Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Cling to the Lord Jesus in your feebleness, in your fickleness, in your nothingness; and abidingly take him to be everything to you.

from Spurgeon's sermon, "Preparation for the Coming of the Lord.
If Jesus undertook to bring me to glory, and if the Father promised that
he would give me to the Son to be a part of the infinite reward of the
travail of his soul; then, my soul, till God himself shall be unfaithful,
till Jesus shall cease to be the truth, thou art safe. --Spurgeon

Saturday, October 25, 2008

Call Out To Jesus

When he heard that it was Jesus of Nazareth, he began to shout,
`Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!’
Many rebuked him and told him to be quiet, but he shouted all the more,
`Son of David,
have mercy on me!’”

Kim Riddlebarger: "Somehow this blind man had heard of Jesus. His relentless cry of faith, “Jesus,
Son of David, have mercy upon me,” is framed in the langauge of the Psalter.
This man believes that
Jesus can help him
and he simply will not give up,
despite the crowd’s insistence that he do so.
He calls
out to Jesus
over
and
over.

He is desperate.
And he just knows that Jesus can heal him."

Thursday, October 23, 2008

My Jesus Makes All things New

Sunday we'll look at Jesus' healing of Blind Bart. This is a wonderful picture of Christ restoring Creation's intent.

Election time reminds me how low our hopes tend to be... Let us long for and rejoice that we have a King who calls for HIGH (really high!) hopes.

A. Peterson captures it well.......

Vs 1: Come Broken and Weary, come battered and bruised
my Jesus makes all things new, All things new

Vs 2: Come lost and abandoned, come blown by the wind
He'll bring you back home again, home again

Chorus: Rise up oh you sleeper awake
The light of the dawn is upon you
Rise up oh you sleeper awake
He makes all things new
All things New

Vs 3: Come frozen with shame, come burning with guilt
my Jesus loves you still, loves you still

Chorus

Bridge: The world was good, the world is fallen, the world will be redeemed, The world was good, the world is fallen, the world will be redeemed

Vs 4: So Hold on to the promise, the stories are true,
My Jesus makes all things new

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Several Things

1.) Here is the FAQ page for Christianity Explored, the course we are gearing up now to run in January.


2.) quote of the day y'day:
“The mother never has such success in showing her affection to her child as when he is in distress, sick, poor, or imprisoned. So Christ shows His affection to His children when tempted, or when bested by temptation.

When His children lie in Satan’s prison, bleeding under the wounds of their consciences, this is the season He takes to give an example of His tender heart in pitying, His faithfulness in praying for them, His mindfulness in sending help to them, His dear love in visiting them by His comforting Spirit.

Thus Jesus Christ, whom Satan thought to bring out of the soul’s favor and liking, comes in the end to sit higher and surer in the saint’s affections than ever.”

—William Gurnall, Christian in Complete Armour


3.) joy joy... y'day Hiatt and i took our annual roadtrip to Starbucks to discuss several things... we hit the baristas in a generous mood and scored 2 hot chocolates (man! those are good) and 2 small coffees for a grand total of $1.50
We drank like kings!

4.) See if God doesn't bump you into someone in the next 24 hrs ... someone you can invite to Fall Festival Sunday.

.

Monday, October 20, 2008

Sunday, October 19, 2008

The notion which the phrase ‘penal substitution’ expresses is that Jesus Christ our Lord, moved by a love that was determined to do everything necessary to save us, endured and exhausted the destructive divine judgment for which we were otherwise inescapably destined, and so won us forgiveness, adoption and glory. To affirm penal substitution is to say that believers are in debt to Christ specifically for this, and that this is the mainspring of all their joy, peace and praise both now and for eternity. --JI Packer, from article The Logic of Penal Substitution



“The cross is the blazing fire at which the flame of our love is kindled, but we have to get near enough for its sparks to fall on us.” --John Stott


“The cross is God’s way of standing worldly power and authority on its head… God’s way of putting us & the world to rights … The cross challenges and subverts all the human systems which claim to put the world to rights but in fact only succeed in bringing a different set of humans out on top.” –Tom Wright

“Only those who are aware of God’s wrath are amazed at God’s grace.” --C.J. Mahaney

Rec’d Resources… To look into “the cup of God’s wrath” further:
Christ Our Mediator, C.J. Mahaney (96 pages) The Cross of Christ, John Stott (380 pages)

Help for Parents! Dr. R.C. Sproul's newest story, The Prince's Poison Cup, is the story of a little girl, Ella, who is sick and must take yucky medicine to make her well. Ella wonders why something that will make her get well has to taste so bad. She puts the question to Grandpa who tells her the story of atonement and the terrible price that Jesus had to pay for our redemption by being willing to drink that awful cup. Great Christmas present!

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Papers I handed out today

Sanctification by JI Packer
b/c we are (subtly) focusing on sanctification during our worship services in October

Threefold Use of The Law of God by RC Sproul
b/c Jesus used one of them on the Rich Young Ruler

Sunday, October 05, 2008

( by Preaching he means on sunday by a preacher to a crowd or tuesday
by a normal Christian to a friend... and--i think--the way we talk to
our children about being right with God! )
The true preaching of the gospel of salvation by grace alone always
leads to the possibility of this charge being brought against it.
There is no better test as to whether a man is really preaching the
New Testament gospel of salvation than this, that some people might
misunderstand it and misinterpret it to mean that it really amounts to
this, that because you are saved by grace alone it does not matter at
all what you do; you can go on sinning as much as you like because it
will redound all the more to the glory of grace. If my preaching and
presentation of the gospel of salvation does not expose it to that
misunderstanding, then it is not the gospel. Let me show you what I
mean.

If a man preaches justification by works, no one would ever raise this
question. If a man's preaching is, 'If you want to be Christians, and
if you want to go to heaven, you must stop committing sins, you must
take up good works, and if you do so regularly and constantly, and do
not fail to keep on at it, you will make yourselves Christians, you
will reconcile yourselves to God and you will go to heaven'. Obviously
a man who preaches in that strain would never be liable to this
misunderstanding. Nobody would say to such a man, 'Shall we continue
in sin, that grace may abound?', because the man's whole emphasis is
just this, that if you go on sinning you are certain to be damned, and
only if you stop sinning can you save yourselves. So that
misunderstanding could never arise . . . . . .

Nobody has ever brought this charge against the Church of Rome, but it
was brought frequently against Martin Luther; indeed that was
precisely what the Church of Rome said about the preaching of Martin
Luther. They said, 'This man who was a priest has changed the doctrine
in order to justify his own marriage and his own lust', and so on.
'This man', they said, 'is an antinomian; and that is heresy.' That is
the very charge they brought against him. It was also brought George
Whitfield two hundred years ago. It is the charge that formal dead
Christianity – if there is such a thing – has always brought against
this startling, staggering message, that God 'justifies the ungodly' .
. .

That is my comment and it is a very important comment for preachers. I
would say to all preachers: If your preaching of salvation has not
been misunderstood in that way, then you had better examine your
sermons again, and you had better make sure that you are really
preaching the salvation that is offered in the New Testament to the
ungodly, the sinner, to those who are dead in trespasses and sins, to
those who are enemies of God. There is this kind of dangerous element
about the true presentation of the doctrine of salvation.

This is from Lloyd-Jones commentary on Romans 6, pp 8-9, and was
quoted by Chuck Swindoll in his book The Grace Awakening, pp. 39-40.

"When all Thy mercies O my God,

My rising soul surveys,

Transported with the view I'm lost

In wonder, love & praise.

Unnumbered comforts on my soul

They tender care bestowed,

Before my infant heart conceived

From whom these comforts flowed.

When in the slippery paths of youth

With heedless steps I ran,

Thine arm unseen conveyed me safe,

And brought me up to man.

When worn with sickness oft hast Thou

With health renewed my face;

And when in sins and sorrows sunk,

Revived my soul with grace.

Friday, October 03, 2008

What do we mean when we say that we're "saved"? In Scripture, salvation concerns three realities: First, we have been saved. By his atoning death Christ secured our acceptance before God and when we placed our trust in Christ we were immediately justified and adopted. "There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus." But (second*) we are also being saved. At the same moment that the Holy Spirit creates faith by the preaching of the Gospel the believer is truly changed and his sanctification has already begun. Justification is a once-and-for-all declaration of right-standing because of an imputed righteousness; sanctification is a progressive growth in the grace and knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ through an imparted righteousness. As living branches of the Savior's Vine, we immediately begin to bear the fruit of the Spirit, although others may be more aware of it than are we. Justification is instantaneous, objective and complete. Sanctification is progressive, subjective and partial. As the Heidelberg Catechism puts it, "For even the holiest of Christians make only a small beginning in obedience in this life. Nevertheless, they begin with serious purpose to conform not only to some, but to all the commandments of God." The Westminster Confessions adds, "Even our best works, as they are wrought by us, are defiled and mixed with so much weakness and imperfection that they cannot endure the severity of God's judgment." The question arises, then, why pursue good works at all? Why should we even be interested in sanctification? --Mike Horton, whole thing here

*The 3rd reality of salvation is that we SHALL be saved, on the Day of Judgment

Amazingly Intimate Care from Our Majestic Father


You have kept count of my tossings;
put my tears in your bottle.
Are they not in your book?


--from Psalm 56

Tonight's Spurgeon

"He himself hath suffered being tempted." - Hebrews 2:18

It is a common-place thought, and yet it tastes like nectar to the weary heart-Jesus was tempted as I am. You have heard that truth many times: have you grasped it? He was tempted to the very same sins into which we fall. Do not dissociate Jesus from our common manhood. It is a dark room
which you are going through, but Jesus went through it before. It is a sharp fight which you are waging, but Jesus has stood foot to foot with the same enemy. Let us be of good cheer, Christ has borne the load before us, and the blood-stained footsteps of the King of glory may be seen along
the road which we traverse at this hour.

Who are the parents in Mark 10?

Sinclair Ferguson:

Jesus is speaking about children whose parents are already disciples (and will in turn 'disciple' them). Such parents know they need to teach their children the responsibilities of kingdom life, as well as the privileges of kingdom possession. If the blessings of God are rejected in disobedience, they are forfeited. Nothing that is said here implies ... that irrespective of their response to Jesus these children were automatically guaranteed salvation.... or any other position on the part of Jesus.

--Sinclair Ferguson, Let's Study Mark, p.162

Life-Changing Truth... I still remember first time I heard it

We all automatically gravitate toward the assumption that we are justified by our level of sanctification, and when this posture is adopted it inevitably focuses our attention not on Christ but on the adequacy of our own obedience.

We (wrongly tend to) start each day with our personal security resting not on the accepting love of God and the sacrifice of Christ but on our present feelings or recent achievements in the Christian life. Since these arguments will not quiet the human conscience, we are inevitably moved either to discouragement and apathy or to a self-righteousness which falsifies the record (lowers the standard) to achieve a sense of peace.


--richard lovelace

What is your view of sanctification? How does one avoid antinomianism and legalism as we grow in grace?

What is your view of sanctification? How does one avoid antinomianism and legalism as we grow in grace?

I believe the classical Reformed view—that on the one hand, sanctification is not by ‘works’ but by a continuous re-orienting ourselves to our justification. So sanctification is not moralistic. Yet it takes enormous effort (so it is not quietistic.)

When we feed on,
remember,
and live in accordance with our justification,
it mortifies our idols
and fills us with an inner joy and desire to please and resemble our Lord through obedience.
But the feeding on, remembering, and living in accordance—takes all our effort. --timothy j. keller

The Differences between Justification & Sanctification

Justification describes the position of acceptance with God which he gives us when we trust in Christ as our Saviour. It is a legal term, borrowed from the lawcourts, and its opposite is condemnation. To justify is to acquit, to declare an accused person to be just, not guilty. So the divine judge, because his Son has borne our condemnation, justifies us, pronouncing us righteous in his sight. 'Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus' (Rom. 8:1).
Sanctification, on the other hand, describes the process by which justified Christians are changed into the likeness of Christ. When God justifies us, he declares us righteous through Christ's death for us; when he sanctifies us, he makes us righteous through the power of his Holy Spirit within us.
Justification concerns our outward status of acceptance with God; sanctification concerns our inward growth in holiness of character.
Further, whereas our justification is sudden and complete, so that we shall never be more justified than we were on the day of our conversion, our sanctification is gradual and incomplete. It takes a few moments only in court for a judge to pronounce his verdict and for the accused to be acquitted; it takes a lifetime even to approach Christlikeness.

--John Stott

Might Show at Next Step Tonite

THREE ways, not TWO:





Missional versus Evangelistic



Gospel Imperatives & Indicatives, by Sinclair Ferguson

Wednesday, October 01, 2008

Clearly, Jesus loved the children,
he blessed them as members of his covenant, and he was very upset with the disciples when they tried to prevent
parents from bringing their children to him. Children are the perfect example of the kingdom of God,
because they don’t see the need to try and earn entrance, they just receive it. In fact, says Jesus, children
(even very little ones–infants and toddlers) are members of his kingdom. This is why we not only apply
to them the sign and seal of the covenant (baptism), but why we involve our children in our worship just
as soon as they are physically ready. Jesus’ attitude toward children should be our own. It was Jesus
who said, “let the little children come to me.” We must never hinder them from coming to their Savior! --kim riddlebarger

Yet I Sin

Eternal Father,
Thou are good beyond all thought,
But I am vile, wretched, miserable, blind;
My lips are ready to confess, but my heart is slow to feel, and my ways reluctant to amend.
I bring my soul to thee; break it, wound it, bend it, mold it.

Unmask to me sin's deformity... My faculties have been a weapon of revolt against thee; as a rebel I have misused my strength, and served the foul adversary of they kingdom.
Give me grace to bewail my insensate folly...

Work in me more profound and abiding repentance;
Give me the fullness of a godly grief that trembles and fears, yet ever trusts and loves, which is ever powerful, and ever confident;
Grant that through the tears of repentance I may see more clearly the brightness and glories of the saving cross.

--from Valley of Vision, a collection of Puritan prayers... see the whole prayer here

Our attitude is to be just like that of those children who Jesus picked up and
blessed. If we are Christ’s disciples, we will not claim the kingdom, we will not try and force our way
into it, we will simply receive it with the empty hands of faith. And never forget that in this kingdom
there is forgiveness of all of our sins–there is forgiveness for divorce, there is forgiveness for adultery,
and there is forgiveness for the sin of pride on the part of any who say to themselves, “I never committed
the sin of adultery and I never got a divorce,” therefore I am superior to those who have. In this
kingdom, God freely receives repentant sinners. But he turns away all those who think they’ve earned
their place with in the kingdom. Entrance into the kingdom of God is bestowed and received. Entrance
can never be earned. We must simply receive the blessings which Jesus gives us, as those children who
were brought to Jesus reveled in his blessing. 00 Kim Riddlebarger
O Friends, instead of thinking
yourselves more fit for Christ by growing bigger, grow smaller! Instead of getting greater, get less! Instead of being more
wise, be more completely bereft of all wisdom and come to Jesus for wisdom, righteousness and all things!
Sometimes when we are very feeble and our language is very simple, God may bless it all the more and I do pray He
may, this morning, set His seal upon this poor talk of His sick servant! Every particle of my flesh and every atom of my
bones is praying God to bless this sermon! Grim pain has been racking me while I have been speaking. May this discourse
be more honorable than its brethren because I bore it with sorrow! I long, I pine, I cry before God that He may bless this
feeble word of mine to your conversion and to the conversion of many dear children. Those of you who have never looked
to Christ and lived, do unto Christ, I pray you, just what these dear children did—He called them and they came and
were folded in His arms. Come along with you!
Do you half wish you could be a child, again? You can be! He can give

you a child’s heart and you can be in His Kingdom newly-born. May it be so, for His name’s sake! Amen. --SPURGEON

I love a good phrase....

.... Even if i disagree with the premise!
One of my heroes, Charles Spurgeon, was NOT a minister who baptized the children of believers. I am, with great joy. I have always thought his sermon on my text for Sunday had a catchy title...

Back into Mark 10

Jesus directs these words to the disciples who
continue to miss Jesus’ point. Little children are the model of how people enter the kingdom. God
bestows his kingdom upon the low, the helpless, those who can do nothing to gain entrance.
Entrance into the kingdom of God is not something which can be earned, or gained on the basis of human merit. As one commentator so aptly puts it, to receive the Kingdom is to allow oneself to be given it. ==Kim Riddlebarger

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