Pages

Thursday, December 31, 2015

Especially beautified



(William Plumer, "Vital Godliness: A Treatise

on Experimental and Practical Piety" 1864)


"Clothe yourselves, all of you, with humility." 1 Peter 5:5


Humility is lowliness of mind — the opposite of pride and

arrogance. It belongs to the essence of experimental

religion. A humble spirit is the opposite of a lofty one.

True humility is an inward grace based on a view of our

own guilt, weakness, vileness, and ignorance — as

compared with the infinite excellence and glory of God.


Humility is one of the most lovely of all the traits of a

child of God. It is opposed to all ostentation. It hides

the other graces of the Christian from the gaze of

self-admiration. Its aim is not to be thought humble,

but to be humble. The godly man loves to lie low — and

cares not to have it known.


Humility will not disfigure, but adorn you. As Rebecca

was not the less lovely, but the more so, when she took

a veil and covered her beauty and all her jewels; so the

child of God is especially beautified when arrayed in

humbleness of mind.


All plenitude is in Christ




(James Meikle, May 24, 1757)


All plenitude is in Christ, to answer all the needs

of His people. In Christ dwells all the fullness of

the Godhead bodily, that out of His fullness I may

receive all spiritual blessings! 


Have I destroyed myself by sin? I have deliverance

from Him who is mighty to save from sin and wrath!

Is my foolish mind darkened? Am I a guilty, polluted,

and ruined wretch? Jesus is my wisdom, righteousness,

sanctification, and redemption!


Is my life fleeting--and passing away like a shadow?

Jesus is the Ancient of days, and endures for evermore!

Are my days short-lived and full of trouble? Jesus is my

life, the length of my days, and the joy of my heart!


Am I exposed to contempt? Jesus shall be

my crown of glory, and diadem of beauty!

Am I traveling through the wilderness?

Jesus is my staff, and on Him I lean all the way!

Am I on my last journey to my long home?

Jesus is my leader, and my rewarder!


Am I a sheep? Jesus is my pasture,

and my green pasture too!

Am I hungry and thirsty? Jesus is my heavenly

manna, and gives me to drink of the water of life!


Am I weary? Jesus is my rest and refreshing!

Am I weak? Jesus is my strength!

Am I oppressed and wronged?

Jesus is my judge, and my avenger!

Am I reproached? The reproach of

His people, Jesus will wipe away!


Am I a soldier? Jesus is my Captain and shield!

Must I fight in the field of battle?

Jesus is my armor in the day of war!


Do I sit in darkness? Jesus is my light!

Do I have doubts? Jesus is my counselor!

Am I ignorant? Jesus is my wisdom! 

Am I guilty? Jesus is my justification!

Am I filthy? Jesus is my sanctification!


Am I dead in sin? Jesus is my life, and quickens

those who are dead in trespasses and sins!

Am I poor? Jesus is the pearl of great price,

and has immeasurable riches!


Am I blind? Jesus, and none but He

can open the eyes of one born blind!

Am I naked? Jesus has white clothing

to cover the shame of my nakedness!


Am I in the very utmost necessity?

Jesus is a very present help in time of trouble!

Am I exposed to the hurricanes of adversity?

Jesus is . . .

a refuge from the storm;

a shelter from the blast;

rivers of water in a desert;

the shadow of a great rock in a weary land!


Am I afraid of being left alone? Jesus

will never leave me, nor forsake me!

Do friends and brethren prove false? Jesus

is the friend who sticks closer than a brother!


Am I in danger from diseases and death; or

from sin and Satan? My life is hidden with

Christ in God! When He shall appear, I shall

appear with Him--immortal in my body, and

glorious in my soul!

Is my case considered in the court of

heaven? There Jesus is my Advocate!

Do I offend the Father? Jesus is my Intercessor!

Do I suffer in my body, and am I grieved in my mind?

Jesus bore my infirmities, and carried my griefs!

Is my mind disquieted, and my soul debarred from

peace? Jesus is my sympathetic High Priest! He was

tempted in all points, and knows how to support

those who are tempted!

Am I poor in my circumstances? Jesus, the heir of all

things! Though He was rich, yet for my sake He became

poor, that I through His poverty might be made rich!


Do I suffer in my character? Jesus was numbered with

transgressors, called a Samaritan, a glutton, a drunkard,

and a devil!


Am I bereaved or alone? Well, Jesus in the fatal night

was left alone; all the disciples forsook Him and fled!

Jesus, my only friend, can never die!


Must I undergo death and be laid in the grave?

Jesus has taken away the sting of death, and

robbed the grave of its victory!


Must I rot in the grave? Jesus shall be my resurrection,

and raise me to immortality and bliss!

Would I go to God and to glory? Jesus is my way,

and must admit me into the palace of the great

King, where I shall abide forever!

In summary, Jesus is . . .

my brother,

my physician,

my prophet,

my priest,

my king,

my father,

my head,

my husband!


In eternity, when I shall dwell in the land of bliss,

in the city of God--Jesus will be the light thereof!

And since I am to worship there forever, He will

be the temple of all the redeemed!


My needs are many, but His fullness is infinitely more!

The morning dews and fructifying showers water the

fields, and refresh the parched furrows. But what are

they, compared to the exhaustless ocean of Jesus?


What is all that I enjoy here below, compared to the

exuberant fullness of the heavenly bliss? O! then, how

shall my soul be replenished--when possessed of

this infinite All, through eternity itself!


"Jehovah Shammah"


"Jehovah Shammah" 
by T. Austin-Sparks


"The Lord is There"

"The name of the city from that day shall be, JEHOVAH-SHAMMAH" (Ezekiel 48:35).

So, the end sees the eternal object attained: that which prompted creation; that which motivated Providence; that which has always been the dynamic of Sovereignty; and that which carried through Redemption.

The supreme and all-inclusive object has been God's presence in pleasure and satisfaction in the midst of men.

The City of Ezekiel's prophecy has its realisation in the "holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God" (Rev. 21:2). "And God himself shall be with them" (verse 3).

This has ever been God's quest. From one of many standpoints, the Bible can be said to be from beginning to end a record of God's quest for a place and for conditions suitable for His presence. In many symbols, types, and representations, this is the spiritual principle which governs and explains.

In a comprehensive way the Incarnation gathers up everything in this one connection: "Immanuel - God with us". The Cross is set in this one relationship - to clear the ground for God's dwelling. The Advent of the Holy Spirit must be seen supremely in the light of this eternal purpose. The Church is explained and justified in this one design. The individual believer is apprehended with this pre-eminent Divine thought. In all God is working toward this one issue and verdict

"THE LORD IS THERE"

If this is true, and surely it is obvious in the Scriptures, then certain very practical conclusions and issues follow.

1. This is the Explanation of the Cosmic Conflict

That there is such a conflict is surely more apparent now than at any previous time in history. The new attitude toward this matter is one of the many signs of the times. We have passed through a phase in which Satan's cleverest ruse has been widely successful. He has persuaded men not to believe in him, and has resolved the whole matter of evil into 'complexes', 'neuroses', 'good in the making', etc. Theology has bowed out the Devil, and he has grinned behind the mask of deception, as he sees his dupes so 'clever'. But there is a come-back, and it is largely due to an altogether new appraisal of the New Testament and of Paul in particular. Paul has come into a place that he has never before held, and this postulates a principle, that a return movement is always stronger than the first position because it has in it all the strength of bitter lessons learned through experience.

A modern writer of no mean authority, a professor in one of the premier universities of Scotland, drawing attention to this return movement on the part of other outstanding intellectuals, says:

SINAI AND SION






Way Into the Holiest - 30: SINAI AND SION



      "YOU are come to Mount Sion, and to the city of the living God, . . . and to an innumerable company of angels, to the general assembly and church of the firstborn, . . and to God the Judge of all, and to the spirits of just men made perfect, and to Jesus, and to the blood of sprinkling, that speaks better things than that of Abel. " (HEBREWS 12.22-24).


      To how great splendour had these Hebrew Christians been accustomed - marble courts, throngs of white-robed Levites, splendid vestments, the state and pomp of symbol, ceremonial, and choral psalm! And to what a contrast were they reduced - a meeting in some hall or school, with the poor, afflicted, and persecuted members of a despised and hated sect!

      It was indeed a change, and the inspired writer knew it well, and in these magnificent words, the sublime consummation and crown of his entire argument, he sets himself to show that, for every single item they had renounced, they had become possessed of a spiritual counterpart, a reality, an eternal substance, which was compensation told over a thousand times.

      "You are come." He refuses to admit the thought of it being a future experience, reserved for some high day, when the heavenly courts shall be thronged by the populations of redeemed and glorified spirits.

      That there will be high days of sacred festivity in that blessed state is clear from the Apocalypse of the beloved Apostle. But it is to none of them that these words allude. Mark that present tense, "You are come." Persecuted, weary, humiliated, these Hebrew Christians had already come to Mount Sion, to the city of the living God, and to the festal throngs of the redeemed. That they saw not these by the eye, and could not touch them by the hand of sense, was no reason for doubting that they had come to these glorious realities.

      And what was true of them is true of each reader of these lines who is united to the Lord Jesus by a living faith.

      WE BELONG TO MOUNT SION. 

"You are not come to the mount that might not be touched and that burned with fire, . . . but you are come to Mount Sion." At the bidding of these two words two mountains rise before us. First, Sinai stern and naked, rifted by tempest, cleft by earthquake, the centre and focus of the vast sandstone passages which conducted the pilgrim host, stage above stage, until it halted at its foot.

      But, grand as Sinai was by nature, it must have been grander far on that memorable day in which all elements of terror seemed to converge. There was the flash of the forked lightning out of the blackness of the brooding clouds. There was the darkness of midnight, the peal of thunder, the reverberations of which ran in volumes of sound along those resounding corridors, the whirlwind of tempest, and the voice of words which they entreated they might not hear any more.

      And all was done to teach the people the majesty, the spirituality, and the holiness of God. The result was terror, struck into the hearts of sinners, trembling at the contrast between the greatness and holiness of God and their own remembered murmurings and shortcomings. Even Moses said: "I exceedingly fear and quake."

      In contrast with this stands Mount Sion, the grey old rock on which stood the palace of David and the Temple of God - sites sacred to Jewish thought for holy memories and divine associations.

      "The Lord has chosen Sion, He has desired it for His habitation. This is My rest forever. Here will I dwell, for I have desired it." To the pious Jew, Mount Sion was the joy of the whole earth, the mountain of holiness, the city of the Great King. Her palaces, grey with age, were known to be the home and haunt of God. The very aspect of the hoary hills must strike panic into the heart of her foes. And her sons walked proudly around her ramparts, telling her towers, marking her bulwarks, considering her palaces, whilst fathers told to their children the stories of her glory which in their boyhood they too had received (Psalm 58.).

The counterpart of this city is ours still, ours forever. The halo of glory has faded off those ancient stones, and has passed on to rest on the true city of God, of which the foundations are Righteousness, the walls Peace, and the gates Praise, which rises beyond the mists and clouds of time, in the light that shines not from the sun or moon, but from the face of God.

Losing SELF in Christ






The Lesson of Love: Chapter 8 - Losing SELF in Christ


By J.R. Miller

      "If anyone would come after Me, he must deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow Me. For whoever wants to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for me will save it." Luke 9:23-24


      The Christian's first duty--is to honor his Master. He must be willing to sink himself out of sight--in order that the name of Christ may be magnified. It is not possible to both honor Christ--and yet to honor ourselves before men. The wreath on our own brow must fade--if we would keep the wreath for Christ beautiful and green. We must decrease--that Christ may increase. We must be willing to fall into the shadow--that the full light may be cast upon Christ's lovely face. We must be ready to suffer loss--that the cause of Christ may be advanced.

But all this seeming decrease if we are true at heart to our Master, is only seeming. The honor on our brow is never so bright as when we have willingly stripped off the stars from ourselves to bind them on the brow of Jesus. It is easy to mar the beauty. We have all seen people chafing and envying, when position and influence once theirs--passed to others. There is no severer test of character than comes in such experiences as this. It is not easy when others achieve promotions that we had hoped to win, for us to keep our spirits gentle, generous, and sweet. It is not easy, even in school, to have another win the prize which we sought and hoped to take, and then not to feel envious of him--but to treat him with true affection, joining his fellows in sincere honoring of him. It is not easy in the home, for a plain, unattractive child to see a bright, popular, brilliant sister idolized and petted, receiving universal praise--while she, the plain, homely one, is neglected and left without attention--it is not easy for the plain girl to see this and yet keep loyal affection in her heart and join cheerfully and sincerely in the honoring of the favorite. It is always hard to decrease--while another increases, especially if it is at our own cost.

      Yet only as we learn to die to self, do we become like Christ. Unrenewed nature seeks all for self--and none for Christ. 

Becoming a Christian is the taking of Christ into the life--in the place of self. Then all is changed. Life has a new center, a new aim. Christ comes first. His plan for our lives is accepted, instead of our own. It is no more what we would like to do--but "What does the Master want us to do?" It is no longer the pressing of our own will--but "May Your will, not mine, be done." This is the foundation of all Christian living--the dying of self--and the growing of Christ in the heart. So long as there remains any self-will, any unsubmission, any spirit of disobedience, any unconquered self, asserting its authority against the will of Christ--just so long, is our consecration incomplete.

      This lesson has its very practical bearing on all our common, every-day life. Naturally we want to have our own way. We like to carry out our own plans and ambitions. We are apt to feel, too, that we have failed in life, when we cannot realize these hopes. This is the world's standard. The successful worldling is the one who is able to master all life's circumstances and make them serve him in his career. He is the man who "increases" until he fills a large place among men. The world has little praise or admiration for the man who "decreases" in his property, brilliance, power, or prosperity.

      But we who read the Word of God know that there is an increase in men's eyes--which is a dwarfing, shrinking, and shriveling of the life in God's sight. We know also that there is a decrease in human eyes, which as God sees it, is a glorious enlargement and growth.

      The greatest thing possible in any life--is to have the divine plan for it fulfilled, the divine will go on in it--even though it thwarts every human hope and dashes away every earthly dream. It is not easy for us to learn the lesson--that God's ways are always better for us than our own. We make our little plans and begin to carry them out. We think we have all things arranged for our greatest happiness and our best good. Then God's plan breaks in upon ours--and we look down through our tears upon the shattered fragments of our fine plans. It seems wreck, loss, and disaster. But no--it is only God's larger, wiser, better plan--displacing our little, imperfect, shortsighted one.


THE GRACIOUS INVITATION

By John MacDuff, 1858
"Remember the words of the Lord Jesus, how He said,"
— Acts 20:35


THE GRACIOUS INVITATION

"Remember the words of the Lord Jesus, how He said,"
"Come unto Me, all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest." — Matthew 11:28
Gracious "word" of a gracious Savior, on which the soul may confidingly repose, and be at peace forever! It is a present rest — the rest of grace as well as the rest of glory. Not only are there signals of peace hung out from the walls of Heaven — the lights of Home glimmering in the distance to cheer our footsteps; but we have the "shadow" of this "great Rock!" in a present "weary land." Before the Throne above is there "the sea of glass," without one rippling wave; but there is a haven even on earth for the tempest-tossed, "We who have believed DO enter into rest."
Reader, have you found this blessed repose in the blood and work of Immanuel? Long going about "seeking rest and finding none," does this "word" sound like music in your ears — "Come unto Me"?All other peace is counterfeit, shadowy, unreal. The eagle spurns the gilded cage as a poor exchange for his free-born soarings. The soul's immortal aspirations cannot be satisfied, short of the possession of God's favor and love in Jesus.
How complete is the invitation! If there had been one condition in entering this covenant Ark, we must have been through eternity at the mercy of the storm! But all are alike warranted and welcome, and none more warranted than welcome. For the weak, the weary, the sin-burdened and sorrow-burdened, there is an open door of grace.
Return, then, unto your rest, O my soul! Let the sweet cadence of this "word of Jesus" move quietly upon you amid the disquietudes of earth. Sheltered in Him, you are safe for time — safe for eternity! There may be, and will be, temporary tossings, fears, and misgivings; manifestations of inward corruption; but these will only be like the surface-heavings of the ocean, while underneath there is a deep, settled calm. "You will keep him in perfect peace" (lit. peace, peace) "whose mind is stayed on You." In the world — it is care on care, trouble on trouble, sin on sin — but every wave that breaks on the believer's soul seems sweetly to murmur, "Peace, peace!"
And if the foretaste of this rest is precious, what must be the glorious consummation? Awaking in the morning of immortality, with the unquiet dream of earth over — faith lost in sight, and hope in fruition — no more any bias to sin — no more latent principles of evil — nothing to disturb the spirit's deep, everlasting tranquility — the trembling magnet of the heart reposing, where alone it can confidingly and permanently rest — in the enjoyment of the Infinite God. "These things have I spoken unto you, that in Me you might have peace."

Look! Gaze! See! Behold!

from Spurgeon, "SLAYING THE SACRIFICE"


The doctrine of the death of Christ for our sins should

inspire us with greater love for the Lord Jesus.

Can you look at his dear wounds, and

not be wounded with love for him?

Are not his wounds as mouths which plead

with you to yield him all your hearts?

Can you gaze upon his face bedewed with bloody

sweat, and then go away and be ensnared with the
world’s painted beauties?

Oh, for the vision of the Crucified!


When shall we see the face that was so marred for us?


When shall we behold the hands and feet which bear the

nail-marks still, and look into the wounded side bejewelled
with the spear-wound?

Oh, when shall we leave all our sins and griefs, for

ever to behold him shine and see him still before us?

Oh, when shall we be —

“Far from a world of grief and sin,
With God eternally shut in”?

Our hope, our solace, our glory, our victory, are all found in the
blood of the Lamb, to whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen.


Monday, December 28, 2015

The lesson is a long one


(J. R. Miller, "The Lesson of Love" 1903)

"God is love, and all who live in love live in God, and God lives in them." 1 John 4:16

To learn how to love — is to learn how to live. The lesson is a long one — but it is the great business of life to master it. The Master not only taught the lesson in words — but also set it down for us in a life — His own life. To follow Christ is to practice this great lesson, learning more of it day by day — until school is out and we go home!

Christian love has to be learned. There is natural affection which does not need to be learned — the love of parents for children, of children for parents, of friend for friend. But it is not natural to love our enemies, to love unlovable people, to be unselfish, to return kindness for unkindness. We have to learn this love — and it is the great business of life to do it.

"Dear friends, since God so loved us — we also ought to love one another." 1 John 4:11


And WHY, dear Savior--tell me why?


(James Smith "Redeeming Love!" 1861)

"He gave Himself for us--that He might redeem us from all iniquity, and purify unto Himself a peculiar people, zealous for good works." Titus 2:14

"HE gave Himself for us." Note the contrast between the Giver--and those for whom He gave Himself.

The Giver is He who was . . .
  the only begotten Son of God,
  the author of creation,
  the sustainer of the universe,
  the brightness of divine glory,
  the source and end of all things!
He who was proclaimed by the prophet as "the mighty God, the everlasting Father, and the Prince of Peace."
He who is declared by the apostle to be "God over all--blessed for evermore!"

"He gave Himself for US." For US--who at the best are mere creatures, between whom and our Creator, there can be no comparison. But it was not for us as mere creatures--but for us as base, vile, insignificant, and totally depraved creatures! We had debased ourselves, even unto Hell. Our nature could not be worse, for "the human heart is the most deceitful of all things--and desperately wicked!"

The most exalted, glorious, and holy being in the universe--gave Himself for the most vile, polluted, and degraded of His creatures!

O how astonishing! 

But He volunteered on our behalf, without any solicitation, offering to become . . .
  our Substitute--to fulfill the law in our stead;
  our Sacrifice--to make a full atonement for our sins; and
  our Ransomer--to pay the satisfactory price for our redemption.

He engaged to bear the desert of all our sins in His own body--to suffer all that the inflexible justice of God could inflict on our Surety--and so put away our sins forever, by the sacrifice of Himself. He gave . . .
  His person--for our persons;
  His blood--as our ransom price;
  and His life--for our lives!

He gave His entire self, doing and suffering all that was necessary to secure our release from sin's curse, and our everlasting salvation.
O amazing grace of a gracious Savior!
He gave Himself--that He might justly redeem, ransom, or deliver us--from the guilt, power, and penal consequences of sin.


He gave Himself--to expiate the guilt, to destroy the power, and secure us against the eternal desert of our transgressions.

He gave Himself to purify unto Himself, by fully expiating their sins--a peculiar people:
a people purchased--to be peculiarly His own;
a people sanctified, separated from all others--to be set apart for Himself;
a people to be His own subjects--as the King of Zion;
a people to be His own soldiers--as the Captain of our salvation;
a people to be His own servants--as the Lord of the house;
a people to be His own children--as the everlasting Father!

"He gave Himself!" The love of Jesus is unparalleled. Out of pure love to us who had no love to Him, nor ever would have had--but for His first loving us! He gave, not only His time, His labor, His wealth--but Himself! He gave His entire person as the God-man, the incarnate Jehovah!

"He gave Himself!" This was more than as if He had given a thousand worlds--for these He could create with a word!

"He gave Himself," and not merely to live for us, or labor for us--but even to die for us!

"He gave Himself," and not even to die some easy and honorable death--but the most painful, shameful death, that any man ever invented, or any creature ever suffered!
O wondrous love!


And WHY, dear Savior--tell me why,
You thus would suffer, bleed and die?
What mighty motive could Thee move,
The motive's plain--'twas all for love!
For love of whom? Of sinners base,
A hardened herd, a rebel race!
That mocked and trampled on Thy blood,
And trifled with the wounds of God!
They nailed Him to the accursed tree;
They did, my brethren--and so did we!
The soldier pierced His side, 'tis true;
But we have pierced Him through and through!
O Jesus, never, never was there love like yours!

   ~  ~  ~  ~


The Conversion of John Bunyan



      John Bunyan was brought up by his father in the craft of a brass worker. Although he was never a drunkard or a violent man, his special sins were profanity, Sabbath-breaking, and atheism. Before he was converted, he was notorious for the energy that he put into all his doings. He had a zeal for idle play and an enthusiasm in mischief that perversely manifested his forceful personality.

      His biographer, Dr. Hamilton, gives the following description of Bunyan in his youth:

      He is the noisiest of the party playing pitch-and-toss--that one with the shaggy eyebrows whose entire soul is ascending in the twirling penny. His energetic movements and authoritative exclamations identify him at once as a ringleader. The penny has come down on the wrong side, and a loud oath at once bellows from young Bunyan. You have only to remember that it is Sabbath evening, and you witness a scene often repeated on Elstow Green two hundred years ago.

      The only restraining influence that Bunyan then felt was the power of terror. He was often depressed by fear of the impending wrath of God, and he frequently had terrible nightmares that the reckless diversions of his waking day could not always dispel. He would dream that the last day had come and that the quaking earth was opening its mouth to let him down to hell. Or he would find himself in the grasp of fiends who were dragging him away.


      As he grew older, his conscience grew harder. He experienced some remarkable escapes from death, but these providences neither startled nor melted him. He married very early, and his wife was the daughter of a godly man. Her whole property consisted of two small books, The Plain Man's Pathway to Heaven, and Practice of Piety, which her father had left her on his deathbed.

      Young Bunyan read these books, and his wife often told him what a good man her father had been. The consequence was that he felt some desire to reform his vicious life, and he began to attend church twice a day. At the same time, he became overrun with a spirit of superstition. The mere sight of a priest bewitched him. However, while enamored with the garb and ritual of worship, Bunyan continued to curse and blaspheme and to spend his Sabbaths in the same riot as before.

      One day, however, he heard a sermon on the sin of Sabbath-breaking, and it haunted his conscience throughout the day. When he was in the midst of the excitement of that afternoon's diversions, a voice seemed to dart from heaven into his soul, 'Wilt thou leave thy sins and go to heaven, or have thy sins and go to hell?' His arm, which was about to strike a ball, was stopped, and as he looked up to heaven, it seemed as if the Lord Jesus was looking down upon him in rebuke and deep displeasure.

      At the same time, he was overcome with the conviction that he had sinned so long that repentance was now too late. His desperate conclusion was that he was beyond hope. In fact, he became so persuaded that he had forfeited heaven forever that he decided to enjoy the pleasures of sin as rapidly and intensely as possible. One day, as Bunyan was standing at a neighbor's window cursing and swearing, the woman of the house protested that he was the ungodliest man that she had ever known in her life. Because the woman was herself a notoriously worthless character, her reproof had a dramatic effect on Bunyan's mind. He was silenced in a moment. However, his swearing had become so habitual that he thought reform was impossible without returning to childhood and relearning how to speak.

      Soon after this circumstance, Bunyan began to read the Bible. He took a special interest in the historical portions of the Scripture, and his outward life underwent much reformation. His own account of this period of his life says:

 I did set the commandments before me for my way to heaven and I strived to keep them. I thought I kept them pretty well sometimes which would bring me comfort. Yet now and then I would break one, and so afflict my conscience. I would repent and promise God to do better next time. I then thought I pleased God as well as any man in England. Thus I continued about a year and all my neighbors considered me to be a very godly man, a new and religious man, and did marvel much to see such great alterations in my life and manners. And so it was although I knew not Christ, nor grace, nor faith, nor hope. I was nothing but a poor painted hypocrite, yet I loved to be talked of as one that was truly godly.


Gently rubbed off by the hand of love


(John Angell James, "The Sin of Scoffing at Religion" 1824)

"Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness
 sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Blessed are you
 when others revile you and persecute you and utter all
 kinds of evil against you falsely on My account. Rejoice and
 be glad, for your reward is great in heaven!" Matt. 5:10-12

Consider it your honor to be persecuted for righteousness sake.

The richest laurel that can adorn your brow is the scorn of fools!

The praise of the wicked is censure--and their satire is praise.

Every feeble mind can scoff, but only the wise man can bear it well.

The scorner is below a man; but the man who bears scorn
patiently is like an angel.

Instead of indulging in revenge, exercise forgiveness!

You have reason rather to be grateful to the scoffer, than to
be angry with him. His foul breath, though it seems to tarnish
your reputation for awhile, yet being gently rubbed off by
the hand of love
, shall only prepare it for a brighter luster.

And it shall be proved hereafter that the scorner was the
occasion of adding one more gem to the crown of glory
which shall adorn your brow with unfading honor!

Pity him, for he is indeed more an object of your pity than
of your contempt. Thus prove to the scoffer that the religion
which he ridicules, subdues the turbulent and angry passions,
teaches its possessor to forgive iniquities against himself, and
implants the godlike disposition of returning good for evil.



The Hart and Hind



Scripture Alphabet of Animals: The Hart and Hind
By Harriet N. Cook


Several animals of the deer kind are mentioned in the Bible under the names of Fallow-deer, Hart, Hind, and Roe-buck. They were all numbered among the clean animals, or those which the Israelites were allowed to eat; as we see in Deut. 14:4, 5, "These are the beasts which ye shall eat; the ox, the sheep, the goat, the hart, the roe-buck and the fallow-deer." In 1st Kings, 4:23, we read of the daily provision which was made for king Solomon's table, and among the rest were "ten fat oxen, and twenty oxen out of the pastures, and a hundred sheep, besides harts, and roe-bucks, and fallow-deer."

These animals are all harmless, gentle, timid, loving and beautiful; noted for their branching horns, for the elegance of their form, and for their surprisingly swift and graceful motion. It has long been a favorite amusement in eastern countries to pursue them in the chase; and as the swiftest greyhound can scarcely overtake them, it is usual to train hawks or falcons to attack them, and so delay them till the dogs come up. They bound along over the plains, "fleet as the wind," seeming scarcely to touch the ground: no motion can be more beautiful. In the last verse of Solomon's Song we read, "Make haste, my beloved, and be thou like to a roe, or to a young hart on the mountains of spices." The 35th chapter of Isaiah contains a beautiful description of the peaceful kingdom which Christ will one day establish in the earth; and among other things it is said, "Then the eyes of the blind shall be opened, and the ears of the deaf shall be unstopped; then shall the lame man leap as an hart, and the tongue of the dumb shall sing."

The hart or hind is remarkably sure-footed as well as swift: this may explain one or two verses in the Bible. David says, 2d Sam. 22:33, 34, "God is my strength and power, and he maketh my way perfect. He maketh my feet like hinds' feet, and setteth me upon my high places." In the last verse of Habakkuk we read, "The Lord is my strength, and he will make my feet like hinds' feet."

The male deer is called a hart, the female a hind; and their affection for each other is beautiful. Solomon says in the Proverbs, "Rejoice with the wife of thy youth; let her be as the loving hind and pleasant roe."

The hart often suffers from thirst in the dry and sandy countries where it lives-especially when pursued by the hunters; it then longs for water, and plunges with the greatest eagerness into the cooling stream. David says in the 42d Psalm, "As the hart panteth after the water brooks, so panteth my soul after thee, O God. My soul thirsteth for God, for the living God; when shall I come and appear before God?" Nothing could more strongly express his love to God, or his ardent desire for communion with him. Happy is the child who has in his heart such feelings towards God, and who finds pleasure in praying to him, from day to day; he has been taught by the Holy Spirit, and is preparing to meet God in peace. (See Roe.)


Half the diseases of Christianity


(J. C. Ryle, "The Gospel of Matthew" 1856)


"These are the names of the twelve apostles . . .
and Judas Iscariot, who betrayed Him." Mt. 10:2-4

We are taught here, that all ministers are not
necessarily saved men. 
We see our Lord choosing

a Judas Iscariot to be one of His apostles. We
cannot doubt that He who knew all hearts, knew
well the characters of the men whom He chose.
And He includes in the list of apostles one who
was a traitor!

We shall do well to bear in mind this fact.

Ordination does not confer the saving grace of the
Holy Spirit. Ordained men are not necessarily
converted.
 We are not to regard them as infallible,

either in doctrine or in practice.

We are not to make popes or idols of them, and insensibly put them in Christ's place. We 
are to regard them as "men of like passions"
with ourselves, liable to the same infirmities,
and daily requiring the same grace.

We are not to think it impossible for them
to do very bad things
, or to expect them to

be above the reach of harm from flattery,
covetousness, and the world.

We are to prove their teaching by the word
of God, and follow them so far as they follow
Christ, but no further.

Above all, we ought to pray for them, that they
may be successors not of Judas Iscariot; but of
James and John. It is an dreadful thing to be
a minister of the Gospel!


Ministers need many prayers.

It is plain that the life of a faithful minister of
Christ cannot be one of ease.
 He must be ready

to spend body and mind, time and strength, in
the work of His calling. Laziness and frivolity are
bad enough in any profession, but worst of all in
that of a watchman for souls.

It is plain, for another thing, that the position
of the ministers of Christ is not that which
ignorant people sometimes ascribe to them,
and which they unhappily sometimes claim for
themselves. They are not so much ordained
to rule as to serve. They are not intended so
much to have dominion over the Church, as
to supply its needs, and serve its members.

Happy would it be for the cause of true religion,
if these things were better understood! Half the
diseases of Christianity
 have arisen from
mistaken notions about the pastor's office!


Money can hire workers.

Universities can give learning.

Congregations may elect.

Bishops may ordain.

But the Holy Spirit alone can
make ministers of the Gospel.



Patience of Perseverance






By Hugh Black

      "If thou hast run with the footmen, and they have wearied thee, then how canst thou contend with horses? and if in the land of peace, wherein thou trustedst, they wearied thee, then how wilt thou do in the swelling of Jordan?" (Jer. 12:5).

      Does it seem an unfeeling answer? It was the answer Jeremiah needed. He needed to be braced, not pampered. He is taught the need of endurance. It is a strange cure for cowardice, a strange remedy for weakness; yet it is effective. It gives stiffening to the soul. The tear-stained face is lifted up calm once more. A new resolution creeps into the eye to prove worthy of the new responsibility God appeals to the strength in Jeremiah, not to the weakness. By God's grace I will fight, and fighting fall if need be. By God's grace I will contend even with horses; and I will go to the pride of Jordan though the jungle growl and snarl. This was the result on Jeremiah, and it was the result required. Only a heroic soul could do the heroic work needed by Israel and by God, and it was the greatest heroism of all which was needed, the heroism of endurance.

      Nothing worth doing can be done in this world without something of that iron resolution. It is the spirit which never knows defeat, which cannot be worn out, which has taken its stand and refuses to move. This is the 'patience' about which the Bible is full, not the sickly counterfeit which so often passes for patience, but the power to bear, to suffer, to sacrifice, to endure all things, to die, harder still sometimes to continue to live. The whole world teaches that patience. Life in her struggle with nature is lavish of our resources. She is willing to sacrifice anything for the bare maintenance of existence meanwhile. Inch by inch each advance has to be gained, fought for, paid for, kept. it is the lesson of all history also, both for the individual and for a body of men who have espoused any cause.


Sunday, December 27, 2015

Could you grasp the world like an orange

Related image

 
(Edward Payson, 1783-1827)

"You have made known to me the path of life; You
 will fill me with joy in Your presence, with eternal
 pleasures
 at Your right hand." Psalm 16:11

Could you grasp the world like an orange, and
squeeze all the happiness it gives into a single cup,
it would be as nothing compared to one drop of
God's eternal pleasures!



Two seeds?

Two seeds?

Spurgeon, "In the Garden with Him." #2106. 

So the Lord God said to the serpent, "Because you
have done this, you will be punished...
And I will put enmity between you and the woman,
and between your seed and her seed..." Genesis 3:14-15

There are two seeds in the world- the seed
of the woman, and the seed of the serpent.

And if the seed of the serpent never hisses at you,
you may be afraid that you do not  belong to the
seed of the woman. God has put an enmity between
 the serpent and the woman; between the serpent's
seed and the woman's seed.

And so it must be till the end  of time.

Take any opposition that you get from worldlings as
a token for good, a sign that you are of a different
race from those who despise you, a testimonial to
your character from those whose homage to goodness
embodies itself in persecution. That is the way in which
they compliment us.



Persecution of the Anabaptists


Excerpts from the book, "Mennonites in Europe" by John Horsch
 
(Note: The term "Anabaptist" was used to describe and define certain Christians during the Reformation era. These Christians rejected infant baptism, choosing instead believer's baptism. Since many of them had been baptized in their infancy, they chose to be baptized as believing adults. So their enemies called them Anabaptists — "re-baptizers." For their "crime of believer's baptism", Anabaptists were heavily persecuted during the 16th century and into the 17th, by both Roman Catholics and Protestants.)

In need scarcely be said, that Roman Catholicism had always taken an attitude of intolerance and persecution toward all dissenters from its creed. On the contrary, the principal leaders in the Reformation movement, Luther and Zwingli, in the first period of their reformatory labors, condemnedRomish intolerance. They were in the earlier period, defenders of the principle of liberty of conscience. Later they agreed to a thorough-going union of the church with the state, which meant the abandonment of the principle of religious liberty. Furthermore, the natural and inevitable consequence, was the persecution of the Anabaptists by the established Protestant state churches.

It is a fact recognized by many recent historians, that the persecution of the Anabaptists surpassed in severity the persecution of the early Christians by pagan Rome! Persecution began in Zurich soon after the Brethren had organized a congregation. Imprisonment of varying severity, sometimes in dark dungeons, was followed by executions. Within a short period the leaders of the Brethren lost their lives in the persecution.

Anabaptism was made a capital crime. Prices were set on the heads of Anabaptists. To give them food and shelter was a made a crime. The duke of Bavaria, in 1527, gave orders that the imprisoned Anabaptists should be burned at the stake — unless they recanted, in which case they should bebeheaded. In Catholic countries the Anabaptists, as a rule, were executed by burning at the stake; inLutheran and Zwinglian states, Anabaptists were generally executed by beheading or drowning.
Thousands sealed their faith with their blood. When all efforts to halt the movement proved vain, the authorities resorted to desperate measures. Armed executioners and mounted soldiers were sent in companies through the land to hunt down the Anabaptists and kill them on the spot without trial or sentence. The old method of pronouncing sentence on each individual dissenter proved inadequate to exterminate this faith.

In the first week of Lent, 1528, King Ferdinand of Austria commissioned a company of executioners to root out the Anabaptist faith in his lands. Those who were overtaken in the highways of fields were killed with the sword, others were dragged out of their houses and hanged on the door posts. Most of them had gone into hiding in the woods and mountains. In a forest near Lengbach seventeen were put to death.

In the province of Swabia, in South Germany, four hundred mounted soldiers were, in 1528, sent out to put to death all Anabaptists on whom they could lay hands. Somewhat later the number of soldiers so commissioned was increased to eight hundred, and then to one thousand.

In various provinces an imperial provost marshal by the name of Berthold Aichele, with his assistants, put many Anabaptists to death. On Christmas day, 1531, he drove seventeen men and women into a farmhouse in Württemberg and burned the building together with the inmates.
Three hundred and fifty Anabaptists were executed in the Palatinate before the year 1530.
At Ensisheim, "the slaughterhouse of Alsace," as it was called, six hundred were killed within a few years.
Within six weeks thirty-seven were burneddrowned, or beheaded at Linz, in Austria.
In the town of Kitzbüchl in the Tyrol, sixty-eight were executed in one year.

Two hundred and ten or more, were burned in the valley of the Inn River.

The number of Anabaptist martyrs in the Tyrol and Görz, was estimated at one thousand at the end of the year 1531.

One last very touching incident:

Dirk Willems of Holland was re-baptized when he became a believer, thus rejecting the infant baptism practiced at that time. This action, plus his continued devotion to his new faith and the re-baptism of several other believers in his home — led to his subsequent arrest and martyrdom.

An officer came to arrest him at the village of Asperen. Running for his life, Dirk came to a frozen pond. After making his way across in great peril, he realized that his pursuer had fallen through the ice, and into the freezing water.

Turning back to save the drowning officer, Dirk dragged him safely to shore. The man wanted to release Dirk, but a burgomaster, having appeared on the scene — reminded him that he was under oath to deliver criminals to justice. Dirk was bound off to prison, interrogated, and tortured in an unsuccessful effort to make him renounce his faith. He was tried and found guilty of having been re-baptized, of holding secret meetings in his home, and of allowing baptism there — all of which he freely confessed. "Persisting obstinately in his opinion", Dirk was burned at the stake near his hometown on 16 May 1569, by these blood-thirsty, ravening wolves — enduring it with great steadfastness.
 
For further reading:

"The Anabaptist Story" by William R. Estep

"The Reformers and Their Stepchildren" by Leonard Verduin



The result has been . . .

(Arthur Pink, "An Exposition of the Gospel of John")

"If the world hates you, keep in mind that it hated Me first. If you belonged to the world, it would love you as its own. As it is, you do not belong to the world, but I have chosen you out of the world. That is why the world hates you!" John 15:18-19

"Do not be surprised, my brothers, if the world hates you!" 1 John 3:13

The professing Church has boasted that it would convert the world. To accomplish this aim, it has sought to "popularize" religion. Innumerable devices have been employed to attract the ungodly — many of which even a sense of propriety should have suppressed!

The result has been that the world has converted the professing Church!

But notwithstanding this, it still remains true that the world hates the true followers of the Lamb. And nowhere is this more plainly evident, than in those who belong to what we may term the religious world!

If you resolve that by Divine grace you will live godly in Christ Jesus — then know you that persecution must be your portion. And that persecution will come upon you not from atheists and infidels — but from those bearing the name of Christians. It will issue from those who still keep up a form (or semblance) of godliness, but who are strangers to its living power. It will come to you from empty professors whose compromising ways are condemned by your refusal to conform thereto; whose worldliness and carnality is rebuked by your spirituality.

Remember, it was the religious leaders who hounded the Savior to His death!


The believer's lesson book!



(George Everard, "Beneath the Cross" 1877)

"May I never boast except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, through which the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world!" Galatians 6:14

The cross of Christ is the believer's lesson book. The sufferings He bore for our sake, should be the subject of our constant meditation.

Nowhere, as in the Cross and in the scenes connected with it--do we see such revelations of the heart of Christ.

Mercy shines forth in her beauty . . .
  seeking pardon for His cruel murderers,
  compassionating the daughters of Jerusalem,
  and saving a sinner of the deepest dye!

Justice, too, stands forth in unsullied glory. In paying the debt of human guilt, in bearing the penalty of a broken law--Christ is seen to be a just God, as also a Savior.

In our Lord's suffering and death, there is precious instruction for the believer in almost every matter belonging to the Christian life . . .
  what are the perils you are likely to meet with--and how best to overcome them;
  what should be your life in secret before God--and what should be your path in the world;
  what is your strength in the hour of temptation, and in the season of sorrow;
  how to crucify the world--and how to glorify God in the position which you occupy
--all this may be learned in fellowship with our suffering Redeemer.

Beneath the Cross likewise, you may best learn to cultivate every Christian grace and virtue. 
Meekness and courage,
zeal and love,
prayer and patience and forebearance,
and submission to the will of God--
are the fruits of a believing view of Christ's death.

You may learn, too, to conquer sin by the sight of that which it cost Christ to save you from it. The nail and the spear may be driven through the sins which have been most cherished. You may thus be enabled to crucify the flesh with the affections and lusts.

And beneath the Cross you may learn another lesson. You may learn how to die. Through death, Christ has destroyed the power of death--the sting is gone. To him who believes, death is life--for it is departing to be with Christ, which is far better.

Therefore let us often betake ourselves to Calvary. Let memory recall and ponder those hours on which our everlasting peace depends. Let our faith bridge over the centuries that have passed between. Let us go and stand in thought, beside the faithfulwomen who were last at the cross, and first at the grave. Let us look again, and yet again, and discover new lessons of instruction and fresh grounds for the deepest contrition, as also for everlasting joy and thankfulness--beneath the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ.
   ~  ~  ~  ~