July 2015

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To topple abortion, we must strike at the root...

Like many of you, the videos released by the Center for Medical Progress have dominated my thoughts for the past two weeks. I attended the defund Planned Parenthood rally here in Bloomington, and I am glad to see what appears to be real momentum to defund Planned Parenthood. I pray that it continues.

But the very political and social momentum caused by the videos has led me to consider various "what ifs". What if government money was taken away from Planned Parenthood? What if abortion after 20 weeks was made illegal? What if all abortion was made illegal? What then?

As it currently stands, over one million abortions are performed in our country each year. That's over one million sisters, mothers and daughters who decide to kill their own child. That's over one million brothers, fathers, and sons who encourage it, pay for it, or simply split and ignore it. 21% of all U.S. pregnancies (excluding miscarriages) end in abortion. That's nearly one in four. (Statistics found here.) There is an enormous demand for abortion in this country, and outlawing abortion will not remove that demand...

Brian Prentiss has not actually been hidden in a closet...

Under the post, "Intown's Brian Prentiss comes out of the closet...," one reader asked, "How long before the PCA ends up in the same slough of despond, and heaven knows what else, that has claimed most of the PCUSA?"

Since the PCA is a largely southern denomination, her failures will always lag behind other denominations, and her wealth will give it a better face than most. But she'll have to stop giving northern liberal churches/pastors a pass despite knowing disciplining them won't get good press. At this time the PCA's failures aren't even in the same ballpark as the PC(USA). At this time.

The troubling thing is that the PCA is following the same path the PC(USA) and her predecessor denominations followed in trusting famous men of wealth and influence rather than following little boys named "David" with just a slingshot who are determined to slay the giant using "only" the means of grace: discipline, from the least formal private discussion and exhortation all the way to heresy trials.

In this context of Intown, Pastor Prentiss has been giving signs of heterodoxy for years and I'm guessing nothing has been done by anyone on any faithful personal level. That's the norm within PCA presbyteries. We don't want to deal with men individually through private remonstrance and exhortation and rebuke, and that for a whole host of reasons including...

The Witches of Washington whine...

The Christian Science Monitor ran the headline, "Planned Parenthood reportedly hacked: New anti-abortion tactic?"

Now isn't this precious? They're caught negotiating a higher price for the body parts of the little babies they murder in the hundred of thousands each year, and just in the nick of time they announce they are the victims of computer hacking.

But precisely what are their computers used for?

To keep track of...

Reformed University Fellowship and accountability...

Under the post Campus Outreach NOT joining the rainbow..., one reader ask about the difference between the two primary campus parachurch organizations that serve the sons and daughters of the PCA, Campus Outreach and Reformed University Fellowship. A reader responded with this comment: "I believe Campus Outreach operates under the authority of a local church's Session, while Reformed University Fellowship is under the authority of the Presbytery."

In this all-important matter, Campus Outreach has it right.

Having served on Ohio Valley Presbytery's RUF committee and watched RUF through the years (including personal contact and meeting with RUF's CEO as well as son Joseph being active in RUF's chapter at Vandy), it's my observation that, despite what's on paper, RUF is not normally under the authority of presbyteries in any organic way.

RUF has the money and tells presbyteries what to do, where, when, and with whom—even down to the planting of churches and the selection of those churches' pastors when they have an RUF campus nearby. They are the donkey that wags the tail (presbytery). It's just another example of the guy that has the money getting to call the tune.

I encouraged Joseph to be involved in RUF when he went to Vandy and am grateful for the ministry they provided during his years there. Now though... 

The things we do for Science: rally tomorrow for the babies...

"fetal tissue donation ...is an important element of health care research in this country..." 

- President of Planned Parenthood Cecile Richards in response to videos showing her employees negotiating the non-donation price of her little victims' body parts

Joe Sobran once wrote a piece arguing that it's in the nature of those who commit murder by abortion to justify their crimes by making some use of the bodies of their victims. They want to justify their crimes by making a show of some benefit to humanity. Now videos have been released that record top medical officers of Planned Parenthood's national office negotiating the price they will get from their victims' body parts.

Thank you...

You, dear readers, answered my request and fully funded the $9,000 needed by Lions Among Lambs to record the first ten Psalms in their commitment to write and record musical settings for all 150 psalms. And it was funded before I went to bed Friday evening, as I requested. Thank you so very much.

The Kickstarter campaign is now oversubscribed to the tune of $10,800 ($1,800 over) and this gives us joy. Every extra dollar will be used for further work on this project. With love,

Lions Among Lambs: get in while you still can...

Actually, after posting this I was informed by Jody that the goal has been reached and exceeded. Praise God and thank you, dear brothers and sisters!

Since I asked readers to contribute yesterday, $1,000 of the $1,500 still needed to fully fund the recording of Psalms 1-10 has been given. That means you can still finish the work by giving towards the $578 still needed. Please do it now. I would like to go to bed tonight knowing Baylyblog readers lifted this good work over the top.

A warm thank you to all who help.

Intown's Brian Prentiss comes out of the closet...

For those of us who find the SCOTUS decision something to be celebrated, we should remember Romans 14, where the Apostle Paul advises those of us with less scruples to be gracious towards our brothers and sisters with more. (The "weaker" brother language is unfortunate here, because it seems to suggest one is right and the other is wrong...)

- Brian Prentiss, pastor of Intown Presbyterian Church, Portland; member of Pacific Northwest Presbytery, Presbyterian Church in America; M.Div. Reformed Theological Seminary, Jackson, Mississippi; former Campus Director at Campus Outreach and Collegiate Director at Briarwood Presbyterian Church. (On LinkedIn, Prentiss is commended for his pastoral leadership by Andrew Field, former pastor at Redeemer (NYC) and present board member of CCEF—David Powlison, Steve Estes, Ed Welch, etc.)

The above is excerpted from a post on the Intown Presbyterian Church (PCA) web site written by her pastor, Brian Prentiss. The post is scandalous. When the Supreme Court issued its pro-sodomy ruling, Bergefell v. Rhodes, Pastor Prentiss decided not to battle the wolf in defense of the sheep, so he wrote a bunch of gobbledigook to cover his abandonment...

Become a subscriber to My Soul Among Lions...

The faith, zeal, and self-sacrifice of our Clearnote musicians have strengthened our church and her officers for years, now. I don't know how I lived as a pastor in former times without the strength of these men's leadership. I didn't know what our churches were missing until our brothers turned their backs on money and personal fame in the music world and gave themselves to the Church and her worship. They are true Sons of Asaph.

As Jody told you in a post earlier this week, and then another a few minutes ago titled A Psalms concert for your church..., they have embarked on a project of writing musical settings for all 150 Psalms. They're done with the first ten and are ready to record them. My favorite is their setting for Psalm 6 (the Psalm I preached on last week). Wonderful setting for this penitential Psalm but I can't give you a listen because...

A Psalms concert for your church...

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We're praising God for the encouraging support we've received for our 'Psalms 1-10' Kickstarter campaign. As I write this we're 82% funded with 23 days yet to go. Amazing! Thanks to all our readers who have made pledges. If you haven't given yet, would you please consider doing so now? And then would you pass the project along to anyone and everyone you think might be interested?

Here's a good way to make a big boost to the project while giving an encouraging gift to your church...

The Puritans, "gay Christians," and our identity in Christ...

I'm about halfway through Rosaria Butterfield's Openness Unhindered: Further Thoughts of an Unlikely Convert. This book is her second work after her popular personal testimony in The Secret Thoughts of an Unlikely Convert: An English Professor's Journey into Christian Faith. Her honest writing (she was born again after living in a lesbian relationship and working as a pioneer in the field of Queer Studies as a tenured profession of English) is helpful and humbling (particularly her exhortations to show hospitality and love to those in bondage to their sin). 

One aspect of her books that has encouraged me thus far is her obvious love for the writings of Puritan pastors such as Thomas Watson, John Owen, Richard Baxter, and Jonathan Edwards. Their voices help her writing and thinking avoid the presuppositions of modern psychologists and all their hellish deviancy on anthropology. There is a reason the Puritans are known as physicians of the soul: they believed Scripture's testimony about the deceptiveness of the heart, the depth of human depravity, and the radical power of Holy Spirit in the new birth and subsequent sanctification. They were masters of the Biblical doctrines of temptation, sin, repentance, and sanctification.

In our recent discussions of homosexuality here on this blog, I've often had the thought that those who are promoting the "gay celibate Christian" idea are intensely pessimistic...

Questions about Christian witness in the public square...

Here's a response to a couple questions posted under "Trust your nose...".

Dear (brother),

Thanks for your questions. A couple responses:

1. Let's say a man speaks out against the sins of society and uses Scripture to support his arguments. You say it would be wrong to discourage him, and I agree. But let's say a man speaks out against the sins of society and decides not to overtly use Scripture to support his arguments but instead uses natural law. Would that man be wrong to not openly use Scripture?

Tactics are open to debate. Each man decides what is best in which situation. Would I have thought Gov. Mike Pence should have quoted Scripture in supporting the state's just-passed RFRA when Tim Cook and the NCAA attacked him? Not necessarily, but then again, maybe. But I'd argue in favor of quoting Scripture in the public square on strategic—not just principled—grounds. If it were a timid person in the congregation I serve who spoke up in defense of God's Moral Law and did it on the basis of general revelation, I'd simply...

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