Taxes and Abortions?

Here is Dr. R. C. Sproul, “Should Christians refuse to pay taxes when they are used to finance abortions?”

It is one of my great passions, the desire to see me, and the evangelical church take the evil of abortion more seriously, to have our hearts more deeply broken, and our actions more faithful. We have all, I fear, come to accept the status quo. We are content to vote for Republicans hoping they will give us justices that will slow down the horror. What we are generally unwilling to do is go through any kind of hardship to stop abortion. When I am asked about this, should we stop paying taxes, I am at least heartened to know that there are some willing to pay dearly to win this battle. Not paying taxes rarely ends up comfortably for those who won’t pay.

That said I can say with confidence that Christians should in fact pay whatever taxes they owe even when that money ends up financing abortions. The Christian who pays such taxes has no need to feel guilty, while the Christian that refuses to pay, however well intentioned, ought to feel guilty.

Theologians have long understood the principle that must be applied here- we are responsible for our own actions, not the actions of others. In this instance, the Bible is quite clear about our obligation to pay our taxes (Mark 12:17). It is also clear that the proper function of the state is not to finance evil, but to punish it (Romans 13). Their failure to do what God calls them to do, however, does not mean I am free to not do what I am commanded to do. That they have so horribly misused the taxes that I have paid doesn’t mean I am guilty of what they have done. I have been taxed, and when those taxes are paid, they are no longer mine. What the state does with them may be something I should speak against. It may be something I should condemn. But I am not guilty.

Remember that the same Caesar to whom Jesus commanded taxes be paid used those taxes for what may be the only thing worse than abortion. Those tax moneys financed the judgment of Pilate. They paid the salaries of the Roman soldiers. They purchased the nails that held our Lord on the cross. Those taxes crucified the Lord of Glory.

More close to home, suppose the more a husband loves his wife the less she respects him, or the more the wife respects her husband the less he loves her. In either instance we are not to try to guess the result of our behavior. We are supposed to do what God commands. We are not responsible for the results of what we do. We are responsible to obey whatsoever God commands. We are called not to success, but to obedience.

The state should repent for all misuses of taxes paid. Christians should prophesy against the state when they do evil, including financing evil. We should all be on our knees imploring God to stop the horror. But we should pay our taxes. March on Washington. Preach outside your local mill. Write your congressman. Support your local crisis pregnancy center. And, as painful as it may be, trusting in His providence, render unto Caesar the things that are Caesars, our taxes, and unto God the things that are God’s- obedience.

Jesus’ View of Scripture

Kevin DeYoung:

Jesus held Scripture in the highest possible esteem. He knew his Bible intimately and loved it deeply. He often spoke with language of Scripture. He easily alluded to Scripture. And in his moments of greatest trial and weakness—like being tempted by the devil or being killed on a cross—he quoted Scripture.

His mission was to fulfill Scripture, never disregarded, never disagreed with a single text of Scripture.

He affirmed every bit of law, prophecy, narrative, and poetry. He shuddered to think of anyone anywhere violating, ignoring, or rejecting Scripture.

Jesus believed in the inspiration of Scripture, down to the sentences, to the phrases, to the words, to the smallest letter, to the tiniest mark.

He accepted the chronology, the miracles, and the authorial ascriptions as giving the straightforward facts of history.

He believed in keeping the spirit of the law without ever minimizing the letter of the law. He affirmed the human authorship of Scripture while at the same time bearing witness to the ultimate divine authorship of the Scriptures.

He treated the Bible as a necessary word, a sufficient word, a clear word, and the final word.

It was never acceptable in his mind to contradict Scripture or stand above Scripture.

He believed the Bible was all true, all edifying, all important, and all about him. He believed absolutely that the Bible was from God and was absolutely free from error. What Scripture says God says, and what God said was recorded infallibly in Scripture.

Jesus submitted his will to the Scriptures, committed his brain to study the Scriptures, and humbled his heart to obey the Scriptures.

In summary, it is impossible to revere the Scriptures more deeply or affirm them more completely than Jesus did. The Lord Jesus, God’s Son and our Savior, believed his Bible was the word of God down to the tiniest speck and that nothing in all those specks and in all those books in his Bible could ever be broken.

The Resolved Lamb of God

My friend, Justin Edwards writes of this sermon (below):

Closing out the final Resolved Conference a couple of weeks ago, C.J. Mahaney delivered one of the most enthralling messages I have ever heard. No other message should captivate our souls and move us to love, worship, and obey the Lord Jesus Christ than the reality of the cross. Yet, not just the cross on Golgotha, but beginning in Gethsemane.

The Garden of Gethsemane is where we find Jesus being so distressed and troubled, so sorrowful even unto death, so overwhelmed with the impending reality of what He was about to face, that He was crushed by the weight of despair to soon be forsaken by His Father as He drinks the cup of the Father’s wrath. Mark 14:35-36b:

And going a little farther, he fell on the ground and prayed that, if it were possible, the hour might pass from him. And he said, “Abba, Father, all things are possible for you. Remove this cup from me.
Jesus was so distressed that Luke tells us,

And being in an agony he prayed more earnestly; and his sweat became like great drops of blood falling down to the ground. – Luke 22:44

Jesus was praying to His Father that, if it were possible, He would remove this cup:

For in the hand of the Lord there is a cup with foaming wine, well mixed, and he pours out from it, and all the wicked of the earth shall drain it down to the dregs. – Psalm 75:8

And this cup:

He will tread the winepress of the fury of the wrath of God the Almighty. – Revelation 19:15c

But, Jesus was met with silence from the Father. Three times. What did this mean? What did it mean for Jesus, who lived perfectly holy before His Father, who never sinned in thought, word, or deed, who was pure in every way and had always been in perfect fellowship with His Father since eternity past, to be met with silence?

And what did it mean when Jesus said,

Yet not what I will, but what you will. – Mark 14:36c

What did this mean for Jesus, who was not only about to drink the cup of the fury of His Father’s wrath but to do so alone and forsaken by His Father, to be resolved to obey His Father’s will even unto death on the cross?

Step inside Gethsemane and walk to the foot of Golgotha to witness the resolve of the Lamb of God by watching CJ Mahaney’s beautiful depiction of the glorious Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ. May it change you and cause you to either surrender your life to this Worthy King, or cause you to grow in your understanding of the breadth and length and height and depth of God’s love for you.

Resolved 2012, Session 13 from Resolved on Vimeo.

Friday Round Up

(1) I love theology, missions, preaching, worldviews, music, and more. Check out the $5 Ligonier sale here.

(3) Rock of Ages by Augustus Toplady (1740-1778)

Rock of Ages, cleft for me
Let me hide myself in Thee
Let the water and the blood,
From thy wounded side which flowed
Be of sin the double cure
Save from wrath and make me pure

Not the labors of my hands
Can fulfill Thy law’s demands
Could my zeal no respite know
Could my tears forever flow
These for sin could not atone
Thou must save, and Thou alone

Nothing in my hand I bring
Simply to Thy cross I cling
Naked, come to thee for dress
Helpless, look to thee for grace
Foul, I to the fountain fly
Wash me, Savior, or I die
Wash me, Savior, or I die
Wash me, Savior, or I die

While I draw this fleeting breath
When mine eyes shall close in death
When I rise to worlds unknown
And behold thee on Thy throne
Rock of Ages, cleft for me
Let me hide myself in Thee
Let me hide myself in thee
Let me hide myself in thee

(4) Punctuation Matters! (usually a whole lot more than spelling does)

2,000 Years of Jesus’ Catholic Church?

A quote from Dr. James White’s blog at www.aomin.org from 2006.

“We all heard the “2,000 years of Jesus’ Catholic Church” mantra last year when John Paul II died, and it was almost never challenged. I would ask our writer to name, please, a single bishop at the Council of Nicea who believed as he believes on each of these topics: Marian dogmas (Perpetual Virginity, Immaculate Conception, Bodily Assumption), Papal Authority (infallibility), Purgatory, transubstantiation. Any semi-serious reader of history knows he would not be able to find such a person, so the claim of “2,000 years” may sound impressive, but it has the truth value any advertising slogan carries: none. It may sound great to those ignorant of history, and to those who wear the glasses Rome provides that filters out all the extraneous problems and issues, but for anyone with an even semi-decent grasp of the past, it is a hollow, shallow claim.”