Perhaps the most astounding aspect of this book to me is that in a book about knowing the times in which one lives, and the 1940s-70s were very different times than my own, I found myself constantly making a note in the margins of my book that a statement or a comment he had just made is still extremely relevant in our time today. The slide of evangelicalism into liberalism was in full swing during the ministry of Jones, and it continues still today. And so the power of the book lies not just in the encouragement for the reader to know the times in which they live, but seemingly every address contained in the book is still amazingly relevant to today, both in the error that it confronts and the truth that it brings to bear.
The ability to ‘read the room’ is a really good life skill to have. What do I mean? Oftentimes one may get themselves in a fair bit of trouble if they, in whatever varied situation they find themselves in, are unable to grasp the particular demeanor or emotional temperature of the gathering. Perhaps it’s as simple as walking into a room which had just received some bad news and cracking a joke. A simple look at the solemn faces of those around should have made it clear that it wasn’t the appropriate time for a joke. It’s a simple example, but it makes the point. You may well desire to swim upstream when everyone else is swimming downstream, but the first key to doing that is to see which way the current is moving and how everyone around you is reacting to it. Knowing when to speak and when to keep silent or when to act and when to stay still are important pieces of wisdom that not everyone possesses. But reading the room isn’t just a skill limited to social gatherings. As Christians it is valuable to be able to monitor and evaluate the various winds that may be blowing, both in culture at large and in the church. Once that information is attained, the Christian is able to bring the Gospel and truth of Scripture to bear in specific and relevant ways.
Knowing the Times[1] by D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones has been sitting on my bookshelf for a few years, and I took some of the free time I had during the COVID lockdown to pull it out and read through it. I was exceedingly glad that I did. In short, this book is a compilation of lectures, sermons, or radio broadcasts that Lloyd-Jones delivered through the middle of the 21st century. As the title of the book indicates, the general theme that was chosen is lectures that in some manner help the reader ‘read the room’ or know and evaluate the prevailing winds in culture and the church. Perhaps the title itself is derived from chapter 2, where Llyod-Jones says this in a radio broadcast in Wales in 1945:
It is obvious that we do not fully realize what the state of the world around us is in when we speak of religion tomorrow, because our ideas and our aims for the future depend to a great extent on the way we interpret our present situation. Moreover, there is nothing which shows our spiritual condition more clearly than our ability to comprehend the signs of the times. Do we realize that the problem of religion today is very different from what it was, say, forty years ago, and even twenty years ago? Today, we are producing men who are almost totally ignorant of the Bible, and from the point of view of morality, the problem is not so much immorality, but the total absence of morality.[2]