
Redwood Church Preaching
154 episodes — Page 1 of 4

Psalm 111, God’s acrostic love for his people
God has given us nine acrostic psalms, yet modern songwriting sensibilities do not include this form. Why would God make alphabetical lines a priority for poetic expression? Why limit himself to having his message dictated by the order of the Hebrew alphabet? What profound truth does the form and nature of this poetry communicate about God’s love for his covenant people? This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Good kissing & glorious dancing (Song of Songs part 2)
Being discipled by chick flicks and pop songs, we tend to think of love as the initial flames set ablaze when we meet the person of our dreams. But the “flame of Yah”—true love as God designed it—is a cultivated fire from start to finish. To keep this marital fire burning brightly, Song of Songs depicts key elements of romance which we can cultivate in our own marriages. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Tuning the modern ear to biblical poetry (Song of Songs part 1)
If Song of Songs is truly named, then it is the best and most important song ever written. Yet the modern reader finds its poetry awkward, unsatisfying, and confusing. What help does God offer through this song for cultivating romantic affection in our own marriages—and how can we train our modern ears to find it profitable? Three elements contribute to poetic excellence, and help us to discern the value in Solomon’s work. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

The truth that grounds every new year, and time itself
Psalm 47 is a psalm that grounds all of time, drawing history together into a meaningful whole. Always it has been true, always it is true, and always it will be true. It is the great foundation of the past; the great promise of the future; the linchpin of yesterday, today, and tomorrow: King is God over the nations; very ascended is he. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

The inconvenience of Christmas
Despite the celebrations, Christmas is a time of many mundane hardships and difficulties — from annoying relatives to stretched finances. Since it is easy for us to feel set-upon and inconvenienced, it is helpful to reflect on how the first Christmas is a story of stress and anxiety, confusion and unknowns for Mary and Joseph, who had their expectations, hopes, and plans for their lives completely upended. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Judges 4, part 3: Yael, deceiver and piercer of the serpent
Yael, the lady of a house in league with the Canaanite king, defies her husband by deceiving and slaying Sisera, the principal of the Canaanite army. What should we make of Yael’s treatment of Sisera? Is she a liar and a murderer? Or is she indeed blessed among women? And if so, what is the implication for women in the church, and spiritual warfare? This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

How are we to let go of rage and forgive our enemies?
Scripture tells us we are to participate in Christ by forgiving our enemies — sacrificing ourselves and our anger, knowing that ultimately God is the one sacrificing us for the sake of shaping us into his image. Yet the New Testament doesn’t give much practical instruction in how. This is because the Psalms already do. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

What does it mean to forgive our enemies?
Contrary to popular belief, we can and must forgive even those who wrong us unrepentantly. Repentance is not a necessary precondition for forgiveness — but, in fact, forgiveness is a necessary precondition for repentance. The doctrine of the cross helps us to understand how and why — and the scriptural distinction between forgiveness and reconciliation. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Jesus’ arguments against anxiety, part 3
Jesus distilled his wisdom about worry into seven simple arguments in his Sermon on the Mount. We can follow these arguments to reason our way out of anxiety, and into mental fortitude. His third argument is that God provides food for all creatures through various means — even birds who don’t have to work for it. Since we are of superior worth, we should trust that God will provide our food also, through the means he has ordained for man: work. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Judges 4, part 2: the faith of Baraq
After 20 years, a new generation has been raised up by Deborah to war against evil—led by Baraq, the lightning-man, to fight the lightning-god Ba’al. While modern readers haughtily interpret Baraq as a man of defective faith, he has the trust in God (along with the confidence of 10,000 peasants) to engage a humanly suicidal strategy to defeat 90,000 Canaanite soldiers, consuming them as fire from heaven on the mountain of Tabor. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Judges 4, part 1: Deborah, mother of the savior
Because Israel has failed to represent God’s father-rule into the world, its own fathers are unable to rule. For as long as it takes to raise a child for battle, they are thus without a savior — and a married woman under authority must judge them. Yet through grace, this curse turns to a blessing, as Deborah the holy mother raises up a spiritual son as a warrior-savior. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Jesus’ arguments against anxiety, part 2
Jesus distilled his wisdom about worry into seven simple arguments in his Sermon on the Mount. We can follow these arguments to reason our way out of anxiety, and into mental fortitude. His second argument is that rightly ordering our concerns in a proper hierarchy is foundational to cultivating peace about the future: placing the lesser things beneath the greater, and taking care to how they fit together in our lives. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Judges 3, part 4: Shamgar, the anti-Ehud
Shamgar and Ehud are a study in contrasts: Ehud is Hebrew, Shamgar is Canaanite; Ehud smote a people of the land, Shamgar a people of the sea; Ehud struck one head, Shamgar 600 bodies; Ehud used a weapon for intimate and personal assassination, Shamgar a tool for impersonal killing at arm’s length. There is a clear picture here of the progression of the power and peace of the gospel from Israel to the nations, from Jesus to the Church, from reformer to evangelist, and from warrior to worker. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Judges 3, part 3: Ehud in the church age?
What is the relationship between the story of Ehud and Eglon…and the story of the church? What enduring principles does this story exemplify, and how do they inform the way Christians should live today? Should we expect God to still raise up men like Ehud — men of daring and deceit? What would they look like, and how would they act? To answer this question, we must understand how the symbols of Israel’s history are visible words which have a “future tense” — which must now be translated into the “perfect” tense of the church age. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Jesus’ arguments against anxiety, part 1
Worry is fundamental to the human experience, and our worldly cares and concerns often unsettle us. Jesus, the man with perfect mental health, knew what it took to deal with anxiety—and he distilled this wisdom in seven simple arguments against anxiety in his Sermon on the Mount. We can follow these arguments to reason our way out of anxiety, and into mental fortitude. The first is that anxiety oppresses those who are mastered by earthly concerns; therefore, we must submit ourselves to the inevitable loss of earthly things in the providence of God. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Judges 3, part 2: Ehud’s sacrifice of Eglon
Whereas the story of Othniel frustrated us with its lack of detail, now the story of Ehud frustrates us with its details. What are we to make of the scatological humor, deceit, and assassination in this first “real” story of one of Israel’s saviors—a type of Christ? From the left-handed “son of the right hand” to the fattened Eglon (“calf”), every element of this narrative reveals through physical history the patterns of spiritual warfare we ourselves are engaged in. In fact, the text uses so many strange words to tell its story that you cannot help but notice: it is as much sacramental as martial. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Psalm 95, part 2: covenantal election and apostate sheep
Who are God’s sheep, and how does he feed them? And what is different about the pastures of God, compared to the world’s? While all those baptized into the Church are called to respond to the food of God’s word, not all are eternally elect. Some will harden their hearts — yet are still exhorted as sheep. This can only be understood through the doctrine of covenantal election. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Judges 3, part 1: Othniel as the paradigm of all the judges
In the book of Judges, why is the first story of an actual judge so short on details? Because it is crafted to teach us how to read the more detailed and difficult stories that are to come. It establishes a clear paradigm for interpreting these—lest we imagine the judges as crazed vigalante superheroes. It also establishes what is at sake—the victory of Aram over Israel, the world over the church, Babel over Jerusalem, a wicked giant over Christ. Finally, it establishes the manner in which God ensures this will not happen—by raising up saviors anointed by his Spirit, and appointed by his people. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Psalm 137, part 2: Singing psalms beyond their original context
Psalm 137 expresses Israel’s grief in exile and longing for true worship. Though contextually bound to Babylon, the psalm applies to the church today as we seek worship that pleases God, mourn sin, trust in divine justice, and anticipate the perfect worship of heaven. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Psalm 137, part 1: Praise God for cutting off Babylonian seed
Worship should shape us—not be reshaped to our comfort. Psalm 137 calls believers to unashamedly embrace God’s justice, long for his kingdom, and trust his sovereignty in judgment. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Judges 2, part 3: failures of modern (spiritual) warfare
Israel’s failure of warfare leads to two major compromises: bonds with their enemies and idolatry. The same failure and compromises are present in the new covenant age. The church today feels overrun by the world because we shrank back from our spiritual warfare—and now cannot even recognize the enemy because of the bonds we have formed and the false gods we serve. This became very obvious during covid, where the church conceded the state as god. But the same compromises and idolatries occur with education, voting, taxation, and many other issues. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

How the form of the law forms mature disciples
An exposition and application of Psalm 132. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Psalm 95, part 1: Thankful & loud worship
We are all by nature thankless creatures; but God, through the gospel, makes us thankful. Yet even after this transformation, we are still prone to grumbling, and must be beckoned back to gratitude. The truth of this should be applied especially to public, corporate worship—coming into God’s great and gracious presence, and responding with appropriately loud singing and praise. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Judges 2, part 2: culture and conquest
Israel’s existence is threatened by her forming covenant bonds with the Canaanites, leaving God’s altar (the center of her identity) for Baal’s. Yet God nonetheless leaves leaves these serpents in the garden of Canaan—because Israel must learn his work of warring against evil. This is a picture of the New Testament age: Israel is the church, the promised land is the world, and the Canaanites are sin and Satan. Unlike Israel, however, we do not drive out nations from their physical territory; we rather drive out sin and the devil from hearts of the nations themselves—discipling them into an inheritance for Christ. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Judges 2, part 1: how to keep a new generation from bowing to the world
To understand what happens in the book of Judges as a whole, we must understand what happened immediately after Joshua died. Every time Israel is oppressed, it is because a new generation arises that prostrates to the world, rather than to God. Why? Because their parents failed to teach them to remember who God is, and what he has done…and what he requires of them. The church, too, is in the same danger — in just the past 5 years, 50% of young people with a biblical worldview have abandoned it. And the solution today is the same as the solution then: a return to God’s model of family discipleship, over the world’s model of secular education. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

A vision for living another year in the world
Christ is Lord over all things — so we must submit to his rule over every part of life. Christ’s lordship is mediated through his infallible word — so we must learn to read it as he reveals. Christ is sovereign to choose whom to save (and who not to) — so we can rely on him to build his church through our preaching. Christ intends to save the world — so Christianity will surely conquer the world in the end. Christ rules through three spheres of authority: family, church, state — so these must all be led by Christ, to achieve his peace in the world. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Judges 1, part 4: compromise by covenants of convenience
Like Israel, we have been given a command to drive out the Canaanites. Like Israel, we have failed. Like Israel, the reason is the same: we have compromised our ability to build God’s city, because we have formed covenant bonds of convenience with those who hate God’s religion and culture, and want to build their own cities instead. Judah’s compromise at Luz is the toe in the door that leads to Israel’s complete failure of take the rest of the land, and being dispossessed from their own inheritance. How will our compromises affect our Great Commission, and the inheritance of Christ—and will we respond with repentance as Israel does? This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

What Mary Knew
A common Christian trope is to wonder what Mary knew when she pondered the baby in her arms. Scripture tells us that she knew a lot. Many of her responses to the angel Gabriel are unintuitive and surprising to us, but reveal an extraordinary knowledge of scripture, of God’s plan, and of the implications for her own life. Examining the Magnificat can help us to become more like Mary in our own responses to God and his word. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Judges 1, part 3: Fear & faithlessness in Israel and the church
Judah’s failure to conquer key territory planted the seed for Israel’s later division. In the same way, spiritual compromises today can produce disastrous long-term divisions in the church. We have mirrored Israel’s failures in fearing worldly opposition like COVID-era shutdowns, more than fearing God. Correcting these errors is necessary to restore the church’s ability to fulfill the Great Commission. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Psalm 98: The wondrousness of Christmas
Psalm 98 calls all creation to a joyful celebration of God’s salvation, kingship, and coming judgment. These are not hidden, but proclaimed to the nations, and established in history through the birth of Christ. In his cross, he promises salvation; in his reign, he restores both humanity and creation; and in his coming judgment, he assures us that justice, righteousness, and peace will prevail. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Judges 1, part 2: Israel’s success as the Church’s success
Many details in Judges are perplexing if we don’t know how to read symbolically. The Canaanite City of Records is captured and renamed Word—a picture of the church replacing the false identities of the nations through the gospel. Aksah is given a field and asks for the upper and lower springs—a picture of the Church seeking the Spirit from God, to make the world fruitful. The burning of Charamah, and coming on a donkey, similarly are pictures fulfilled in Christ. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Judges 1, part 1: Judges as typological of the church age
In an age where the church has taken much ground, but failed in the last hour to fulfill the Great Commission, perhaps the record of Israel’s prior failure will be of help to us in understanding our times—and what we ought to do. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Repentance, part 16: the forward-looking nature of biblical happiness
As with all sanctification, the pursuit of happiness is already and not yet. It is a forward-looking anticipation of the perfection we already have in Christ, which will become ours when we are glorified. By faith, we anticipate the perfect bliss of eternal union with God, but we also know we already are united to him in Christ. And so we seek to participate in that union now, as practice for what will become fully ours then. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Rightly ordered affections: natural vs covenantal identity
As Western civilization collapses, Western Christians are struggling for identity. For some, the pendulum is swinging from woke radical individualism to ethnic allegiances. But without recovering these natural bonds as covenantal categories, we are trading one form of identity politics for another. To rightly order the bonds of blood and soil, they must ultimately be fitted together under the covenantal arche of Christ. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

What does it mean to pray in faith?
How can it be true that “ask ye whatever ye may wish, and it shall come to be for you,” when our prayers so frequently go unanswered? The answer is that we do not pray as we ought—either continually enough, persistently enough, or with true faith: i.e., a living participation in Christ, discerning what God desires in him. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

How we overcome by faith…even (especially) when we fail
Though we seek continually to work out our salvation through righteous deeds, we often fall. How can we not be discouraged? By clinging to Christ, even in failure and humiliation—because in doing so, we share in his victory. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Repentance, part 21: individual transformation through Christ’s body
It is impossible to become like Christ without being attached to his body, just as it is impossible for your finger to keep reflecting your will and intention if it is cut from your hand. Outside the church there is no ordinary possibility of salvation. The transformation of our minds is therefore not just a question of “what am I becoming,” but also fundamentally, “what are we becoming?” This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

The biblical lawlessness of IVF
IVF violates three different biblical laws: (1) gross negligence, as many embryos die; (2) adultery, by introducing a third party into the sex act; (3) presumption, by creating life without the certainty of birth. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Repentance, part 19: we are all Cretans now
Cretans are liars, sluggards and gluttons—and from this, Paul infers that they will desire to go after fables and myths. Why? Because they want to waste themselves on consumption, without care for whether it is false. Unfortunately, social media algorithms and on-demand entertainment is now shaping us all into Cretans. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Repentance, part 18: fasting—scripture’s answer to consumerism
The consumerism of our age shapes our souls, by instant gratification, to covetousness and impatience. These are antithetical to contentment and faith, and leave us numb. The biblical remedy is not to ascetically resist the urge to indulge—but rather to reorder our desires toward God. Fasting teaches us how to do this. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Repentance, part 15: what is happiness?
Scripture has much to say about the happiness of those who consume God’s word. But how should we understand this, when antidepressant usage is common among Christians and non-Christians alike? Part of the answer is that biblical happiness is not a feeling, but an action of faith ordering the affections. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Repentance, part 14: three applications of biblical meditation
To consume God via his word, he tells us to be speaking the scriptures to ourselves, singing the scriptures to ourselves, and dialoging the scriptures between ourselves. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Covenant bodies & hospitality
Hospitality is a natural function of bodies. Giving the best of yourself for others works out not just at the personal level of individuals or families, but also in churches and even nations. What are some ways that New Zealand is hospitable, what does this hospitality reveal about its religion — and how should we then live? This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Repentance, part 13: to consume God, he must first consume us
We become like God by consuming him. But this pattern does not originate with us. To understand what it means to eat God — and how to do it — we must first know what it means that he eats us. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Receiving your national inheritance with gratitude
Our nation, and everything that makes it unique, is Christ’s own inheritance. We therefore cannot despise it, ignore it, or reject it—but rather love it and build it up for him. An exposition and application of Deuteronomy 21:1–9. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Psalm 132: Driven to establish worship
An exposition and application of Psalm 132. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Repentance, part 11: we’re always consuming either life or death
Even more elemental than light and eyes are food and mouth. Scripture teaches us that we are always consuming something, and that the first sin was a sin of consumption. In the modern day, we are especially tempted by the unearned wisdom, and unearned glory, of the tree of knowledge. But we must learn first to feed upon the tree of life. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Romans 1: Why idolatry makes you gay
Rejecting the creator/creature distinction logically and naturally leads to rejecting the male/female distinction. This follows necessarily from the biblical logic of “you become what you worship.” This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Psalm 124, part 2: Cannibalism—not whether, but which
An exposition and application of Psalm 124. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com

Repentance, part 10: attention as worship
All of life is worship, and we become what we worship; therefore, we are continually being conformed to the image of whatever it is we serve. Let us make sure that this is God, and not a black mirror. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit redwoodchurch.substack.com