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For more media content from Grace
Community Church in San Antonio, Texas, go to gccsatx.com. Hello, I'm Phil Johnson, Executive
Director of Grace to You, and I'm in the studio today with
pastor and Bible teacher, John MacArthur. Hello, John. Hi, Phil.
Great to be with you again. Let's get right to it. We're
calling this interview, The Case Against the R-Rated Church. What
do we mean when we say the R-Rated Church? Well, who'd have thought,
right? Yeah. The R-rated church. Staggering. What do we mean by
that? How about this? Foul, coarse
language in the pulpit. Sexually explicit language in
the pulpit. Cheap jokes about sacred things. Overt sexual references making
public what should be private. aggressive, purposeful integration
of pop culture, I think at its basest level, and secular entertainment
at its basest level into the worship service. I think it begs
the point that it's not even possible to consider it a worship
service. And then you have the amazing
trend on sex-oriented challenge programs, where you have pastors
telling their people they need to have sex every day for 30
days, or sex every day for 14 days, or sex every day for seven
days. This is supposed to transform
their marital life. These are the kinds of things
that are commonplace much more than most of us would ever realize. And some of you out there are
saying, are you kidding me? And we would tell you if you
were to look on the internet, and you've got a watch that you
probably don't do that, you would be shocked at the explicit nature
of these kinds of things that are running rampant in the name
of the church. Yeah, especially in the Christian districts of
the Internet where you think you might be safe. In a similar
vein, I've noticed four times over the past year, at least
four different times, there have been news stories about different
churches who've had these series on sex or sex challenges, that
sort of thing, and advertised it with billboards that have
created a stir in the community, and people in the community who
aren't even believers are outraged at the carnality reflected in
the church's advertising. You know, when I was flying into
Dallas some months ago, I saw that church where a massive banner
stretched across the whole side of the building, the sexual revolution
begins here. That's what it said. Selling
sex. Yeah, now this is not an isolated
problem, right? No, it's coming clear that this
is widespread. It's so widespread now, as you
well know, Phil, that public media, public journalists, public
television, you know, news stations are picking up on it. It's the
new attraction in the church from a media standpoint. This
is hot stuff when the church sort of joins the pornographic
trend. Yeah, we looked at a couple of
news items about this trend, and the interesting thing is
that most of these news accounts actually express a degree as
well of shock that churches would stoop to this level. Yeah, I
think, you know, traditionally there is a certain sense about
the dignity, the propriety that a church should manifest. And I think those kinds of sensibilities
are part of our society, part of our culture, and I think it
does shock non-believing people to see churches sink to this
level. Well, it certainly shocks me.
If you had said to me five years ago that we would have a conversation
like this, I would have thought, that's crazy. It'll never get
to that point. People always ask me the question,
what's the next trend? You know, where is it going?
What's going to be the next issue? No matter how many times I have
been asked that question in the past, I could never have comprehended
that the church would embrace the pornographic movement. I
have in my hand an article called, A Proposal for Christian Pornography. Christian pornography, this is
by some spiritual leader, some church, some evangelical, right? And he says Christian pornography
is going to be good because when we do Christian pornography,
you know, we're going to help couples have better sex life.
But there are some rules for Christian pornography. This Christian
pornography must be uplifting, inspirational, focusing on strengthening
Christian marriage and Christian faith. And oh, by the way, no
profanity is allowed. Those are the rules for the correct
use, it says, of Christian pornography. Now, I'm shocked like you when
you say you really didn't see this coming, but the fact is,
let me play for you something you said 30 years ago where I
think you saw this tendency in its mildest form and decried
it even then. This is from more than 30 years
ago, your series on Ephesians 5. Here's what you said. We live
in an age when fornication or sexual sin is rampant. You wouldn't
be adverse to call this society the sexy 70s. We are inundated,
drowned, preoccupied, and our senses are dulled to the potency
of the attack that comes against us. It's a tragic thing because
it affects the church. We have sex madness, I'm afraid,
even in the church. It really shocks me, some of
the books that are now being written by Christian people.
Sex for Christians. I've thrown some of them in the
trash can. I've had some books sent to me, written by Christians,
published by Christian publishers, dealing with the issue of sex,
read about three pages and pitched it in the trash. You know what's
happened is the world is selling this so effectively that the
church is coming in the back door and buying some of it and
sort of trying to sanctify it. You can't sanctify this. I heard
one person say in his premarital counseling he advised the couple
to see each other naked before they were married so that they
would have some idea of what they were getting into. Ludicrous. This isn't something clinical
that can be dealt with in that fashion. There are some who even
suggested premarital sex relationships for Christians before they're
married. That's pretty good. Thirty years ago I said all that?
Yeah, I think you were reacting to books that were... There was
a... Oh, I know. There was a wave of those books. I remember the
books. But you know, it sort of had its little day, and it
went away really fast. That's not going to happen in
the current environment. And I think, Phil, one of the
major contributors to this in the Church is that the Churches
in general are so full of non-Christian people. They're just filled with
non-Christian people. I think many of them are, quote-unquote,
led by or pastored by non-Christian people. I just think that the
church today We call it an evangelical church. Nobody would say, I'm
a liberal. People aren't promoting liberalism,
neo-orthodoxy, all that kind of thing. Everybody wants to
be an evangelical. But I think we have within the big word evangelical
just massive numbers of people who have no real salvation. And they're attracted to all
of this stuff. And if you can just sanctify this, it's a perfect
world for them. How did the church get so full
of people who perhaps aren't really even Christians? Well,
you can lay the responsibility on the negative side, you can
lay it at the feet of the marketing strategy that came in in the
church growth movement. In order to sell Jesus, they
stripped the gospel. that they became minimalists,
that they developed a sub-Christian gospel. Well, we've said this
before. You take a book like The Purpose-Driven
Life, The Purpose-Driven Life selling in the tens of millions,
supposedly to lead people to salvation, and there is not one
single mention of the doctrine of justification or the resurrection
of Jesus Christ. And in order to be saved, you
have to believe God raised Him from the dead, Romans 10, 9,
10. So I think it is the market strategy which has minimalized
the gospel, just turned it into some kind of sub-saving, over-simplified
message. And then I think the second element
that really has produced this is connected to that, and that
is the idea that we have to make non-believers comfortable in
the church. So we never really deal with
sin the way sin should be dealt with, and that's essential if
we're going to have genuine conversion. I think popularity has been the
goal, and we've sold out to a damning lie as to what salvation really
is for the sake of popularity. So you're really saying that
you don't see this, the root problem here isn't merely a lack
of sanctification among people who are saved. It goes back even
further than that. No, I think genuine believers,
for the most part, are not responsive to this. You know, there may
be some immature genuine believers who can't quite figure it out,
but for somebody who genuinely has been transformed, whose longings
are for holy things, who is doing everything in his or her life
to resist the flesh, these kinds of things seem intrusive. Now we listened to some calls
that came into the church that was promoting sex everywhere,
and the people called up, and Christian people called up and
said, this is outrageous, why are you doing this? You're a
sex club hiding behind the name of a church. I think that's the
kind of response you might get from genuine Christians. It's
intrusive, it's It opens up areas that they know are not helpful
in their own spiritual development. But I think non-believers are
happy to imbibe this, happy to embrace this. People sitting
in a church thinking they're Christians because they go to
the church and they have warm feelings about Jesus. This is a perfect
kind of religion for them. I think very little different
maybe than worshiping in Corinth. You know, at the pagan temple
where sex dominated the worship. We all know that from the New
Testament, that temple priestesses were essentially temple prostitutes,
and people worshipped by going and communing with the deities
through having sex with a prostitute. So that's been a part of religion
in the past, even in the New Testament era, pagan religion.
That's always had a high level of appeal. Look at Islam. You
can be a Muslim and you can have multiple wives and you can die
and waiting for you if you die in a jihad or seventy-two virgins
on green pillows waiting for you to have eternal sex with
them. You can always make religion more attractive by selling sex. That's a bigger appeal, I think,
than selling celibacy. That's why there are so few priests.
But I do think that works with people who are religious but
never really have been transformed. I think when the Spirit of God
really transforms a heart, there are spiritual instincts that
draw us away from those kinds of things because we know they
pander to the flesh and they're not helpful in our spiritual
growth. And even beyond those spiritual instincts, don't you
think there's something in the conscience of every person that
says, This isn't right. Some of those phone calls we
listened to were unbelievers who were offended. Right, and
that's what we were saying earlier, that people are shocked that
quote-unquote Christians would do this. Absolutely. I don't
think you can get away from the fact that the law of God is written
in the heart. Part of the law of God, of course,
is a moral law that relates to sexual behavior. I think part
of the agony and pain of our sexually liberated society is
that people are dealing with such massive guilt, because although
they're not violating their Christian commitment, because they're non-Christians,
they are violating the law of God written in their heart, their
conscience is accusing and accusing and accusing and accusing, and
I think it's part of the horrendous stress and pain and unfulfillment
and dissatisfaction that comes to these kinds of people. you
can sort of aid and abet the release of that guilt by saying,
hey, we have Christian pornography, we have sex in church. If you
can work to sanctify it, you can mitigate some of that that's
naturally in people's hearts. I mean, if the church tells you
that Christian pornography is okay and, you know, you ought
to have sex every single day and reduce your marriage relationship
to nothing more than a sex act. That's coming from the church.
That kind of helps with whatever guilt you might be feeling. Yeah,
now that prompts me to say this. I've dialogued with a number
of people, as I know you have, who want to justify this kind
of thing, and there's some standard arguments that they use to justify
it. Let me throw some of those arguments
at you and see how you would answer them. One of the key ones,
first of all, they would say, well, the Bible itself is R-rated. Scripture talks about sex. There
are certain words in Scripture that you wouldn't want to read
in a public venue, in the King James Version at least. What
do you say to that? I mean, the Song of Solomon talks
about the marital relationship. I think that the propriety of
the Bible is clear. I don't think that there's any
sentence, paragraph, or word anywhere in Scripture that in
and of itself is prurient, designed to elicit lustful thoughts or
lead to sin. I don't think anything in the
Bible is designed to be a temptation because God cannot tempt. God
is the author of Scripture, He tempts no man. That is explicitly
stated in Scripture. The Bible can talk about sex
because sex is a reality. You can talk about it, I can
talk about it without having a prurient approach to it. Look,
I've been preaching for 40 years in the pulpit, and we've talked
about a lot of things in the Bible in the 40 years that I've
been preaching. I don't know that anybody's ever come to me
when they edited my tapes in 40 years and said, you know,
this was sexually explicit, this could be read as a temptation,
this was a lust-inducing statement. That is the farthest thing from
my mind. I don't think anybody's ever
taken anything like that out of anything I've said, and I
take it right out of the Scripture and explain exactly what the
Bible means. I think that's false accusation. The Bible does not
do that. It does not do that. In fact,
the Scripture speaks about matters that are sexual in a very general
way or in a very, very veiled way. Now you brought up Song
of Solomon, so I need to mention that. Song of Solomon is a wonderful,
wonderful gift from God. It is a book in which God celebrates
the physical joys of marriage. Clearly that is it. And it's
so important that it was there because it would be...you take
Song of Solomon out and there might be some dialogue about
how much you should enjoy sex with your partner, your wife,
right? I mean, we could be tempted to
be a little bit prudish about that, but Song of Solomon just
blows that prudishness up, because it has all these expressions
of the joy of the physicality of your spouse. It talks about
the beauty of form, the handsome desirability of the man, and
the beauty and desirability of the woman in veiled terms. I like to think of the Song of
Solomon as this beautiful, beautiful veiled statement in which you
talk only in analogies and only in metaphors. Your hair is black like goat's
hair and your eyes are like pools and your breasts are like deer
or whatever it is. I don't think the idea is that
there's a one-to-one correspondence there. That doesn't make sense. It's simply that he sees in life
the beauty of creation, the beauty of nature, the beauty of the
garden, the flowers and the trees, and she sees the same. And it's
all those physical beauties and delights and joys that are metaphorically
used to describe what is never really described at all. And
the reason the explicit aspect of their relationship in love
is never described is because it is never intended to be anything
but private. And I think the greatest statement
on the privacy of the sexual relationship between a man and
a woman, the greatest statement on that in the Bible is the Song
of Solomon, because God veils the whole entire thing. thing. You never get past the
metaphors. You never get past the analogies.
You never get past the word pictures, which don't have a one-to-one
correspondence, but are rather just general kinds of things,
feelings about something beautiful and something lovely and something
flowing and moving. all of that. So I think that
to say that Song of Solomon is erotic is absolutely ridiculous. To say that it is sensual is
ridiculous if you mean by that that it's somehow sexually explicit,
because it is just the opposite. And recently I addressed this
issue because there are people who try to turn the Song of Solomon
into an erotic, explicit sexual book, taking liberties that are
not found in the text, reading their own pornographic ideas
into the text. And I called it the rape of Song
of Solomon because what was done was like a rape. You rip the
beautiful poetic dress, you rip the beautiful imagery off, and
you leave the book stark and naked. And I don't think that
that does justice to the intent of it. I think that's a brutal
way to treat Song of Solomon because I think the Bible always
is veiled, always general. When it gets into the beauty
of the man and the woman and their unique relationship, it
veils the entire thing in euphemistic analogies. And it's intended
for that because it is the most private thing in human life. And God wants to make sure it
stays private, and yet he celebrates the beauty of it. Yeah, now you
go through all of that in detail in the MacArthur Study Bible.
Yes, I do, going through Song of Solomon, right. And I think
it's intriguing that that's exactly how you dealt with it, so that
the notes, while they explain some of the imagery, do so without
violating that sense of privacy that you get as you read it.
You know, and it's also true that their cultural analogies
that might not work today. I mean, I doubt that we would
say to our wives when we wanted to express something about their
beauty the same thing that they would have said then in an agrarian
culture. So it is so culturally designed
in that environment to speak of things very familiar, things
that spoke of beauty and joy and all of that, that that I
think they even shift and change today. Yeah, the point is clear.
It's the tenderness and the joy of that relationship. Well, what
it is, it's a guy saying about his wife, I can't find enough
words to describe your beauty. And instead of just having 42
adjectives, you're really, really, really, really, really beautiful.
He just grabs all the imagery in the beauty of creation, all
the imagery in a garden, all the imagery in the agrarian culture,
all the imagery, the beautiful motions and forms of animals,
and he just grabs everything that he can find and expresses. It's for the purpose of finding
ways to express without just tacking on repeated adjectives
in front of how beautiful she is. But I do think the veiling
of it is what gives it its wonderful, wonderful beauty. And by the
way, it has been a rare, rare day in the history of the church
when anybody interpreted Song of Solomon in the explicit way
that it is being interpreted today. And this is the new popular
book to teach. I was at a pastor's conference
recently with some young guys, and there were about four or
five of us. Four of the young guys were starting Song of Solomon.
And I just grabbed my head because I knew what was going to happen.
They're going to jump into that thing and they're going to follow
the explicit style that has become the kind of pop way to do it
and they're going to tear into that book and I just fear that
they'll rape the book the way others have done it recently.
That's the pattern they have to follow, isn't it? One of the
other things you mentioned is the sort of the lowering of the
bar with regard to what kind of language is deemed appropriate
for Christians to use in their casual conversation, and even
more so in the pulpit. We hear now about pastors using
profanity from the pulpit. I mean, I hear stories about
that every single week, and it's become a big thing. The argument
there is twofold. They say this is vital to do
as a means of contextualization, to translate the gospel message
into language that the people I'm trying to reach can understand. This is the language of our culture,
and so it's appropriate to translate the message into that language.
That's argument number one. Argument number two is Scripture
doesn't give us any list of forbidden words, and for every dirty word
you can name, I can name a synonym that means the same thing. So
why is this word deemed dirty. There's no biblical command to
abstain from this or that particular word. Why are some of these words
inappropriate, and is the culture changing to the point where they're
not inappropriate anymore? Well, first of all, with regard
to contextualization, I will probably sound like a dinosaur
at this particular point, but I think the only context that
people need when you communicate to them the Word of God is the
biblical context. Look, there's a context assumed,
right? I'm talking in the English language,
okay? That much context we have. I
think I've lived long enough in this culture and long enough
spoken this language that I know what the words in this language
mean. So that is just a false standard. You talk in the language
of the people and that's really all you need. I think the only
context people need The only context they need to have the
power of divine truth hit them is the biblical context, so they
know what it meant by what it said. That is the issue. With regard to the second thing
that you pointed out, what about words? I think it's pretty simple. We all know what words are considered
curse words, swear words, out of bounds. We all know what words
gracious mothers would rather not have their little children
hear. We all know what words children
say when they come home from school and their mothers say,
don't ever say that word again. You know, when I was a kid, I
got my mouth washed out with Fell's Naptha soap. for a few
words, and it had a great effect on me. We all know that. The culture knows that. And if
the culture shifts over a long period of time, maybe that would
change. But for pastors to lead the shift,
for pastors to be the out front guy, okay guys, I'm going to
start using this word because this is just a word, and there
are three other synonyms to this word. So let me lead the parade,
I think it's irresponsible and mostly it's immature. It's kind
of like being a perennial seventh grader who just loves to be able
to say that word and not get his mouth washed out. Now you
mentioned that these standards, because they really are cultural
standards, there is no definition of the boundaries in Scripture.
Paul simply says, let no filthy talk come out of your mouth.
He assumes they're going to know what they mean. And I read a
thing today that says, In the Roman world, there were about
1,200 words deemed cuss words. By comparison, in English, we
have about 30. And there are people who would say, that standard
is changing, John. It has changed. Maybe you've
missed it, but people use these words all the time. So if the
standard has changed, why not embrace it? Well, maybe someday
I will, but I'll be the last one. Why? As long as there's
anybody left who's going to be offended, what ground have I
gained? Look, we say this in another context. People always
ask me about, how do we do music at Grace Church? And my answer
is this. To elevate people, and secondly,
to do music that never ever intrudes on anyone's ability to worship. Why would I want to eliminate
them from worshiping? Well, I want to find the most
common ground I can find. And the same would be true in
the speech that I use in the pulpit. Oh, sure, I might be
able to say some things that some people would think cool,
but if there's going to be anybody in my mind that is going to be
offended by me saying that, I'm not going to say that. So that's
why I say if things do change, I'll be the last guy to use those
kinds of words because there may be some folks out there who
haven't caught up with the trend yet. And why would I cheapen
myself? Why would I offend them? when
what I want to gain is a hearing and an acceptance with them.
And I don't want to shock them. I don't want to drive them away.
One of the things that happens when you throw this kind of stuff
into your messages, it doesn't communicate. And I think this
needs to be said. Swearing, cussing, dirty talk,
whatever it is in a message does not aid communication. What it
does is shock people and end communication. It stops it. because
they're stunned by it and they lose you. Instead of, oh wow,
he really connected with me, the jolt of it becomes either
a joke, an offense, and it's a distraction. So it really doesn't
aid communication at all. And people will walk away maybe
forgetting everything else you said and remembering only that.
Okay, now one of the other common arguments against this is, look,
you're talking style here, not substance. This is just a matter
of generational conflict. You're old-fashioned. That's
the sort of church you grew up in. The people I'm trying to
reach aren't shocked by this sort of language. Well look,
you know our church, right? So last Sunday night we had 60
people join the church. 60 people joined the church.
Two were out of their 30s. Two. All the rest were in their
30s. You tell me how many nations
were there represented? Asian people, Middle Eastern
people, African-American people, and we've been tracking this
for a dozen years now, and I say this, look, 85% of the people
that come to Grace Church over the last dozen years are in their
30s and under, and they're Los Angeles. They're Hispanic, they're
Asian, they're Korean, they're Filipino, more Armenian people
joining our church, Middle Eastern people joining our church, they're
from all over the place. I just want to make sure that in my
ministry to these people, I don't offend any of those people. And
so I stay so far inside the bounds, not only of words, but of humor. My mind isn't filled with dirty
stories. I'm not trying to have to check
myself all the time. Oops, can't say that. I just,
I think out of the heart the mouse speaks and I don't see
any purpose in cultivating some kind of whatever you want to
call it, connection with people by getting on the edge either
of the words you use or the sexual innuendos or the smarmy kind
of humor. It's just, it's pointless. There
is also a true sense in which the medium colors the message.
So, you do actually affect the content of the message if you
start to translate it into, you know, filthy humor and dirty
language and all of that. It's pretty hard to represent
the holiness of God when you're catering to the fleshliness of
the culture. Now, let me tell you a story.
Sunday, last Sunday morning, a lady walked up to me. She said,
I go to such and such a church that's in our area. She said,
I take my two boys and she said, I work in Owanna. I'm a leader
in Owanna. That's a children's ministry.
She said, I've come to your church because I'm sick of the cursing
that goes on in Owanna. I said, in Awana? A children's
ministry? Yes, she said, I'm just sick
of the cursing, and I don't think I should have my children exposed
to that. Well, look, if it's okay for
the pastor to do it, right? It should be okay for the Awana
leader to do it. How sad. The trickle-down effect
is very real. You know, you're going to have
the freedom to do that in the pulpit. Believe me, you're never
going to be able to stem the tide in the pew. You legitimize
people flooding their minds with the kinds of things that produce
that kind of speech. Another common complaint you often hear
from people who say, you know, we think this is legitimate,
we want the church to move more and more in this direction. They'll
cite 1 Corinthians 9, 22, where Paul says, I become all things
to all people that I might by all means win some. No, I hate
it when they use that verse. What does that verse mean, if
not that we should contextualize? It doesn't have anything to do
with that. What Paul is saying there is the opposite of that.
What he is saying is, I will restrict any liberty, every liberty
that I have. I will give up anything. I will
sacrifice anything. I will change my behavior, whatever
it requires. Whatever I have to give up, I
will give up for the sake of reaching those people. That's
what it means. It is not saying, that in order
to reach those people I have to become like those people.
He's really not talking about freeing himself up to talk like
them and act like them and live like them to reach them. He's
talking about the very opposite. He's saying there isn't anything
I wouldn't give up. There isn't anything I wouldn't
say no to. There isn't anything I wouldn't restrain and hold
back and forfeit for the sake of reaching people with the gospel. So that's a very, very different
approach. Yeah, in fact, doesn't the pastor
have a biblical duty to stand above the culture in order to
be an example to his people? That's what Paul told Titus.
Well, of course. Yeah, don't be like the culture. Don't be like the Cretans who
are lazy gluttons. Well, he should have said to
him, I suppose, in the church growth movement, become a lazy
glutton so you can reach those people. What in the world? That's
just so bizarre. Again, from my standpoint, look,
I've been preaching now over 40 years in the same church.
Cultures have come and gone. How fast? Really fast. Trends
have come and gone, like lightning, just more and more and different
and changes. And what have we done different?
Absolutely nothing. Absolutely nothing. If you listen
to Grace To You, you might be listening to a message preached
35 years ago, or 35 days ago. or three years ago. It doesn't
matter. The messages that I preach at
Grace Church, I also preach on satellite television in Germany
or in India. Or I get on an airplane and I
preach them in Italy, or I preach them in Russia, or I preach them
in the Ukraine, or I preach them in Latin America, or I preach
them in Asia, or I preach them in London, or I preach them in
Scotland. And I tell pastors all the time,
if you can't get your sermon out of your zip code, throw it
away. If you can't get your sermon out of your country, throw it
away. It ought to be transcended. And that's one of the real joys
of our ministry is that our Christian radio goes across the world in
English a thousand times a day and also in Spanish a thousand
times a day. Books are translated into, I
don't know, 50, 60 languages all over the world. I don't change
anything when they translate a book. Somebody said to me,
we were talking about it yesterday, they're doing your study Bible
in Arabic. Are they having any trouble with
the issues of American culture and Arabic culture?" And I said,
no, because there's nothing in my study Bible about the American
culture. There's nothing there. And it's in German and French
and Italian and Russian and Spanish and English and now it's in Chinese
and Arabic. And so far nobody said to me,
can you help us fix this American colloquialism? I just think you
put a narrowing on your ministry. You limit yourself. How wonderful
it is to be able to preach. Well, you know, Spurgeon was
like that. Where did his sermons go? They said every ship that
left England for 20 years was packed with thousands of his
sermons. Where did they go? They went to every port in the
world. And people still read them. And they still read them
today. You know, every time I write a book, we wind up with Spurgeon
in the book somewhere, an appendix or introduction to a chapter
or quotes or whatever. just totally transcendent, just
totally transcendent. And that's what happens when
you stick with the truth of Scripture. It's timeless. Absolutely. You
marry the spirit of the age and you are destined to become a
widower. Good for you guys. When I go to heaven, you can
just keep playing my tapes. And we intend to do that, if we outlast
you. So, John, let's talk about holiness
in the Church. Do you see this as a result of
the lack of holiness in the Church, or is this a trend that is causing
a lack of holiness in the Church, or is it just an endless cycle
where it's feeding upon itself and this is all of the above?
all of the above. So how do we get out of it? The
church is unholy. Church is unholy. First of all, we don't have sanctifying
shepherds. We don't have sanctifying shepherds. If the pastor's objective
is to be cool with the culture, boy, he's going to make massive
sacrifices to the process of sanctification, right? If he's
not consumed with the holiness of his people, then he's really
prostituted his calling. Look, Paul said, I am in birth
pains until Christ is fully formed in you. He said, who sins and
I don't feel the pain to the Corinthians? Do you understand
that a pastor has one calling? Peter, 1 Peter 5, feed the flock
of God. feed the flock of God. It doesn't
say revolutionize your community. It doesn't say reach the unreached. It doesn't say reach unchurched
Harry and Sally. It doesn't say raise the moral
consciousness of your city. feed the flock of God. We are sanctifiers by calling.
That's what we do. We are sanctifying agents in
the church. My goal as a pastor is to give
an account to the Lord of the church for how I have been faithful
to feed the flock of God, over which I've been given oversight.
Or in the language of Hebrews 13, they are to follow our faith
and we give an account for that. Ephesians chapter 4 says the
same thing. He gave apostles, prophets, evangelists,
teaching pastors for what? For the perfecting of the saints,
the building of the body to the fullness of Christ. We've gone
so far away from that, trying to titillate people, trying to
titillate the non-believer, make them feel comfortable. The call
of the pastor is to feed and nurture the flock of God to spiritual
maturity, Christ-likeness. Now if you don't do that, if
all you try to do is make non-believers comfortable, you literally sacrifice
holiness, you sacrifice sanctification. And then you get an unsanctified
congregation that will continue to be unsanctified. You can't
change the trend, and they're going to be more and more victimized
because they're immature and unable to cope with the real
issues of life, and they're going to fall victim to sin again and
again and again and again. It just escalates, and what you
get is this sinful congregation, and all the time you're convinced
that if you can just draw a big crowd, you've done what your
calling is. That's not your calling. That's not your calling. Your
calling is not to get a crowd of unbelievers together. Your
calling is to feed the flock of God so they can be mature
and godly and holy and righteous and then when they go out in
the world, they live a life that is attractive and winsome and
draw people to Christ and proclaim the gospel. So I think it is
true that churches are unsanctified because pastors are not sanctifying
shepherds Would you say the root of this problem then lies with
a leadership problem? It's a leadership issue in the
church. Always, like people like priests. People never rise higher
than their leader. Well-known pastors using bad
language, issuing sex challenges to their people. Some of the
pastors of America's largest churches doing this. Would you
say this is a serious enough thing to disqualify some of those
men from ministry? I would. Look, it's a serious
enough thing to disqualify you from ministry if you don't do
what you're supposed to. Forget that you do what you're not supposed
to. You shouldn't be qualified if you don't even do what you're
supposed to. We're to feed the flock of God. I don't know how
you could say it more clearly. Peter says, feed the flock of
God. Well, where do you think he learned
that? Well, he learned that, as we know, in John 21 when he
comes off of the denial of Christ and Jesus meets him post-resurrection
and confronts him and says, Do you love me? Do you love me?
Do you love me? And every time he says yes, he
says, feed my sheep, feed my sheep, feed my sheep. And Peter
got the message. And so when he wrote to pastors,
he said, feed the flock of God and do it humbly. not lording
it over them like you're some important person. Do it humbly,
do it graciously, don't do it for money, right, not for filthy
lucre. So I think it's as simple as
this, the shepherds who feed their flock are the ones that
do what God has called them to do. And hey, all of us will give
an account. 1 Corinthians 4 says there will
come a day when no matter what people have said about us, no
matter what we think about ourselves, the secrets of the heart will
be revealed. And then will every man have his praise from God.
Now with regard to the shepherd's duty to feed the flock, I know
you've preached on this at least twice recently. Once was at the
Moody Pastors Conference this past summer, and then more recently
from a student's perspective you gave a similar message on
this subject to students, college students, at the Resolved Conference
talking about what sort of spiritual leaders they should look for.
Talk about that for a moment. Well, first of all, it needs
to be said to pastors because pastors need to do what they
should. But it also needs to be said
to kids. And this may seem like a rather narrow approach, but
I am convinced that young people pick churches for all the wrong
reasons. They pick a church because of
the music. They pick a church because of the video, or they
pick a church because one kid said to me, I go to Suttonston
Church, why do you go there? Because the pastor's a cool dude,
man, he comes and plays basketball with us. Really? Really. You
can go to the YMCA and find somebody to play basketball with you.
You know, kids just don't make the most informed spiritual decisions. So my objective talking to 4,000
college kids at Resolve was to say, look, not only are pastors
responsible for what they are and what they do, but you are
responsible to God for the choice you make as to what church you're
a part of. And you need to find a sanctifying
pastor. And then I describe to them what
a sanctifying pastor is like, and how critical it is that he
be that way, and how secure and safe and protected and blessed
you are when you find someone like that. You know, kids, it's
a hero-worshipping world, right? We've got all of these frivolous,
unaccomplished people who are famous for being famous, who
are the heroes of our youth, whether they're athletes who
live utterly immoral and grossly greedy lives, or movie actors,
or these musicians, or whoever they are. Kids don't necessarily
pick the best heroes to follow. And the pastor that looks like
their heroes, or acts like their sort of worldly heroes, oftentimes
attracts them. If he's funny, if he's cool,
if the music is really the kind they like. And somehow they've
got to get beyond that. I've often wished that God would
just shut down all the music. Well, He will, according to the
book of Revelation. All the music one day will stop. But I always
wonder, if all the music stopped, where would people go to church?
I think a lot of them probably wouldn't go at all because in
many cases you've got basically a rock concert with a 20-minute
sermonette for Christianettes at the end. But I think kids
need to make decisions about where they're going to go that
are far beyond the kinds of things that are making those decisions
for them. So that's why I want to talk to him about it. You've
got to pick the right church. You've got to be under a sanctifying shepherd.
And what should you look for? And what would be the marks of
that kind of shepherd? Okay, John, in conclusion, just
talk to our listeners. I know some people have followed
this trend or they see it as a threat. For some, this is the
first time they've heard about it. What should they do next
at the personal level? What can we as church people
do to sort of counter this trend and help set things right? I
think if it exists in your church, you need to go to your pastor,
write him, and just say, I appreciate you if you do, but I don't think
this is necessary. It's offensive. I don't think
it honors the Lord. It's not helpful to me. And that's
the first place you go. The only way to ever resolve
an issue is to confront the issue. A sanctifying pastor knows the
power of confrontation. I think you do that. I don't
think you try to tear up the church and create a gossip campaign
and all that. But I do think you go directly
to the person in charge, the pastor or youth leader, whoever
is taking these kinds of liberties, and just let them know that this
is not helpful and you're deeply concerned about it. That's the
first thing to do. And then I think you've got to decide whether
you, if indeed the person responds, you can stay and be a part of
that. If they don't respond, look, there's no sense in being
loyal to something that's not spiritually beneficial. Find
a sanctifying shepherd. And I think instead of being
caught up in the contemporary culture, this may sound a little
unusual, start reading great material from the past. Get out
of this culture. I tell people, young people particularly,
you don't need any more of this culture. You don't need your
pastor acting like he's on a talk show. You don't need your pastor
acting like the people you see on television. You need something
that is unaffected by the constantly increasing corruption of the
culture. I encourage young people, read the Puritans. Go back. Read
sermons by Spurgeon. Get good sermon material. If
you know somebody that gives good sermons on the Word of God,
gifted communicators and Bible teachers, get their material,
listen to their material. You don't need more cultural
junk. You certainly don't need it from the pulpit. What you
do need is to think biblically. And I think that the issue is
get separated from the culture. Come out of it. Get out of it.
Love not the world, neither the things that are in the world.
Friendship with the world is enmity with God. All these kinds of
things are clear in Scripture. When I step into the pulpit at
our church, when anybody teaches at any level in our church, the
last thing we want to do is make sure that everybody knows how
well we are informed about the culture. Look, the culture's
everywhere, and it has a million variations that we could never
get to anyway. But what we want them to know
is we are consumed with something that is unaffected by the culture,
and that's the truth of God. So I think go to sources that
are transcendent. Go back in years and read Donald
Gray Barnhouse, or go back and read Jim Boyce, or go back all
the way to the Puritans. and begin to think biblically
apart from your culture. You don't need to have everything
strained through this culture. It sucks out the life of it.
I guess you could say cultural preaching takes the nutrients
out of the truth. That's what it does. Well, thank
you, John. I know I speak for thousands
of our listeners when I say thank you for your clear thinking on
this and the clarity with which you speak. And thanks for the
admonition to think biblically and for the help you give us
in doing that. Well, it's my joy, Phil, and thank you for
your great partnership and friendship. It's a real blessing to me. What
a wonderful life of ministry the Lord's given us together,
right? Amen. We trust you're encouraged by
what you've just heard. You've been listening to pastor,
Bible teacher, and author, John MacArthur. John is featured speaker
on Grace To You, a daily half hour radio broadcast. For more
information about Grace To You, or for a catalog detailing our
books and tapes, call us at 1-800-55-GRACE. Thanks again for your interest
in Grace To You, where each day we're unleashing God's truth
one verse at a time.
The Case Against the R-Rated Church (Interview)
Series Language in the Pulpit
Phil Johnson interviews John MacArthur about the R-Rated language and content coming from some of the pulpits today (many of them being influenced by men like Mark Driscoll in Seattle from Mars Hill).
Check out John MacArthur's website at:
http://www.gty.org
Posted by Grace Community Church in San Antonio, TX:
http://www.gccsatx.com
| Sermon ID | 82409191398 |
| Duration | 48:37 |
| Date | |
| Category | Radio Broadcast |
| Language | English |
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