Adrian Warnock adrianwarnock.com
This Site:


Linked Sites:

Latest Headlines From This Site Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Jonathan Edwards on Perseverance of the Saints


Jonathan Edwards teaches the doctrine of perseverance in this passage, which is about as far removed from the easy believism most understand when they say "once saved always saved" as you can get.

" . . .as soon as ever a soul has put forth one act of faith towards Jesus, it becomes interested in his righteousness, and so in all the benefits that are purchased by it. The soul is thenceforward united to Christ, and Christ is his and all that he has. When a soul has believed in Christ, God stands bound to do all the rest for him. He stands bound to bestow grace to persevere in faith and holiness, and to carry on his work, even to eternal life.

When once any person has by faith committed himself into the hands of Christ, Christ has promised that he will keep them, and that they never shall pluck them out of his hands. John 10:28, "My sheep shall never perish, neither shall any pluck them out of my hands." But,

of a title to salvation. There never is a title to salvation without it. Though it han't the righteousness by which a title to life is attained, yet none have that righteousness that don't persevere; and that because although it is not proper to say that perseverance is necessary in order to justification, yet a persevering principle is necessary in order to justification. In order to a title to Christ's righteousness, 'tis necessary that there should be such a qualification in the heart; that is as it were a seed of perseverance, and such a foundation that perseverance will be the certain result of it 'Tis necessary that there should be "such an heart in them" in order to justification (Deuteronomy 5:29). 'Tis necessary that a man should believe in Christ, and cleave to Christ in a persevering way: a temporary faith don't justify. But in order to that, persons must have that faith that is of a persevering, everlasting sort. He must have that sort of seed that is an abiding seed. 'Tis not a vanishing but a durable faith that justifies. Though perseverance be not an act performed, till after persons have finished their days; yet perseverance is looked upon as virtually performed in the first act of faith, because that first act is of such a nature as shows the principle to be of a persevering sort.

Perseverance is necessary to salvation, as 'tis the necessary consequence and evidence of effectual calling. 'Tis an evidence that universally attends uprightness, and the defect of it, an infallible evidence of want of uprightness. Jonathan Edwards [1734], Sermons and Discourses, 1734–1738 (WJE Online Vol. 19) , Ed. M. X. Lesser, page 600-601

Labels: , ,


Wednesday, November 12, 2008

SERMON - Back to the Word: Nehemiah 8


Last Sunday, I preached a sermon at Jubilee Church in our series on the book of Nehemiah. A video of it is now available to download. You can also download the mp3, listen to it right here, or read my notes below:



“Let me tell you about a most wonderful experience I had early Monday morning, March 19, 2007, a little after six o’clock. God actually spoke to me. There is no doubt that it was God. I heard the words in my head just as clearly as when a memory of a conversation passes across your consciousness. The words were in English, but they had about them an absolutely self-authenticating ring of truth. I know beyond the shadow of a doubt that God still speaks today.

John PiperI couldn’t sleep for some reason. I was at Shalom House in northern Minnesota on a staff couples’ retreat. It was about five-thirty in the morning. I lay there wondering if I should get up or wait till I got sleepy again. In his mercy, God moved me out of bed. It was mostly dark, but I managed to find my clothing, got dressed, grabbed my briefcase, and slipped out of the room without waking up Noël. In the main room below, it was totally quiet. No one else seemed to be up. So I sat down on a couch in the corner to pray.

As I prayed and mused, suddenly it happened. God said, ‘Come and see what I have done.’ There was not the slightest doubt in my mind that these were the very words of God. In this very moment. At this very place in the twenty-first century, 2007, God was speaking to me with absolute authority and self-evidencing reality. I paused to let this sink in. There was a sweetness about it. Time seemed to matter little. God was near. He had me in his sights. He had something to say to me. When God draws near, hurry ceases. Time slows down . . .”

John Piper

GOD DOES SPEAK TODAY! THROUGH HIS WORD!

Read Nehemiah 8:1-12

INTRODUCTION
Nehemiah has come, the wall has been built, and the opposition has been dealt with. It's now time to begin to build the people. God not only rebuilds walls, but restores lives. Fixing the people—that was the real plan. God is less interested in walls and more interested in people. Building the people of God.

How do we go about building the people of God? Nehemiah knew that when it came to fixing lives, he wasn’t the man to do it. Even though he was the leader, he had a sense of teamwork, so he called for Ezra to bring the book, to open the book. Nehemiah realized that it wasn’t only the trowels that were needed; now the people needed to hear from the book of the Law. He made room for the preacher. He knew everyone had a role. He gathered a big group—50,000 people. And they came and listened to the Word of God for six hours! Why would they do that?
  1. THE IMPORTANCE OF THE WORD OF GOD

    2 Timothy 3:15-17
    “. . . from childhood you have been acquainted with the sacred writings, which are able to make you wise for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus. All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be competent, equipped for every good work."

    What does that mean? First, this Book is holy. It also means it's possible for it to save us. And it means it can equip us for everything God has for us. In order to be saved, there are some things we need to understand.

    Romans 10:9-17
    “If you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. For with the heart one believes and is justified, and with the mouth one confesses and is saved. . .So faith comes from hearing, and hearing through the word of Christ."

    It’s not a man who will save us. Only Jesus can save us, and the way he saves us is through our understanding of what’s in this Book.

    Psalm 119:130
    “The unfolding of your words gives light; it imparts understanding to the simple.”

    Romans 15:4
    "For whatever was written in former days was written for our instruction, that through endurance and through the encouragement of the Scriptures we might have hope."

    Matthew 4:4 and Deuteronomy 8:3
    “Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God.”

    It sustains spiritual life and shapes our everyday life. Without it we will starve, have no hope, no endurance, no instruction, no wisdom, not be equipped for what God wants us to do, have no faith, and ultimately be foolish and unsaved!

  2. HOW DO WE TAKE HOLD OF THE WORD OF GOD?

    People died in order that we can have this Book in our hands. People were killed just for owning this Book. The Reformation restored the Bible to the common people from the priests, who had maintained an exclusive right to it. And now, in our times, a generation is again emerging that is IGNORANT of this Book!

    How then do we take the Word of God in?

    • TAKE IT IN CHUNKS
      It’s good to have a system. Use a Bible-reading plan. Maybe have it read to you. Use the CD player in your car. I use Every Day in the Word. It provides OT reading, NT reading, Psalms, Proverbs—a varied diet. Not all meat for a month and no vegetables! Don’t worry if you don’t understand everything! Or use an iPOD (you can subscribe to it as a podcast). Take fifteen minutes a day and you will be able to read or listen to the entire Bible in one year. Don’t feel condemned if you miss a day.

    • PRAY AND MEDITATE ON IT
      Take a phrase and chew on it and pray it back to God. Mull it over. Let it emotionally impact you. Believe it. Ask God for the promises, believe the truths. Change in response to it.

      Psalm 119:15
      “I will meditate on your precepts and fix my eyes on your ways.”

      It’s not just academic; it’s experiential, faith arises. Nehemiah does this in chapter 1 by praying back to God a verse from Deuteronomy—“God who keeps covenant and steadfast love with those who love him and keep his commandments.” The advantages of meditation gets us up close and personal with the Bible. We can remind God of his promises. Mould ourselves to the Word.

    • STUDY IT
      Get a study Bible, such as the new ESV Study Bible. Use notes, commentaries, books, word study, Grudem's Biblical Doctrine, Bible software, etc. God wants us to be those who labor at his Word. We work hard at our jobs, why not work hard so you can do the job of life? Don’t be tossed to and fro. Ezra knew that it was his job as priest.

      2 Timothy 2:15
      “Do your best to present yourself to God as one approved, a worker who has no need to be ashamed, rightly handling the word of truth.”

      Sometimes we don’t understand the Bible very well, and sometimes we have no shame in that fact. “Oh, I’m a “spirit person, I’m not a Word person.” But what did the Bereans do?

      Acts 17:11
      “They received the word with all eagerness, examining the Scriptures daily to see if these things were so.”

    • SEEK HELP FROM OTHERS
      We need to study this Book, understand it, meditate on it, such that we won’t be blown away. Do we always understand it all? Sometimes we need others to teach us—our church, small groups, someone to lead us individually. In addition, listening to sermons, some perhaps repeatedly, may help our understanding.

      The Bible is not like normal food in the sense that we can’t get too much of it! We won’t become obese eating too much spiritual food.

      BUT, there is one danger, and that is the danger that we only read it, maybe even study it, maybe even become an academic expert on it, but somehow the vibrancy and the life of God’s Word doesn’t touch us, doesn’t impact us. If we are left untouched by God’s Word, there will be two main consequences in the life of the believer—we will be hearers of the Word, but not doers of the Word. The Word is about action, in our lives and in sharing the gospel. It’s about living in response to it. The second is that we wil become proud of our knowledge and be academic and dry, devoid of the Spirit.

      1 Corinthians 8:1-2
      “Knowledge” puffs up, but love builds up. If anyone imagines that he knows something, he does not yet know as he ought to know. But if anyone loves God, he is known by God.”

    • SEEK HELP FROM THE HOLY SPIRIT
      The goal is to KNOW GOD—not just to “know about” the Bible.

      Hebrews 4:13
      “For the word of God is living and active.”

      The Word has a power of its own, breathed into it by the Spirit who inspired it! We must read it, meditate on it, pray, study it, marinate it with the Spirit That’s the key. If we do that, the Word of God will make sense to us. THERE IS NO CONFLICT BETWEEN THE WORD AND THE SPIRIT!

      1 Corinthians 2:14
      The natural person does not accept the things of the Spirit of God, for they are folly to him, and he is not able to understand them because they are spiritually discerned.

      We need the help of the Spirit to make it clear to us. It’s tragic that some Christians emphasize the Word, but don’t want to know about the Spirit, and other Christians emphasize the Spirit, but don’t want to know about the Word. It’s time to bring the Word and the Spirit back together. There’s never been a battle between them!

    • MEMORIZE IT and VALUE IT APPROPRIATELY

      Psalm 119:11
      I have stored up your word in my heart, that I might not sin against you.”


  3. WHAT ARE THE EFFECTS OF THE WORD OF GOD?

    • THAT WE MIGHT NOT SIN
      That we will repent. That we will turn our backs on sin and obey God.

      John 14:15
      “If you love me, you will keep my commandments.

      The Word adjusts conduct, character, and the course of our lives. Because we are on our way to heaven, we live in a way that is worthy of that calling.

    • TO DEFEAT THE DEVIL
      It’s like a sword in our hands. Ephesians 6 says, “The sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God.” When Nehemiah built the wall, the workers had a sword and trowel in their hands.

    • TO BE THE ANSWER FOR ALL OF OUR PROBLEMS
      The Bible says to ask God for wisdom and he will give it to you—in marriage, relationships, sex, parenting, work, success, money, suffering, etc. We live in a lost world and the world doesn’t know where to go for guidance. But this Book has all the answers.
BUT sadly many Christians read all this and feel “I can’t do it.” MANY CHRISTIANS REMAIN IN THE PLACE OF CONDEMNATION. Many of us came to the same place that the people did when they heard Ezra reading the Law. They come to the place of sorrow and guilt. There was weeping. The Word shows us our sin. Pricks our deadened conscience back to life. Convicts us.

2 Corinthians 7:10
“For godly grief produces a repentance that leads to salvation.”

The Word exists to bring us to the one who is called “The Word.”

John 5:39
“You search the Scriptures because you think that in them you have eternal life; and it is they that bear witness about me.”

Jesus is the hero of every passage in the Bible, even if you can’t see it at first. Every Scripture takes us to Jesus. Because of him, the Word can wash us clean. With the Word marinated by the Spirit we are converted. It’s the gospel that is the power of God to save us. Faith comes. We are born again.

It is so right when we listen to the words of this Book that sometimes we want to weep, we feel helpless, guilty, like we’ve messed up. May I suggest it’s because we have messed up? But God doesn’t want to leave us there. So many people go through life starting each day with “Oh God, I’m sorry for all the things I’ve done. Thank you for forgiving me, but I feel guilty.” And they go through all the sins they’ve committed. Not to say there is no place for confession, there is. But it’s interesting that the Lord’s prayer begins with “OUR FATHER . . .”

The Lord’s prayer doesn’t start with sin—it begins with the fatherhood of GOD. We need to relate to God as a father who has loved us, who has forgiven us, who sent his Son to take our place, to bear our punishment in order that we can be forgiven. He sees us as holy, as if we’ve obeyed every command in this Book. He sees us as if we never did anything wrong. When we understand that, a great joy should well up inside of us!

JOY TO KNOW WE ARE FORGIVEN!

JOY IN JESUS, NOT WORLDLY THINGS—He is the goal of the gospel.

JOY IN JESUS MAKES SIN LESS APPEALING.

SANDWICH MEAT versus SIZZLING STEAK!

JOY OF THE LORD.

Nehemiah 8:10
Then he said to them, “Go your way. Eat the fat and drink sweet wine and send portions to anyone who has nothing ready, for this day is holy to our Lord. And do not be grieved, for the joy of the Lord is your strength.”

CONCLUSION
The Word of God brings us through conviction to repentance, and through repentace to joy. Joy is not that everything is perfect, but rather it is a joy the world cannot take away since we know that in the end we will be with Jesus.

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,


Saturday, October 11, 2008

Death By Love - Pastoral Application of the Atonement by Driscoll and Breshears


I want to introduce you to a very unusual book by Mark Driscoll and his writing buddy and professor, Gerry Breshears. I would go so far to say that this is a unique book in that I have never seen anything quite like it.

If their first book together, Vintage Jesus, was a light cheerful book that offended some by its use of humor and at times edgy topics for illustrations, this new book by these two men is more of a grungy, almost dark book. The video over at the ReLit site leaves you in no doubt that this is a book that will wrestle with darkness, pain, and even demonization.

Certainly this book represents just a tiny sample of the ocean of pain that a pastor of a large church has to handle over the years. Some neoliberals argue that people who believe in penal substitutionary atonement do not engage with the real suffering found in the world. This book demonstrates emphatically that this is simply not true in Driscoll's case. Such critics also argue that the evangelical's gospel can become overly narrow, eventually focusing solely on the "felt need" of the feelings of guilt many still feel. Guilt, however, is far from the only reason people come to Christ. The New Testament is full of helpful ways we can understand what Jesus did on the cross.

Without in any way softening his commitment to the centrality of Jesus taking the punishment of sin in our understanding of the cross, Driscoll is far broader in his understanding of and application of the cross to hurting people's lives today. From convicted child molesters, to cheating husbands and raped women, Driscoll shares pen outlines of the destruction manifest in the lives of specific people to whom he has ministered. He then shows in a letter written to each individual how a specific aspect of what Jesus has done on the cross can bring wholeness and salvation to them.

This is a vital book that should be read by every Christian who is serious about reaching out with the gospel into this dark and damaged world. I will share a video of Mark speaking about the book, followed by an excerpt from one of those letters that particularly struck me. You will have to buy the book to see exactly how Driscoll and Breshears apply the gospel to Bill and his violent, abusive father.



"As a little boy you rightly felt angry at your dad, and that anger rightly compelled you to confront his injustice and protect the rest of the family. Therefore, anger can be a righteous virtue, which explains why God gets angry at sin too. The Bible is full of examples of God getting angry at sinners. A few examples will illustrate my point clearly, but a reading of Leviticus 26:27-30, Numbers 11:1, and Deuteronomy 29:24 for starters, speak of God's anger as being hostile, burning, and furious.

Flaccid church guys will often accept that in the Old Testament God did get angry, but they will say that Jesus was a nice, emotionless, flaccid church guy, just like them, who chose a hollow, fake smile over anger every day. But even Jesus got angry, furious, and enraged . . . [Here Driscoll cites Mark 3:5 and Revelation 19, but one could also add Matthew 21:12-13, Mark 11:15-17, Luke 19:45-46, and John 2:13-17.]

In speaking of God's anger, I want to be careful not to give permission for us to lose our temper and rage, because that is a sin—the very sin your father committed repeatedly. However, because God is perfect, his anger is perfect and, as such, is aroused slowly (Exodus 34:6-8), sometimes turned away (Deuteronomy 13:17), often delayed (Isaiah 48:9), and frequently held back (Psalm 78:38).

Furthermore, God feels angry because God hates sin (Proverbs 6:16-19, Zechariah 8:17). Sadly, it is commonly said among Christians that "God hates the sin but loves the sinner." This is as stupid as saying that God loves rapists and hates rape, as if rape and rapists were two entirely different entities that could be separated from one another. Furthermore, it was not a divinely inspired author of Scripture but the Hindu, Gandhi, who coined the phrase, "Love the sinner but hate the sin" . . .

Regarding God's anger and hatred, it is commonly protested that God cannot hate anyone because he is love. But the Bible speaks of God's anger, wrath, and fury more than of his love, grace, and mercy. Furthermore, it is precisely because God is love that he must hate evil and all who do evil—evil is an assault on whom and what he loves.

Therefore, Bill, your anger toward and hatred of your father are justifiable and are the healthy response to seeing your dad beat the mother and siblings you love. However, in a mysterious conflict of deep emotions, you continued to love your father just as God continues to love unrepentant sinners whom he simultaneously hates . . .

I know this will be difficult for you to comprehend, Bill, but Jesus has fully experienced what you have, and much more. Jesus was mocked and beaten, though he was without sin. He willingly substituted himself for those he loved and wanted to save . . . "

From Death By Love by Mark Driscoll and Gerry Breshears, copyright 2008, pages 127-129. Used by permission of Crossway Books, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers, Wheaton, IL 60187, www.crossway.com.

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,


Thursday, July 10, 2008

TOAM08 - Keith Hazell - Prophets and Prophets Together: A Fuller Picture


This morning I attended the second session of the training track, Prophetic Encounter. This session was entitled “Prophets and Prophets Together Giving a Fuller Picture.” The New Testament refers to prophetic bands. Prophets working together often results in releasing the prophetic gift in greater measure, to the enhancement and greater health of the local church. The session was led by Keith Hazell, a visiting speaker from outside Newfrontiers.

Keith and his wife, Nova, live in Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada, and are based in Mosaic Church. Keith has been in the prophetic ministry for more than forty years and ministers extensively at home and abroad. He has a growing relationship with Newfrontiers churches, and has served some in East Anglia for more than twenty years. He and his wife are British-born and have strong roots in eastern England. They are blessed to serve in the body of Christ, along with their family, teaching and demonstrating the prophetic ministry.

More posts from this conference can be found on my TOAM08 label page. You can download the mp3s of this week's talks by subscribing to the new Newfrontiers podcast, which will be an easy way for you to get access to the mp3s for free

Keith HazellIn the book of Acts, prophets do work in teams. Some people think prophets are all about tearing down. But the building-up bit is important. Prophets work as part of the leadership of a church, with different gifts.

Acts 13:1-3
“Now there were in the church at Antioch prophets and teachers . . .”

Prophets need to be comfortable with others; they are not individual players. We see them being sent in teams. They are under authority. Judas and Silas were sent together as a team and said much to encourage the Church.

1 Corinthians 14:29
Two or three should speak and others weigh carefully. It is a team package. Get confirmation from one another when a team is involved. Learn to hear the voice of God with other people.

Prophets Working Together in Unity
Whenever prophets are mentioned in the book of Acts, they are always mentioned in the context of the Church. There are no "Lone Rangers" in Acts. Identify who are prophets and who are not, and then use them to build the Church. God appoints them, the church recognizes them. As Ephesians 4 says, "God gives the Church prophets." The place for building the body is in the Church.

The Purpose of Prophets Working Together
This is good for their humility. Prophets should not think more of themselves than they ought. Like obscurity, hide as much as you can. When they work together they build. Prophecy is not just about blessing people as individuals.

Protection for the Church
One man prophetic ministry can be very dangerous for a church. One prophet doesn't see everything there is to see.

Prophets Train Others
Prophets need to reproduce other prophets—train people, help to stretch their horizons.

There is Power in Working Together
It is like an exponential increase of anointing. In 1 Samuel 10:5-6, Saul is told by Samuel that he will see a "procession of prophets coming down from the high place ... and they will be prophesying." As a result of him being near that group, the Spirit came on him. Iron sharpens iron. Get near people who are prophets and you may “catch” something, almost as if it's contagious.

Problems Do Arise Sometimes When Working Together
We all have human frailties that can interfere with our ability to work together. We can feel jealous sometimes. Some prophetic people take pride in being weird and eccentric. In a team that can get ironed out. Some become insecure and depressed. Apostolic covering brings security. It makes all the difference. Accountability is crucial for prophets.

Promises Are Given by God
Ecclesiastes 4:9 — “Two are better than one ...” Because we only know in part and prophesy in part, you get a bigger picture.

Deuteronomy 32:30 — "How can one man chase a thousand, or two put ten thousand to flight?" Two people can put 10,000 to flight, but one only 1,000.

Julian Adams then added some additional thoughts. Prophets are intercessors. There is something about connecting to the heart of God and his affection, being carried into the heart of God together. Developing a sensitivity to the emotions of God for the people you are about to prophesy over. Get God's heart. Pray together as prophetic people.

We are in Christ so there will never be a closed heaven. When Jesus was baptized heaven was opened, and now he has risen to heaven.

Prophets can also come together for the sake of evangelism. Start with an encouraging word. Encouragement is the simplest form of prophecy. When unbelievers come in, they should say God is in this place. The worship team and prophecy can go together also. Stop, pause, and meditate.

Labels: , , , , , , , ,


Monday, April 28, 2008

SERMON – God's Gift of Life (Exodus 20:13)


Here are notes from a sermon I preached on the 27th April at Jubilee Church. The mp3 is available to download here or listen to using the following embedded player-





You shall not murder.” (Ex 20:13)

Ok, right at the outset, do we have any murderers here? No? Anyone planning on committing a murder? No? Good, so then we can all go home, yes? We got it straight, since we live in a Christian country means its Chicken for dinner tonight rather than human. Lets go get some coffee.

Actually there is some more to this commandment than first meets the eye.

No careless killing ESV footnote "also causing human death through carelessness or negligence" so see for example Ex 21:28-29 “When an ox gores a man or a woman to death, the ox shall be stoned, and its flesh shall not be eaten, but the owner of the ox shall not be liable. But if the ox has been accustomed to gore in the past, and its owner has been warned but has not kept it in, and it kills a man or a woman, the ox shall be stoned, and its owner also shall be put to death.”

Deuteronomy 22:8: “When you build a new house, you shall make a parapet for your roof, that you may not bring blood-guilt on your house if anyone falls from it.”

Risk assessment is biblical! “[The Jew] was to do everything humanly possible not to cause the death of another person” -The Master's Seminary, Master's Seminary Journal Volume 11, 11:206 (Master's Seminary, 2000; 2003).

- Therefore, human life is precious we should take good care of it. Every human is made in Gods image and therefore worth looking after. It is the Christian faith that teaches us we are not just the outcome of millions of years of chance reactions. We don't kill because life itself is a gift of God. We should also support initiatives that reduce the risk of death or serious injury.

eg car and road safety - 1 in 200 risk of dying on the roads! So driving at no more than 30 mph in built up areas is a good idea due to the dramatic risk of death if hit faster. 95% live if hit at 20mph, 90% die at 40mph. Also wear seat belts, pay for proper maintenance, and buy the safest car you can afford.

-also health measures, smoking in public bans is good as it will lead to less premature death. Form of Russian Roulette – 50% will die prematurely loosing ave of 16 years of precious God-given life. In country after country smoking bans have led to dramatic drops in the rates of heart attacks – 17% in Scotland for example in one year. Christians should support the provision of good health care and also simple social changes that can make massive impact by saving lives. Especially in developing world eg lack of clean water.

However, although this commandment applies to careless killing, there were clear distinctions made in the punishment depending on the intent “(1) the weapon used, (2) the enmity of the killer toward his victim, and (3) premeditation” (Numbers 35. 16–24) -The Master's Seminary, Master's Seminary Journal Volume 11, 11:205 (Master's Seminary, 2000; 2003).

Similar rules are still used today.

What other things that might be called murder?

-We have seen that negligence such as careless fighting or driving, is surely potential murder by the broader hebraic definition. But what of some areas that may be less clear to some. Lets be very clear here -

-Euthanasia or so-called “mercy killing”- so far even the unbelievers cannot bring themselves to legalize this in the UK. How could we know someone really understood what they were asking for and weren't coerced or depressed? Bible simply says "no killing". This surely even applies to some of the grey areas being discussed such as removing food and drink via tubes from brain damaged.

-Assisting Suicide remains illegal, but what about neglecting to prevent it?. Psychiatric services should be used appropriately... sadly the quality of our services vary. But people have a right to be treated against their will when they pose a danger to themselves and are not in their right minds.

-Abortion? We all agree that life exists after birth. We believe it is wrong to murder a newborn baby. So surely life exists just before. When then does it start? There is no logic to our current term limits for abortion- loosely based on when a child might survive "independently" outside the womb. But when technology improves will that mean the date changes? And, since a baby is not truly "independent" are they less fully human?

Our question should simply be is this a human? Does he or she have the image of God? If so we must protect, not kill. John the Baptist leapt for joy in his mothers womb whom when he met Jesus (Luke 1:44) and Psalm 139 makes plain God saw us and knew us there as he knit us together.

-Contraception? Pre conception fine, anything that definitely acts post conception is clearly not. Some methods are controversial as to their mode of action (eg oral contraceptive pill, coil etc). Christians should examine the evidence for themselves, pray, seek advice if needed then make the decision their conscience is happy with.

-IVF? Christians undergoing this procedure may wish to speak with their doctors about the fate of so-called "spare" embryos. Although they are routinely discarded, this need not be the case.

-War? The police? Romans 13.1-4 "Let every person be subject to the governing authorities. For there is no authority except from God, and those that exist have been instituted by God. Therefore whoever resists the authorities resists what God has appointed, and those who resist will incur judgment. For rulers are not a terror to good conduct, but to bad. Would you have no fear of the one who is in authority? Then do what is good, and you will receive his approval, for he is God's servant for your good. But if you do wrong, be afraid, for he does not bear the sword in vain. For he is the servant of God, an avenger who carries out God's wrath on the wrongdoer.”

In the end this boils down to a simple question. If you were holding an armed gun, and had a chance to kill someone who was definitely about to kill another, would you be wrong to pull that trigger? The balance of the bible strongly suggests that you would not be wrong to do that.

So far, though, for the vast majority of us, none of this will have touched us. Perhaps there are some in the room who have had an abortion, if so, please bear with me as there is forgiveness for you as we will explain later.

But for the rest of us there is a danger that we will feel morally superior and proud of ourselves. So we haven't murdered... Big deal! If we think that makes us worthy of praise by God we are deluded!

Jesus punctures that bubble by saying “You have heard that it was said to those of old, ‘You shall not murder; and whoever murders will be liable to judgment.’ But I say to you that everyone who is angry with his brother will be liable to judgment; whoever insults his brother will be liable to the council; and whoever says, ‘You fool!’ will be liable to the hell of fire. So if you are offering your gift at the altar and there remember that your brother has something against you, leave your gift there before the altar and go. First be reconciled to your brother, and then come and offer your gift.” Matthew 5.21-24

Words can kill!

Everyone who hates his brother is a murderer, and you know that no murderer has eternal life abiding in him.” 1 Jn 3:15

It is not only the act, but also the sentiment underlying the act, which is evil” - Walter A. Elwell and Barry J. Beitzel, Baker Encyclopedia of the Bible, Map on lining papers., 2044 (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker Book House, 1988).

You are of your father the devil, and your will is to do your father’s desires. He was a murderer from the beginning” Jn 8:44

Actual murder is just the extension of anger and bitterness. Billy Grahams wife was once asked if she had ever considered divorce during their long marriage her answer- "divorce, NO! Murder, YES!"

If murder is sometimes the ultimate punishment for some imagined harm done by its victim, forgiveness is the opposite. Far from merely not murdering our enemies, God calls us to love them and forgive them.

We are told to forgive as we have been forgiven and warned that he will not forgive us if we do not forgive others.

Christians should be recognized as those who practice the reverse of murder. If murder is treating someone as sub-human and a less valuable object then the opposite is surely thinking of others as more important than you and selflessly loving them expecting nothing in return.

You can't murder someone you love. Jesus said love fulfills the law - love God covers the first few commandments, love your neighbor covers the rest.

God is the ultimate forgiver. We see this in the sad story of King David. We see the king who is described as the man after Gods own heart that the smallest sin can grow to become a major one. Most murders happen as a result of an argument between for example husband and wife. It is even possible that by causing us to stop and realize how dangerous anger is that this sermon might prevent a future murder.

Owen once said “be killing sin or it will be killing you.”

In Davids case, laziness led to a roaming eye. In our day he'd have visited certain websites or the top shelf at the news-agent. Then, he went on the roof to catch a glance at a woman bathing. That led to adultery. That led to deception and trickery. That led to murder.

Sin is sin. We stand before God bankrupt. When you are bankrupt it doesn't really matter if you owe a few thousands or a few million. You simply can never pay. An eternity in hell facing the wrath of God wont wipe away our sins.

The scandal of the cross is that on it, a man was murdered. Without removing the moral responsibility for that act, and the fact that we are all guilty of killing the son of God....ultimately there was something else going on.

The cross was a judicial killing. God the Almighty poured out his righteous wrath and punishment on his son. Jesus paid our debt. Not only did he cancel our debts, he credited our account with his righteousness. If you are a christian this morning he is as pleased with you not just as if you never sinned but just as if you were always righteous or put another way he is as thrilled with you as he is with Jesus!

Murderers are Invited to become Christians. Why? Because God can even forgive murderers, So he can forgive you.

Labels: , , , , , , , ,


Thursday, July 12, 2007

TOAM07 - Seminar: Guy Miller and Julian Adams On Prophesying in Power


Here I am, sitting in a cinema next door to the conference center. Those of you who read regularly will realize that I'm feeling very at home, since the London church of which I'm a part also meets in a cinema. There is something about these venues that encourage you to shut out the world and close yourself in with God. I love the banked seating that enables you to see what is going on down below. That's another point — in an age when some churches elevate the role of the pastor too much, it somehow communicates something good when our leaders are standing beneath us rather than up on the stage. There is nothing wrong with stages, but it's possible for them to be misinterpreted as raising our leaders too high. If you have a large room and fill it with people, there are only two choices — either lift the leaders up on a stage or lift the people up on tiered seating. Anyway, back to the seminar.
Julian Adams
Julian is originally from Bay Community Church, Cape Town, South Africa, where he was an elder. He moved to the UK last August in response to God’s leading for him to be with Terry Virgo for a season and become part of Church of Christ the King, Brighton. Julian has an amazing prophetic gift and has travelled widely over the past few months serving the Newfrontiers churches in the UK.

Guy Miller
Guy Miller leads the Bournemouth Family Church, UK and leads apostolic teams that serve the Wessex Region with seventeen churches. He also overseas the work of 21 churches in the North and West of India and two churches in Portugal. He is a passionate family man, married to Heather with four children, and loves fishing.
Julian began by explaining that we need to raise the level of prophecy. We need to avoid the weird mystical things that go on in the world of prophecy. Our prophecy needs to be full of truth and must be weighed with a clear biblical understanding and application. We must be able to spot false prophetic ministry.

Guy then spoke about how Jesus has given to his Church power gifts to know him and extend his kingdom. Sometimes these gifts are trivialized and treated like wrapping paper, or they can be placed to one side and we are told we don't need them. There is sadly so much rubbish that goes on. It's no wonder that the Scripture warns us both to not put out the Spirit's fire and to test and weigh prophecy.

The roots of prophecy are found in the OT. Genesis 20:7. God spoke of Abraham as a prophet. But the one which is used as a normative one is Moses. Deuteronomy 18:14. Prophets in the OT are clearly people who are called and have a clear role among the people of God. The prophet's primary role is to bring a clear proclamation. There is a connection between the people of God and the living God. Prophets bring a living connection to God. Prediction is not primary, God is primary. The prophet brings the presence of God. Our God reigns.

Prediction is, however, a part of the prophetic movement. They see something over the horizon. The scope of the prophet is wide. Prophets see. Prayer is also a key part of the life of the prophet. These men knew where the power came from. The prophet himself was not the final judge of the validity of their own revelation. Fulfilment is not the supreme and genuine test of a prophet. False prophets can get it right sometimes. The true test is much more theological. The false prophet will draw people away from a true relationship with God. A true prophet will draw people into adoration and a closer relationship with God and the holiness that results.

Prophecy forms the greatest line of continuity between the Old and New Testaments. The last OT-style prophet was John the Baptist, who pointed to the One who was the fulfilment of all prophecy.

Shoots of prophecy. 1 Corinthians 14:1-5. The NT gift is something to be eagerly desired. Paul wanted everyone to prophecy. ALL. Men and women, young and old. We should be a prophetic community. Prophets are those who are recognized and move in a continuous way in this gift. The truth is that the Holy Spirit's gifts are gifts of a loving God to be used in love by God's loving people. How much do I love God? How much do I love these people? If you have a prophetic impulse, the motivation should be to share it — it should bring encouragement and maturity to the hearers.

This gift speaks to men for their strengthening. Prophecy is not adding in any way to the bible. It is under the bible. We judge it by the bible. The bible is like our map, we judge everything by it. Prophecy is like a compass which helps us know where we are on the map. We need the prophetic, and we must also be devoted to the scriptures.

How do we prophecy? We must be submitted to authority. We must be under the word of God, but also in the context of the local church. We must be submitted to the church's leaders. Prophecy should not lead to individualism, but rather it should be part of a loving community. Prophecy is clear, intelligible, scriptural, and truthful. There can definitely be too many prophecies in a meeting.

How does God speak? In visions. In words. Preaching can be prophetic. It can be through things we see in the world around us. We want this gift to not be in the isolated "Lone Ranger" world. We want to be a part of the community of God. The fruit of prophecy is edification — strengthening, encouragement, and comfort.

Edification — there must be a building process. We should feel closer to God and closer to our brothers and sisters.

Encouragement and comfort — there should be a courage transfusion that takes place.

Unbelievers falling down — prophecy is not always seeker-sensitive. They need to experience the power of God! Prophecy is intended to bring people to Jesus. Meeting with God. Let's not try and tame our meetings. We need the dynamic of the Spirit.

__________________________

Those of you who read my blog and who were there will know that I was singled out for some specific personal prophetic words during the ministry time. They impacted me so much that I didn't get the chance to jot down some of the things that were said. If you heard the words, do feel free to send me an e-mail with what you remember at adrian.warnock@gmail.com — but as they are, of course, personal, don't share them in my comment box or elsewhere on the web!

Labels: , , , , , ,


Friday, March 30, 2007

T4G Articles 5-6 - The Attributes of God and the Trinity


The next two articles in the Together for the Gospel Statement discuss the nature of God. The concept of the Trinity is so entwined with God’s attributes and who He is I have decided to roll these two articles into one. I have already posted an extensive set of notes and an audio on the attributes of God and the Trinity. In my talk I demonstrated that Jesus can be shown from the Bible to share every major attribute of God that theologians describe. Enough of these are also ascribed clearly to the Spirit for us to say He must hold all the unique attributes of God also. There are also more articles on the trinity elsewhere on my blog.

Today, after sharing the two articles, I will share a long quote from what may possibly be the best
article on the Trinity in the world. It is cited as by "Desiring God Staff" tho I am sure Piper was involved in it somehow. I encourage you to go read it all—I think it will be incredibly helpful.

Article V

We affirm that the Bible reveals God to be infinite in all his perfections, and thus truly omniscient, omnipotent, timeless, and self-existent. We further affirm that God possesses perfect knowledge of all things, past, present, and future, including all human thoughts, acts, and decisions.

We deny that the God of the Bible is in any way limited in terms of knowledge or power or any other perfection or attribute, or that God has in any way limited his own perfections.

Article VI

We affirm that the doctrine of the Trinity is a Christian essential, bearing witness to the ontological reality of the one true God in three divine persons, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, each of the same substance and perfections.

We deny the claim that the Trinity is not an essential doctrine, or that the Trinity can be understood in merely economic or functional categories
.

“WHAT DOES IT MEAN THAT GOD IS A TRINITY?

The doctrine of the Trinity means that there is one God who eternally exists as three distinct Persons—the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Stated differently, God is one in essence and three in person. These definitions express three crucial truths: (1) The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are distinct Persons; (2) each Person is fully God; (3) there is only one God.

The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are distinct Persons. The Bible speaks of the Father as God (Philippians 1:2), Jesus as God (Titus 2:13), and the Holy Spirit as God (Acts 5:3-4). Are these just three different ways of looking at God, or simply ways of referring to three different roles that God plays?

The answer must be no, because the Bible also indicates that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are distinct Persons. For example, since the Father sent the Son into the world (John 3:16), He cannot be the same person as the Son. Likewise, after the Son returned to the Father (John 16:10), the Father and the Son sent the Holy Spirit into the world (John 14:26; Acts 2:33). Therefore, the Holy Spirit must be distinct from the Father and the Son.

In the baptism of Jesus, we see the Father speaking from heaven and the Spirit descending from heaven in the form of a dove as Jesus comes out of the water (Mark 1:10-11). In John 1:1 it is affirmed that Jesus is God and, at the same time, that He was "with God"—thereby indicating that Jesus is a distinct Person from God the Father (cf. also 1:18). And in John 16:13-15 we see that although there is a close unity between them all, the Holy Spirit is also distinct from the Father and the Son.

The fact that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are distinct Persons means, in other words, that the Father is not the Son, the Son is not the Holy Spirit, and the Holy Spirit is not the Father. Jesus is God, but He is not the Father or the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is God, but He is not the Son or the Father. They are different Persons, not three different ways of looking at God.

The personhood of each member of the Trinity means that each Person has a distinct center of consciousness. Thus, they relate to each other personally—the Father regards Himself as "I," while He regards the Son and Holy Spirit as "You." Likewise the Son regards Himself as "I," but the Father and the Holy Spirit as "You."

Often it is objected that "If Jesus is God, then he must have prayed to Himself while He was on earth." But the answer to this objection lies in simply applying what we have already seen. While Jesus and the Father are both God, they are different Persons. Thus, Jesus prayed to God the Father without praying to Himself. In fact, it is precisely the continuing dialog between the Father and the Son (Matthew 3:17; 17:5; John 5:19; 11:41-42; 17:1ff) which furnishes the best evidence that they are distinct Persons with distinct centers of consciousness.

Sometimes the Personhood of the Father and Son is appreciated, but the Personhood of the Holy Spirit is neglected. Sometimes the Spirit is treated more like a "force" than a Person. But the Holy Spirit is not an it, but a He (see John 14:26; 16:7-15; Acts 8:16). The fact that the Holy Spirit is a Person, not an impersonal force (like gravity), is also shown by the fact that He speaks (Hebrews 3:7), reasons (Acts 15:28), thinks and understands (1 Corinthians 2:10-11), wills (1 Corinthians 12:11), feels (Ephesians 4:30), and gives personal fellowship (2 Corinthians 13:14). These are all qualities of personhood. In addition to these texts, the others we mentioned above make clear that the Personhood of the Holy Spirit is distinct from the Personhood of the Son and the Father. They are three real persons, not three roles God plays.

Another serious error people have made is to think that the Father became the Son, who then became the Holy Spirit. Contrary to this, the passages we have seen imply that God always was and always will be three Persons. There was never a time when one of the Persons of the Godhead did not exist. They are all eternal.

While the three members of the Trinity are distinct, this does not mean that any is inferior to the other. Instead, they are all identical in attributes. They are equal in power, love, mercy, justice, holiness, knowledge, and all other qualities.

Each Person is fully God. If God is three Persons, does this mean that each Person is "one-third" of God? Does the Trinity mean that God is divided into three parts?

The Trinity does not divide God into three parts. The Bible is clear that all three Persons are each one hundred percent God. The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are all fully God. For example, it says of Christ that "in Him all the fullness of Deity dwells in bodily form" (Colossians 2:9). We should not think of God as like a "pie" cut into three pieces, each piece representing a Person. This would make each Person less than fully God and thus not God at all. Rather, "the being of each Person is equal to the whole being of God." The divine essence is not something that is divided between the three persons, but is fully in all three persons without being divided into "parts."

Thus, the Son is not one-third of the being of God, He is all of the being of God. The Father is not one-third of the being of God, He is all of the being of God. And likewise with the Holy Spirit. Thus, as Wayne Grudem writes, "When we speak of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit together we are not speaking of any greater being than when we speak of the Father alone, the Son alone, or the Holy Spirit alone."

There is only one God. If each Person of the Trinity is distinct and yet fully God, then should we conclude that there is more than one God? Obviously we cannot, for Scripture is clear that there is only one God: "There is no other God besides me, a righteous God and a Savior; there is none besides me. Turn to me and be saved, all the ends of the earth! For I am God, and there is no other" (Isaiah 45:21-22; see also 44:6-8; Exodus 15:11; Deuteronomy 4:35; 6:4-5; 32:39; 1 Samuel 2:2; 1 Kings 8:60).

Having seen that the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit are distinct Persons, that they are each fully God, and that there is nonetheless only one God, we must conclude that all three Persons are the same God. In other words, there is one God who exists as three distinct Persons.

If there is one passage which most clearly brings all of this together, it is Matthew 28:19: "Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit." First, notice that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are distinguished as distinct Persons. We baptize into the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit. Second, notice that each Person must be deity because they are all placed on the same level. In fact, would Jesus have us baptize in the name of a mere creature? Surely not. Therefore each of the Persons into whose name we are to be baptized must be deity. Third, notice that although the three divine Persons are distinct, we are baptized into their name (singular), not names (plural). The three Persons are distinct, yet only constitute one name. This can only be if they share one essence . . . .

How is God one? He is one in essence. How is God three? He is three in Person. Essence and person are not the same thing. God is one in a certain way (essence) and three in a different way (person). Since God is one in a different way than He is three, the Trinity is not a contradiction. There would only be a contradiction if we said that God is three in the same way that He is one.

So a closer look at the fact that God is one in essence but three in person has helped to show why the Trinity is not a contradiction. But how does it show us why there is only one God instead of three? It is very simple: All three Persons are one God because, as we saw above, they are all the same essence. Essence means the same thing as "being." Thus, since God is only one essence, He is only one being-not three. This should make it clear why it is so important to understand that all three Persons are the same essence. For if we deny this, we have denied God's unity and affirmed that there is more than one being of God (i.e., that there is more than one God).

What we have seen so far provides a good basic understanding of the Trinity. But it is possible to go deeper. If we can understand more precisely what is meant by essence and person, how these two terms differ, and how they relate, we will then have a more complete understanding of the Trinity.

ESSENCE AND PERSON
Essence. What does essence mean? As I said earlier, it means the same thing as being. God's essence is His being. To be even more precise, essence is what you are. At the risk of sounding too physical, essence can be understood as the "stuff" that you "consist of." Of course we are speaking by analogy here, for we cannot understand this in a physical way about God. "God is spirit" (John 4:24). Further, we clearly should not think of God as "consisting of" anything other than divinity. The "substance" of God is God, not a bunch of "ingredients" that taken together yield deity.

Person. In regards to the Trinity, we use the term "Person" differently than we generally use it in everyday life. Therefore it is often difficult to have a concrete definition of Person as we use it in regards to the Trinity. What we do not mean by Person is an "independent individual" in the sense that both I and another human are separate, independent individuals who can exist apart from one another.

What we do mean by Person is something that regards himself as "I" and others as "You." So the Father, for example, is a different Person from the Son because He regards the Son as a "You," even though He regards Himself as "I." Thus, in regards to the Trinity, we can say that "Person" means a distinct subject which regards Himself as an "I" and the other two as a "You." These distinct subjects are not a division within the being of God, but "a form of personal existence other than a difference in being."

How do they relate? The relationship between essence and Person, then, is as follows. Within God's one, undivided being is an "unfolding" into three personal distinctions. These personal distinctions are modes of existence within the divine being, but are not divisions of the divine being. They are personal forms of existence other than a difference in being. The late theologian, Herman Bavinck, has stated something very helpful at this point: "The persons are modes of existence within the being; accordingly, the Persons differ among themselves as the one mode of existence differs from the other, and-using a common illustration-as the open palm differs from a closed fist."

Because each of these "forms of existence" are relational (and thus are Persons), they are each a distinct center of consciousness, with each center of consciousness regarding Himself as "I" and the others as "You." Nonetheless, these three Persons all "consist of" the same "stuff" (that is, the same "what," or essence). As theologian and apologist, Norman Geisler, has explained it: "While essence is what you are, person is who you are. So God is one 'what' but three 'whos'."

The divine essence is thus not something that exists "above" or "separate from" the three Persons, but the divine essence is the being of the three Persons. Neither should we think of the Persons as being defined by attributes added on to the being of God. Wayne Grudem explains: "But if each person is fully God and has all of God's being, then we also should not think that the personal distinctions are any kind of additional attributes added on to the being of God . . . Rather, each person of the Trinity has all of the attributes of God, and no one Person has any attributes that are not possessed by the others. On the other hand, we must say that the Persons are real, that they are not just different ways of looking at the one being of God...the only way it seems possible to do this is to say that the distinction between the persons is not a difference of `being' but a difference of `relationships.' This is something far removed from our human experience, where every different human `person' is a different being as well. Somehow God's being is so much greater than ours that within His one undivided being there can be an unfolding into interpersonal relationships, so that there can be three distinct persons." READ MORE . . .
© Desiring God. Website: http://www.desiringgod.org/


Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , ,


Thursday, March 15, 2007

SERMON - The Reviving Power of God's Word


The following is a full set of notes, including background information and quotes I used whilst preparing my sermon entitled, "The Reviving Power of God's Word," which was preached at Jubilee Church on the 11th of March 2006. This sermon was the third part of a series on Revival. The earlier messages, "Revival" and "Reviving Prayer" are also available.

Much of this material was never designed to form part of the sermon — instead it is, if you like, part of the "iceberg" that lies beneath the surface supporting what I actually said. You can download the audio (you may need to right click and save the file onto your PC) or listen right here using the following embedded player:




INTRODUCTION
There is a
series of adverts on TV that arrests me every time I see them. You see someone crying, hugging a loved one. Your heart goes out to them, even before you begin to hear the words of the commentary. But then the commentary starts, and if you are a big softie like me, you feel like you are about to cry — even if you have seen it before. The person says "when I was diagnosed with cancer . . ." For the first few seconds you hear about the terrible impact those words had on the individual. You can picture them in the doctor's room. Then, the voice says, "Today I was told I have my life back." You suddenly realize that the person is crying for joy, not anguish, and in their tears a smile appears. You see the impact that a single sentence from a doctor can have.

We sometimes talk about “MERE words,” and yet SOME words mean everything — they can literally bring life and death. Words are powerful. They can steal away hope, and they can give it back again.

Words affect us all the time. I remember when I asked Andrée to marry me. I had shocked her by turning up earlier than she expected with a bunch of roses and a ring that I had designed. As I was kneeling there for what seemed like an eternity, first she laughed, then she cried, then she said, "No . . ." Fortunately, she meant this in disbelief rather than as a rejection! I just wanted to hear one word. That was all, one word. And if that word had been “no” and not “yes” I would have been a very different man!

If our words can feel like they take away life and give it back again, is it any wonder that God’s Words can do the same? It's no wonder that Ravi Zacharias made the astute observation: "In the beginning was the Word, not video."

I love the following quote: ". . . in OT times the word was regarded as being alive, and so was portrayed as being sent out of the heart (mind/brain/mouth) of a living person, to leap to the goal at which it was directed. Then, when it arrived, it did the work of the speaker who had sent it forth, for it conveyed the power of the speaker to change the heart or the mind of the hearer of the word." [1]

We as Christians are a people who value words, although we live in a world that values image. Last week,at our joint celebration,we heard about how the image of God is actually described as the Word of God. It is hard to think of a stronger way that God could express Hs high view of “words” than that. The Bible — so-called "mere words" written down on a page — is what God has left us by which to know Him. The Bible is not God — we don’t worship it. But, as we read it, as we listen to it, the God of the Bible leaps off the page at us. These words shape us. They can save us. They teach us how to live, but more than that, they give us life.

Today we are going to look at God’s reviving Word. In revivals, a hunger for God's Word returns. Sermons often become longer — sometimes lasting all day! (As an example of this, see Nehemiah 8 and 9). People cannot hear enough of God's Word. Amazing things happen to people as they hear and read God’s Word during revivals. I could tell you story after story — but I won’t.

If we have learnt anything as we have been studying how God revives us, it is this — what is true of the multitude in a revival can be true of you and I, even outside of a revival. I am convinced that God wants us as a people to become more and more aware of just how God's Word can revive us and help us become the people of faith we are convinced He wants us to be.

What does the Bible say about words, and God's Word in particular? Those of you who have been with us for awhile may remember that during the series we preached on Proverbs there was a message on Proverbs 18:21 which says, "Death and life are in the power of the tongue."

It is no wonder that the Apostles declared, "We will devote ourselves to prayer and to the ministry of the word." (Acts 6:4)

If there is one place in the Bible that honours God’s Word more than anywhere else, it is Psalm 119. It is the longest chapter in the Bible and it comes just two psalms after the shortest chapter in the Bible — Psalm 117 — which just so happens to be the middle chapter of the Bible. You will find it somewhere in the middle of your Bible.

BACKGROUND ON PSALM 119

  • “of David” — a man who loved God “after God's own heart.”

  • He loved God's law because it was God's Word. He loved God's Word because it showed him his God.

  • For him, the Word of God was almost exclusively the law, and presumably Judges, Ruth, and maybe Job.

  • If he can love these bits of the Bible that are only beginning to reveal God, we should love it all, since progressive revelation means that more comes later.

  • An acrostic poem — “It consists of twenty-two strophes of eight lines each. Each strophe has the same Hebrew letter at the beginning of every one of its eight lines, going in succession, by strophes, from alef, the first letter of the Hebrew alphabet, as the first letter of each line in the first strophe, to taw, the last letter of the Hebrew alphabet, as the first letter of each line in the last strophe.” [2]

  • Eight different Hebrew words are used to speak of the Law . . . The following Hebrew words are used: (1) torah (see "law" and comments, 1.2); (2) ‘eduth (see “testimony” and comments, 19.7c); (3) mishpat (see “judgment,” 7.6); (4) mitswah, always in the plural, except in verses 96, 98 (see “commandment,” 19.8c); (5) choq, always in the plural (see “decree” and comments, 2.7; “statutes,” 18.22); (6) piqudim, a plural form (see “precepts,” 19.8a); (7) dabar; (8) ’imrah (see “promises,” 12.6; 18.30). Torah is always singular and means the whole law of God, the Mosaic Law; dabar and ’imrah mean “word, saying,” and sometimes have the specific meaning of “promise.” The other words refer to rules or commands or instructions . . . All of these eight words are synonyms; they all refer to God’s Law as contained in the Mosaic legislation recorded in the first five books of the Scriptures. The Law is not seen as having a human origin, but always a divine origin; Yahweh is the author of the Torah. It should be noticed that in every one of the 176 verses in this psalm, God is either addressed or referred to.” [3]

  • The Psalm in some way reminds me of the Proverbs, because it does not flow well — it is almost a collection of random words or sayings about God’s Word.

  • WESLEY — “. . . the word of God is here called by the names of law, statutes, precepts or commandments, judgments, ordinances, righteousness, testimonies, way and word. By which variety, he designed to express the nature and perfection of God's word. It is called his word, as revealed by him to us; his way, as prescribed by him for us to walk in; his law, as binding us to obedience; his statutes, as declaring his authority of giving us laws; his precepts as directing our duty; his ordinances, as ordained by him; his righteousness, as exactly agreeable to God's righteous nature and will; his judgments, as proceeding from the great judge of the world, and being his judicial sentence to which all men must submit; and his testimonies, as it contains the witness of God's will, and of man's duty.” [4]

  • SPURGEON – “I have been bewildered in the expanse of the One Hundred and Nineteenth Psalm . . . Its dimensions and its depth alike overcame me. It spread itself out before me like a vast, rolling prairie, to which I could see no bound, and this alone created a feeling of dismay. Its expanse was unbroken by a bluff or headland, and hence it threatened a monotonous task, although the fear has not been realized. This marvellous poem seemed to me a great sea of holy teaching, moving, in its many verses, wave upon wave; altogether without an island of special and remarkable statement to break it up. I confess I hesitated to launch upon it. Other psalms have been mere lakes, but this is the main ocean. It is a continent of sacred thought, every inch of which is fertile as the garden of the Lord: it is an amazing level of abundance, a mighty stretch of harvest fields. I have now crossed the great plain for myself, but not without persevering, and, I will add, pleasurable, toil. Several great authors have traversed this region and left their tracks behind them, and so far the journey has been all the easier for me; but yet to me and to my helpers it has been no mean feat of patient authorship and research. This great Psalm is a book in itself: instead of being one among many psalms, it is worthy to be set forth by itself as a poem of surpassing excellence. Those who have never studied it may pronounce it commonplace, and complain of its repetitions; but to the thoughtful student it is like the great deep, full, so as never to be measured; and varied, so as never to weary the eye. Its depth is as great as its length; it is mystery, not set forth as mystery, but concealed beneath the simplest statements; may I say that it is experience allowed to prattle, to preach, to praise, and to pray like a child prophet in his own father's house? [5]

  • EULOGIUM — “This Psalm is a prolonged meditation upon the excellence of the word of God, upon its effects, and the strength and happiness which it gives to a man in every position. These reflections are interspersed with petitions, in which the Psalmist, deeply feeling his natural infirmity, implores the help of God for assistance to walk in the way mapped out for him in the divine oracles. In order to be able to understand and to enjoy this remarkable Psalm, and that we may not be repelled by its length and by its repetitions, we must have had, in some measure at least, the same experiences as its author, and, like him, have learned to love and practise the sacred word. Moreover, this Psalm is in some sort a touchstone for the spiritual life of those who read it. [6]

  • BARCLAY says of this word “Law”: “We must be clear, however, what the word law means in the original Hebrew. We have met it in earlier psalms where we found that it is the word Torah. We found that this word does not mean “law” in the classical Roman sense of lex which has formed the basis of our western legal system. Torah actually means “teaching”, so that it means teaching that has come out of the mouth of the Living God. When the disciple hears the words of his master’s teaching, he receives through it a revelation of what is in the mind of his teacher, and so here, of what is in the mind of God. Torah then means both teaching and revelation, in fact, both these at once—from God!” [7]

ON THE LAW
Although Psalm 119 is really about God’s Word in its widest sense, perhaps partly because so much of the Bible that David would have read would have been the law of Moses, he speaks many times about God’s law. David loves God’s law. This is a very different attitude to what we tend to have. So I cannot avoid giving a very brief introduction here to our view of the law. This is not a sermon about that — one day perhaps we will address this more fully — I did address some of this more in my talks on Galatians last year. But just to help us as we approach this psalm, let's look at how we should view the law.

  1. Our Attitude Toward the Law

    • We tend to rebel whenever we hear rules — e.g. “Don’t walk on the grass.” Law teaches us what sin is, and unless empowered by the Spirit, actually provokes us to sin more whilst making us feel condemned.

    • According to Paul, the law exists to lead us to Christ — to make us feel helpless so that we will seek Him for the free gift of salvation which is not dependent on what we have done, but what Christ has done.

    • Those who are Christians tend to say, “We are not under law, but under grace.”

    • Sadly many go one step further and do not want to read the law, nor do they value it as part of God’s Word for us today.

  2. Jesus' Attitude Toward the Law

    • Is very different to the over-simplified view many of us have today. Listen to what He said:
      • "Scripture cannot be broken." (John 10:35)

      • "For truly, I say to you, until heaven and earth pass away, not an iota, not a dot, will pass from the Law until all is accomplished." (Matthew 5:18)

  3. The Solution
    • God does want us to live righteously, and so the law does have a role for us.

    • We are to see the law as revealing God's character and making us fall in love with Him — actually much like David does in this psalm.

    • As we fall in love with Jesus, our hearts change and we WANT to keep His commandments.

    • Paul calls this the “obedience of faith” (Romans 1:5)

    • Tim Keller puts it this way: "Religion is — I obey so I can be accepted. The gospel is — I am accepted so I can obey."

So, with that bit of introduction over, let’s get into our text — Psalm 119. I think that, on the basis of that introduction, for our purposes in our studies we can replace the word "law" for the word “word” whenever we want to. The psalmist speaks about the law and word interchangeably because that was all he knew of God's Word at that point. If the law was all David knew and he could say all these things about it, how much more should we be able to say the same things of the whole counsel of God, including the law that David knew? So let's turn to Psalm 119.

You will be pleased to know that I am not going to read the whole psalm today, but I would encourage you, in your own time, to read it over several times.

We are going to pick out a number of verses from this psalm today which speak of the effects of God’s reviving word. What exactly does God's Word do for us when we read and listen to it?

  1. THE WORD OF GOD BRINGS REVELATION

      "Open my eyes, that I may behold wondrous things out of your law." (Psalm 119:18)

      The psalmist prays to God — and you will notice how much of this psalm is a prayer, if you like a prayer about God's Word — he asks God to reveal Himself to him in His Word. He says something similar in verse 105: "Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path."

      The last time I spoke, I mentioned that the Bible is clear that we are blind and cannot even see God without His help. We need God to shine into our hearts. Like the writer of that great hymn, "Amazing Grace," the Christian is aware that “I once was blind, but now I see.”

      "For God, who said, 'Let light shine out of darkness,' has shone in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ." (2 Corinthians 4:6)

      We don’t see the face of Jesus today — how do we see Him? It's in the Scriptures — that is the place for us to meet God! As we read and pray over the Words of this book, let the God of the Bible leap off the page at us!

      Notice that the revelation is about Jesus — Jesus makes this astonishing claim Himself.

      • "You search the Scriptures because you think that in them you have eternal life; and it is they that bear witness about me." (John 5:39)

      Through the Scriptures, we are meant to hear God’s voice. Jesus says this — "My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me" (John 10:27) He means both spiritual guidance and the Bible — we hear His voice in the Bible. As we read the law, even then we see Jesus. He is revealed. The whole book is about Him.

      This experience of looking to Jesus, of revelation, is not a once-for-all experience. I am sure we can all think of moments when either listening to a sermon or reading from the Bible, it is like a light gets switched on in our heads – “I see it now”

      But as we begin to see Jesus there is something else that happens. Remember that God is a reviving God, as we have been saying. So is it any wonder that as we read God's Word, it revives us? Let's see what our next verse has to say.

        QUOTES

        • Chicago Statement — “God who is himself truth and speaks only truth has inspired Holy Scripture (HS) in order thereby to reveal himself...”

        • “Insight into the meaning of God’s law depends not only on prolonged study and meditation; it depends also on God’s guidance. So the psalmist prays, Open my eyes; only in this way can he discover the wonderful truths, or teachings, in the Law. It is God who will enable him to appreciate and understand the Law.” [8]

        • “The word of God is central to the life of God’s people. Our God is a God who speaks and it is the possession of that verbal revelation which marks his people off from all others on earth”. [9]

        • Wesley — “Enlighten my mind by the light of thy Holy Spirit, and dispel all ignorance and error.” [10]

        • Boston:
          1. “That there can be no sufficient knowledge of the duty which we owe to God without the scriptures. Though the light of nature does in some measure show our duty to God, yet it is too dim to take up the will of God sufficiently in order to salvation.

          2. That there can be no right obedience yielded to God without them. Men that walk in the dark must needs stumble; and the works that are wrought in the dark will never abide the light; for there is no working rightly by guess in this matter. All proper obedience to God must be learned from the scriptures.

          3. That there is no point of duty that we are called to, but what the scripture teaches, Isaiah. 8:20; men must neither make duties to themselves, or others, but what God has made duty. The law of God is exceeding broad, and reaches the whole conversation of man, outward and inward, Psalms 19; and man is bound to conform himself to it alone as the rule of his duty.” [11]

        • Boston — “The scriptures teach but externally. It is the Spirit that teaches internally. The scriptures externally reveal what we are to believe concerning God, and what duty God requires of man; but the inward illumination of the Spirit of God is necessary for the saving understanding of such things as are revealed in the scriptures.”[12]

        • William Cowper — “If it be asked, seeing David was a regenerate man, and so illumined already, how is it that he prays for the opening of his eyes? The answer is easy: that our regeneration is wrought by degrees. The beginnings of light in his mind made him long for more; for no man can account of sense, but he who hath it. The light which he had caused him to see his own darkness; and therefore, feeling his wants, he sought to have them supplied by the Lord.” [13]

        • Spurgeon — “The light which they beg is not anything besides the word. When God is said to enlighten us, it is not that we should expect new revelations, but that we may see the wonders in his word, or get a clear sight of what is already revealed.” [14]

        • "The natural person does not accept the things of the Spirit of God, for they are folly to him, and he is not able to understand them because they are spiritually discerned." (1 Corinthians 2:14)

  1. GOD'S WORD REVIVES US

      Verse 25"My soul clings to the dust; give me life according to your word!"

      As we recognize our desperate state before a holy God, as we get to the end of ourselves, God in His grace comes to us by His Word and says “LIVE!” Again this is definitely referring to what happens when we become Christians — but it is also an ongoing experience of the Christian who immerses himself in the Word of God with prayer. There are a few other places in the Bible where this is also stated:

      • "The law of the Lord is perfect, reviving the soul." (Psalm 19:7).

      • "Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God." (Matthew 4:4, Deuteronomy 8:3)

      • "For the word of God is living and active, sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing to the division of soul and of spirit, of joints and of marrow, and discerning the thoughts and intentions of the heart." (Hebrews 4:12)

      We who are privileged to have a complete Bible in front of us should, like David, be always able to find a verse that will sustain us and give us that feeling of a life renewed when we are feeling low. If you are low in energy and life this morning, what do I have to offer you? I can give you a pat on the shoulder and some well-meaning words of support, or I can give you a lifeline from this Book. I know which I prefer!

      This life-giving force of the Bible is also described in a slightly different way in verse 28.

        QUOTES
        "Now we reach the key-word of the whole long psalm. It is the word live. Our biological life is a gift from God. We do not create it ourselves. The Torah, however, uses this word quite differently from Plato and the Greeks. For the Torah, God is the Living God. This Living God offers his children his life, and that is not mere biological life. "It is life in the Spirit, to which physical death has nothing to say." [15]

        Spurgeon — "When there was so little Scripture written, yet David could find out a word for his support. Alas! in our troubles and afflictions, no promise comes to mind. As in outward things, many that have less live better than those that have abundance; so here, now Scripture is so large, we are less diligent, and therefore, though we have so many promises, we are apt to faint, we have not a word to bear us up." [16]

          1. GOD'S WORD STRENGTHENS US

              Verse 28"My soul melts away for sorrow; strengthen me according to your word."

              God’s Word really is robust and strong enough for us to lean on it when we are feeling weak and depressed. I knew someone who suffered from depression who quite literally used to take God's Word as though it were medicine three times a day. Over time she was strengthened and eventually did not require medication any more. Now, of course, depression can sometimes be biological, and that is not to say that antidepressants do not sometimes have their place. But, there is no doubt that God's Word, if you let it shape you over years, will go a long way towards strengthening you and lifting you up.

              As I was preparing, I felt God drop into my heart that there were some here who have struggled with depression and feel that there is nothing you can do. You feel a failure. Well, I want to tell you that even great men of God like Elijah, and in modern history Spurgeon, suffered from depression, so you are not alone. But God would say to you today, there is something that you can do in addition to taking medication, if that is needed. You can feast yourself on God's reviving and strengthening Word. It may take years — don’t expect a quick fix — but consistent exposure to God's Word will help you — come and talk to us afterwards if this is you, and we would love to give you some ideas about which verses would be especially helpful for you to add to your daily medication list.

              There is another thought that came to me as I was studying these few words. For God's Word to strengthen us reliably it has to be trustworthy and reliable — imagine, if you will, someone who says, "I will cover you" to Jack Bauer and then doesn’t — some today who believe the Bible has errors in it — we addressed this in our Bible study — but I want you to know this is God's Word. If God doesn’t lie, then neither can His Word!

              • "The sum of your word is truth, and every one of your righteous rules endures forever." (Psalm 119:160)

              • "Every word of God proves true; he is a shield to those who take refuge in him. Do not add to his words, lest he rebuke you and you be found a liar." (Proverbs 3:5-6)

              It is important that we fill our minds with God's truth and not lies. That we focus on righteousness and not sin. That we — as Paul puts it — fill our minds with what is pure. In fact, as we read the Word, it begins to do something to us so that our appetites and desires change. The Word changes us, as we shall see in verse 37.

                QUOTES
                Berkouwer —"There can be no doubt that for a long time during church history certainty of faith was specifically linked to the trustworthiness of Holy Scripture as the Word of God ... From its earliest days the church held that Scripture is not an imperfect, humanly untrustworthy book of various religious experiences, but one with a peculiar mystery" [17]

                  1. GOD'S WORD CHANGES US

                      Verse 37"Turn my eyes from looking at worthless things; and give me life in your ways."

                      It is interesting that it is mentioned here that God changes our eyes from looking on and valuing things we shouldn’t, and that it is “according to his ways” or words. But, we cannot ask God to do something like this for us and then do nothing about it ourselves! Job puts it this way: "I have made a covenant with my eyes; how then could I gaze at a virgin?" (Job 31:1)

                      Paul says: "Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is commendable, if there is any excellence, if there is anything worthy of praise, think about these things." (Philippians 4:8).

                      This amazing change that happens on the inside of us — from desiring to look at sinful things and then commit sin, to desiring to do good — is called repentance in the New Testament. But it comes from the Word of God – it is God's message that has the power to change us from sinners to saints.

                      • "For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek." (Romans 1:16)

                      Repentance is a gift from God — you may remember that verse in Elijah’s prayer that said it is God that turns us around. There are many others who say the same thing. And yet one of the paradoxes is that God also commands us to repent and “choose life.” The book of Acts, for example, is clear in its instructions to anyone listening who is not a Christian — you are COMMANDED to repent. Our problem is that we are commanded to do the impossible. This is why becoming a Christian is about coming to the end of yourself and asking God to help you. For those of us who are Christians, as we seek the face of God in prayer and in His word, there is a glorious promise for us.

                      • "And we all, with unveiled face, beholding the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from one degree of glory to another. For this comes from the Lord who is the Spirit" (1 Corinthians 3:18)

                      Seeking the face of God is a familiar theme in the Scriptures. We become what we eat. We become what we gaze on. Are you feasting on Jesus? As we think about seeing God's very face, as we learn more about God's holy character in the Bible, there is something else that should happen to us. Something that perhaps we don’t like to talk about so much, but it is something that is very much a hallmark of every revival I have read about. Let's see what this is by reading verse 38:

                        QUOTE
                        Wolfgang Musculus — Notice that he does not say, I will turn away mine eyes; but, "Turn away mine eyes." This shows that it is not possible for us sufficiently to keep our by our own caution and diligence; but there must be divine keeping." [18]

                    1. GOD'S WORD PRODUCES A HEALTHY FEAR OF GOD

                        Verse 38"Confirm to your servant your promise, that you may be feared."

                        We like the first half of this verse. We want God to fulfill His promises to us. There is great joy in seeing God's promises fulfilled — in seeing God act. But it also has what may seem to us to be a surprising result. Like Peter, who fell at Jesus' feet and said, "Away from me for I am a sinful man," the activity of God reintroduces us to the very biblical concept of the fear of God.

                        • " … this is the one to whom I will look: he who is humble and contrite in spirit, and trembles at my word …" (Isaiah 66:1)

                        The thing that marks out historical revivals more than almost anything else is an outbreak of the fear of God. Even in my own experience of a mini-revival, there was something of a sense of the holiness of God which I have rarely experienced before or since.

                        We see this in the Bible — last time I preached, I mentioned the case of Ananias and Sapphira. We pray “God, send us the experience of the book of Acts," but do we include that experience? Not surprisingly, when they died it is said that great fear fell on the Church. There is a seriousness of God that is felt at those times. C.J. Mahaney once preached a whole series on everyone God killed in the Bible. Not surprisingly, perhaps it led to more salvation than they had seen up until that point, as well as Christians putting their lives straight.

                        There is much joy in revivals experienced by the newly-saved and the long-time Christian, but there is also many tears experienced by those coming under conviction of sin who have not yet received salvation.

                        Isaiah 6 is a good illustration of this. Isaiah comes face-to-face with God and says, "Woe is me! For I am lost; for I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips; for my eyes have seen the King, the Lord of hosts!"

                        God is still the same God today and is definitely not to be messed with!

                        God touches Isaiah’s lips to take away his guilt — only God can deal with guilt — and commissions him. Sadly for Isaiah, incidentally, he is commissioned into a period of time that was precisely the opposite of a generalized revival. He gets personally revived and is sent out to tell others who, he has been warned, will not listen. He must have really struggled with that. Somehow, though, even for Isaiah, God intended him to be full of hope.

                        We see in verse 49 that hope is one of the outcomes of allowing God’s Word to come to us and joining it with our faith.

                          QUOTES
                          “The fear of God is distinct from the terror of him that is also a biblical motif (see FEAR). Encompassing and building on attitudes of awe and reverence, it is the proper and elemental response of a person to God. This religious fear of God is a major biblical image for the believer’s faith. In fact, there are well over a hundred references to the fear of God in the positive sense of faith and obedience. To "fear" God or be "God-fearing" is a stock biblical image for being a follower of God, sometimes in implied contrast to those who do not fear him. The very frequency of the references signals that the fear of God is central to biblical faith, and the relative absence of this ancient way of thinking in our culture should give us pause. It is important to note, however, that the preponderance of references occur in the OT, perhaps implying that a permanent change (though not an abrogation) occurred with the incarnation of Christ, who calls his disciples friends rather than servants (John 15:15).

                          What images should we associate with this mysterious "fear of God?" The actions most frequently associated with fear of God are serving God (Deuteronomy 6:13, 10:20; 1 Samuel 12:24) and obedience to his commandments (Deuteronomy 31:13; 1 Samuel 12:14). The fear of God is linked to wisdom (Psalm 111:10; Proverbs 9:10, 15:33) and is part of the covenant between God and his people (Psalm 25:14, 103:17–18). To fear God is to be in awe and reverence of him (Ps 33:8; Malachi 2:5 RSV) and to trust him (Psalm 40:3, 115:11). Fearing God means hating and avoiding evil (Proverbs 8:13, 16:6). It is not too much to say that fearing God is virtually synonymous with having saving faith in him. Deuteronomy 10:12–13 is an apt summary of what is encompassed in the fear of God: "And now, O Israel, what does the Lord your God ask of you but to fear the Lord your God, to walk in all his ways, to love him, to serve the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul, and to observe the Lord’s commands and decrees" (NIV).

                          The fear of God is a fundamental quality of those who have an experiential knowledge of who he is.” [19]

                    1. GOD'S WORD GIVES US HOPE

                        Verse 49"Remember your word to your servant, in which you have made me hope."

                        • See also verse 74"Those who fear you shall see me and rejoice, because I have hoped in your word."

                        • And verse 81"My soul longs for your salvation; I hope in your word."

                        • So faith comes from hearing, and hearing through the word of Christ." (Romans 10:17)

                        Hope is infectious . . . as is despair. We should surround ourselves with those who will instill hope into us! But our hope must come from the Scriptures and not a false whipped-up hope.

                        I can speak personally about how this works. As I was a bit tired out before Christmas, I asked Tope for a break from preaching for awhile. This was a good thing as everyone needs a break from time to time. But I lifted my foot off the accelerator a bit regarding my study of God's Word, and was also not praying as much — obviously when you are preparing to preach you study more and pray more. But what I found was that as my break from the hard work of preaching lengthened, my level of hope was slowly being reduced. I found myself feeling even quite fearful. I remember even having the thought come into my mind, "Perhaps I've forgotten how to preach." But there were also a couple of personal situations where I was beginning to allow fear to have a foothold.

                        So, how did I deal with this? Well, two things seem to have lifted me. The first was that I received prayer on Saturday morning. The second was that as I went back to a more rigorous Bible study program and begun to pray more, I found that hope began to return and fear subsided.

                        It is God's Word, soaked in prayer, that gives us hope, that lifts us, that gives us life!

                        God wants us increasingly to be almost aggressive in how much we place our hope in His Word. Many prayers in the Bible remind God of His promises and almost “sue” him to act. I believe God responds to that kind of prayer — prayer that is mixed with God's own Word.

                        So far we have seen that God's Word brings revelation, it revives us, it strengthens us, it changes us, as the great hymn says "it teaches our heart to fear," but it also relieves that fear. Is it any wonder that this Word is so precious to the psalmist? What else is there that can do all this to us when we are troubled? What else can comfort us in all our troubles as we see in verse 50?

                          QUOTES
                          Spurgeon — "The argument is that God, having given grace to hope in the promise, would surely never disappoint that hope. He cannot have caused us to hope without cause. If we hope upon his word we have a sure basis: our gracious Lord would never mock us by exciting false hopes. Hope deferred maketh the heart sick, hence the petition for immediate remembrance of the cheering word." [20]

                          Richard Sibbes — "When we hear any promise in the word of God, let us turn it into a prayer. God's promises are his bonds. Sue him on his bond. He loves that we should wrestle with him by his promises. Why, Lord, thou hast made this and that promise, thou canst not deny thyself, thou canst not deny thine own truth; thou canst not cease to be God, and thou canst as well cease to be God, as deny thy promise, that is thyself. 'Lord, remember thy word' 'I put thee in mind of thy promise, whereon thou hast caused me to hope.' If I be deceived, thou hast deceived me. Thou hast made these promises, and caused me to trust in thee, and 'thou never fullest those that trust in thee, therefore keep thy word to me.'" [21]

                    1. GOD'S WORD COMFORTS US

                        Verse 50"This is my comfort in my affliction, that your promise gives me life."

                        What a wonderful verse that is! God comforts us when we are struggling because of His promises. When Mark Dever was trying to summarise the entire message of the Bible, he just said this — the Old Testament is "promises made" and the New Testament is "promises kept," although, of course, we have plenty of promises kept in the Old Testament and made in the New Testament! We should get a hold of God's promises and let them comfort us, revive us, strengthen us, and give us hope.

                        God's Word really is a comfort — not the latest gadget, nor the bottle, but His faithful Word. The more we see Him being faithful to His Word, the more we will find our faith rising within us. There are now only two more things that I want to address that the Word of God does for us. The first is, in a sense, a summary of all we have said so far. What does God’s Word do? It gives us grace. Verse 58.

                          QUOTES
                          spurgeonSpurgeon — "The worldly man clutches his money bag and says, "this is my comfort"; the spendthrift points to his gaiety, and shouts, "this is my comfort"; the drunkard lifts his glass, and sings, "this is my comfort"; but the man whose hope comes from God feels the giving power of the Word of the Lord, and he testifies, "this is my comfort." Paul said, "I know whom I have believed." Comfort is desirable at all times; but comfort in affliction is like a lamp in a dark place. Some are unable to find comfort at such times; but it is not so with believers, their Savior has said to them, "I will not leave you comfortless." [22]

                          “What the Word has already done is to faith a pledge of what it shall yet do.” [23]

                      1. GOD'S WORD GIVES GRACE TO US

                          Verse 58"I entreat your favor with all my heart; be gracious to me according to your promise."

                          GRACE is what we need to save us — so it is no wonder that Paul said to Timothy that the Scriptures are "… able to make you wise for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus." (2 Timothy 3:15)

                          It is interesting to see the way that Paul links wisdom and salvation there, for the last thing that I want us to address today from Psalm 119 is, in fact, wisdom. Or as the psalmist says, "good judgment" or discernment (verse 66).

                        1. GOD'S WORD GIVES US WISDOM

                            Verse 66"Teach me good judgment and knowledge, for I believe in your commandments."

                            Is it any wonder that the Jubilee membership course says the following:

                              The BIBLE is the WORD OF GOD

                              • The sole basis of our belief is the BIBLE. We believe that all Scripture is inspired by God and that it was given through men chosen by God.

                              • We believe that the Bible, all sixty-six books, contain God's revelation to man, and that the Scriptures are infallible and inerrant.

                              • We therefore take all our teaching and insight for living from the Bible."

                                    Jubilee Church Membership Course

                            "We don’t stand above the Bible, we stand under it."

                                    Tope Koleoso




                          Next time I speak to you, God willing, I intend to speak about how practically we stand under the Bible. I will leave you today with one verse that summarises what our response to all this should be:

                          • "They received the word with all eagerness, examining the Scriptures daily to see if these things were so." (Acts 17:11)

                          Let's receive this reviving Word with all eagerness, and in every way, allow ourselves to be moulded by this wonderful Book God has given us. It’s the only Book that can give life, can save us, can show us how to live. It really is God’s reviving Word. AMEN.
                          ________________

                          END NOTES
                          OT=Old Testament
                          [1] George Angus Fulton Knight, Psalms: Volume 2 (The Daily Study Bible Series, Louisville: Westminster, John Knox Press, 2001, c1982), p.223.
                          [2] Robert G. Bratcher and William David Reyburn, A Translator's Handbook on the Book of Psalms (Helps for Translators,New York: United Bible Societies, 1991), p.996.
                          [3] Ibid.
                          [4] John Wesley, John Wesley's Notes One the Bible, Ps 119.
                          [5] C. H. Spurgeon, Treasury of David, Ps 119:1.
                          [6] Cited in C. H. Spurgeon, Treasury of David, Ps 119:1.
                          [7] George Angus Fulton Knight, Psalms: Volume 2 (The Daily Study Bible Series,Louisville: Westminster, John Knox Press, 2001, c1982), p.215.
                          [8] Robert G. Bratcher and William David Reyburn, A Translator's Handbook on the Book of Psalms (Helps for Translators, New York: United Bible Societies, 1991), p.1002.
                          [9] D. A. Carson, New Bible Commentary: 21st Century Edition (Revised edition of: The New Bible Commentary, 3rd ed. / edited by D. Guthrie, J. A. Motyer. 1970; 4th ed.; Leicester, England; Downers Grove, Illinois, USA: Inter-Varsity Press, 1994), Ps 118:24.
                          [10] John Wesley, John Wesley's Notes On the Bible, Ps 119:18.
                          [11] Thomas Boston, Thomas Boston Sermons (Joseph Kreifels).
                          [12] Ibid.
                          [13] Cited in C. H. Spurgeon, Treasury of David, Ps 119:18.
                          [14] C. H. Spurgeon, Treasury of David, Ps 119:18.
                          [15] George Angus Fulton Knight, Psalms: Volume 2 (The Daily Study Bible Series, Louisville: Westminster, John Knox Press, 2001, c1982), p.226.
                          [16] C. H. Spurgeon, Treasury of David (Joseph Kreifels), Ps 119:25.
                          [17] G. C. Berkouwer, Holy Scripture (Translation of De Heilige Schrift; ed. Jack Bartlett Rogers; Grand Rapids: W. B. Eerdmans Publishing. Co., 1975), p.11.
                          [18] Cited in C. H. Spurgeon, Treasury of David, Ps 119:37.
                          OT=Old Testament
                          RSV=Revised Standard Version
                          NIV=New International Version
                          [19] Leland Ryken et al., Dictionary of Biblical Imagery (Electronic edition; Downers Grove, Illinois: InterVarsity Press, 2000, c1998), p.277.
                          [20] C. H. Spurgeon, Treasury of David, Ps 119:49.
                          [21] Cited in C. H. Spurgeon, Treasury of David, Ps 119:49.
                          [22] C. H. Spurgeon, Treasury of David, (Joseph Kreifels), Ps 119:50
                          [23] Robert Jamieson et al., A Commentary, Critical and Explanatory, on the Old and New Testaments (On spine: Critical and Explanatory Commentary; Oak Harbor, Washington: Logos Research Systems, Inc., 1997), Ps 119:50.


                              Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,


                              Tuesday, November 28, 2006

                              AUDIO - The Attributes of God: What is God Like?


                              At Jubilee we have been doing a series of talks this autumn, each one lasting about an hour, during which we attempt to instruct the hearer to a greater extent than is possible in our Sunday morning sermons. One of the ones I did - which was on the subject of "What is God Like?" - has just been made available online at the Jubilee Audio Sermons site. You can visit there to download the sermon or listen to it here:



                              These talks have been inspired by the following verse:

                              “Do your best to present yourself to God as one approved, a worker who has no need to be ashamed, rightly handling the word of truth." (2 Timothy 2:15)

                              I do want to acknowledge my indebtedness to Dr. Wayne Grudem, whose Systematic Theology was used as a major resource for this talk. When preparing to speak as a Christian, I believe that it is important to lean on the wisdom found in the work of others, and I certainly did that here.

                              I definitely did make this my own, however, so don't blame Dr. Grudem for any errors! I will now share the full notes here. You can also download the PowerPoint file. As with all my material on this blog, you are welcome to use it in any way that does not involve making a profit, and you should, of course, attribute it if you copy the entire article.


                              THE ATTRIBUTES OF GOD - WHAT IS GOD LIKE?


                              Do NOT expect to understand everything about God - He is infinite; we are finite and cannot understand Him fully. Almost all language used about God is a metaphor, and therefore it has the whisper “God is, but is not the same” as the concept used to describe Him.

                              This is not a mere intellectual exercise, but has two goals:

                              1. To know, worship, and follow God more.

                              2. For our beliefs about God to be clearly grounded in the Bible.


                              “The secret things belong to the Lord our God, but the things that are revealed belong to us and to our children forever, that we may do all the words of this law.” (Deuteronomy 29:29)


                              Arguments for God’s Existence

                              • Intelligent design of the universe (teleological).
                              • God as the ultimate cause - that which came first (cosmological).
                              • The greatest being we can conceive (ontological).
                              • The presence of a universal basic set of ethics (moral argument).
                              • The spiritual nature of mankind – the mind/body problem.
                              • The God-shaped hole in all cultures.
                              • Christianity does people good (pragmatic argument).
                              • But . . . we cannot use our reason to prove God’s existence, for that would make our reason above God.
                              The Bible Assumes God Exists and People Know

                              • “In the beginning, God created ...” (Genesis 1:1)
                              • “…his invisible attributes...have been clearly perceived...” (Romans 1:18-22)
                              • “The fool says in his heart, There is no God.” (Psalm 14:1)
                              • God is unknowable and invisible, but chooses to reveal Himself.
                              • “Oh, the depth of the riches and wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are his judgments and how inscrutable his ways…” (Romans 11:33-34)
                              • “For now we see in a mirror dimly, but then face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I have been fully known.” (1 Corinthians 13:12)
                              God Has Both Transcendence and Immanence

                              • Christians often emphasise one or the other.
                              • Jesus – the revelation of God.
                              • “…the radiance of the glory of God and the exact imprint of his nature, and he upholds the universe by the word of his power...” (Hebrews 1:1-4)
                              • “No one has ever seen God; the only God, who is at the Father's side, he has made him known.” (John 1:18)
                              • “Isaiah said these things because he saw his glory and spoke of him.” (John 12:41)
                              • “If you had known me, you would have known my Father also. From now on you do know him and have seen him … Whoever has seen me has seen the Father. How can you say, ‘Show us the Father’? Do you not believe that I am in the Father and the Father is in me?” (John 14:7-10)
                              Father, Son, and Holy Spirit

                              • “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things were made through him, and without him was not any thing made that was made.” (John 1:1-3)
                              • “If anyone loves me, he will keep my word, and my Father will love him, and we will come to him and make our home with him.” (John 14:23)
                              • “You, however, are not in the flesh but in the Spirit, if in fact the Spirit of God dwells in you. Anyone who does not have the Spirit of Christ does not belong to him. But if Christ is in you, although the body is dead because of sin, the Spirit is life because of righteousness. If the Spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, he who raised Christ Jesus from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through his Spirit who dwells in you.” (Romans 8:9-11)
                              • “God has sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, crying, "Abba! Father!" (Galatians 4:6)

                              The Trinity Reflects a Chain of Authority

                              • “But when the Helper comes, whom I will send to you from the Father, the Spirit of truth, who proceeds from the Father, he will bear witness about me.” (John 15:26)
                              • “But I want you to understand that the head of every man is Christ, the head of a wife is her husband, and the head of Christ is God.” (1 Corinthians 11:3)
                              • “The words that I say to you I do not speak on my own authority, but the Father who dwells in me does his works.” (John 14:10)
                              • “God has put all things in subjection under his feet...when all things are subjected to him, then the Son himself will also be subjected to him who put all things in subjection under him, that God may be all in all.” (1 Corinthians 15:27-28)
                              We Believe in One God in Three Persons

                              • “Let us make man in our image, after our likeness.” (Genesis 1:26)
                                “...baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.” (Matthew 28:19)
                              • “You shall worship the Lord your God and him only shall you serve.” (Matthew 4:10)
                                “I am the Lord, and there is no other, besides me there is no God.” (Isaiah 45:5)
                              • Jesus accepts worship: “My Lord and my God!” (John 20:28)
                              • “Let all God's angels worship him.” (Hebrews 1:6)
                              • Jesus shares seventeen attributes unique to God - “For in him the whole fullness of deity dwells bodily.” (Colossians 2:9)

                              1. God is an Independent Community - Because of His Self-Sufficiency and Trinity, He Doesn’t Need Us!

                              • “The God who made the world and everything in it, being Lord of heaven and earth, does not live in temples made by man, nor is he served by human hands, as though he needed anything, since he himself gives to all mankind life and breath and everything.” (Acts 17:24-25)
                              • He didn’t make the world because he was lonely.
                              • “God is love.” (1 John 4:8)
                              • Jesus: “Father . . . you loved me before the foundation of the world.” (John 17:24)
                              2. God is the Creator of Everything.

                              • God: “For from him and through him and to him are all things. To him be glory forever. Amen.” (Romans 11:36)
                              • Jesus: “He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation. For by him all things were created, in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or rulers or authorities—all things were created through him and for him. And he is before all things, and in him all things hold together.” (Colossians 1:15-17)
                              • The Spirit: “The earth was without form and void, and darkness was over the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God was hovering over the face of the waters.” (Genesis 1:2)
                              God created diversity
                              • “O Lord, how manifold are your works! In wisdom have you made them all; the earth is full of your creatures.” (Psalm 104:24)
                              • “...so that through the church the manifold wisdom of God might now be made known to the rulers and authorities in the heavenly places.” (Ephesians 3:10)
                              3. God is Eternal – He Always Existed

                              • God: “Before the mountains were brought forth or ever you had formed the earth and the world, from everlasting to everlasting you are God.” (Psalm 90:2)
                                “‘I am the Alpha and the Omega,’ says the Lord God, ‘who is and who was and who is to come, the Almighty.’” (Revelation 1:8)
                              • Jesus: “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things were made through him, and without him was not any thing made that was made. In him was life, and the life was the light of men. The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it.” (John 1:1-5)
                              • “I am the Alpha and the Omega, the first and the last, the beginning and the end.” (Revelation 22:13)
                              • “Father, glorify me in your own presence with the glory that I had with you before the world existed.” (John 17:5)
                              • Spirit: "...through the eternal Spirit..." (Heb 9:14)

                              4. God is Omniscient – He Knows Everything

                              • God: “For whenever our heart condemns us, God is greater than our heart, and he knows everything.” (1 John 3:20)
                              • “No creature is hidden from his sight...” (Hebrews 4:13)
                              • “How precious to me are your thoughts, O God! How vast is the sum of them!” (Psalm 139:17)
                              • Jesus: “...needed no one to bear witness about man, for he himself knew what was in man.” (John 2:24-25)
                              • “Now we know that you know all things.” (John 16:30)
                              • Spirit: “For the Spirit searches everything...” (1 Corinthians 2:10-11)
                              • Psalm 139:1-6
                              God knows the future
                              • God: “I am God, and there is no other; I am God, and there is none like me, declaring the end from the beginning and from ancient times things not yet done, saying, ‘My counsel shall stand, and I will accomplish all my purpose . . . I have spoken, and I will bring it to pass; I have purposed, and I will do it.’” (Isaiah 46:9-11)
                              • Jesus: “I am telling you this now, before it takes place, that when it does take place you may believe that I am.” (John 13:9)
                              • "God knows everything that ever was, everything that now is, and everything that is to be; all that is actual and all that is possible. Therefore God knows in advance all the free acts of all free creatures." (John Edgren)
                              • “Everyone who believes in God at all believes that He knows what you and I are going to do tomorrow.” (C. S. Lewis)
                              • Openess Theology denies this.

                              5. God is Not Bound by Time

                              • God: “. . . with the Lord one day is as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day.” (2 Peter 3:8)
                              • “For a thousand years in your sight are but as yesterday when it is past, or as a watch in the night.” (Psalm 90:4)
                              • “I am who I am.” (Exodus 3:14) or I am what I am, or I will be what I will be – God’s name Yahweh.
                              • Jesus: “Jesus said to them, ‘Truly, truly, I say to you, before Abraham was, I am.’ So they picked up stones to throw at him.” (John 8:58-59)
                              • Wayne Grudem: “God views the whole span of history as vividly as He would if it were a brief event that had just happened. But He also views a brief event as if it were going on forever. God sees and knows all events – past, present, and future – with equal vividness. Though He has no succession of moments, He still sees the progression of events at different points in time.”
                              6. God is Unchangeable

                              • God: “For I the Lord do not change.” (Malachi 3:6)
                              • Jesus: “Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever.” (Hebrews 13:8)
                              • God both does and doesn’t have regrets!
                              • “I regret that I have made Saul king, for he has turned back from following me.” (1 Samuel 15:11)
                              • "The Glory of Israel will not lie or have regret, for he is not a man, that he should have regret.” (1 Samuel 15:29)
                              • But God does truly relate to us.
                              • “If at any time I declare concerning a nation or a kingdom, that I will pluck up and break down and destroy it, and if that nation, concerning which I have spoken, turns from its evil, I will relent of the disaster that I intended to do to it. And if at any time I declare concerning a nation or a kingdom that I will build and plant it, and if it does evil in my sight, not listening to my voice, then I will relent of the good that I had intended to do to it.” (Jeremiah 18:7-10)
                              • John Piper: “So the repentance over Saul means not that he did not know what Saul would be like, but that he disapproves of what Saul has become and that he feels sorrow at this evil in his anointed king, and that he looks back on his making him king with the same sorrow that he experienced at that moment when he made him king, foreknowing all the sorrow that would come. For God to say, "I feel sorrow that I made Saul king," is not the same as saying, "I would not make him king if I had it to do over, knowing what I know now." God is able to feel sorrow for an act that He does in view of foreknown evil and pain, and yet go ahead and will to do it for wise reasons.”

                              7. God is Wise

                              • God: “. . . the only wise God.” (Romans 16:27, see Psalm 147:5)
                              • Jesus: “Christ...the wisdom of God.” (1 Cointhians 1:24)
                              • Holy Spirit: “. . . the Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him, the Spirit of wisdom and under-standing, the Spirit of counsel and might, the Spirit of knowledge and the fear of the Lord.” (Isaiah 11:2)
                              8. God is Truth

                              • God: “God is not man, that he should lie...” (Numbers 23:19)
                              • “God, who never lies.” (Titus 1:2)
                              • Jesus “I am the way, and the truth, and the life…” (John 14:6)
                              9. God is Omnipresent – He is Everywhere

                              • God: “Where shall I go from your Spirit? Or where shall I flee from your presence...” (Psalm 139:7-10)
                              • "Do I not fill heaven and earth, declares the Lord." (Jeremiah 23:24)
                              • Jesus: “ For where two or three are gathered in my name, there am I among them.” (Matthew 18:20)
                              • But, it is not wrong to speak of God “coming.”
                              • “...we will come to him and make our home.” (John 14:21)
                              • “But when the Helper comes, whom I will send...” (John 15:26)
                              10. God is Omnipotent – He is All-Powerful

                              • “... Nothing is too hard for you.” (Jeremiah 32:17)
                              • “Now to him who is able to do far more abundantly than all that we ask or think…” (Ephesians 3:20)
                              • Jesus: “Who then is this, that even wind and sea obey him?” (Mark 4:41)
                              11. God is Uncontainable

                              • God: “…heaven and the highest heaven cannot contain you...” (1 Kings 8:27)
                              • Jesus: “...he was transfigured before them, and his face shone like the sun, and his clothes became white as light...” (Matthew 17:2-6) (Building a tent to contain him was foolish!)
                              12. “God is Light.” (1 John 1:5)

                              • Jesus - “I am the light of the world.” (John 8:12)
                              13. “God is Spirit.” (John 4:24)

                              • Jesus “And the Word became flesh...” (John 1:14)
                              14. “God is Holy.” (Psalm 99:9)

                              • Jesus “I know who you are the Holy One of God.” (Luke 4:34)

                              15. God is Righteous and Just

                              • God: “No one is good except God alone.” (Luke 18:19)
                              • “. . . your heavenly Father is perfect.” (Matthew 5:48)
                              • Jesus: “For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.” (2 Corinthians 5:21)
                              16. God is Jealous and Full of Wrath Against Sin

                              • God: “The Lord is a jealous and avenging God; the Lord is avenging and wrathful…” (Nahum 1:2)
                              • Jesus: “Zeal for your house will consume me.” (John 2:17)
                              17. God is Sovereign - His Will Always Comes to Pass

                              • God: “. . . according to the purpose of him who works all things according to the counsel of his will.” (Ephesians 1:11)
                              • “I know that you can do all things, and that no purpose of yours can be thwarted.” (Job 42:2)
                              • “… it is the purpose of the Lord that will stand.” (Proverbs 19:21)
                              • “Our God is in the heavens; he does all that he pleases.” (Psalm 115:3)
                              • Jesus: “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me.” (Matthew 28:18)

                              But he is not responsible for sin.

                              • “God cannot be tempted with evil, and he himself tempts no one...” (James 1:13-14)
                              WHO IS JESUS?

                              Jesus Shares All the Attributes of God

                              • He was eternally one of the three persons in the Trinity. He is frequently described with the word “lord” which is used 6,814 times in the Septuagent for Jehovah/Yahweh. Jesus is also fully man and a real man’s man.
                              • “He was in the world, and the world was made through him, yet the world did not know him . . . the Word became flesh and dwelt among us.” (John 1) “And making a whip of cords, he drove them all out of the temple, with the sheep and oxen. And he poured out the coins of the money-changers and overturned their tables.” (John 2:15)

                              Jesus Was Truly a Man

                              • He was born of a normal human mother.
                              • He “grew and became strong” (Luke 2:40) and “increased in wisdom and in stature
                                and in favour with God and man.” (Luke 2:52)
                              • He was hungry.” (Matthew 4:2) and he said, “I thirst.” (John 19:28)
                              • He got “wearied” from a journey (John 4:6) and he slept. (Luke 8:23)
                              • He was not a “Clark Kent” figure only pretending to be vulnerable.
                              • There were things that Jesus, the man, did not know. "But concerning that day or that hour, no one knows, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father." (Mark 13:32)

                              Jesus Felt All Our Emotions

                              • He “marvelled.” (Matthew 8:10)
                              • “Your throne, O God, is forever and ever. The sceptre of your kingdom is a sceptre of uprightness; you have loved righteousness and hated wickedness. Therefore God, your God, has anointed you with the oil of gladness beyond your companions.” (Psalm 45:6-7)
                              • “Jesus wept.” (John 11:35)
                              • “My soul is very sorrowful, even to death.” (Matthew 26:38)
                              • John Piper: “Jesus was fully human and fully God – he was not God with a human veneer – like a costume. He was a real flesh and blood man, a carpenter's son.”
                              • Mark Driscoll: “It's hard to worship someone you can beat up.”
                              • Wayne Grudem: “An infinite God came to live in a finite world. In Jesus, God and man became one person . . . For Jesus Christ was and always will be, fully God and fully man in one person.”
                              Jesus Remains a Man Forever

                              • “…a spirit does not have flesh and bones as you see that I have...” (Luke 24:38-43)
                              • “This Jesus…will come in the same way as you saw him go into heaven.” (Acts 1:11)
                              How Can Jesus be Both Man and God?

                              • Error 1 - A human body, but not a human mind or spirit – Mickey Mouse suit.
                              • Error 2 – Two persons in one body – circus “horse” suit.
                              • Error 3 – One new nature – neither God nor man! -Drop of ink in water.
                              • The Solution: Two natures, but one person (see Power Point for graphical images of these - thanks to Wayne Grudem for the illustrations!)

                              Some Things are True of Only One of Jesus' Natures

                              • Jesus’ human nature ascended to heaven and is no longer in the world - John 16:28 “I am leaving the world.”
                              • But . . . his divine nature is everywhere present. -Matthew 28:20 “I am with you always.”
                              • Jesus felt weak and tired. (Matthew 4:2; 8:24; Mark 15:21; John 4:6), but in His divine nature He was omnipotent. (Matthew 8:26-27; Colossians 1:17; Hebrews 1:3).
                              • Jesus was 30 years old and existed from eternity!
                              • A false objection: “Omniscience and ignorance, omnipotence and impotence cannot coexist. The former swamps the latter.” (A.N.S. Lane)

                              The Two Natures and Jesus’ Death

                              • “. . . it is not correct to say that Jesus’ divine nature died, or could die, if “die” means a cessation of activity, a cessation of consciousness, or a diminution of power. Nevertheless, by virtue of union with Jesus’ human nature, his divine nature somehow tasted something of what it was like to go through death. The person of Christ experienced death. Moreover, it seems difficult to understand how Jesus’ human nature alone could have borne the wrath of God against the sins of millions of people. It seems that Jesus’ divine nature had somehow to participate in the bearing of wrath against sin that was due to us (although Scripture nowhere explicitly affirms this). Therefore, even though Jesus’ divine nature did not actually die, Jesus went through the experience of death as a whole person, and both human and divine natures somehow shared in that experience.” (Wayne Grudem)

                              A BIBLICAL SUMMARY – KEY VERSES

                              • “The Lord, the Lord, a God merciful and gracious, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness, keeping steadfast love for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin, but who will by no means clear the guilty . . .” (Exodus 34:6-7)
                              • "I am God, and there is no other; I am God, and there is none like me, Declaring the end from the beginning and from ancient times things not yet done, Saying, 'My counsel shall stand, and I will accomplish all my purpose . . .I have spoken, and I will bring it to pass; I have purposed, and I will do it.” (Isaiah 46:9-11)
                              • “...who, though he was in the form of God ...” (Philippians 2:6-11)

                              WHAT WE SHOULD SAY ABOUT GOD

                              • Together for The Gospel 2006
                                -We affirm that the Bible reveals God to be infinite in all his perfections, and thus truly omniscient, omnipotent, timeless, and self-existent. We further affirm that God possesses perfect knowledge of all things, past, present, and future, including all human thoughts, acts, and decisions.
                                -We deny that the God of the Bible is in any way limited in terms of knowledge or power or any other perfection or attribute, or that God has in any way limited his own perfections
                              • What does Jubilee Believe About God?
                                -“Life in Jubilee Church can be summarised as: loving God, loving each other, and loving the world.” (Membership Course)
                              • Jubilee is a member of the Evangelical Alliance and holds to its Statement of Faith:
                                “We Believe in . . .
                                -The one true God who lives eternally in three persons—the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.
                                -The love, grace, and sovereignty of God in creating, sustaining, ruling, redeeming, and judging the world.”

                              This God Chooses to Take Delight in Us!

                              • God: “The Lord your God is in your midst, a mighty one who will save; he will rejoice over you with gladness; he will quiet you by his love; he will exult over you with loud singing.” (Zephaniah 3:17)
                              • Jesus: “. . . who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame.” (Hebrews 12:2)

                              He Wants Us to Delight in Him!

                              • “Rejoice in the Lord always, and again I will say, rejoice.” (Philippians 4:4).
                              • “Delight yourself in the Lord; and he will give you the desires of your heart.” (Psalm 37:4).
                              • “Let not your hearts be troubled. Believe in God; believe also in me.” (John 14:1)
                              CONCLUSIONS

                              • If we believe in a good, all-powerful, all-knowing, all-present, all-wise, all-loving God who is in control of every detail of the universe and works it all out for our good, how can we not worship Him and trust Him with our future?
                              • When we know God better, we become more like Him.
                              • “And we all with unveiled face, beholding the glory of the Lord, are being changed into his likeness from one degree of glory to another.” (2 Corinthians 3:18)
                              • “One thing have I asked of the Lord, that will I seek after: that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life, to gaze upon the beauty of the Lord.” (Psalm 27:4)
                              • “Now to him who is able to keep you from stumbling and to present you blameless before the presence of his glory with great joy, to the only God, our Savior, through Jesus Christ our Lord, be glory, majesty, dominion, and authority, before all time and now and forever. Amen.” (Jude 24-25)

                              Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,


                              Friday, July 14, 2006

                              Links for July 14, 2006


                              Labels: , , ,


                              Friday, June 09, 2006

                              Piper Friday (Romans 8) God DID Punish Sin in Jesus


                              I seem to have stirred up a lot of interest with my post on God Killing Christ. I thought I'd ask John Piper to spring to my defence!

                              This is very much how I see this verse, do you agree with what John Piper says in What the Law Could Not Do, God Did, Sending Christ?


                              Romans 8:1-4
                              Therefore there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus. 2 For the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus has set you free from the law of sin and of death. 3 For what the Law could not do, weak as it was through the flesh, God did: sending His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and as an offering for sin, He condemned sin in the flesh, 4 so that the requirement of the Law might be fulfilled in us, who do not walk according to the flesh but according to the Spirit.

                              Verse 1 declares that in Christ Jesus there is no condemnation. God does not condemn us for our sins if we are in Christ Jesus. Jesus is a safe place from the hurricane of God's holy and just wrath . . .

                              Let's draw out some of the wonders in these statements. First, "God condemned sin in the flesh." Notice three wonderful things about what this statement says.

                              Sin Has Been Condemned, not Merely Shown to Be Condemnable

                              First, sin has already been condemned. What does that mean? It does not mean that sin has been criticized and called condemnable � as when we say, President Bush "condemned" the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center. We know it does not mean this because this is something the law could do and did do quite well. The law criticized sin and called it condemnable. The law says, for example, "You shall not covet" (Exodus 20:17). And the law pronounces punishments on law breakers (Deuteronomy 28:15). So the law clearly "condemned" sin in this sense.

                              But Romans 8:3 says, "What the Law could not do, weak as it was through the flesh, God did." So God did something more than merely criticize sin and call it condemnable. What then does Paul mean when he says, "God condemned sin in the flesh"? He means that in Jesus' flesh � in his suffering and dying body on the cross � God executed a final sentence of condemnation on the sin of everyone who is in Christ. In other words, "God condemned sin" means God found sin guilty and sentenced sin to be finally punished and carried out the penalty of suffering in the death of his Son . . .

                              He says "likeness of sinful flesh" because he was not sinful. Jesus had no sin. His flesh was human, and it was like sinful flesh. But it was not sinful. So how could God condemn sin in his flesh? There was none there to condemn. The clearest answer is given in 2 Corinthians 5:21, "[God] made Him who knew no sin to be sin on our behalf, so that we might become the righteousness of God in Him." There it is. Paul says it as clearly as it can be said: "He knew no sin." Jesus never sinned. Of all the people who have ever lived, Jesus is the only one who did not deserve to die. Jesus is the only person who ever lived who did not deserve to suffer. But he died and he suffered.

                              So the question is: Whose sin was condemned when Jesus' flesh was tortured and killed? God condemned sin in the flesh of his completely innocent Son. Whose sin? The answer is given clearly.

                              • Romans 4:25: "He . . . was delivered over because of our transgressions."

                              • 1 Corinthians 15:3: "Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures."

                              • Galatians 1:4: "[He] gave Himself for our sins."

                              • 1 Peter 2:24: "He himself bore our sins in his body on the tree."

                              • 1 Peter 3:18: "For Christ also suffered once for sins, the righteous for the unrighteous.

                              • Isaiah 53:5-6: "But He was pierced through for our transgressions, He was crushed for our iniquities; The chastening for our well-being fell upon Him, And by His scourging we are healed. All of us like sheep have gone astray, Each of us has turned to his own way; But the Lord has caused the iniquity of us all To fall on Him."

                              The answer is that our sin was condemned in the suffering and death of Christ, not His. He had none . . .

                              And now we know why the death of Jesus Christ takes away all my condemnation. Because when he died God was condemning sin, sentencing it, and punishing it completely and fully and finally for all God's elect � all who are in Christ by faith. Therefore it was my sin that was being condemned and sentenced and punished completely and fully and finally when Christ died. And if my sin was punished there finally and fully, I will not be punished for it again.

                              Brothers and sisters, there is no other cleansing agent in all the universe that can clean your conscience, besides this one. There is no other shield that can protect you from the white hot wrath of God, besides this shield. There is no other argument that will hold up in the final courtroom of heaven than this argument: Christ died for my sins. Christ bore my condemnation. Christ absorbed all the divine wrath that would and should have come on me . . .

                              That's the second wonderful thing about this statement that "God condemned sin in the flesh." The first is that sin has already been condemned, sentenced, punished, executed in Jesus. The second is that Jesus had no sin to condemn. It was ours that was punished. "[God] made Him who knew no sin to besin on our behalf" . . .

                              The third wonderful thing about this statement is that God did it. "God condemned sin in the flesh." Two things are powerfully relevant for us here . . .

                              The text says � and the whole Bible is built on this view � that God did this.

                              "Sending His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and as an offering for sin, [God!] condemned sin in the flesh." Jesus did not put himself forward between God and man; God put Jesus forward between God and man (Romans 3:25). God "sent His own Son." God saw to it that the eternal, uncreated Son of God took on "the likeness of sinful flesh." God poured out his wrath on the Son as the condemnation and punishment of our sins. Jesus didn't butt in to save us from God. God sent him in to save us from God. God himself saved us from the wrath of God.

                              When you ponder the cross, don't just ponder the love of Jesus rescuing us from the anger of God. Ponder the love of God rescuing us from the anger of God. If you know Jesus, you know the Father. The heart of Jesus is the heart of the Father. Jesus is as angry at sin as the Father is. And the Father is as caring for sinners as Jesus is . . .

                              God did it. God condemned sin in the flesh. And the first thing that is so relevant about that for us is that it keeps us from playing Jesus and God off against each other. It helps us see that the Father and the Son have one heart and one mind as they take their different roles in saving us from our sin . . .

                              But this is what Paul is saying here in Romans 8:3. God � the one and only Creator of the universe � sent his Son (his pre-existing, divine, eternal Son) in human flesh to bear the outpouring of his wrath in condemnation on sin. THAT is who God is. If you say, "God did not do that," then the God you worship is not God . .

                              The true and only God sent this divine Person into the world and in his flesh condemned sin � sentenced it, punished it, executed it. Yours and mine. And everyone's, who by faith are in Jesus Christ . . .

                              God did it. God condemned sin in the flesh of his own Son. There is no other cleansing for the conscience. No other protection from wrath.No other argument in the last judgment. Let's believe it, bank on it, live it, and sing it.

                              My faith has found a resting place,
                              Not in device nor creed;
                              I trust the ever living One,
                              His wounds for me shall plead.

                              I need no other argument,
                              I need no other plea,
                              It is enough that Jesus died,
                              And that he died for me.

                              Enough for me that Jesus saves,
                              This ends my fear and doubt;
                              A sinful soul, I come to him,
                              He'll never cast me out.

                              My heart is leaning on the Word,
                              The written Word of God,
                              Salvation by my Savior's name,
                              Salvation through his blood.

                              My great Physician heals the sick,
                              The lost he came to save;
                              For me his precious blood he shed,
                              For me his life he gave.


                              UPDATE: For a continuing discussion on this subject, please see my latest post "Did God Kill Jesus? Am I Really Alone?"

                              Labels: , , , , , ,


                              Monday, May 29, 2006

                              Lloyd-Jones Monday - Is the Bible Authoritative?


                              Well, so far the Doctor is doing quite well in joining my challenge to blog through the Together for the Gospel Statement. Last week he explored the importance of doctrine itself. Today he addresses the same issues raised in the first article of the statement we are examining together, which addresses the authority of Scripture. He argues that in considering whether the Bible is authoritative, we must come to grips with some big questions. Lloyd-Jones puts it this way:

                              �Can we accept the Bible�s testimony? Can we regard it as authoritative? How do we justify our claim as evangelical Protestant Christians that it is here, and here alone, that we have an authoritative statement with respect to God�s revelation to men and women? Why do we look to this book rather than to the Church, to some tradition, to some �inner light�, or to our own reason and understanding? . . . It is, therefore, necessary that we should justify that, and the way to do so is to consider what the Bible itself has to say about this matter.�

                              It is important at this point to note that the Doctor, in dealing with the various doctrines in this book, emphasizes that he is keeping simply to that:
                              �There are other things that could be said. There are other arguments that could be adduced and it is the province of theology to do that. But we are trying to keep ourselves to a positive exposition of biblical doctrines. I shall not, therefore, conceive it to be a part of my business to consider the so-called �higher criticism� movement. Theology and apologetics both do that. But here we are trying to be more positive, so let us bear in mind our definite and limited objective.�
                              The Bible, says Lloyd-Jones, makes the following claims:
                              • It is a record of divine revelation
                              • It is God�s Word
                              • It is divinely inspired
                              But, he continues,

                              �Everything that is in the Bible is not revelation, but everything in the Bible is inspired . . . Take, for instance, the book of Ecclesiastes, or the statements recorded in the Bible which were uttered by sinful, ungodly people. There is no revelation in such statements; nevertheless, the Bible says that all these statements, as they are recorded, are done so in an inspired manner . . . .�

                              What, then, is meant by inspiration? Lloyd-Jones answers first in the negative:

                              �We do not mean that certain portions of the Bible are inspired and that others are not.�

                              �Neither do we mean simply that the men who wrote were writing in an exalted or creative way.�

                              �Neither does it mean that the books�the writings as such�are the product of human origin on to which the divine breath or afflatus has come.�

                              Well, what DO we mean? The Doctor explains it like this:

                              �We mean that the Scriptures are a divine product breathed out by God. Inspired really means �God breathed.� We mean that God breathed these messages into men and through them, and these Scriptures are the result of that divine action. We believe that they were produced by the creative breath of the almighty God.�
                              But he goes even further and says that the Bible claims for itself what is called verbal inspiration.

                              �It is not merely that the thoughts are inspired, not merely the ideas, but the actual record, down to the particular words. It is not merely that the statements are correct, but that every word is divinely inspired . . . we must make it clear that when we say that the Bible is verbally inspired by God in this way we are not teaching some sort of mechanical dictation. We do not mean that the writers sat down, as it were, as a shorthand-writer does, and that God dictated all the words to them.�
                              The definition, then, is this: inspiration means
                              �the writer has been controlled by the Holy Spirit of God in such a way that he cannot be guilty of error in what he writes . . . Verbal inspiration means that the Holy Spirit has thus overruled and controlled and guided these men, even in the choice of particular words, in such a way as to prevent any error, and above all to produce the result that was originally intended by God.�
                              How does the Bible make these claims? The Doctor divides his answer into three headings:

                              1. Notice that the Bible makes specific claims in this matter of inspiration.

                              The Bible uses certain terms about itself: �such as the term Scripture, which designates �holy writings�; not ordinary writings; special�holy writings . . . Then take the description it gives of itself as the Word of God . . . �The Lord said,� �The Lord spake�, �The word of the Lord came� . . .�

                              But there are even more specific claims, and crucial in this matter is Deuteronomy 18:18 � �I will raise them up a Prophet from among their brethren, like unto thee, and will put my words in his mouth; and he shall speak unto them all that I shall command him.�
                              �Not only is that a prophecy of the coming of our Lord, it also tells us much about Moses himself and his own ministry . . . all the prophets of the Old Testament make this claim. They do not say that they suddenly decided to write; they say, �The word of the Lord came . . .� and they tell you exactly when it came. They were called, they were commissioned, and the word was given to them . . . .�

                              �Another interesting fact, and a very valuable argument, is that some of these prophets tell us quite honestly that at times they were reluctant to speak.�

                              �Still another important fact is that you will find the prophet saying that he does not understand even what he himself is writing.� (See Daniel 12:8, 1 Peter 1:10-12, 1 Corinthians 2:13, Ephesians 2:20).
                              Lloyd-Jones now addresses what he terms �the crucial passages,� which are those of 2 Timothy 3:16 and 2 Peter 1:20-21.

                              2 Timothy 3:15 in the Authorised Version reads �All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness: that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good works.�

                              �So runs the Authorised Version, but the Revised Version is different; it reads, �Every scripture inspired of God is also profitable for teaching . . .� This is a very serious matter because there is no question at all that at this point the Revised Version is not only wrong, but is tragically and lamentably wrong. It suggests at once that there are scriptures that are not divinely inspired. The Authorised Version, however, is quite clear about it: �All scripture is given by inspiration of God.�

                              So what can be said at this point? Well, the Revised Version makes the apostle Paul guilty of what is called tautology, saying the same thing twice over, expatiating upon the obvious. To render it �All scripture [every scripture] inspired of God is also profitable� makes the thing ridiculous because every scripture inspired of God is of necessity profitable, and there is no need to say so. But the Authorised Version, you notice, does not say that. It says �All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable . . .� which is a very different way of putting it.�
                              2 Peter 1:20-21 says, �Knowing this first, that no prophecy of the scripture is of any private interpretation. For the prophecy came not in old time by the will of man: but holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost.�

                              �A most vital statement,� says Lloyd-Jones. But what does Peter mean when he says �no prophecy of the scripture is of any private interpretation�?
                              �Well, he is not simply saying that no one has a right to his or her own particular interpretation of the Scriptures. No, Peter is concerned here about the origin of prophecy, the origin of Scripture, and what he means is that no prophecy of the Scripture gives any individual�s private understanding or interpretation of things . . . that when these prophecies were written, it was not a case of a man in control of himself, using his natural powers and propensities and abilities, thinking things out and then writing as best he could. Not at all! The whole time he was controlled by this gale of the Spirit, by this wind of God, this divine energy . . . and it was as a result of that process that these prophecies and these Scriptures came into being.�
                              2. Notice the things the Bible assumes about itself and its own statements.

                              John 10:34-36 � �The scripture cannot be broken�it cannot be annulled or withstood; it cannot be denied.

                              Galatians 3:16 � �Now to Abraham and his seed were the promises made. He saith not, And to seeds, as of many; but as of one, And to thy seed, which is Christ.�
                              �You see the importance of that? The apostle there attaches significance just to one single letter��Now to Abraham and his seed were the promises made.� With regard to this whole question of verbal inspiration, this is one of the most important statements of all. The whole argument of the apostle depends upon the fact that the Scripture says �seed� and not �seeds�. If it had said �seeds� then this particular argument would have been irrelevant, but because it uses the singular and not the plural it is a reference to the Lord Jesus Christ . . . .�

                              Sometimes the Bible combines a statement from the New Testament with one from the Old Testament and refers to the two together as 'Scriptures'. (1 Timothy 5:18)


                              Notice how the New Testament quotes the Old Testament. (Acts 4:24-25; Acts 13:35; Hebrews 3:7)

                              3. As we read the Bible, we can make certain other obvious deductions which clearly prove this doctrine of inspiration.

                              Lloyd-Jones makes the following points, which I will partially paraphrase:

                              Sixty-six books written over sixteen hundred years by over forty authors, and yet only one type of doctrine in the whole of the Bible, only one type of morality in the whole range of Scripture.


                              The Old Testament - the pervasive spirit is that of the hope of the Messiah.


                              The New Testament - only one great theme: Jesus Christ and Him crucified.

                              "The testimony of Jesus himself�in reading the Gospels, note the way He constantly quotes the Old Testament. Notice the way He assumes it is authoritative�that He puts it beyond argument or dispute whatsoever. �So if you begin to play fast and loose with the authority of the Scriptures, and with the verbal inspiration of the scriptures, you are of necessity involved in difficulties about the person of the Lord Himself . . . So, in the last analysis our authority for our understanding of inspiration is to be found in the Lord Jesus Christ Himself. That was His view of the Scriptures.�
                              In closing this chapter, the Doctor addresses questions regarding various differences and discrepancies.
                              �There are . . . certain things which we simply cannot explain, and it is our business to say that quite readily and frankly. But let me hasten to add that most of these so-called difficulties and discrepancies which the critics bring forward can be explained, and indeed have been explained.�

                              �Still, there are a certain few differences that remain, but it is significant that they are never with respect to doctrine or historical facts . . . There is nothing which in any way interferes with vital, essential doctrine. So what we affirm and state is this: the original documents, as originally written, are inerrant and infallible.�

                              �But finally, you cannot prove to anybody that the Bible is uniquely and divinely inspired. Ultimately, people have to be enlightened by the Holy Spirit . . . .� (See The Westminster Confession of Faith, Chapter I:V)

                              ______________________________

                              All emphasis mine.

                              All excerpts quoted in this post were taken from:

                              D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones, Great Doctrines of the Bible, "The Authority of the Bible", Crossway Books, Wheaton, Illinois, 2003, chapter 3, pp. 22-33.

                              Labels: , , , , ,


                              Monday, May 22, 2006

                              Dr. Martyn Lloyd-Jones Monday - Why Examine Doctrine?


                              �The secret things belong unto the Lord our God: but those things which are revealed belong unto us and to our children for ever, that we may do all the words of this law.� (Deuteronomy 29:29)

                              In light of my upcoming series of blogging through the T4G statement, and the blogging challenge, I thought it might prove helpful to quote a few things the Doctor has to say about how to examine Biblical doctrines. If you like, this is what I imagine the Doctor would have said if he could
                              join us in blogging through the T4G statement. I would, of course, have made sure he won a copy of the free book�and I suspect he would have been proud of what his successor, John Piper, had to say!

                              In the first chapter of his book, Great Doctrines of the Bible, he says that when we begin to look at doctrine, we need to have some things quite clear in our minds beforehand:

                              • What we are doing
                              • How we will do it
                              • Why we are doing it

                              What are We Going to Do?
                              �What do we mean when we talk abut a biblical doctrine? The answer is that the Bible is particularly concerned about teaching certain truths, and nothing is more important than that we should grasp that and that we should start with it. The Bible is a book which has a very definite objective. All its teaching is designed to a certain end; it is concerned with putting before us its doctrines, the particular truths which it wants to emphasize and to impress upon the minds of all of us.�

                              How Are We Going to Do This?
                              �We must of necessity confine ourselves to what the Bible says and to what the Bible alone says . . . The position we occupy is that, again, of Deuteronomy 29:29 . . . We must confine ourselves to the things that have been revealed, not to the secret things that are ultimately in the mind of God.�

                              Why Do We Believe That This Should be Done?
                              �Now these are some of the answers I would suggest to that question. The first is that the Bible itself does it and therefore we are bound to do it . . . to read my Bible properly means that I must consider doctrine. The Bible wants me to grasp its doctrine. In other words, I may know my Bible very well, but unless I realise the importance of grasping its doctrines, my knowledge of the Bible may be quite useless to me.�

                              �Another reason is that it is dangerous for us to study the Bible without doing this. We talk, do we not, about missing the wood because of the trees, and what a terrible danger that is! The real trouble with the Jews at the time of our Lord was that they stopped at the letter and never arrived at the spirit. In other words, they never got at the doctrine.�

                              �But another reason for studying biblical doctrines is that the Church throughout the centuries has always found that it is essential to emphasize the doctrines of the Bible. In the very first days of the Church no one was received into church membership without making the confession, at all costs, that Jesus is Lord. But the moment you say �Jesus is Lord,� you are making a doctrinal statement . . . [But] very soon heresies began to arise; people within the Church began to say things that were not correct . . . the Church found it was absolutely essential to extract its doctrines, and to state them in a perfectly clear and definite manner. So you had what is commonly called among Protestants, the great Confessions . . . Now all these Confessions, and the catechisms which go with them, are nothing but a statement of biblical doctrines, so that people within the Church might know exactly what to believe and what not to believe and the reasons for this belief . . . . Now if that was necessary in the early days of the Church, if it was necessary at the time of the Reformation and in the seventeenth century, surely it is something which is urgently needed at this present hour?�

                              �But I have a higher reason for considering these doctrines with you. Ultimately it is the only way truly to know God, to come into His glorious presence and to learn something of the wonders of His ways with respect to us. Yes, let us go on reading our Bibles and studying them, but let us not get lost in the detail. Let us pick out these great, mighty, mountain-peaks of doctrine, and realise there who God is, and what He has done for us in the person of His dear Son, and in spite of our sin.�

                              Finally, the Doctor clarifies what he has in mind when examining doctrine:

                              �I am not doing this in order to get you some intellectual knowledge or information that you did not have before. God forbid that I should attempt to do that, or that anybody should think of what we are doing in that way. �Knowledge,� says Paul, �puffeth up, but charity edifieth.� (1 Corinthians 8:1) . . . We are concerned with God�to know Him. It is worship. Any consideration of the Bible is worship and to me there is nothing so dangerous as to approach the Bible and its teaching as you approach any other text book . . . The doctrines of the Bible are not a subject to be studied; rather we should desire to know them in order that, having known them, we may not be �puffed up� with knowledge, and excited about our information, but may draw nearer to God in worship, praise, and adoration because we have seen, in a fuller way [than] we have ever seen before, the glory of our wondrous God. May He give us cause to do this, and grant that as a result of these doctrines, we may all come to know Him, the only true and living God, and Jesus Christ whom He has sent�and as a result may all be revived . . . .�

                              __________________________________________

                              All excerpts quoted in this post were taken from:

                              Martyn Lloyd-Jones, Great Doctrines of the Bible, �My Purpose and Method,� Crossway Books, Wheaton, Illinois, 2003, chapter 1, pp.1-10.

                              Labels: ,


                              Friday, May 19, 2006

                              Links for May 19, 2006


                              • Nathan Pitchford: "It is a tragic irony that, in the course of debate over what may constitute authentic worship, the sine qua non of authentic Church-wide worship has been lost."
                                (tags: church worship)

                              Labels: , ,


                              Tuesday, November 15, 2005

                              Lets get some things straight in the charismatic prophecy debate


                              PyroManiac is a wiley rascal. He is STILL trying to claim that he o so innocently had no thought of cessation in is head when he started his series on modern prophets. But, cessationism is so much part of him that he didnt even need to have the thought in his head for it to come out so clearly to those of us reading his blog! Later on, in his own post the clear truth of his underlying assumptions comes out - he couldnt supress it any more:

                              So here's my challenge to those continuationists who insist that the problem of bogus prophecies pales in importance compared to the exegetical issues raised by cessationism: Name one faithful modern prophet whose prognostications are both objectively verifiable and always one-hundred percent accurate. Because that is the biblical standard (Deuteronomy 18:20-22).
                              If you argue (as most do) that the gifts being practiced today are different in quality from the gifts possessed by the apostles themselves, you are actually arguing for a kind of cessationism yourself. If no one can identify a prophet who meets the biblical standard for basic accuracy, the question of cessationism is essentially moot anyway.


                              And we seem to have hit the heart of the cause of misunderstanding between charismatic and cessationist. You see, the Deuteronomy text is from the Old Testament and when we come to the New we see a totally different view of prophecy and prophets. Prophecy in the new testament IS described as fallible- 1 Cor 13:20 "For we know in part and we prophesy in part", and we are urged to test prophecy and hold on to the good of it.

                              I have already conceded on behalf of all my charismatic blogging friends: WE DO NOT BELIEVE IN CONTINUATION OF 100% ACCURATE PROPHETIC REVELATION. If Phil is ready to join with jollyblogger in conceding that God DOES speak today through fallible impressions to his followers then we almost dont have an argument to have. This is all about definitions in my view........

                              If prophecy really was infallible in the New Testament then tell me, how did the Corinthians get into such a mess with it? They really were the first charismaniacs!

                              Labels: , ,


                              Sunday, May 15, 2005

                              Leviticus - so what?


                              Leviticus at first sight can appear a challenge to any serious bible student. It is often remarked that those who embark on reading the bible through all to often fall at this hurdle. It is full of elaborate rituals for the priesthood and descriptions of sacrifices involving quite gory detail of blood being shed. It is no doubt the lengthy descriptions of Leviticus that the writer to the Hebrews had in mind when he summarized that �almost all things are by the law cleansed with blood; and without shedding of blood is no remission.' (Heb 9:22.)

                              We could almost be excused for passing quickly over Leviticus, but as the bible points out, inspired scripture is profitable. What then is its use to us?

                              The expositor Gill in his commentary on Leviticus described it as �worthy of diligent reading and consideration' since �many things in it.. give great light to several passages in the New Testament'. He also pointed out that many of its rituals foreshadow Christ's sacrifice. In fact, R.K. Harrison in his introduction to this book goes further still and declares that a nineteenth century writer was quite correct to describe it as �the seed-bed of New Testament Theology'. What is it about this book so many of us miss today?

                              Leviticus falls neatly into two sections. The first fifteen chapters deal with the sacrificial regulations of the Levitical priesthood, the last eleven with moral and ethical matters. In this, the book mirrors many new testament letters. For let us not forget that the sacrifices were the means by which the Israelites were to get right with God. First then, God takes the initiative in providing a means for forgiveness of sins. Secondly he provides us with the means to live a Godly life.

                              Leviticus teaches us about the nature of God. Realizing that this God who required such rituals is the same yesterday today and forever is important (Heb 13:8). If we are to take the bible seriously, we cannot overlook this book in its description of God's character.

                              As we approach this book afresh in this essay, it clearly displays God as really rather different to a friendly, easy going �Father Christmas' figure. All too often we take our view of God in this superficial way. Leviticus will not allow us to do that.

                              We see first how seriously God views sin. Forgiveness is only achieved with the shedding of blood. Even approaching the presence of God requires great care and caution. The shedding of blood is a condition of God accepting a worshipper's presence and yet there is no absolute promise of forgiveness here outlined. Indeed it is quite reasonable for the writer to the Hebrews to come to the conclusion that �it is not possible that the blood of bulls and of goats should take away sins.' Heb 10:4. Indeed as the writer points out the very repetition of these offerings each year seem to show precisely that. We see God as a God who is infinitely pure and makes strong demands on his people. The bloodshed goes some way to appeasing his wrath, but does not remove sin.

                              God is therefore portrayed as unapproachable by sinful man. He is holy, which means that his is entirely separate from his creation. His holiness is not just a negative fact in that in him there is no sin, but positively means that he is so very different to us in every way.

                              Reading Leviticus instills a sense of this awe. It is much as a monarch might impose certain restrictions on the way their subjects can approach them. When we violate these restrictions, the consequences are most severe. The death of the sons of Aaron when they offered 'strange fire' to God highlights this. God responds in what is no doubt the central verse of the book �I will be sanctified in them that come near me, and before all the people I will be glorified.' (Lev. 10:3.)

                              From our perspective of a free and open way into God's presence all this can seem rather unnecessary. God intended however that these graphic descriptions remain for all time to allow us to realize the significance of the change provided for us in Jesus.

                              We are no longer bound to observe these traditions, for as prophesied by Daniel the time would come when God himself would �cause the sacrifice and the offering to cease'. Dan 9:27. In Daniel this prophecy is clearly linked with the death of �the prince....but not for himself'. So although the destruction of the temple was the cause humanly for the fact that the Jews no longer sacrifice, from God's perspective we do not need to sacrifice because Jesus has. This unknowing fulfilment of a prophecy by Jews is surely a strong evidence of Jesus messiahship.

                              It is in understanding these rituals and the need for blood to be shed that we can understand the need for the crucifixion. Indeed, if we do not understand the extent of God's purity and hatred for sin as revealed here, how can we understand his grace?

                              God tells twice us in Leviticus that the people of God are to �be holy, for I am holy'. ( Lev. 11:44 Lev. 19:2). This phrase is repeated in the New Testament it is because of God's holiness he expects holiness from us.
                              The legislation of Leviticus shows us that �all life is lived under the watchful eye of God' (Harrison). This eliminates any hint of a secular/spiritual divide. The Lord is concerned with menstruating women with mouldy linen and murderers. Although not directly bound by this law we too need to realize that life as a Christian involves ALL our lives. The modern compartmentalization of life is not to be found in the bible.

                              The concept of rest found in the Sabbath could teach us much in this hurried age. Also many sacrifices involved the whole community and seemed to be an excuse for a party. We to need to learn how to fellowship. The concept of tithing shows us we should care financially for those who lead us.
                              Leviticus may seem an unlikely inspiration for a modern social justice movement, but the idea of Jubilee has inspired a worldwide campaign. Entirely in keeping with the notion of cancelling debts to give the poor another chance is their campaign to cancel poor countries' debt in the year 2000. The official campaign web site makes no secret of the source of their ideas - so we could recently see a relevant practical application of this book on the television news.

                              It is in Leviticus (chapter 19 verse 18) that we find the second half of Jesus summary of the law �love your neighbour as yourself'. (The first half is in Deuteronomy). In the context of these words the writer has worked out and applied out the phrase in a way that is as morally sophisticated as you can get.

                              Not taking advantage of the disadvantaged and the disabled, rebuking sin where it is seen, not slandering, not avenging sin are all sophisticated concepts we tend to associate with new testament morality - yet they are to be found right here in Leviticus. How strange those words must have sounded when they were first uttered. How wonderfully they reflect the gentle compassionate nature of God. How impossible have they been to fulfill without the help of God. How they convict and rebuke us even today.

                              Do you love your brother enough not to leave him in sin? Do you carry grudges? Do you stand out against exploitation as it exists in our world today? No? Then you fall short of the standards of this holy God and stand in need of a sacrifice for sin. The necessity for a sacrifice for sin if we as unworthy people are to approach the holy God is the message of Leviticus. It exposes our failure, and drives us to Christ who is the sacrifice for sin.


                              More blogging and sermons on Leviticus

                              Labels: , ,


                              Friday, December 05, 2003

                              Lets read Deuteronomy more....


                              Few people will realise that Jesus favorite book of the OT was actually Deuteronomy- he quoted from it more than any others. How come we don't read it much today?

                              Labels:



                              Back to homepage or visit the archive pages
                            • April 2003
                            • May 2003
                            • June 2003
                            • July 2003
                            • August 2003
                            • September 2003
                            • October 2003
                            • November 2003
                            • December 2003
                            • January 2004
                            • February 2004
                            • March 2004
                            • April 2004
                            • May 2004
                            • June 2004
                            • July 2004
                            • August 2004
                            • September 2004
                            • October 2004
                            • November 2004
                            • December 2004
                            • January 2005
                            • February 2005
                            • March 2005
                            • April 2005
                            • May 2005
                            • June 2005
                            • July 2005
                            • August 2005
                            • September 2005
                            • October 2005
                            • November 2005
                            • December 2005
                            • January 2006
                            • February 2006
                            • March 2006
                            • April 2006
                            • May 2006
                            • June 2006
                            • July 2006
                            • August 2006
                            • September 2006
                            • October 2006
                            • November 2006
                            • December 2006
                            • January 2007
                            • February 2007
                            • March 2007
                            • April 2007
                            • May 2007
                            • June 2007
                            • July 2007
                            • August 2007
                            • September 2007
                            • October 2007
                            • November 2007
                            • December 2007
                            • January 2008
                            • February 2008
                            • March 2008
                            • April 2008
                            • May 2008
                            • June 2008
                            • July 2008
                            • August 2008
                            • September 2008
                            • October 2008
                            • November 2008
                            • December 2008
                            • January 2009
                            • February 2009
                            • March 2009
                            • April 2009
                            • May 2009
                            • June 2009
                            • July 2009


                            • SPECIAL OFFER on In Jesus

                              Together on a Mission Churchplanting
                              Newfrontiers Conference


                              Add to Google Reader

                              Subscribe via RSS feed or enter your email address here:

                              My Library

                              ADRIAN'S LINKS





                              Reformed Charismatic Blogs

                              Other Links


                              25% Off Logos Bible Software

                              MY INTERVIEWS


                              Sermons on the Web


                              Previous Posts

                              Associated with

                              Small print

                              Opinions expressed in this blog are Adrian Warnock's alone, and do not represent the views of his church, employer or anyone else for that matter!

                              Material is often provided for your research purposes rather than as an endorsement. We ask you to report anything you see here or on a linked site that you feel may be inappropriate or may inadvertently breach copyright to adrian.warnock@gmail.com.

                              Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No-Derivs 2.0 England & Wales License.

                              ESV
                              Unless otherwise indicated, all bible quotations are from The English Standard Version © 2001, Crossway Bibles. Used by permission. All rights reserved. See my ESV Interview for more information

                              Services by:

                              Christianity Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directory