when we meet. But a second pastor-type role is a crucial partner in this.

That second role is given to several tasks. First, he develops our readings and cultivates our song collection. Second, he designs our orders of service week-to-week, shaping our gatherings with the gospel. In addition, he develops the teams involved in executing our Sunday gatherings. That includes musicians and ensembles, tech teams, and others. When we’re led on Sunday there are a variety of individuals working in a coordinated fashion. If it looks easy, that took work. Finally, this individual also provides public leadership at our Sunday gatherings both personally and in his development of other leaders. The exact way this all looks depends on the man and how he and the Preaching Pastor complement one another. But that’s a general sketch.

For all these reasons, we are committed to looking for the right man for our church. So, who is the right man for Heritage?

A Man with The Right Doctrine and Character

He must be the right man in several respects, first in terms of his theology and his character. Both are non-negotiables for this type of role: “Keep a close watch on yourself and on the teaching. Persist in this, for by so doing you will save both yourself and your hearers” (1Tim. 4:16). Given the public nature of his leadership, this man must meet the qualifications for eldership found in 1 Timothy 3:1–7 and Titus 1:5–9. He must be a proven example to the flock in his character, humble, able to work under authority with joy, and a patient laborer for the church’s unity. He must love the church of the Lord Jesus Christ and his plan to manifest his grace and glory in the assembly of local churches. This role will begin as a director role but is intended, in the years ahead, to mature into an elder/pastor role. As with the rest of our director and pastor team, he will be involved in all of the normal pastoral care functions and may wear a few hats.  

A Skilled Leader of Musicians and Gatherings

The right man for our church will have a few skills. He will be able to lead us vocally on Sundays with warmth, confidence, and clarity—likely from a piano or guitar. He will be more than a musician but a developer of ensembles, arrangements, and leaders for the unique purpose of congregational worship. He will have his own musical wheelhouse, but he should be able to leverage the unique strengths of both classical and band ensembles. He will have an approach to music that is modest because we are jealous to guard the congregation’s voice in worship, enhancing so that music helps the church make melody in her heart, excellent so that we are not distracted, and expressive because we sing to a God of manifold glory and grace. He will also be selective when it comes to the tunes we sing considering the nature of the human voice and our unique voice as a church, while stretching us musically. He will have a basic proficiency in the dynamics of live sound, monitoring, and the various technical aspects involved in large gatherings like ours.

A Good Fit

He needs to be a theological fit, aligned in his understanding of the church and her gathering in God’s plan. Then, there are some obvious intangibles with a hire like this. Is he a relational and philosophical fit with our Preaching Pastor? Is he a good fit with our key musicians and leaders? Is he a good fit for a multi-staff church like ours in a region like ours? Is he a fit with our ministry ethos and emphases? This is a staff director hire and not a hire directly to an elder role and for that reason it will not involve a congregational vote. But we’ll be gathering input from you in some thoughtful ways which we’ll share when the time comes.

A Word About Music While We’re at It

As I said recently, I have made a covenant with the Lord not to answer questions about instruments. I’ll add genre to that too. But I’m glad to speak generally to the topic of music.

First, music is from God and it is good. It’s hard to imagine the world and life without music. Apparently, God didn’t want us to. We don’t only praise him for it, but we praise him with it (Ps. 150). Of course, like all things lovely in this world, we have to be vigilant. Music is great but it’s a terrible God. So, we should make music without making too much of it. God is God and music is music.

Second, music is a blessed means of instruction and expression. By it we “[address] one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody to the Lord with [our hearts]” (Eph. 5:18). By it God impresses truth on our hearts as we sing our faith to one another. And by singing we express or hearts to him. This is why we want to artfully work to match the tunes to the texts we’re singing so that they hold out the truth in ways that fit that truth. We do not want to manipulate emotions with music. We want to oxygenate our faith with melody that carries truth to the heart and from the heart to God.

Third, music is not necessary for true worship. Jesus Christ and his perfect work are all we need to worship God with reverence and awe (1 Tim. 2:5; Heb. 12:28). If we hear ourselves saying, “I can’t worship God without a certain kind of music,” then we understand neither God, nor worship, nor music. We should be able to ditch our instruments and unplug our sound system and get along just fine because Jesus is with us when we gather (Matt. 18:20). Music doesn’t bring us into God’s presence, Jesus does. (Heb. 10:22). Let’s exalt our gracious Lord by embracing a less spiritually charged understanding of music.

Fourth, music is a gift, but it is not a spiritual gift. We are a church with members with many skills, from music to medicine. Sometimes I’ll hear, “I need to be able to serve with my musical gift.” I can appreciate the best spirit in which this comment is made, but this is not a biblical way to think either about our musical skills, the Spirit’s gifts, or about our role in the church.

Fifth, at its best music in the context of corporate worship can be both familiar and stretching. At Heritage, we are happy for our gatherings to be culturally anchored, to feel like us and our home—we want that for foreign peoples too. Jesus will have voices of every kind around his throne in the age to come which means each church can have its own voice in the age we’re in. On the other hand, flexibility can be a sign of health. It can be a sign that we’ve embraced an expansive vision of God’s glory and mission. It can be a sign that we treasure the objective gospel over our subjective tastes. As long as we don’t make musical variety into a new law, it can be a sign that we haven’t elevated our human traditions over God’s eternal Word.

Sixth, music is great, Jesus is greater. Take heart, friends, in this process you won’t hear any strained arguments about what God deserves or what our witness demands. We do not have to be all things to all people, or any one thing for God. He would have told us. Instead, you’ll hear a lot about what Christ has done for sinners and how that makes us sing. In the absence of Apostolic teaching on musical instruments and genre, music is a judgment call for every congregation. That judgment depends a good bit on who is hanging around here, what we can do well together musically, and who is leading. A new worship director will bring his own touch to the place. Let’s look forward to that. 

The right man will share the right agenda for our church: to sing big truth with big heart.

Your Role as Members in this Process

Now, a final question: what is your role in this process? We want our Lord to smile on our church in this process. Here are four things we can do that we believe will invite his blessing.

First, Let’s Pray for The Right Man

Let’s pray for the Lord to provide the right man. The man is more important than the music. Remember Paul’s words to Timothy, “Keep a close watch on yourself and on the teaching. Persist in this, for by so doing you will save both yourself and your hearers” (1Tim. 4:16).

Second, Let’s Love One Another More than The Music We Like the Most

We’re getting better at this all the time. Remember that verse about letting Christ dwell in us richly by singing to one another? Here’s what Paul wrote to that church just before that: “Put on then, as God’s chosen ones, holy and beloved, compassionate hearts, kindness, humility, meekness, and patience, bearing with one another and, if one has a complaint against another, forgiving each other; as the Lord has forgiven you, so you also must forgive. And above all these put on love, which binds everything together in perfect harmony. And let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts, to which indeed you were called in one body. And be thankful” (Col. 3:12–16). That’s the kind of church we’ll want to invite our neighbors to. It’s the kind of church we’ll want to raise our kids in. And it’s the kind of church the right man for this job will want to give his life to. So, let’s love him in advance by loving one another well.

Third, Let’s Grow in Budget and Sound Doctrine

We will start a public search for this role when the budget allows. In any given year we can only budget as much as came in the previous year. This commitment protects us from making presumptuous decisions. But it also means that we have to work strategically as a whole church in a scenario like this, where we would like to do something new. So, as we shared at the Family Meeting on February 28, we are asking you to partner as a church in raising our budget by $2,000 per week from here through the end of the fiscal year, the close of September. That will allow us to launch a public search for this role. The funds that we raise in this process will be dedicated to seeing our Lord worshiped among the Riau Melayu people, our newly adopted unreached people.  

Let’s give to the budget, but let’s also grow in sound doctrine. Yes, that is a pun. Here are some suggestions for growing in your understanding of God’s purposes and instructions for our gathering. Watch or listen to Bob Kauflin’s excellent podcast Sound+Doctrine. Read Kauflin’s book for worship leaders, Worship Matters: Leading Others to Encounter the Greatness of God. Read Matt Merker’s new book on a theology of the church gathered, Corporate Worship: How the Church Gathers as God’s People. For a deeper dive in how the church has worshiped down the ages, read Bryan Chappell’s volume, Christ-Centered Worship. For help in connecting the gospel to the patterns of life and our life and worship as a church, read Mike Cosper’s, Rhythms of Grace: How the Church’s Worship Tells the Story of the Gospel. Listen to a sermon on singing from Colossians 3:15–17, “Christ-Centered Community.”

Finally, Let’s Worship While We Wait

There’s nothing keeping us from singing our hearts out right now. You are proving that every Sunday. Keep showing up and keep it going.

As we wait for a more vocationally devoted leader, we want to invest in our Sunday musicians and teams. In that vein, you’re invited to join us for a Hymn Sing on Sunday evening, April 11. We’ll host a weekend workshop for our Sunday musicians, and this will bring that weekend to a conclusion. We’ll have a guest in to run this workshop and lead us in singing through that weekend. More on this in the weeks ahead.

I look forward to seeing you and hearing you this Lord’s Day. 

 

Your Journey Through The Psalms: Where to Begin

Your Journey Through The Psalms: Where to Begin

Editorial Comment: Mark Centers is a member of our Preaching Cohort, a small group of pastors and preachers in training that meets monthly to work on the preaching craft. He is also an Elective class teacher on Sundays. This year the group is working on preaching poetry with a focus on the Psalms. Mark presented some excellent work on the Psalms and so I’ve asked him to write a series of posts for our church to help us better understand and employ the Psalms. —Trent

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If you’ve been in church long enough, you’ve probably been told to, “open your Bibles to the book of Psalms, right in the middle of your Bible.” Measured by chapters, Psalms is the longest book in our Bibles so it’s not hard to find. In it are the prayers, hymns, and laments of our ancestors to our great God. It’s filled with familiar lines that we rightly recall: “Blessed is the man who walks not in the counsel of the wicked,” or, “The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want” (1:1; 23:1). But whatever you might think of the Psalms individually, they were compiled as a book. In this and several follow-up posts I want to help you hear the overall message of the book of Psalms.

As we begin, let’s get a common misconception out of the way. The Book of Psalms is not a hymn book. It is filled with songs of various kinds, yes, but it is not organized like our hymnbooks and not all of the Psalms were sung. It is a five-part story that chronicles the rise and fall of the Davidic dynasty (Books 1–3) while calling the nations to join Yhwh (Book 2) and mourning the “failure” of the Davidic covenant (Book 3). But this story does not end in despair. Book 4 takes the reader on a journey back to the roots of authentic biblical Judaism, while anticipating the deliverance of the world by David’s greater Son—marked by the return of the King, the Messiah (Book 5).

Enter at the Gate, Look Both Ways

As with any unified work, it begins in a very deliberate way. Psalms 1 and 2 act as the introductory gateway into this story. Imagine yourself beginning a hike through the vast forest of the Psalter—but in order to find a clear path into the heart of the woods you must first pass through a massive gate. The gate is supported by two hand-carved posts. The left post represents Psalm 1, the right post Psalm 2.

The word “Blessed” is clearly carved into the top of the left post (Ps. 1). Under this word you see two men, one walking a path to destruction and the other walking away towards a tree. The tree is carved in the center of the post. The tree is healthy, fruitful, and full of leaves. Underneath the tree a great river that never ends supplies life to the tree. The last image at the bottom of the Psalm 1 post is a court room scene where God sits as Judge. All those who are his stand with him, and those who do not stand with him are blown away like chaff.

You turn to examine the right post (Ps. 2). At the top is etched a congregation representing the world’s elite deliberating on how to break free from God and his Messiah. This deliberation is cut short with the laughter of God from heaven. In the middle of the post, you see a king with the full authority of heaven in his hands accompanied with this announcement: “I have installed my king on Zion, my holy mountain.” The Son is given the nations as his inheritance and commanded to exercise dominion over the whole earth. The final carving is a concise warning to all people, but especially the world’s elite: “Pay homage to the Son, lest he be angry and consume you.” At the very bottom of the right post, we see the King on his throne with people all around him with this same word again—blessed.

Look Out for These Two Themes on Your Journey Ahead

These dual themes of the fate of the righteous and wicked, and the authority of the Messianic King are woven through this deliberately ordered anthology of the Psalter. The author of Psalm 1 and 2 purposefully introduces these dual themes for you. As you pass through the gateway into the forest of the Psalter, these images from the pillars will pop up again and again as a reminder of the bigger story. Always anticipate the juxtaposition between the righteous and wicked and the hope in the coming Messianic King.

In the next blog post on the Psalms, we will take a fast-paced journey through the 5-book arrangement. We will look for these themes, and we will see how the book of Psalms tells a story.

No Bits and Pieces, No Little People: Meet Francis Schaeffer

No Bits and Pieces, No Little People: Meet Francis Schaeffer

When the Sadducees came to Jesus with a disingenuous question about the resurrection, his response was direct: “you are wrong, because you know neither the Scriptures nor the power of God” (Mk. 12:24). We explored this interaction in Sunday’s sermon, “He is God of the Living.” The Sadducees insisted that there would be no future resurrection, that when we died that was it. It’s a brutal way to live. As in Jesus’ day we too are tempted to pursue religion without the truth of resurrection, to see the world as matter in motion without ultimate meaning.

Jesus’ chief interest in coming was souls. But we do well to ponder how a denial of a truth like the resurrection is destructive for both souls and societies. It’s by pondering the course of bad ideas that we more clearly see and speak the true goodness of the good news, to speak to our neighbors and the need of the age.

Maybe for you this pursuit isn’t so much about speaking to others as it is about coming to terms with the claims of Scripture yourself. As we said Sunday, if you have rejected Christianity because you cannot buy-in to the resurrection, you should be commended for seeing that claim for what it is. Whatever the case, I’d like you to meet someone who knew both the Scriptures and the power of God.

Meet Francis Schaeffer, a Recently Dead Pastor

It’s good for us to read the works of dead pastors from long ago, but it’s also good to read the works of dead pastors from not so long ago. In this case, the works of a man like Francis Schaeffer—a pastor and apologist from the mid-to-late 20th century—are proven valuable for two reasons. First, they have stood the test of time. Time is a wonderful sorting mechanism in a world of so many words. Second, his work has stood the test of time because he was a man who understood the times. Schaeffer was an exegete of the Scriptures and the present stage on which God’s saving plans are unfolding.

I came into Schaeffer in a theologically formative period of my own life through two books, He Is There and He Is Not Silent and The God Who Is There. Both books helped establish my confidence in the basic truthfulness and coherence of Scripture. I’m not alone. Albert Mohler tells his own story of how Schaeffer, as he puts it, “gave me a way of understanding how the Christian faith related to and answered the questions of the world around me.” Os Guinness tells a similar story in, “An Interview with Os Guinness on the 25th Anniversary of Francis Schaeffer’s Death.” Os and Mohler reminisce a bit together in a conversation they shared a few years ago. There are countless other stories along these lines.

Francis Schaeffer was an academic but no less an evangelist. His work in understanding the world was powered by his love for the people who inhabit the world, as it should be. If you’re a skeptic yourself, he had you in mind.

Whereas Mohler first encountered Schaefer through his books, Guinness came to know Schaeffer in Schaeffer’s home turned ministry called L’Abri, which he co-founded in Switzerland with his wife Edith. If your interest is piqued, read Jerram Barr’s, “Francis Schaeffer: The Man and His Message,” for his story, his emphases, and some critique.

Where to Begin

With the Sadducee’s error in mind, this Sunday I quoted this excerpt from Schaeffer’s, A Christian Manifesto:

“Those who hold the material-energy, chance concept of reality, whether they are Marxist or non-Marxist, not only do not know the truth of the final reality, God, they do not know who Man is. Their concept of Man is what Man is not, just as their concept of final reality is what final reality is not. Since their concept of Man is mistaken, their concept of society and of law is mistaken, and they have no sufficient base for either society or law.”

Schaeffer had a way of getting under the surface of things. One of his central critiques of Christians in his day was that, as he said, “they have seen things in bits and pieces instead of totals.” That is, we tend to see issues like pornography, the breakdown of the family, abortion, etc. instead of the total world and story in which these tragedies emerge. Schaeffer’s burden was to help us understand this.

For an entry into Schaeffer’s work, A Christian Manifesto is a good place to start, but let me offer a few other options. Three books together form the heart of his apologetic work: The God Who Is There, Escape from Reason, and He Is There and He Is Not Silent. These books will help to those wrestling with questions about the truthfulness of the Christian worldview and those who are engaging friends disaffected by Christianity. High School students and their parents will get help as well. Here’s from Escape from Reason:

“People today are trying to hang on to the dignity of man, but they do not know how to, because they have lost the truth that man is made in the image of God. . . . We are watching our culture put into effect the fact that when you tell men long enough that they are machines, it soon begins to show in their actions. You see it in our whole culture—in the theater of cruelty, in the violence in the streets, in the death of man in art and life.”

The title of another book describes its aim: How Should We Then Live?: The Rise and Decline of Western Thought and Culture. We do well to study history with a Christian worldview. But the purpose of doing so must always be fidelity to the God of history in our own day. If you can put up with the dated and even cheesy production, watch the the video series by the same name:

There are a host of volumes written by those who studied with Schaeffer in some fashion. One of the most important among them—and a book you would do well to have on the shelf—is Nancy Pearcy’s, Total Truth: Liberating Christianity from Its Cultural Captivity. For some reading on the life and ongoing relevance of Schaeffer’s work, check out the Summer 2020 edition of Southern Baptist Journal of Theology on the occasion of L’Abri’s 65th anniversary, edited by my dear friend Stephen Wellum—there, again, another influence of mine influenced by Schaeffer.

No Little People

Schaeffer influenced the world with his words, but here are some words he wrote that explain his reach: “A compassionate open home is part of Christian responsibility, and should be practiced up to the level of capacity.” He more than understood the truth of Scripture for our day, but embodied it in Christian hospitality that changed the world.

This Sunday we will be in the next passage in Mark, 12:28-44, where we meet scribes who like the best seats and a poor woman who contributes all she has to live on. In all our work to understand the world, let’s remember our place in it with Schaeffer’s help—a man for whom there truly were No Little People:

Jesus commands Christians to seek consciously the lowest room. All of us — pastors, teachers, professional religious workers and non-professional included — are tempted to say, “I will take the larger place, because it will give me more influence for Jesus Christ.” Both individual Christians and Christian organizations fall prey to the temptation of rationalizing this way as we build bigger and bigger empires. But according to the Scripture this is backwards: We should consciously take the lowest place, unless the Lord himself extrudes us into a greater one.

It is there we come to know both the Scriptures and the power of God.

Defining Justice

Defining Justice

There’s a popular slogan these days, “No Justice, No Peace.” Surely, we should want to positively affirm this simple statement. It is theologically true that there is no peace without justice. But in context, this slogan has been used as a threat. In short, “if we do not get justice, we will burn this city down.” So much turns on the meaning of justice.

In Sunday’s sermon, “The Things that Are Caesar’s,” we considered the role of governing authorities in our lives and in God’s world. Though there may be extensive disagreement between two people in the precise scope of the government’s proper authority—whether it belongs in education, if and how it should intervene with markets, foreign policy, etc.—everyone agrees that the government is in the business of doing justice. According to the Bible’s own basic job description, it’s half of government’s job. Governing authorities are sent “to punish those who do evil and to praise those who do good” (1Pet. 2:14). Paul puts it even more starkly: “For he is the servant of God, an avenger who carries out God’s wrath on the wrongdoer” (Rom. 13:4).

In the conclusion of this sermon, I offered three comments about justice by way of application for better thinking on this topic. You might be having some conversations about injustices in our day, and you should. You don’t need my help on all the important minutiae. But we all need some help from the Bible to think in biblical categories and biblical ways about a topic dear to our Lord’s heart, that is, justice and the role of governing authorities.

The purpose of this post is not to argue that God cares for people and what that means in practical and personal terms; I expect that will emerge in the regular course of preaching and teaching. Rather, the purpose of this post is to explore a neglected and nuanced subject of the proper role of government—in its role as a minister of God’s justice—in mediating God’s care for people.

Justice is a big topic, and so is government. Here are three big thoughts for thinking about them.

First, Justice Is More Than Government

This point will seem both obvious and problematic. When Peter writes that it is the governing authority’s job to “punish those who do evil,” this assumes that evil means something. It assumes a standard of evil that is not determined by the state, a standard that is true not because an individual or society determined that it is true, but because it is. Both evil and justice, then, transcend any one time and place and state.

That should seem obvious to us. But whose justice is true justice? This is where Christianity presents us with a second absolute claim. The first is that there is such a thing as evil. The second is that God’s view of these things is the right one.

Governing authorities are “instituted by God,” they are “God’s servant,” even “ministers of God” (Rom. 13:1, 4–6). That’s the same word we use for “deacon.” Paul is pressing on us the lofty and even sacred responsibility that we have as citizens to submit to our governing authorities. But this also highlights the truth that justice is God’s business and the state is God’s servant, whether it wants to admit as much or not. God is a God of justice and humans should be treated a certain way because they are made in his image. We see that truth applied to the question of murder in the early pages of Scripture, “Whoever sheds the blood of man, by man shall his blood be shed, for God made man in his own image” (Gen. 9:6). Jesus was not arguing for a theocratic state in this age. We give to Caesar what is Caesar’s and to God what is God’s (Mk. 12:17). His kingdom is not of this world and, as such, it does not advance by means of the state. Nevertheless, human government is still God’s government.

Here’s one thing this means: justice isn’t determined by society or the state; it is discerned. Justice is not relative but revealed. God’s righteousness is revealed in what God has made and we clearly perceive it, for he has given us inner faculties to discern a standard of justice that is outside of us (Ro. 1:19, 20). In fact, our very law-making impulse is one proof that the human conscience is sensitive to the deeper truths about God and humanity (Ro. 2:15, 16). This doesn’t mean we always get it right. In fact, we actively suppress the truth we perceive in creation (Ro. 1:18). What it means is that the human conscience is calibrated to pick up on the signals that God’s creation puts out concerning the basic nature of humanity—the dignity of all human life, human sexuality as male and female, the proper authority of parents over children, the nature of marriage as heterosexual and monogamous, the dignity and responsibility of work, etc. The state is not beholden to the particular law code given to Israel in the old covenant, as that has been fulfilled in Christ. But human government is accountable with all of humankind to the truth about humans reflected in all the Scriptures, truth which is both encoded on the human conscience and embedded in creation.

Here’s another thing this means: government can get these things right, but government can also get these things wrong. When the state wields its sword based on a false understanding of humanity it is bound to commit injustice. This means we can and should speak and work for justice in our systems of government. Abraham Lincoln was right to do so in his day, as was Martin Luther King Jr. in his. Both appealed to the human conscience and our universal sense of accountability to something higher and truer than the state. When human government uses its sword for evil, its legal systems become injustice multipliers. The riots at the Capitol were an atrocity, roundly and universally condemned, and rightly so. Greater still are some of the bills passed on that floor. My point is that the government and the news will hold out some things as evil and other things as good, but they are not and cannot be our litmus test of right and wrong; they are not a reliable gauge.

One reason that authoritarian governments suppress Christianity and the church is this: they will not accept a standard of judgment by which they may be found guilty. When a state stops being accountable to its own people, it won’t be long before it stops accounting to the people’s voice on justice. Christians have been famously resilient under state pressure. We are gracious and happy to live quiet and peaceful lives. But we are not—and we must not be—easily coerced. We know better because we know God.

Justice is more than government. We give to God what is God’s.

Second, Justice Requires More Than Good Intentions

I showed up to Southern Seminary in 2005 as a 25 year old to grow in handling God’s Word for God’s people. I came to that place because of several professors, including Ronald Nash. I didn’t get to take a class with Nash, as he died a year later in 2006. He was a rare and needed combination of theological, philosophical, economic, and historical scholarship. Rarer still, he wrote with a love and concern for the church. Lately, I’ve been growing in my appreciation of Nash all the more for his ability to see under the surface of things. Here’s how he opened his book, Social Justice and the Christian Church, some thirty years ago:

One of the two sides of Christian social concern is the Christian’s clear obligation to care and to be concerned about the poor and oppressed and to do what he can on their behalf. But the other dimension of Christian social concern adds the stipulation that if a Christian wishes to make pronouncements on complex social, economic, and political issues, he also has a duty to become informed about those issues. … There is no question about the fact that [Christians] care. But their compassion is often wedded to a political and economic ideology that is long on heart and short on wisdom.

God cares about people and that’s why people care about people. We’re like him. But, as Nash suggests, good intentions need to be paired with good ideas. Good intentions paired with bad ideas about government can lead to profound injustice.

This leads us to the topic of social justice. This is an idea in need of definition. Justice and people are too important. Unfortunately, social justice is a term that suffers from semantic overload. Ten people can mean ten different things, some of them contradictory. Some of us might hear “social justice” and think about justice expressed in human relationships, perhaps with an accent on active care for the poor and oppressed. Others might think of justice in the administration of human government so that every human is rendered his or her due. Those are profoundly biblical concerns. They also align with how the term was used when it was first employed. In what may be its original usage in the 1840’s, Jesuit philosopher and conservative Catholic Luigi Taparelli taught that inequality was not an injustice but a byproduct of justice in rightly ordered constitutional arrangements. But that is the opposite of how the term is often used today. Since the mid-point of the last century social justice has been a stand-in for policies that treat people unevenly in order to achieve even outcomes. Those are two different meanings. If you carefully define what you’re talking about intentions intersect with more or less biblical political ideologies.

At this point, we could explore the claims and consequences of Marxism, statism, and socialism. You can pick up a copy of Nash’s book for that. Or check out this interview with James Lindsay by Albert Mohler for a more realtime take on what’s happening around us.

For our purposes, I want to stay closer to the ground of the biblical text. It’s fine for us to use terminology that is not in Scripture such as “social justice.” However, a set of more biblically precise categories will help us not only understand one another, but match our good intentions to the very best ideas about justice and human government.

With that in mind, here are four types of justice with reflections on the role of the state.

Personal Justice

This is what we usually think of as personal righteousness. Often in the Scriptures the language of justice is paired with righteousness. A just or righteous person is a godly person, a person with integrity. This is someone who does what is right and does right by others. We might even include here the voluntary generosity in helping the poor (Lk. 12:33). Noah was “a righteous man, blameless in his generation” (Gen. 6:9). When the Bible mentions justice, this is what it is usually talking about.

The state has an obvious interest in this. Unless we’re going to be a police state, then most people will have to be mostly good most of the time. Or, as Colson’s Law states, “the only alternatives to conscience are cops or chaos. If the inner shield of a community is lowered, the outer shield must be raised to stave off chaos. Therefore, a community, especially a free democracy, that loses its conscience will necessarily become a police state.” Hence, an important function of human government is not only to promote good behavior but to “praise” and “approve” those who do good (1Pet. 2:14; Rom. 13:3).

Commercial Justice

Commercial justice is justice in the marketplace. The Lord is for this. “A just balance and scales are the LORD’s; all the weights in the bag are his work” (Prov. 16:11). “You shall have just balances, just weights, a just ephah, and a just hin: I am the LORD your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt” (Lev. 19:36). The poor or less savvy should not be taken advantage of. We should pursue just practices in our businesses and welcome the state’s regulation of the marketplace to ensure just transactions.

Here the state fulfills an important function. One of the evils that the state is assigned to punish is theft. The state should protect private property and act as a recognized authority to adjudicate disputes in the marketplace as they arise.

Legal Justice

This is justice before the law, specifically in instances of remediation, when the state is addressing some kind of harm. Five qualities are crucial for this kind of justice in order to not add injustice to injustice. This kind of justice is truthful in that it is based in the truth. False reports are condemned, and multiple witnesses are required (Ex. 23:1–3; Deut. 19:15). It is impartial, showing favoritism neither to the poor nor the rich (Lev. 19:15; cf. Acts 10:34; Js. 2:8, 9). The poor receive special attention in Scripture, in part, because of their vulnerability in legal settings (Ex. 23:3, 6; Ps. 72:1–4). It is proportional. In our interpersonal dealings we should turn the other cheek, but governing authorities are instituted to punish evil. When they punish evil they should do so with proportion, an eye for an eye, tooth for tooth, foot for foot (Deut. 19:21). This kind of justice is also personal, not based on our association with a group but on our own deeds. And it is procedural, involving due process in order to clarify facts, discern intent, and settle on a just resolution (Num. 35:9–34).

Let me illustrate and apply this briefly. If an unarmed man is killed in the street by a police officer, justice requires an investigation to uncover facts and a verdict based on that evidence. If it is proven a murder, then it should be called a murder and the murderer should receive a just sentence. If evidence shows that it was manslaughter, then he should be treated accordingly. Neither the victim nor the defendant’s ethnicity, connections in the community, or economic status should be in play as it concerns the outcome. Related, if it is true that evidence does not support the claim that racist police officers kill unarmed black people at a disproportionate rate (evidence which I find convincing and, if true, encouraging), then it is an injustice to make this claim. At our very best we all want to respond in a just way to injustice. An injustice will draw a crowd. Maybe it should. But in our own responses, let’s respond to God rather than a mob lest we add injustice to an already heartbreaking situation.

So far, we have explored three types of justice. Each of these could be rightly called “social justice” in the sense that they involve justice in human relationships in people are given what they are due as those made in God’s image.

A fourth type of justice is where we meet the rub between what the Bible requires of us in human government and what we might call ideological social justice.

Distributive Justice

This form of justice is concerned with the distribution of the nation’s burdens and resources. Every nation will do some of this. We pay different amounts in taxes but share the same roads and military. In the United States, things like public education and Social Security are examples of the government distributing burdens and benefits.

The question at hand is this: as an agent of God’s justice to see that people are given their due, what is the state’s responsibility to its people as it concerns the coercive distribution of burdens and resources?

We have Bible verses that regulated Israel’s national life with respect to the poor with laws that allowed the poor to glean from the fields (Ex. 23:10; Deut. 24:19–22). One could argue from those texts to social safety nets of one kind or another. But today’s cries for social justice are not just stronger appeals to help the destitute, but something altogether different.

As a subset of distributive justice, social justice proponents appeal for the distribution of resources with the goal of equal outcomes—usually economic outcomes. It sees unevenness between groups of as a problem rooted in injustice in society, a result of oppression by oppressors. Eradication of these differences, proponents insist, is a fundamental governmental responsibility. Not every person who adopts this vocabulary embraces this whole program of thought. Nevertheless, this is the philosophical and academic foundation that undergirds social policy that flies under the banner of social justice today.

How can we boil down the problem with so-called “social justice”? Here’s one way. Social justice proponents are correct that the world is fraught with injustice, but they locate the human problem in the wrong place. Christians know that the problem with humanity is inside us and it flows from inside out. It is no surprise for us to find problems everywhere humans are found. But social justice ideology insists that where humans err they do so because of the society around them and because of inadequate institutions. The answer, then, is to destroy institutions and rebuild society in order to perfect humanity.

If we locate the problem outside ourselves, we will have an unrealistically high expectation of what government can achieve, or more precisely what a few people at the top can achieve in destroying society and remaking it. Naturally, having identified the problem wrongly, they seek a solution that can only bring harm, a cost that some proponents openly embrace. There’s a discernible echo here of biblical eschatology that sees a judgment and new creation on the horizon, just without God. The social justice movement in this expression sees the state as the means to this transformation, as the state is the only vehicle for forcing the reallocation of resources and wealth. That social justice proponents see institutions as the problem and nevertheless trust the institution of human government to address the problem is a contradiction inherent to their worldview.

Liberation theologians (a driver for social justice thinking among Christians) embrace a different gospel. They see God’s plan of salvation summed up in the liberation of oppressed peoples from bondage in this age by means of the state. The centrality of the state to this vision of justice is why you may feel like affirming justice requires the endorsement of certain policy proposals. That’s why the language of “social justice” is dangerous. It allows some who use it to enlist the support of well-intentioned but undiscerning voters. This is not a post about race, but it is impossible to untangle the topic of race from social justice because the social justice movement has identified race, along with gender and so-called “gender identity,” as the fault lines that divide oppressed groups in need of liberation from oppressive society. This binary and inflammatory claim explains so much of the heat in our newsfeeds in the last decade.

What we are experiencing is not a new phenomenon. Historian Victor Davis Hansen had this to say about revolutionary societies: “In revolutionary societies the most dangerous cycle is not from poverty to equality. The most dangerous cycle is from equality to parity.” That is, from poverty to an equality of opportunity to an equality of outcome—which some refer to as equity, or which Hansen calls parity. What’s happening here socially, he says, is not so much unlike what happened in Russia in 1917 at the start of the Russian Revolution. When a people in a population who have largely achieved equality of treatment begin to see that parity is within reach, the demands of the general population go up, the demands on the state go up, the promises of the state go up, and the violence goes up. But since it can never be ultimately achieved, the society risks a descent into greater division and violence, which in turn triggers the growth of the state to address the chaos. This is why social justice has been called a Trojan horse to a totalitarian state. The state is the only agent that can bring about the demands of social justice on the broader society.

Friends, we should be optimistic about the good of the state, cooperative, and thankful. But we should also be pessimistic because we know who humans are as sinners. Government is supposed to be limited, but without constant vigilance, as history has taught us, governments will not only reflect the best but the worst of human nature. Government is an instrument of God’s justice, but as John teaches us in his apocalypse, the state can become a beast, an instrument of Satan’s blasphemous evil purposes (Rev. 13).

What causes the state to grow beyond its divinely ordered limits? Governments grow because of human pride, as leaders find ways to arrest more power. They grow because of faulty human philosophy that locates human hope in the state. They grow because of various problems—health crises, natural disasters, threats from without, and chaos from within—as they expand their powers to solve problems but then do not give those powers back. The state grows when the people value personal affluence and pleasure more than their proper freedoms as human beings, ceding more power to the state on the promise that they can keep their comforts. And the state grows as it multiplies promises in exchange for the people’s support. At every step we hear appeals for justice and promises of a more just world.

If you want to search out this topic of social justice a bit further, Tim Challies has several helpful posts exploring some Scriptures and recent attempts to make distinctions. One book he interacts with by Thaddeus Williams is particularly helpful, Confronting Injustice without Compromising Truth. For a masterful book on the relevant and familiar passages, pick up a volume we have our interns read, What Is the Mission of the Church?: Making Sense of Social Justice, Shalom, and the Great Commission, by Kevin DeYoung and Greg Gilbert. Neil Shenvi has also done some good work on this front in his post, “Christianity and Social Justice,” and in his series, “Social Justice, Critical Theory, and Christianity: Are They Compatible?,” and in a follow-up piece, “Social Justice, Critical Theory, and Consistency.” For an economist’s interaction on these themes, read two essays by Thomas Sowell, “The Quest for Cosmic Justice,” and “Race, Culture, and Equality.”

Third, Justice Is Nothing Less Than the Foundation of God’s Throne

Why were our streets filled with men and women crying out for justice this past summer? Why did so many storm the Capitol at the start of this year? Without getting into any of the details, we can say this: people long for justice because they were made by a just God, and they are having a hard time finding it down here. We too long for justice.

For all of us, here’s some good news:

Righteousness and justice are the foundation of your throne;
steadfast love and faithfulness go before you. —Psalm 89:14

We experiment in human government, but our God does not experiment in his government of the universe. His execution of his justice and his plan is perfect. In the end, any injustice in this world will be settled.

That truth on its own is unsettling. In the garden we were in a just relationship with God and one another. When Adam sinned, he committed an injustice against the sovereign of the universe. Since then, we humans have been busy thinking up and carrying out every kind of injustice against one another and, by extension, against the God whose image we bear (Gen. 6:5; 9:6). When we cry out for justice, we’re often on to something. Human governments, as we’ve said, can commit injustice too. But just as often we are covering for injustices we’d rather not talk about or admit as individuals and as a society. The God whose throne is founded on justice sees it all. In fact, so many of our problems in this world are God’s judgment already. “For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who by their unrighteousness suppress the truth” (Rom. 1:18).

In an age of bad news headlines, we herald and hold fast to this good news, that the God whose throne is founded on justice is both “just and the justifier of the one who has faith in Jesus” (Rom. 3:26). In the cross we meet the God of justice who is also the God of steadfast love and faithfulness. On the cross he accomplished both justice and peace (Col. 1:20). Even better, he makes us just people and he forms a just community, the church with outposts in every place where people are at peace with God and one another. Today he is building little cities within the cities of this world where people treat each other as they ought, old and young, rich and poor, slave and free, Jew and Greek.

Nations come and go, but as a friend recently put it, the church is the only institution which Jesus promised to build, defend, and preserve. A knowledge of God’s justice is one way he does that. It is faith in this God of perfect justice that grounded Christians in the first century. They faced many injustices. But even as Rome declined over the second and third centuries, the church emerged intact. She was not supported by a pantheon of pretend gods who could give her no true meaning or hope. She was sustained by the God whose throne is founded in justice, who judges and who justifies.

Slogans will come and go. People will mean all sorts of things by them. The church’s message remains. It is no threat. It is not ambiguous. It is an open statement of the truth and it’s a standing offer to all: know justice and know peace.

Help for Anxious Hearts

Help for Anxious Hearts

God speaks some of the most beautiful words to anxious people. I don’t know where I read that, but it has stuck with me.

Our text from Sunday took us to some of those beautiful words in Jesus’ otherwise peculiar command: “look at the birds” (Matt. 6:24). Birds are a reminder that God values us. If he feeds them, how much more will he care for us! That’s a good argument, and it’s put in a way that changes how we look at things. It literally changes what we are look at. Birds are one of God’s answers for our anxious hearts.

You may be wrestling with anxiety right now. If you’re not, you probably know someone in our church who is. If so, your words are one way God may gladden their heart this week. “Anxiety in a man’s heart weighs him down, but a good word makes him glad” (Prov. 12:25).

Anxiety is not an easy thing to understand, but it’s worth the work. Here are some resources to help you mine the Scriptures for more of God’s beautiful words for anxious hearts. These are in order by length.

Any of these resources would be something you could take up alone or with a friend in our church. If you weren’t able to join us, listen to Sunday’s sermon, “Look at the Birds: Seeking the Kingdom in an Age of Anxiety.” However you put this Sunday’s sermon to work, remember the God who cares for you and who stands ready to carry your anxieties (1Pet. 5:7).

You can purchase the book here.