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Thursday, July 16, 2026

Divorce is Not Your Saviour: A Refutation of Russell Moore

Is divorce the savior from danger and unhappiness? Russell Moore and his followers think so.

Dr. Moore wrote an article in 2022 for Christianity Today titled Divorcing an Abusive Spouse is Not a Sin: Not only is it morally justified, it also aligns with Christ’s heart for the vulnerable. You might be wondering why I’m writing a refutation in 2026…the answer is simple, I didn’t see the article in 2022 and Christianity Today recently re-pushed it and it garnered quite a bit of interaction on social media. 2026 was the first time I’d seen the article, but I’ve heard the arguments from others for years and have refuted them numerous times in the counseling room. Now that I have a target, I’m publishing my refutation here in order to hopefully help someone draw near to Christ and hate the works of the evil one.

If you’ve followed Russell Moore for any length of time, you know he hates Jesus and his Word and is doing everything he can to tear down goodness and mercy and leave destruction in his wake. If you haven’t heard of Russell Moore, a brief internet search or a deeper dive into Allie Beth Stuckey’s Shepherds for Sale will help you understand. Even still, he has a massive following of people sporting dyed hair and spouting venomous vitriol putting up with him and championing him. He sneaks into households and captures weak women who are burdened with sins and led astray by various passions, and he has multitudes with itching ears flocking to him. If there is any consolation, it’s that God promises that he won’t get very far, and his folly will be plain to all. But though he won’t get far, he is getting somewhere, and he’s hurting people and blaspheming Christ.

In his article (I debated linking to it, but I don’t want to make it easy for anyone to sin, a brief internet search on the title will bring it up), Moore starts out quite strong, pointing out that divorce is a “concession to hardheartedness, not as God’s plan for marriage.” Lou Priolo, an excellent marriage counselor now in glory, would say that the only prerequisite for divorce is a hard heart. Unfortunately, Moore doesn’t spend any time on what hardheartedness does to a person. He misses or ignores that hard heartedness will blind eyes, dull hope, and chill love, ultimately cutting off relationships not just with people (Zechariah 7:9-10), but with God (Proverbs 28:14). Divorce, because of this hardheartedness, needs to be hated with the anger equivalent to God’s hatred, understanding that God sees it as an act of violence and faithlessness, God hates divorce (Malachi 2:16). A hard heart leaves desolation in its path (Zechariah 7:12-14). Russell Moore should hate divorce. Christians hate divorce. If you love God, you have to hate this evil (Romans 12:9). We’ve said for years, “Marriage is hard, divorce is hard. Choose your hard.” And “Marriage is blessed by God, divorce is hated by God; do you want to be blessed or cursed? Make your decision wisely.”

Bear with me as I take a brief detour to address abuse. If you’re in a place of dangerous abuse, God is ready and willing to give you wisdom generously and without criticizing (James 1:5). You might say, “I don’t need wisdom, I need a divorce.” A divorce is a horrible savior; it makes all the promises and will fulfill none of them. It seems right, but its end is death (Proverbs 14:11-12, 16:24-25). Seek godly counsel. Pray and read your Bible. One of the shortest and yet most powerful prayers says, “Lord, if there is no purpose in this, take it away.” It’s based on Romans 8:28-29 and it recognizes that God has put you where you, in the relationship you’re in, for a reason; for all of the things I can be in your spouse’s life, I cannot be their spouse. I can’t pray for them as God’s covenanted partner put in their life to seek their eternal wellbeing. I can help, but I can’t be their helpmeet custom designed by God for them. Besides praying and reading your Bible, seek a godly pastor, ask a wise counselor, find a senior saint who has walked through decades of marriage fidelity or one who regrets their divorce with every fiber of their being. God wants you to thrive in life, love, and joy, and your faithfulness in this matter is his will for you to rejoice in, his Spirit is working unless you quench him (1 Thessalonians 5:17-19). Divorce, for all of the reasons we hate it, is a sure way to extinguish the Spirit’s work in your life. The people who wound you with their spiritual advice are likely the people who love you most, do not accumulate flatterers who will tell you only what you want to hear (Proverbs 27:6). God’s call is an upward call, and divorce is a downward regression that will only steal, kill, and destroy what God wants for you.

One of my main contentions with Russell Moore is that he is clearly drawing people who only like what he is saying about making divorce easy. In researching for this article I found multiple “open letters” from people lauding his efforts but upset that he is not going far enough to destroy marriage or make it easier to sin. Multiple people tried to support Moore’s article to the effect of, “You’re totally right, that’s why I left the church and Christianity.” If actively helping people run from Jesus isn’t warning enough, look at the depths of the depravity of Russell Moore’s heart from the article,

What God hath joined together, let no man put asunder. Yes and amen. But sometimes Jesus also would have us recognize that man should not force together what God has put asunder.

Moore pulls the classic false teacher trick of quoting the Bible but using it to say exactly the opposite of what it means. He couldn’t be any more like Satan in that sentence using scripture to tempt the hearer to sin (confer Matthew 4:3-9). If someone says, “Jesus said…but”, you can know immediately that they are a false teacher. Moore does not give an example of when or where Jesus would have us recognize such an outlandish claim, he simply uses his false authority to contradict Jesus’ very clear command. Leslie Vernick, another popular marriage hater, definitively said, “God does not value the sanctity of marriage more than the safety and sanity of the people in it.” Despite her clearly acting the false prophet by speaking where God has not spoken, she ignores verses like, “Why are we in danger every hour?” and “For your sake we are being killed all the day long; we are regarded as sheep to be slaughtered” (1 Corinthians 15:30-31 and Romans 8:35). I’d like Russell Moore and Leslie Vernick to go to Nigeria tomorrow and tell our Nigerian brothers and sisters that God wants them to be safe. Christians won’t be hard to find, they’ve been gathering for months at funerals for Christians killed by terrorists. God wants a lot of things in your life, but he does not have any interest in your being safe. If you are safe, or seek to make safety your life’s purpose, then chances are you are in great danger of meeting God as a Saviour scorned. There are many things worse than safety. Remember, even our own founders said things like, “Those who would give up essential liberty to purpose a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.”

Russell Moore’s contention is that abuse is the same as abandonment, and therefore warrants divorce. This idea is almost identical to the original context of Jesus’ conversation with the Pharisees in Matthew 19:3, when they ask, “Is it lawful to divorce one’s wife for any cause?” (emphasis mine). There was a massive debate happening at that time between a rabbi (teacher) named Hillel and a rabbi named Shammai. Shammai held to the sanctity of marriage and defended it at all costs. Hillel on the other hand said that a man could divorce his wife for any cause, including burning dinner, being contentious, or outgrowing her youthful beauty. Jesus shows very clearly that Shammai had rightly interpreted the texts, and that God has brought the couple together and they are not to be separated (Matthew 19:4-6). In so doing, Jesus refutes the Hillel argument of any cause. Yet Moore, always learning and always unable to arrive at the truth, misses this historical context and adds his own any cause: abuse.

Where Russell Moore is to be most condemned (may God have mercy on his soul and may he be saved before he faces God after having stored up wrath for so many years) is that he never defines abuse. Hillel would define abuse as being a bad cook, or speaking to strangers in the street, or just being mean. So do so many of Moore’s followers. I’ve personally counseled a number of people who defined abuse as turning off credit cards in the wake of unwise and unfettered spending, of working late without a phone call or text, or of using the family’s only car to drive to work and leaving them at home. Two other counselors have told me that they’ve counseled wives who felt that their husband not cleaning up after themselves was abuse. And the most painful abuse case comes from the imagination of the accuser; things like, “They’ve never hit me, but I knew it was coming” or “I had a premonition” or “I can’t prove it, but I know it’s true.” It’s impossible to repent of something you’ve only committed in someone else’s imagination.

Abuse, aka any cause, is a very subjective term, even if it were grounds for divorce. You only need to look at the comments of Moore’s divorced followers to see that they have not sought the will of God in their lives (I’m adding Bible verses afterwards to refute them):

Called names (When reviled, we bless; when persecuted, we endure… ~ 1 Corinthians 4:12)

Required submission (Wives, submit to your husbands, as to the Lord. ~ Ephesians 5:22)

Blamed for problems (This is a gracious thing, when, mindful of God, on endures sorrows while suffering unjustly. ~ 1 Peter 2:19)

Created a loveless marriage (For one will scarcely die for a righteous person – though perhaps for a good person one would dare even to die – but God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us. ~ Romans 5:6-8, and In this is love, not that we have loved God, but that he loved us… ~ 1 John 4:10)

Harsh words, anger, disrespect (Get behind me, Satan! ~ Matthew 16:23, Jesus to a member of his bride the church)

Breaking of the marriage vows (If we are faithless, he remains faithful… ~ 2 Timothy 2:13; your vows aren’t just to your spouse, they are between you and God)

The idea that “abuse of any kind” was grounds for divorce popped up repeatedly, yet every single poster ignored that Jesus was willingly crucified by his bride to save his bride (Ephesians 5:25-26, Acts 2:36). Moore’s great failing after rejecting everything Jesus said, was that he doesn’t define his terms and allows his audience to define his terms.

Russell Moore is the modern-day Hillel, that any reason that a person can be offended is grounds for divorce. According to Moore and his followers, your happiness and preferences are God’s ultimate goal, and divorce is your savior. This ultimately helps people become the victim in their story, and it has been wisely stated that when you make someone a victim, you cut them off from the gospel. Moore is not just wrong on divorce, he’s wrong on salvation and eternity which are continually expressed in terms of a marriage covenant (Ephesians 5:25, 2 Corinthians 11:2, Revelation 19:9, etc.), and this will cost him and his hearers their souls. Paul warned 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” (1 Timothy 4:16). In playing fast and loose with the teaching, Moore is condemning both himself and his hearers, substituting a very poor savior in place of the Saviour who submitted himself to God’s will, suffered AND died, was abused, was demeaned, who hated the shame, but endured it for God’s will and glory, and is seated even now at the right hand of the Father, exalted having won a bride for his own possession that he is actively sanctifying.

Moore’s next heinous failing is that he doesn’t consider repentance or forgiveness not once in his article. If and when abuse happens, for some reason Russell Moore has snipped “Above all, keep loving one another earnestly, love covers a multitude of sins” (1 Peter 4:8) straight out of his Bible (if he owns a Bible). There is no view to reconciliation anywhere in Moore’s reasoning. He also doesn’t consider winning spouses (1 Corinthians 7:16) or serving them (1 Peter 3:1-2) or sacrificing for them (Ephesians 5:28-31). He misses completely that the goal of marriage is to make both people holy, and love and patience are meant to lead people to repentance (Romans 2:4, 1 Peter 3:1-2)!

All of the vitriol from the disciples of Moore was based on offenses, never once considering, “Why not rather suffer wrong?” (1 Corinthians 6:7, or as Elizabeth Elliot said it, “Why not be wronged?”). For a crowd that attacks those that disagree with them for judging, they have no issue judging that their ex-spouses were unrepentant and would never change. They were sure they had married utter antichrists with no hope of redemption or growth. And why would they expect someone to be able to change? After all, Moore posits a false gospel of comfort and safety, not a gospel that transforms the very people that betrayed and crucified Jesus into his closest friends. Moore’s Christianity has no room for the dead to live or the sinner to be saved, or Christ’s greatest enemies to even become members of the body that is his bride. Jesus said that if a person says “I repent,” you must forgive them (Luke 17:4, emphasis mine, he did not say test their repentance to be sure it is genuine, he did not say to set up your own requirements of repentance or sincerity, he did not say to keep a record of wrongs). Instead, 1 Corinthians 13, all about love, says that love believes and hopes all things. How would you fare if Jesus forgot there was a 1 Corinthians 13 in the Bible and treated you how you’ve treated him, or if he kept a record of your abuses against him?

The cure for Moore’s horrendous heresy is as simple as, “As you wish that others would do to you, do so to them” (Luke 6:31). A spouse that runs to preserve their life will lose their life. The bitterness, poverty, and family impact speaks for itself. A spouse who stays and battles in prayer and love and hope is a spouse that will gain their life (Luke 17:33). Stand for Jesus in the ways that he fought for his bride: you’re never more like Jesus than when you’re loving and forgiving an unlovable spouse. Who knows if God won’t save them? And truly there will be more joy in heaven over one sinner who repents than over ninety-nine righteous persons who need no repentance. Regardless if God saves them or not, your suffering is never in vain (1 Corinthians 15:58), and is nothing in comparison to the glory that is to be revealed in and to us (Romans 8:18) when Christ returns or calls us home.

In conclusion, I’m not sure why I’m still so shocked when Russell Moore shows that he has been taken captive by the devil to do his will, but his blatant disregard of clear biblical commands continues to break my heart, and seeing so many men and women who have been made twice the sons and daughters of hell as himself continues to crush and burden me. Years ago, before he showed his true allegiance, Russell Moore spoke on Christian military members being embedded missionaries in a closed country, and my heart was knit to his for the wisdom of that statement and sermon. Perhaps that is why his apostasy has crushed my spirit so completely; he is my Demas (2 Timothy 4:10).

Russell Moore has shown here and repeatedly that he hates God and so it is no surprise that he hates God’s covenant of marriage. In making divorce easy, Moore is leading many on the broad road to destruction, encouraging them to take lightly the vows they made to each other and in the name of God. In teaching people to run for minor offenses and to withhold forgiveness, he is cutting them off from forgiveness. Russell Moore doesn’t just hate God and marriage, he hates you and wants you to be cut off from life and hope and peace and Jesus. He’s not saying that, but his constant attack on God’s Word while teaching you to doubt and rebel proves that there is no love in his heart for anyone.

If the greatest danger to your soul is pain and discomfort, then divorce is a viable savior. But if your greatest need is to know God, be conformed to Jesus Christ, and to love your neighbors, then we learn to hate divorce. In teaching to hear the Words of Christ and to do exactly the opposite, Moore is encouraging people to build their lives and eternities on a foundation that will collapse, and great will be their fall. In teaching them that marriage can be broken for a burned dinner, an unkind word, or any other cause (regardless of how dangerous it is), he is denying the faithfulness of Jesus Christ. It is all a massive and disastrous false gospel yet many are following it to their destruction. We’ve called it Christianity Astray for so many years and they’re going from bad to worse. Pray with me that God will grant Moore and his followers repentance leading to the knowledge of the truth.

Beloved, don’t take my word for it, study God’s Word and consider how Jesus loves his bride, and how his covenant and promises will never fail. What therefore God has joined together, let not Hillel or Moore or you or any other person separate. Soften your heart, look to Jesus, the perfect bridegroom, and imitate him in how he loves his wayward and abusive beloved, his is a gospel of peace in the midst of the storm, and he is the bridegroom able to deck you in garments of salvation (Isaiah 61:10), he is your only hope for life and peace and an eternity with God.

Dr. Moore, if you’re reading this, you’re in my prayers, and I implore you, in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, be reconciled to God.

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

A Christian Response to Religious Accommodation Requests for Beards

Religious accommodation has been a hot topic in the last few years without much effort to deny it or discern if it’s helpful. Now that we’ve had some time to look back on what these requests accomplished it has become clear that in many cases there was no spiritual benefit to the requestor, nor discernment in the approving authorities.

I am not blameless, not in the least, having helped to push through my fair share of religious accommodations. Most were not from the Judeo-Christian foundation, but some were, and in the last few years, especially the last few months, God has shown me several things from the scriptures that I want to write down for future reference and posterity.

While the following can apply to any follower of the Bible and the one true God, I am basing my observations on the Bible, not Jewish tradition or the Talmud or history, so it may or may not resonate with those who have added to the Hebrew scriptures. I’ll reference some historical figures here, but they’re to buttress the argument, not to act as the foundation. This article is written from a Baptist (Protestant/Evangelical/Confessional/Calvinistic) perspective.

Service Before Self

The first thing I want to say is that most religious accommodation requests should never have been submitted. I base this on the principal of laying down our rights for the privilege of serving our fellow man. Paul surrendered his rights for the blessing of preaching the gospel,

Am I not free? Am I not an apostle? Have I not seen Jesus our Lord? Are you not my workmanship in the Lord?...Do we not have the right to eat and drink? Do we not have the right to take along a believing wife, as do the other apostles and the brothers of the Lord and Cephas? Who serves as a soldier at his own expense? Who plants a vineyard without eating any of its fruit? Or who tends a flock without getting some of the milk?...If we have sown spiritual things among you, is it too much if we reap material things from you? If others have this rightful claim on you, do we not even more?

Nevertheless, we have not made use of this right, but we endure anything rather than put an obstacle in the way of the gospel of Christ

But I have made no use of any of these rights, nor am I writing these things to secure any such provision…for thought I am free from all, I have made myself a servant to all, that I might win more of them. ~ 1 Corinthians 9:1,3-5, 7, 11-12, 15 (emphasis mine)

That’s definitive for me; the idea that religious freedom is meant to serve an individual is crazy. I like religious freedom and the First Amendment; it has done far more good than bad, but individual religious accommodation requests destroy service before self. It'd be easy to still uphold religious freedom on a much larger scale: If you hold to a religion that requires you not to eat meat, put it on your official record and be instantly afforded an option to purchase food somewhere other than the dining facility that caters predominantly to the vast majority of people who have no qualms about eating what it is serving.

If you are a member of a religion that highly recommends beards but doesn't mandate them, you're either going to need to speak to the ruling board of the religion and get them to change their traditions, or you're going to have to admit that "highly recommended" means optional.

If you're against war but a member of a church that isn't against war (think Alvin York), then conform your beliefs to your supposed spiritual authority, expect to be treated by the tenets your religion beliefs, or find a religion that aligns with your beliefs.

If you’re not convinced by scripture, consider these quotes:

Ask not what your country can do for you – ask what you can do for your country. ~ John Fitzegerald Kennedy

Let good citizens prefer the public good to their own private interest... For a citizen who consults only his own disgusts or profits is a parasite upon the commonwealth. ~ Cicero

No man is worth his salt who is not ready at all times to risk his well-being, to risk his body, to risk his life, in a great cause. ~ Theodore Roosevelt

Defending True Religious Accommodation

Sometimes there is a place for a religious accommodation, and I want to emphasize that there is a time to say, “whether it is right in the sight of God to listen to you rather than to God, you must judge, for we cannot but speak of what we have seen and heard” (Acts 4:19-20) and “we must obey God rather than men” (Acts 4:29).

But, most of the requests are optional and are not matters of spiritual fidelity. If we treat all requests as valid, then we cheapen the real wrestlings of men like Desmond Doss and entire religions that served in non-combat roles, accomplishing wonderful things for the service of the United States. We need people like them so that if the government asks us to bow before idols or wage unjust wars or pray to anyone other than the living God, we have legal precedent and past wisdom to fight for God’s righteousness and his calling in our lives.

Hugh Latimer is famous for preaching an incredibly harsh message to King Henry VIII and being threatened with his life if he didn’t recant by the following Sunday. The very next Sunday he preached the same sermon with renewed fervor. Before preaching he asked himself aloud,

Hugh Latimer, dost thou know before whom thou art this day to speak? To the high and mighty monarch, the king's most excellent majesty, who can take away thy life if thou offendest; therefore take heed that thou speakest not a word that may displease!

But then consider well, Hugh, dost thou not know from whence thou comest; upon whose message thou art sent? Even by the great and mighty God! Who is all present! And who beholdeth all thy ways! And who is able to cast thy soul into hell! Therefore, take care that thou deliverest thy message faithfully. ~ Hugh Latimer

After the sermon Henry, instead of executing Latimer, laughed out loud and remarked that he wished he had more ministers with such conviction and integrity towards God.

In this case we must whole heartedly follow the United States Marine Corps Motto: Semper Fidelis, or Always Faithful. Most of our religious accommodation requests have been about fidelity to ourselves, not our God nor to our country. We’ve expended tremendous time and effort for individuals who were just trying to be served, and this is not right. No wonder so few were helped by this process, even when their requests were nearly unanimously approved. In trying to waive or change the laws of the country or organizations for individuals, we’ve failed to put service before self.

So, reader, learn this lesson well: religious accommodation is only warranted when those laws or policies directly contradict the will and commands of God. In cases of contradiction, all individuals are called to choose to serve God rather than men, even if it costs them dearly. If the law or policy is unjust, then it should be fought and fixed at the appropriate legislative level, not at the individual level. Lawmakers and policy makers must consider this before pushing mass requirements or mandates.

If we are faithful to religious liberty and human flourishing within organizations (discipline is good for people, despite what we’ve been led to believe: consider 1 Timothy 4:7-8, 2 Timothy 2:4, Hebrews 12:3-11), then we’ll see morale improve, a common goal be upheld, and individuals seek the highest and best usefulness of their team, nation, and world.

A person who is convinced that they cannot submit to the orders of those appointed over them while serving God should be helped to transition, within a reasonable timeframe, to a place where they can serve God and their conscience, which may very well be outside of the organization.

Permanently exiting an organization for a spiritual conviction may sound harsh, but as we learned by kowtowing to every request, the organization will soon stand for nothing. Take the military for example: the emphasis very quickly turned from defending the country to avoiding lawsuits and bad press. Fading away from long-standing convictions quickly led to forgetting priorities and allocating manpower to things that didn’t matter and didn’t help anyone, even the people requesting the help.

Nazarite Vow

Now, the top of this list is beards. The United States military has long held to the tradition of a clean-shaven appearance. Right or wrong, this is the currently codified law of the United States military. Every military member has raised their right hand and stated that they will obey orders. Beards were the main topic recently, and certainly will be again, so I want to consider a few things from a Judeo-Christian worldview on whether beards are an integral part of the faith.

First though, I want to look at temporary concessions where I think we can work with people for their good and the furtherance of the organizations where they’ll work. Take for example the Nazarite vow. Outlined in Numbers chapter six we see that a Nazarite vow has a lot of requirements. If you don’t want to read the whole list, know that it has dietary, grooming, sanitary, and sacrificial requirements. The Nazarite vow is an opportunity to seek the Lord in a similar way as a Levitical priest:

  1. Open for men or women from any (or no) tribe (Numbers 6:2)
  2. Was done intentionally for the purpose of holiness (Numbers 6:2)
  3. Required abstaining from wine and strong drink (Numbers 6:3)
  4. Required abstaining from vinegar made from wine or spirits (Numbers 6:3)
  5. Required abstaining from all grape products (Numbers 6:3-4)
  6. Was for a predetermined amount of time (Numbers 6:4, though lifelong exceptions occurred elsewhere)
  7. Precluded the cutting of the hair on the head, neither the beard nor the locks (hair) (Numbers 6:5)
  8. Required avoiding approaching or touching a dead body (Numbers 6:6-7)
  9. Required readiness to completely shave your head and making offering of doves if a dead body was touched (Numbers 6:9)
  10. Required quite a few offerings, including a ewe lamb, a ram, and bread (Numbers 6:14-17)
  11. Required completely shaving your head and burning your hair at the conclusion (Numbers 6:18)
  12. Came with an OPTIONAL additional contribution (Numbers 6:21)

All this to say, it’s not an easy vow, and while it does allow for the wearing of a beard, this is not a standalone command. The only optional pieces of this vow are

  1. If you’re going to take it
  2. How long you’re going to observe it
  3. If you want to include a money offering at the end

Paul upheld the vow and paid the expenses (likely the mandatory offerings from verses 14-17 and the optional offering from verse 21) of four Jews in Jerusalem as well as observing his own Nazarite vow in Acts 18:18.

To make it more complicated, we see men like Daniel observing a sort of vow in Daniel 10:3, similar to a Nazarite vow, but mainly focusing on avoiding wine and meat (of which the Nazarite vow says nothing) and anointing, and there is no indication that he shaved his head afterwards. Daniel’s fast or vow lasted twenty-one days. Mephibosheth also observed a modified version when he knew David’s life was in danger (2 Samuel 19:24).

So, all of this to say, we should be accommodating people who want to take temporary vows like this. If it’s in the military where there is some chance that interacting with a dead body is possible, the member should have a good plan to end the vow early (v.9). If they’re fasting from meat like Daniel, and there is a chance they will be in an austere location where vegetarian food is unavailable, they need to be sure they’ll serve others instead of endangering them, which may included breaking their vow early.

If the member is serious about growing a beard, ask them if they’d be willing to take leave; this could be part of the optional offering. We don’t want to be legalistic, as Daniel shows us there are other options, but we do want to be sincere and ensure our people are sincere. Again, the ultimate purpose of the Nazarite vow is to serve God, not to impose our rights or desires on others.

Joseph – The Shaved Ambassador

Do we have an example of someone who was serving God and people in austere, less than ideal, conditions? Yes we do. Was he required to wear a beard? Quite the opposite. Joseph spent years (at least two, maybe as many as thirteen: see Genesis 37:2, 41:1, 41:46) in prison, undoubtedly growing a pretty substantial beard. When it became apparent to the Pharaoh of Egypt that Joseph could help him, Joseph was summoned quickly. But he did not go directly to Pharaoh, the text is clear that he took some time to clean himself up, which included shaving his beard (Genesis 41:14).

There are many people worthy to be emulated in the Bible, none more so than Jesus Christ, but Joseph is near the top of that list. If Joseph took time to make himself presentable in service, and he did, then you’ll be very hard-pressed to convince me that the wear of a beard is a significant part of Christianity.

Shame in Shaving

But, you might say, shaving was seen as shameful in 2 Samuel 10 when a band of David’s men were mistreated and half their beards were shaved off and their clothing was rent in twain. The purpose of David leaving these men in hiding until their beards grew back was not so that they’d have beards, it was to let the reminder fade from how they had been shamefully treated on a diplomatic peace-making trip to supposed allies.

The shaving of half their beards was an outward sign of someone else’s sin and the inward shame of David’s men; the shaving was not the point, if it was the Ammonites would have shaved their whole heads. If any of your members are mistreated by an enemy, learn from this story to seek to restore them from their shame.

In Christianity, we see this mirrored by the transformation that turns sinners into saints (consider 1 Corinthians 6:9-11), who used to be horrible lawbreakers but are now washed, justified, and sanctified.

Jesus’ Beard

You might say, “Jesus had a beard! As a follower of Jesus, I should imitate him by having a beard! After all, 1 Corinthians 11:1 and 1 John 2:6 and 1 Peter 2:21!”

Have you ever studied how we know that Jesus had a beard? It is only mentioned in one place in scripture, Isaiah 50:6, where we see it torn from his face by those who were persecuting him. If Jesus’ beard somehow made him more holy, pious, or righteous, then we would expect the Bible to make something of it, rather than show that it was used to increase his obedience (to allow people to mistreat him) and shame and sorrow. Early Christians like Polycarp, Irenaeus, and Justin Martyr don’t mention Jesus having a beard at all, except to quote Isaiah 50:6.

Charles Spurgeon and Clement of Alexandria made arguments from nature that a beard is natural, scriptural, manly, and beneficial, and I can agree with them on all of those. But beards are all still optional. Spurgeon went on to say,

You might put on tomorrow a garment without seam, woven from the top throughout; you might put sandals on the soles of your feet; you might wear your beard uncut, and so say, “In all this I seek to be like Christ,” and you might even ride through the streets of Jerusalem upon a colt, the foal of a [donkey], but you would be no more like Christ than you are now. The greatest conformity to his image must be within. (emphasis mine)

Become an imitator of Christ by coming not to be served, but to serve (Mark 10:45), and enduring the suffering he endured (Romans 8:17-18, 1 Peter 4:1-3).

Final Thoughts

If a person wants to grow a beard, they are welcome to do it outside of an organization that requires it.

If you want to anoint your beard with oil, then do so physically outside of the military or when you’re on leave. If you want to do it metaphorically, then humble yourself and promote unity among brothers (Psalm 133:1-2, compare 1 John 2:20), there's no law against that. In multiple cases the beard was the downfall of the wearer (1 Samuel 17:35 (granted, it’s a lion that suffered, but it’s impossible to grab something by the beard if they don’t have a beard…) and 2 Samuel 20:9).

In other places it was a source of shame (like David’s servants, and Jesus’ humiliation). Ezra and Ezekiel used their beards to express mourning and judgement over the sin of the people (Ezra 9:2-6, Ezekiel 5:1-17). If Ezra didn’t have a beard, would he have been able to express his mourning? If Ezekiel didn’t have a beard, would he have been able to illustrate God’s judgment? In both cases these were apt illustrations, not requirements.

Conclusion

There is no room for religious accommodation for physical reasons in Christianity, only in matters dealing with eternity. When it comes to these accommodations, we’re not waiting for it to get approved on earth, we’re announcing that it is already approved in heaven.

Monday, July 13, 2026

Which Way to Pray?

Some years ago I was in the Middle East and wanted to purchase a Persian rug. From a previous trip I already had a nice large area rug, so I was just looking for a small throw rug. I picked one out, rolled it up, and brought it home. When I unrolled it, I unexpectedly tripped over something. Upon inspection, there was a small compass strategically glued to one end of the rug. I realized that it wasn’t just a Persian rug, it was a prayer rug, and the compass was meant to help a person kneeling on it find the direction to the Kaaba in Mecca, the location to which Muslims pray (Here’s a random fact: if you really wanted to pray toward Mecca from most places in the world, you’d pray downwards through the earth…unless we believe that prayers are affected by gravity and circumnavigate the globe).

I removed the compass and put that rug to work as a throw rug, but to this day there is still some glue residue in that spot. The real residue was the thought that stuck in my mind that day: Why don't Christians still pray in a certain direction?

A generic prayer rug facing an open window in a palatial setting overlooking a river like the Euphrates
After all, Daniel prayed in a certain direction from his exile in Persia,

When Daniel knew [that the document making prayer to anyone other than Darius illegal] had been signed, he went to his house where he had the windows in his upper chamber open toward Jerusalem. He got down on his knees three times a day and prayed and gave thanks before his God, as he had done previously. ~ Daniel 6:10 (emphasis mine)

Unlike Muslims, Daniel had a reason for praying toward Jerusalem. This was where the temple had been, and where God made his dwelling place on earth. When this temple was dedicated something interesting happened, while this was the dwelling place of God on earth, Solomon did not pray toward the temple, he “knelt on his knees in the presence of all the assembly of Israel and spread out his hands toward heaven…” (2 Chronicles 6:13, emphasis mine). Despite the dwelling place of God being with men, and the temple being completed, Solomon still prayed toward heaven.

Further he said, “Behold, heaven and the highest heaven cannot contain you, how much less this house that I have built” (2 Chronicles 6:18), but then he said something that explained Daniel’s directional prayer,

Yet have regard to the prayer of your servant and to his plea, O Lord my God, listening to the cry and to the prayer that your servant prays before you, that your eyes may be open day and night toward this house, the place where you have promised to set your name, that you may listen to the prayer that your servant offers toward this place. And listen to the pleas of your servant and of your people Israel, when they pray toward this place. And listen from heaven your dwelling place, and when you hear, forgive. ~ 2 Chronicles 6:19-20 (emphasis mine, Compare 1 Kings 8:30-48)

It wasn’t until Solomon finished his prayer that God filled the temple,

As soon as Solomon finished his prayer, fire came down from heaven and consumed the burnt offering and the sacrifices, and the glory of the Lord filled the temple. ~ 2 Chronicles 7:1 (emphasis mine)

Others who prayed toward Jerusalem were Jonah even from the belly of a fish (Jonah 2:4,7) and David when the temple of God was still just a tabernacle (Psalm 5:7).

But those who prayed fervently but without a physical direction include Nehemiah (Nehemiah 1:4-6), Ezekiel (Ezekiel 1:1-3), and Jeremiah (Lamentations 3:55-57), and most importantly, Jesus.

When Jesus visited Samaria there was a pile of rubble on top of Mount Gerizim and the temple on Mount Zion (in Jerusalem) had been rebuilt by Zerubbabel and renovated/expanded by Herod (which is why we call it “Herod’s temple”, I still call it “Zerubbabel’s temple”). Yet the Samaritans still insisted that Gerizim was the proper place to worship God. A Samaritan woman saw her chance to ask a prophet which mountain was the right mountain: “Our fathers worshipped on this mountain, but y’all say that in Jerusalem is the place where people ought to worship” (John 4:20, y’all is the proper translation of her question, implying that Judeans (the country surrounding Jerusalem), not just Jesus, said that Zion was the location of God’s temple). Jesus answered,

The hour is coming when neither on this mountain (Gerizim) nor in Jerusalem (Zion) will you worship the Father. You worship what you do not know; we worship what we know, for salvation is from the Jews (an abbreviated way to say Judeans). But the hour is coming, and is now here, when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for the Father is seeking such people to worship him. God is spirit, and those who worship him must worship in spirit and truth. ~ John 4:21-24

Jesus’ answer is clear, the proper place to pray to the Father is not location or direction dependent, it’s from the inward places: in spirit and truth. When I teach this to kids I point to the heart, “in spirit and,” I point to the head, “in truth."

In the Daniel account it’s easy to see why Daniel would pray toward Jerusalem. Or is it? To make it complicated, in Ezekiel 10 the glory of the Lord had departed from the temple, we call it “ichabod” or literally, “The Glory Has Departed” (the “i” is a negation of “chabod” or glory). So God no longer lived in Solomon’s temple…and there was no Solomon’s temple. Solomon’s temple had been burned not too long after the event of ichabod. This was some four decades before Daniel would pray in that direction. It is almost guaranteed that Daniel was familiar with those two events, yet he still prayed toward Jerusalem. Charles Spurgeon believed it was because Jerusalem was the symbol of God’s covenant promises, remembering God’s specific promises to restore his people, in another place he mentioned that Daniel had an expectation of a rebuilt temple. I believe Daniel knew the temple would be rebuilt because he prophesied that it would be destroyed again (Daniel 9:26), a prophecy that was fulfilled when Roman General Titus destroyed the temple in AD 70 and its stones were ripped one from another to access the gold that had flowed between them in a molten state (Matthew 24:2).

So while Daniel prayed toward Jerusalem, the time has come and is now here where we don’t pray toward Jerusalem because it’s no longer where God lives. We worship him in spirit and in truth. His temple and dwelling place on earth is his church, made up of living stones, and while another temple will be built sometime in the future, it won’t be where God lives. Jews still pray towards the Temple Mount at the Wailing Wall, but Christians pray in a different direction.

So which way do we pray? We pray toward God, "Our God is in the heavens, he does whatever he pleases" (Psalm 115:3, emphasis mine). Psalm 121:1-2 says that when the Psalmist looked to the hills, he wondered, “Where does my help come from?” It’s not from earth or sky, it’s from the maker of these things! In another place it says, “To you I lift up my eyes, O you who are enthroned in the heavens!” (Psalm 123:1, emphasis mine).

Jesus prayed for his disciples and all who would come to faith through their words by lifting up his eyes toward heaven (John 17:1). But David in Psalm 40:12 and 138:2, Ezra in Ezra 9:6, and the tax collector in Luke 18:13 looked down, in humility and shame. Why is that some would look up and others would look down?

Job 22:26 gives us the answer, that we delight ourselves in the Almighty and “lift up our faces to God.” We see the Israelites in the desert looking up, but not to heaven, toward a different object. Moses made a bronze serpent in the shape of the curse that was afflicting the wandering Israelites: if they’d look up, they would be healed and saved from the curse of their sin (Numbers 21:9). Jesus explicitly tells us that was a foreshadowing of him being lifted up on the cross (John 3:14-17), where we would would look to him, all the ends of the earth, and be saved (Isaiah 45:22).

When we pray we still hold to the example of that tax-collector, and humility is good, but it’s not the only way to pray. Often in the counseling room I’ll be actively and silently praying while listening to someone talk. It would be very distracting to bow my head right then and there. While driving it would be very inadvisable to close your eyes and bow your head. We walk by faith, not by sight (2 Corinthians 5:7), but that doesn’t mean literally that we should be driving with our eyes closed. I learned long ago to give invitations for the whole man, “With every head raised, every eye open, no feet moving, and no music playing: God is ready to hear your prayer of repentance, he’ll meet you at your seat or the altar is open.”

The most important direction to pray is toward God. Hezekiah, when he was dying, turned away from men so that he could pray directly to God (2 Kings 20:2-3, Isaiah 38:2-3), the Israelites had to look away from Moses and the fiery snakes to look to the bronze serpent (Numbers 21:9), the Psalmist looked away from the hills to seek help from the Lord (Psalm 121:1-2). The author of Hebrews tells us to run the race looking to Jesus (Hebrews 12:1-2). Where does God dwell? He dwells in the heavens, but he also lives in you if you’ve been born again (John 14:17, 1 Corinthians 3:16, 2 Timothy 1:14). In humility I recommend head bowed and eyes closed, in exaltation I recommend head raised and eyes up. We know the cross is just a symbol, but beloved try praying while looking to the cross, which is both a horrid symbol of the curse and a glorious symbol of God’s love. Stuart Townend wrote, “Come see the cross where love and mercy meet!” (Psalm 85:10-11).

And what about facing people? We rarely lay hands on those we’re praying for, but Jesus and Paul didn’t hesitate to physically touch those they were praying for. I’m not a mystic (dabbling in mysteries) but I have to admit that there is something mystically wonderful in the laying on of hands (compare 1 Timothy 4:14, 5:22) as well as lifting holy hands toward heaven (Nehemiah 8:6, Psalm 28:2, Psalm 63:4, Psalm 119:48, Psalm 134:2, Psalm 141:2, 1 Timothy 2:8, Hebrews 12:12).

When I and many other pastors give the benediction, we lift our hands in the direction of the congregation. This isn’t just tradition, this is following the example of Jesus, “He led [his disciples] out as far as Bethany, and lifting up his hands he blessed them” (Luke 24:50, compare Leviticus 9:22).

Now here’s where I might take this a bit too far, but I don’t think there is any sin in it. Daniel prayed toward Jerusalem, toward a destroyed temple, toward a hope for the future, and toward a place where he longed for the Spirit of God to dwell again. If you have a loved one who is running from God, I think your heart can yearn for them by praying in their general direction. After all, what are they but an empty structure where God has no dwelling place (Ephesians 2:1-3)? Our great desire is that they may be saved (Romans 9:3, 10:1), that God would make his dwelling place among them and walk among them, and that he would be their God and they would be his people (2 Corinthians 6:16). The Prodigal Son’s father was looking in the direction whence his son might return (Luke 15:20). Pray that they would say like Emily Elliott, "O come to my heart, Lord Jesus, there is room in my heart for Thee."

Now, you don’t have to pray in their general or specific direction, especially if you don’t know where they are. The greatest place to approach is the throne of grace (Hebrews 4:16). God knows where they are, even if they’re running, and it’s been rightly said (generally using Jonah 1:3 as an example), “God can hit a moving target.” So pray ultimately toward God for your wayward prodigal:

They can run from you, they can run from their upbringing, they can run from the church, they can run from God, but they can never run from your prayers. ~ Andrew van der Bijl

Paul concluded his list of spiritual warfare accoutrements with, “Praying at all times in the Spirit, with all prayer and supplication” (Ephesians 6:18). Elsewhere we pray unceasingly (1 Thessalonians 1:2, 3:10, 5:17, 2 Thessalonians 2:17). Pray that God will direct their hearts to the love of God and to the steadfastness of Christ (2 Thessalonians 3:5).

Our prayers can go where we cannot; there are no borders, no prison walls, no doors that are closed to us when we pray. ~ Andrew van der Bijl

So, all this to say, pray toward God. Pray toward his dwelling place, pray toward his Son, pray toward his Spirit. Pray looking up, pray looking down. Pray with eyes open beholding the horror of the cross, pray with eyes open in wonder beholding the empty cross because his work is finished and he is risen. Pray with eyes closed to shut out distractions, pray with head bowed to express your humility. Pray with hands lifted high, pray with hands laid on people (his temple on earth) within the church, pray toward the empty people you want God to indwell, pray towards the people filled with bitterness you want God to cleanse.

And above all, if you don’t know which direction to pray: Just pray.

Lift up your hands to the holy place and bless the Lord! ~ Psalm 134:2

Let us lift up our hearts and hands to God in heaven! ~ Lamentations 3:41

Jesus said to them, “I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.” ~ John 14:6

And if, by some happenstance, you do pray in the wrong direction or way, know that both the Son and the Spirit are actively praying for you if you've repented of your sins and are fully trusting in Jesus Christ for your comfort and salvation, and their prayers are perfect (Romans 8:27, Hebrews 7:25), and the Father will hear you directly, in Jesus' name (John 16:26-27), amen.

___________________________________

Further Reading:

Better Chaplain Series – Pray for People

The Privilege of Prayer

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Books Read - April-June 2026

Books I've listened to or read from April-June 2026 (contains Amazon Affiliate Links)

I've been busier than expected but I still worked through a lot of books, none were really ground breaking, but sometimes that's okay. I've been mainly reading from my local library, but that has introduced me to books and authors I wouldn't have looked at elsewhere; it's also limited me from reading some of my favorite authors. I'm going to start with the worst book because it was arguably the most important concept and one that is destroying Christianity as I write this.

Book that wasn't very good but made me think:

Total Forgiveness by R.T. Kendall - This one is tough because it honestly contains a lot of great things about the power of forgiveness, but it has one FATAL and DISASTROUS flaw. It may have been the pre-runner of Chris Brauns' wicked Unpacking Forgiveness or Vee Chandler's bitterness inducing Biblical Boundaries of Forgiveness. Honestly, most of Kendall's book is wonderful and focusing on God's amazing grace in total forgiveness. But where it fails is when talking about judging and withholding forgiveness. Kendall forgets that there is a Matthew 25:23-35 in the Bible and so he requires consequences instead of forgiveness; in Kendall's version of that story the servants (both of them) would have to be punished because there was a chance they would go out and defraud others. The problem with requiring repentance before forgiveness, besides it destroying the unforgiver with bitterness, that the Bible commands it (Colossians 3:13), and that Jesus forgave before repentance (Luke 22:32, Luke 23:34), is that it sets up an arbitrary measurement of repentance that no perpetrator can ever attain. Vee Chandler gives an example of a circumstance where a perpetrator goes public about their sin, quits their job, and leaves the state, and only then the victim would forgive them. Can you imagine Jesus requiring that of those he forgives? If you leave the measurement of repentance in the victim's hands, then you will make them twice the sons of hell as yourself. I hate to be so harsh on this book, because a good bit of it was really good and helpful, but there is a scourge in Christianity destroying relationships and souls and locking people into bitterness, and Total Forgiveness helps to condemn people by not not encouraging Total Forgiveness. The Bible is exceedingly clear on forgiveness, and what Kendall, Brauns, Chandler and others (Teasi Cannon will soon contribute a book to this newer heresy) are peddling is not it.

Books that were okay and made me think:

I, Robot by Isaac Asimov - As the world gets closer to being inundated by A (There is no I in Artificial Intelligence), it was interesting to be part of a book club that was reading this book published in 1950. Asimov saw many of the challenges coming, such as people falling in love with robots, abandoning human relationships, and robots having competing and broken constraints. I'm leaving it in this sections instead of higher because Asimov's interaction with deity and conscience were almost non-existent (except as jokes or plot filler), which is honestly the most important part of the future of A. More than anything else, this book helped me to become disillusioned with the failure that is A and to hope to publish more articles and works in the futures on the Christian response to A.

Appetite for America: Fred Harvey and the Business of Civilizing the Wild West One Meal at a Time by Stephen Fried - Having grown up seeing Fred Harvey busses all over my hometown, I realized I had no idea what the name meant. I actually know where there is a scrapped Fred Harvey bus still visible to the public. In reading this book I hoped to learn more about Fred Harvey, and I was pleasantly surprised to learn many other things about the Southwest from this book. Fried traces the rise and fall of Fred Harvey the brand, starting with Fred Harvey the man. The research is impeccable and the storytelling is for the most part good. Fried took this opportunity to provide smaller biographies and vignettes throughout the book, some interesting, and some wearisome. I'm listing it as just "ok" as there is no real moral to the story; maybe Fried wanted us to find our own moral in it, and it was clear to me that building a brand is no way to build a legacy. Fried also spent a bit of time glorifying criminals, malcontents, and prostitutes that wasn't super helpful to the forward movement of the story. My favorite part was the debate over building a hotel on the edge of the Grand Canyon and how it almost was a massive eye-sore until cooler heads and a president intervened; that hotel, the El Tovar, to this day is one of the most beautiful buildings in the world.

Books that were good and made me think:

He Chose the Nails by Max Lucado - Lucado focuses on the sovereignty of God in the death of Jesus. The title is better than the book, but the book is good enough. The absolute best part of the book was the point that when Jesus nailed to the cross, he could look and see a lot of things, the nails, the cross, the Romans, the crowd, but he could also see the hand of God nailed to that cross. Lucado also mentions the sovereignty of when Pontius Pilate nailed a sign above Jesus head which likely contributed to the salvation of the thief to Christ's right.

Leading Character by Dan B. Allender - Allender focuses on the most important thing in any leadership role being character, not ability. It was a great reminder to serve the Lord Christ rather than men, to not be afraid of "public sanctification", and the fact that every person has unique giftings and failings and that God is working in both.

The Elephant and the Dragon by Robyn Meredith - Similarly to how I was hoping to understand Artificial Intelligence better, I was also wondering about the meteoric rise of China out of the 1990s to where they are today. An older book, The Elephant and the Dragon examines the growth of China and India up until 2008 (when it was published), and while I focused more on China, it was interesting to learn about India's similar growth. With many good insights, the primary take-away is that China has grown to where they are by modifying their socialism into a form of authoritative capitalism, and Meredith introduced me to the idea that helped China out of Maoism: If you come to a fork in the road with Communism to the left and Capitalism to the right, signal left and turn right. I was shocked by the inflation under Mao where many provinces were required to pay more in taxes than they even made, all because of overinflated reporting to try to impress Mao and others. My favorite part about the book was that it made me see Indians and Chinese as people attempting to thrive in life, not as nameless foreigners or enemies or competitors, and it would be a good idea for Christians to read this book so that we can see them as people in desperate need of a Saviour.

The Kill Chain by Christian Brose - I read this for work and it was helpful from a chaplain standpoint that everyone in a military or a society or an organization or a church is in a valuable place to contribute. Brose focuses on the many moving pieces that are required to complete a "Kill Chain" where the mission is accomplished. Take a moment to consider which is more important? The pilot who flies the plane or the person who fixes it? The person who fires the ammunition or the person who ensures the ammunition is reliable? The army or the people who feed the army? The person sending the email or the people who make sure the network delivers emails? Brose helped me to see a concept I already knew about, but now I understand more clearly, every single piece of an organization is vital to its success, and we can't imagine ourselves as individual heroes, but as a body that is able to accomplish a mission if and only if we're working together.

The Bible Jesus Read by Philip Yancey - Yancey helped me understand that the battle for the Old Testament has been raging for far longer than the lifetime of my ministry. I love how Yancey frames the message that Jesus wouldn't have read the New Testament, because it hadn't been written yet. The little vignettes of Job, Deuteronomy, the Psalms, Ecclesiastes, and the Prophets were short but helpful. Christian, if you're not reading the Old Testament, you're not reading the very Bible the Jesus read.

The End of Reason by Ravi Zacharias - A little dated now, this book looks at the arguments of famous atheists of about twenty years ago. Many of their arguments have fizzled and died, as expected, but Zacharias has a wonderful way of pointing his answers to eternal truths, and so it is still an encouraging book, though you're unlikely to find a Sam Harris follower or Christopher Hitchens groupie to try these arguments out on.

Books that were great and made me think:

What's So Amazing about Grace by Philip Yancey - I said I'd read it again, and I did. I've sung the song, I've read the book, I've seen grace be amazing in a million ways, and yet I continually need that reminder. The real life examples Yancey gives are miraculous and wonderful, and it brings immense joy to my heart that there are billions of other stories just like them, some of them actively happening in my life. Christian, if you don't know how amazing grace is, or you need a reminder, this book will rock your world and motivate you to take Christ to a lost and dying world!

The Grand Weaver by Ravi Zacharias - Zacharias takes the imagery of master clothing weavers in India making masterpieces while their young sons work behind the scenes and don't see the progress. He ties it together that God is working all things for good to those who love him and are called according to his purpose. The worst thing that might be happening to a believer may be the best thing that could be happening, they just don't see it yet, or how it is playing together in God's grand design. The ultimate call is to trust God's wisdom, power, and plan, and this book brought me a lot of comfort.

Absolute Surrender by Andrew Murray - I read this book at the recommendation of a friend and I was greatly blessed. We don't realize how many things we're holding onto while feigning submission to God, and Murray helps to release our entire lives, fortunes, and eternities to the one who loved us so much as to surrender his own will to save a people who he then calls to surrender their wills. I hope to read this book again in the near future with friends or family.

Humility by Andrew Murray - I'm sure I read this classic many years ago, but it was a blessing to reread it and be reminded that Christ must increase and I must decrease. I've linked to a different copy than I read because my version had all of the Bible verses switched over to the NIV, so they didn't match Murray's thoughts, and it had quotes at the beginning of every chapter, some good, and some from mystical heretics with highly questionable beliefs. I won't detract from Murray for this, because he didn't do it, some other publisher thought tampering with it was a good idea. My favorite and most impactful part was that the true test of your humility is how you treat and serve others.

Repentance: What it Means to Repent and Why We Must Do So by J.C. Ryle - Ryle has been one of my favorite authors for a good long while, so it was to my shame that I've never read this book. An old friend recommended it and I actually read it twice (it's quite short). Ryle points out that repentance is absolutely necessary as "Heaven is a prepared place, and those who go to heaven must be a prepared people." He encourages believers to know what sin is, sorrow over it, confess it, forsake it, and hate it. His examples of King David and the thief on the cross drive home the thought. And I found a quote I'd been looking for for a long time about repentance at the last moment, or as Ryle calls it, "Late repentance": "One thief was saved that no man might despair, but only one, that no man might presume." The kingdom of heaven is at hand, the time is fulfilled, let us repent of our sins and trust in Christ!

Book that I wrote that I think is pretty good:

Seeking the Cure, Finding the Christ by Canyon Shearer - I wrote this book after I was greatly encouraged preaching through the story of Naaman and the seven people who helped him find God, and greatly discouraged by the tragedy of Gehazi's greed. I also wanted, like Yancey's The Bible Jesus Read, to help believers see the depth and beauty of the Old Testament and to lay a firm foundation for the joy that is revealed in the promised Messiah who is able to wash away our sin and shame. I released this entire book on this blog if you're interested, start at chapter 1: Irredeemable.

Friday, June 26, 2026

Conclusion - Seeking the Cure, Finding the Christ

This post is a chapter from the book, Seeking the Cure, Finding the Christ, which is the book version of multiple sermons preached from 2022 to 2025. Since this book was meant to bless the church I am also making it available on this blog.

Conclusion

There is a lost and dying world full of men like Naaman who will perish in their sins unless someone tells them of Jesus, mighty to save. Your call is to be one part of their redemption. I’m not proposing some magical formula of seven touches to salvation; for some it is far fewer and others it requires many more. However many it takes, God uses human beings to publish his peace and redemption to the world.

What a blessing it is to be used as an instrument of redemption in the master’s hand. Don’t make excuses:

The Israelite Girl was too little and too young.

Naaman’s Wife had been hurt one too many times.

Ben-Hadad had burned too many bridges.

Jehoram didn’t even know God.

Elisha was too busy and too important.

Elisha’s Servant hadn’t graduated seminary yet.

Naaman’s Servants only knew one verse.

If they didn’t make excuses, neither should you; God has put you where you are to be a faithful ambassador. Maybe you’re not as famous or fruitful as you’d like to be. Some of the most famous men of the first century were Paul and Apollos, yet look at how Paul addresses their fame:

What then is Apollos? What is Paul? Servants through whom you believed, as the Lord assigned to each. I planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the growth. So neither he who plants nor he who waters is anything, but only God who gives the growth. ~ 1 Corinthians 3:5–7

I believe in heaven we’ll be enthralled as we are able to continuously hear the intricacies of the interweaving of testimonies and how God used ordinary people and events to change eternal destinies. Will someone say to you, “Because you prayed for me I had the boldness to go talk to this person sitting next to me?” Or will a tribulation in your life that seemed to have no heavenly purpose be linked to your future faithfulness that put you in just the right place to share just the right verse?

People talk about the glories of heaven as streets of gold, gates of pearl, and walls of precious stones, and I do look forward to that, but so much more do I want to hear how God has used you and I to seek his lost sheep and shine his light to the world. If you want to find me in heaven, I’ll be somewhere on the right side of the throne listening to testimony after testimony while I praise my Saviour through it all. I know we’ll sing a new song in heaven, but I’d be content to just sing Hallelujah, What a Saviour (also known as Man of Sorrows) by Philip Bliss:

“Man of sorrows!” what a name
For the Son of God who came
Ruined sinners to reclaim!
Hallelujah, what a Savior!

Guilty, vile and helpless we,
Spotless Lamb of God was He;
Full atonement! can it be?
Hallelujah, what a Savior!

And I expect the best part will be when the Holy Spirit will fill in all of the details that we could not possibly imagine here on earth. I once led a man to Christ who called my office phone number on New Year’s Day; I should not have been in the office, but I had just stopped by before I officiated a wedding. I’m so thankful I was in the right place to answer that desperate caller. He sought hope in a hopeless situation and God blessed me to help him find salvation in Christ.

On another occasion I counseled a man in the evening because it was the only time that worked with his schedule. As we concluded well after dark and were walking to the parking lot, I was surprised to find another man sitting in the lobby hoping to talk. He had been on his way to commit suicide at a lake near my office when he saw the lights on in the chapel and had the random thought, “I wonder what God thinks about what I’m about to do?”

I try not to stay at work late or work on holidays so that I can spend that time with my family, but on both of those occasions God had me right where I was supposed to be. Some of my hardest and most uncomfortable situations have led to the greatest ministry opportunities.

I pray regularly, “Lord, give us the words to speak, the boldness to speak them, and the people to speak them to.” Why would God use us to publish his peace to the world? Because his Word is the word of life, whether it be spoken by Jesus himself, an angel from heaven, or just a nobody trying to tell everybody about somebody who can save anybody. Jesus has entrusted this Word to the most unworthy of people to show his power and redemption:

God uses unlikely people.
He uses flawed people.
He uses failing people.
He uses sinful people,
because if he didn't,
He wouldn't have any people to use. ~ John MacArthur

Beloved, are you a faithful servant of your master? When he calls you to speak, do you speak? Are you loving the people he’s put in your life? Are you part of their story as they’re part of your story as they are part of Christ’s story?

If the gospel be not preached, Christ is, as it were, buried. Therefore, let us stand as witnesses and do him this honor. ~ John Calvin

Above all else, make sure that you don’t miss Jesus in this story or your story. He is still mighty to save, no matter your malady and sin. If you’ll seek him, I guarantee you’ll find him when you seek him with all of your heart.

I can’t guarantee healing from leprosy, but I can guarantee cleansing from sin, because my God is living and able to cleanse from all unrighteousness.

Previous - Still Working

Still Working - Seeking the Cure, Finding the Christ

This post is a chapter from the book, Seeking the Cure, Finding the Christ, which is the book version of multiple sermons preached from 2022 to 2025. Since this book was meant to bless the church I am also making it available on this blog.

Still Working

How will you apply these principles? Who do you identify with the most in this story? Let’s do a quick review of some of the things that God is calling you to; surely this list is not comprehensive, so don’t limit your response to just my insights. The questions are largely rhetorical, but it would be helpful to answer them with a friend.

Naaman

Are you irredeemable like Naaman? Are you convinced by scripture and conscience that your sins and maladies will keep you out of the kingdom of heaven? If you’ll come to the Lord Christ, you can be washed whiter than snow (Isaiah 1:18). While leprosy, sin, and unrighteousness and all of their associated titles will keep you from being redeemed, a better promise exists for those who will repent of their sins and put their trust in Christ,

And such were some of you. But you were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and by the Spirit of our God. ~ 1 Corinthians 6:11

Joseph Hart, alluding to Psalm 109:31, Hebrews 7:25, and John 6:37 among others summarizes the promise,

Come, ye sinners, poor and needy,
weak and wounded, sick and sore,
Jesus ready stands to save you,
full of pity, love, and power.

Whether your sin was inherited, foisted upon you, or if you dove headlong into it and are reaping the consequences, the truth is that the blood of Jesus cleanses from all unrighteousness. Redemption is available and freely offered.

Be like Naaman and seek the cure while it may be found, and may you, like he, find that knowing the healer is infinitely more valuable than obtaining the cure.

The Slave Girl

Can you identify with that little slave girl? Through no fault of your own you are suffering and God has sent you into exile in a foreign land. Here you have no lasting city, the people speak a strange and vulgar language, and you know that your home is a long way off. Will you seek to be a blessing to the city and people you’re in exile with? Can you sing Keith and Kristyn Getty’s song Jesus, Draw Me Ever Nearer,

Jesus draw me ever nearer
As I labor through the storm
You have called me to this passage
And I’ll follow, though I’m worn

May this journey, bring a blessing
May I rise on wings of faith
And at the end of my heart’s testing
With your likeness let me wake.

It may appear that you are insignificant, lost, and hopeless in a foreign land, but if you know the Lord you know that he will be with you, he will be a light unto you, and he will use you to light a world full of darkness. John called Jesus the light of men (John 1:4–5), then Jesus claimed that title for himself (John 8:12, 9:5), but amazingly he called you, dear Christian, the light of the world (Matthew 5:14). Will you hide your light under a basket? Or will you let it shine?

Isaiah 60:1–3 is clearly about the promised Messiah shining on the whole world, but it’s just open enough that we see we get to reflect his light and have that passage fulfilled in us as we shine light on a lost and dying world.

Arise, shine, for your light has come,
    and the glory of the Lord has risen upon you.
For behold, darkness shall cover the earth,
    and thick darkness the peoples;
but the Lord will arise upon you,
    and his glory will be seen upon you.
And nations shall come to your light,
    and kings to the brightness of your rising.

Ensure you have a personal relationship with the God of the world, but don’t let it be so personal that those around you don’t benefit from it. Worship God in your heart, but show that he is worthy by publishing his peace to the world!

Will we offer our lives, or just the songs we have sung? ~ Billy and Cindy Foote

Naaman’s Wife

Do you need to put aside your bitterness and contention to help someone who doesn’t deserve to be helped? To love someone who is unlovable?

Humble yourself to be discipled by someone who knows more about love and forgiveness than you do. Seek the highest and best usefulness of the people around you, even if you don’t like them and especially if you don’t think they deserve it. Consider Corrie Ten Boom who forgave the very man who mistreated her and contributed directly to her sister’s death:

Even as the angry vengeful thoughts boiled through me, I saw the sin of them. Jesus Christ had died for this man; was I going to ask for more? Lord Jesus, I prayed, forgive me and help to forgive him…Jesus, I cannot forgive him. Give me your forgiveness. And so I discovered that it is not on our forgiveness any more than on our goodness that the world’s healing hinges, but on his. When he tells us to love our enemies, he gives–along with the command–the love itself. ~ Corrie Ten Boom

Who can you love today who is unlovable? Wife, you might start with your husband. Husband, you might start with your wife. But don’t stop there.

The King of Syria

Someone on this planet needs you to spend and be spent to move them closer to Jesus. What resources has God entrusted to you for their sake?

Someone needs an urgency and an exhortation because they are presuming on God’s grace and they think that someday they’ll get right with God. Who can you remind that tonight their soul might be required of them?

Someone needs an advocate to speak up for them. Who can you be a voice for today? Who can you help on their journey to be the person God’s desires them to be? How many young preachers are hindered because no one will lend them a pulpit or a recommendation?

God doesn’t need your good works, but your neighbor does. ~ Martin Luther

The King of Israel

Does anyone think you think you’re God? Humble yourself today to declare, not deny, but declare, that Jesus Christ is the true God and Saviour; the only name given under heaven by which we must be saved.

Help people on their journey to meet him, don’t stand in their way. Don’t offer false salvation or false hope, even if you don’t know the true hope of humanity.

When you and I are nothing, God is all; and when we are empty, there is room for God to fill us. ~ Charles Spurgeon

Elisha

Be found faithful in the work that Christ has prepared beforehand for you to walk in. Sometimes that work will be monumental, and other times it will feel small.

A small thing is a small thing, but faithfulness in a small thing is a great thing. ~ Hudson Taylor

Be faithful if you’re called to witness to the leading general of a foreign nation, and be faithful if you’re making unnamed disciples or helping to build a house.

If you cannot honor God in your shop, or in your kitchen, or in your daily work, you will not honor Him anywhere else. ~ Charles Spurgeon

Do you have a grasp of the needs of your community? Whether that’s the world, the nation, the state, the city, or the neighborhood? Do you know how to pray for your neighbors and coworkers? Have they heard about the cleansing and saving work of Jesus? Who is going to tell them?

Are you buying the truth and not selling it? Can you say the following verse faithfully with the Apostle Paul?

I coveted no one’s silver or gold or apparel. ~ Acts 3:6

Elisha’s Servant

You have been entrusted to deliver the message of eternal life, to proclaim that Jesus is the way, the truth, and the life, and no one comes to the Father except through him. Are you faithfully proclaiming this message? Are you an ambassador of the king? Is the king pleased with your message and how you’re handling his Word? Have you kept quiet where you should have spoken? Have you spoken where you should have kept quiet?

When you were sent, did you go?

If faith comes by hearing, who have you told? ~ Aaron Johnson

Naaman’s Servants

Are you a peacemaker or a peacebreaker? Are you encouraging people to trust and obey the promises of God? Or are you helping them to get mad at people and embittered towards God?

How many Bible verses do you know? Are you putting them to work? These men only knew one Bible verse, but they put it to work, and we’re still talking about it nearly three thousand years later.

Have you moved people closer to salvation and God?

Gehazi

What sorts of things are drawing your affections away from the living Christ?

Are the things you’re living for worth Christ dying for? ~ Leonard Ravenhill

Which weights and sins have clung so closely and have stopped or slowed your race? How can you cut them free today?

Think about the last time you fell into grievous sin; did you repent immediately? What might keep you from repentance and seeking the cleansing power of Jesus? What are you hiding? What does it profit a man to gain the riches of the world and contract leprosy? What does it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his soul?

He is no fool who gives up what he cannot keep to gain what he cannot lose. ~ Jim Elliott

God can use you in spite of your sin; he can use you as a bad example, or as a witness to the miracles he is performing. You can know that he is mighty to save and still not repent or seek his blessings.

Don’t perish having read this book or your Bible and hearing the redemptive message meant to make you wise for salvation in Christ Jesus (2 Timothy 3:15). If God can save Naaman, if God can save me, then God can save you. But unless you repent, you will perish like Gehazi and Judas.

Jesus

Notice that none of these people pretended to be the savior. There is one Saviour, and we are not him. We needed a perfect man to make peace between us and God, we needed God in the flesh to sanctify us from all unrighteousness, and we needed a mediator to intercede for us continually. Jesus of Nazareth stepped out of heaven to bear our sins, suffering and scorn, and to lay down his life so he could take it back up again.

Because he lives, he is able to save to the guttermost all those who draw near to him in faith. He is able to wash us whiter than snow, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. He is able to make us new, and he is even able to use us in our afflictions.

For all of these reasons it seems impossible to emulate Jesus. So maybe we’ll just be still and know that he is God (Isaiah 46:10).

But beloved, you are called to look like and act like him (1 Corinthians 11:1, Romans 8:29). Let’s start with the fact that there are communicable (attributes we can imitate) and incommunicable (attributes that belong only to God), so don’t try to be God or the Saviour or the Holy Spirit in anyone’s life: rather point them to the Father, Son, and Spirit who are able to fulfill those roles perfectly. They must increase, and we must decrease.

But beloved, we can seek and save the lost, we can bring his healing to the world, and we can love the unlovable, touch the untouchable. If it costs something to see someone redeemed, pay that price. If it requires time to love someone, spend it. If this kind can only be cast out by prayer and fasting, then pray and fast! If somebody might have to die to take the message to a lost and dying world, then be that somebody. Perhaps you’ve come into the kingdom for just such a time as this.

Go for sinners, and go for the worst. ~ William Booth

Ross King wrote a wonderful song recently called Like Jesus, and in it he juxtaposes that many of the things Jesus did and said cost him dearly; if we are called to imitate Jesus, then consider some of these lyrics.

I wanna be like Him when he tells the Pharisees
    the depth of their own sin.
But I don’t really wanna be like Jesus later when
    he dies for them.

I wanna be like Him knockin’ down those soldiers
    just by sayin’, “I am He.”
But not so much the part right after when He
    surrenders peacefully.

I refuse to pick and choose
    the parts of Jesus that are easiest
    to bow down to…

And finally beloved, what is your answer to that old hymn by E. A. Hoffman, Are You Washed in the Blood?

Have you been to Jesus for the cleansing power?
Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?
Are you fully trusting in his grace this hour?
Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?

Lay aside the garments that are stained with sin.
Oh be washed in the blood of the Lamb!
There’s a fountain flowing for the soul unclean.
Oh be washed in the blood of the Lamb!

If you’re not washed in the blood of the Lamb, I implore you, in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, be reconciled to God!

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