Author: Pastor Rich Lusk
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From the Archives: Theses on Food and Feasting (Revised)
[This was written several years ago and has been available on the the “essays” section of the website, but I’m republishing it here with a few edits.] Jesus made it clear we are not defined by what goes into our mouths but what comes out of them (Mark 7). To call some foods “clean” or…
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December 2025 – X Posts and Miscellanies: Feminism, Christmas, Parenting, Drugs and the Demonic, Sexual Ethics, Socialism as Substitute Patriarchy, DEI, Guns and the Second Amendment, Civil Government/Romans 13, Virgin Birth, Communism, Newbigin on Christendom, Etc.
In C. S. Lewis’ Last Battle, Queen Lucy says, “In our world too, a stable once had something inside it that was bigger than our whole world.” Christmas is about the Creator becoming a creature in order to redeem his creatures. It’s about the God of Israel becoming the perfect Israelite to fulfill Israel’s mission…
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Christopher Caldwell’s Age of Entitlement — A Few Notes and Questions
These are some notes from a while back, prepared for a discussion of Caldwell’s book: This is a compelling book. It’s straight forward and ruthless in its analysis. I thought his assessment of Reagan was harsh but probably fair overall – Reagan had some great rhetoric about limited government but did not have the nerve to…
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The National Association of Evangelicals and Christian Nationalism
Tell me about the National Association of Evangelicals proposing an amendment acknowledging the lordship of Christ over America in the 1950s. AI answers: Yes, the National Association of Evangelicals (NAE) supported efforts in the late 1940s and 1950s to promote a constitutional amendment that would explicitly acknowledge the authority and lordship of Jesus Christ over…
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Driscoll, Wilson, and the Mars Hill Fiasco
I enjoyed this podcast conversation with Mark Driscoll and Doug Wilson: I especially liked the part of the discussion where they contrasted pastors with social media influencers. Many social media influencers are insulated from the “real world” implications of their content. Pastors deal with the messy details of people’s lives (or at least they should).…
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FUTURE JUSTIFICATION: SOME THEOLOGICAL AND EXEGETICAL PROPOSALS
SOME THEOLOGICAL AND EXEGETICAL PROPOSALS FUTURE JUSTIFICATION: SOME THEOLOGICAL AND EXEGETICAL PROPOSALS [This essay was originally published in the book A Faith That Is Never Alone edited by Andrew Sandlin.] Before offering my exegetical and theological proposals for a doctrine of “future justification,” I need to offer a few preliminary principles that set the stage…
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FROM BIRMINGHAM, WITH LOVE: FEDERAL VISION POSTCARDS
FROM BIRMINGHAM, WITH LOVE: FEDERAL VISION POSTCARDS By Rich Lusk [This essay was originally published in the book A Faith That Is Never Alone, edited by Andrew Sandlin.] The book Covenant, Justification, and Pastoral Ministry (CJPM) is yet another frontal assault in the latest Reformed Civil War. According to the editor, Scott Clark, there is…
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The Reformed Doctrine of Justification by Works: Historical Survey and Emerging Consensus
[This essay was originally published in a festschrift for Norman Shepherd.] It is well known that the Protestant Reformation unearthed the glorious biblical truth of justification by faith alone. But it is not as well known that the early Calvinistic Reformers taught a “second justification”[1] by works, based on texts such as Mathew 25:31–46, 2…
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Mary and the Ark of the Covenant
Roman Catholics like to make much of connections between Mary and the Ark of the Covenant. I am certainly open to this typology (with qualifications) but does it hold up under scrutiny? Consider the positive case: The Ark was associated with the glory of God. Jesus is the glory of God, even in Mary’s womb.…
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From the Archives: Sermon Follow-up on Mary from 08-12-7 (Luke 1:26-56)
Sermon follow up 12/7/08 Mary’s Son, Mary’s Song: Implications of the Incarnation Luke 1:26-56 Rich Lusk There is more in these verses than I could cover in the sermon and more than I can cover even in these additional notes. I can, however, point to several very good commentaries. On Luke’s gospel in general, and…