Daily Devotional 8-26-21

Daily Devotional 8-26-21

The Two-Faced God

The following is an excerpt from “The Christian Life: Cross or Glory” written by Steven A. Hein (1517 Publishing, 2015).

More than reflective learned scholars have pondered the question, “What is God really like?” Or even more momentous questions such as: “What does he think about us and this problem of evil here on earth? Does he care? Can we bargain with him or enlist his help in how we want to deal with it? Is he a mighty, vengeful, hard-nosed kind of God who is really not satisfied with anything less than perfection; or is he, rather, a kind, merciful sort of Deity?”’ From mature intellectuals to young, inquisitive children, questions such as these have been mulled over and debated in every age. At some point in our lives perhaps we, too, have desired to take the measure of God and wondered, what would it be like to meet him face-to-face?

The Hidden and Revealed God

Although God is always closer to us than the nose on our face, he has not taken the wraps off and given any sinful and mortal human being a full-measure, face-to-face meeting. As God told Moses who requested such a meeting, the face or full splendor of his holiness and glory would be the immediate death of any sinful human (Exod 33:20). Our God, out of his mercy, keeps himself on the whole under wraps, a hidden God—but not totally hidden.

He has chosen to reveal himself at some times and certain places—and then only to certain aspects of himself. In early Old Testament history, God often revealed himself as the One who is really in control of things here on earth. Again and again, he manifested his might and power in awesome ways. In the days of Noah, it was the destructive flood. With Sodom and Gomorrah, it was fire and brimstone. In Egypt it was the plagues, the death of the first-born, and the parting of the Red Sea. To those on Mt. Carmel it was fireballs from heaven that reduced a water drenched sacrifice and altar to powdered ash. As much as we modern-day believers sometimes think that a good exhibition by God today—as he did back then—would do wonders for the cause of true religion, these spectaculars by God never did inspire much in the way of long-term faith and devotion. For the most part, God’s mighty displays in the Old Testament simply scared the daylights out of people. Even in the wilderness when God first took up a glorious presence with His people in a special tent, the children of Israel always stood outside as if saying to Moses, “You go in and see what he wants; we’ll stay out here.” You can tell us all about it later. God’s special way of saying hello in the Old Testament often necessitated the continually spoken words: “Do not be afraid.” Meetings with the sovereign God back then were usually rather frightening experiences.

Mindful of our sinful frailty and desiring a personal relationship with him, God has chosen to reveal himself to us cloaked in the mundane things of this world. Our Creator has made himself personally known through his Word made flesh in the man Jesus, verbally in the prophetic and the apostolic Scriptures, and visibly in Baptism and the Lord’s Supper. With the masks of humanity, earthly language, and the simple elements of water, bread and wine, God has not simply descended to us, but condescended to us. Here he continually gives us the opportunity to take him in with all our senses in long, slow, and unalarming ways—face-to-face! God has no desire to blow us away. He wants to love and tenderly embrace us as his own. Moreover, his burning desire from creation on has been that we might respond to his love by a returning love, molding a magnificent relationship and life together. But as we know, love always complicates things for us. It complicates things for God, too. Kierkegaard illustrated God’s problem well in the following:

Suppose there was a king who loved a humble maiden. The king was like no other king. Every statesman trembled before his power. No one dared breathe a word against him, for he had the strength to crush all opponents. And yet this mighty king was melted by love for a humble maiden.

How could he declare his love for her? In an odd sort of way, his very kingliness tied his hands. If he brought her to the palace and crowned her head with jewels and clothed her body in royal robes, she would surely not resist—no one dared resist him. But would she love him?

She would say she loved him, of course, but would she truly? Or would she live with him in fear, nursing private grief for the life she left behind? Would she be happy at his side? How could he know? If he rode to her forest cottage in his royal carriage, with an armed escort waving bright banners, that too would overwhelm her. He did not want a cringing subject. He wanted a lover, an equal. He wanted her to forget that he was a king and she a humble maiden and to let shared love cross over the gulf between them.

The king, convinced he could not elevate the maiden without crushing her freedom, resolved to descend. He clothed himself as a beggar and approached her cottage incognito, with a worn cloak fluttering loosely about him. It was no mere disguise, but a new identity he took on. He renounced the throne to win her hand. [1]

As we know, the truth in Kierkegaard’s parable entered human history in Jesus, the Christ. Paul eloquently summarized the historical version of the story in Philippians 2:

Who being in very nature God, did not consider equality with God something to be grasped, but made himself nothing, taking the very nature of a servant, being made in human likeness. And being found in appearance as a man, he humbled himself and became obedient to death—even death on a cross!

The king cast off his regal robes and became a helpless baby, a lowly foot-washer, and a shameful cross-bearer. Not very scary, but that is precisely the point. God has love and courtship on his mind. In Jesus, God meets us face-to-face. But incognito! He comes humbly to win us over with a dying, sacrificial love to be his own bride forever. As he conquered the forces of darkness and death, the risen and exalted Christ is still with us. Out of his loving designs, he is humbly hidden in his gospel, cloaked in mundane human language and the common elements of water, bread, and wine. Through these, Word and Sacrament, his gospel ministry of salvific courtship with frail, sinful people continues. Only now he carries it out through common human bodies like yours and mine. We in his church have become part of our Lord’s humble disguise!

It’s not very flashy or spectacular—nothing like the great Old Testament extravaganzas. Hollywood would never clamor for the screen rights, but here is God’s loving face as clearly as we can receive it from him. And it is his ministry and the way he condescends to meet us for our sake out of his mercy and love. Make no mistake about it, God was not fooling around with the Incarnation. The cross cost him the humiliation and death of his own Son, and all for the sake of his burning love for us sinful human beings. In the gospel we truly meet an honest-to-God—God as he truly is—a loving and merciful God.

From: https://www.1517.org/articles/the-two-faced-god

Daily Devotional 8-25-21

Daily Devotional 8-25-21

Spiritual Conflict…?

In his Screwtape Letters, C.S. Lewis says that there are two equal and opposite errors that people fall into regarding the dark powers. One mistake is to disbelieve in their existence, the other is to believe in them to excess.

In Ephesians 6:10-12, Paul the Apostle writes: Finally, be strong in the Lord and in the strength of his power… For our struggle is not against enemies of blood and flesh, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the cosmic powers of this present darkness, against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly places…

Paul takes the reality of conflict in the world to another level: ‘our struggle’, literally, ‘our wrestling’, is not so much against ‘flesh and blood’ but ‘principalities and powers’. In Ephesians 1:10 Paul speaks of the day when all things, ‘in heaven’ and ‘on earth’ will be brought under the rule of Jesus Christ. However, as we read in chapter 6, for the present there’s a war between the two spheres of darkness and light.

Spiritually speaking, God’s people live in enemy occupied territory. The epic that the Gospels reveal and Ephesians 2:4-7 picks up, is that the true king of the universe slipped into our world without fanfare to rescue people enslaved by the dark powers. As Jesus said to Pilate, he could have brought a great and powerful army (John 18:36) but, knowing that only he could defeat the prince of darkness, he came alone. At great personal cost his mission was accomplished. His resurrection authenticates this.

However, for the present the dark powers, although mortally wounded, continue to do their worst, attempting to destroy God’s sure plan to glorify his people.

Against this background we learn from Ephesians 6:10 that God’s people are caught up in a spiritual conflict as individuals and together. It is here that we are often naïve, thinking that people are the only obstacle to spiritual progress in the world. No, Paul warns. There are formidable supernatural forces at work – powers that will not respond to reason. We are in a spiritual conflict that involves dark powers and human choices.

Put on the whole armor of God, we read in verse 13, so that you may be able to stand your ground. There will be times when the dark forces press us morally – everybody’s doing it; sometimes they press us intellectually – you’re too clever for that; sometimes they press us psychologically – your faith is so intolerant; and sometimes we are physically persecuted. The aim is always the same: to silence God’s people.

Stand firm, Paul says. Be alert. Don’t give in. Put on the inner protection of a godly life-style. Our loins need to be girded with God’s truth; we need a breastplate of righteousness; our feet need to be shod with the commitment to spread the gospel of peace, and we need the headpiece of salvation. Our lives are most at risk when our inner defenses are broken through. We need the qualities of integrity, of righteousness, of gospel readiness, and the deep assurance of God’s ultimate victory.

The dark powers will do their worst to discredit our integrity, prevent gospel outreach through lethargy and infighting, and demoralize us by discouraging us.

And so we need protection – the shield of faith with which we can quench the flaming darts of darkness. We can’t cope on our own. We need to trust Christ, for when we do, the darts of darkness will fall useless. ‘The victory that overcomes the world,’ John tells us, ‘is our faith’ (1 John 5:4).

The sword of the spirit. While Paul hasn’t spelled out the meaning of his metaphors up to this point, he wants us to know that the sword is the Word of God. Unlike communism or any other -ism or ideology, there is no place in Christianity for a literal holy war. God’s new society is not brought in by act of Congress, still less at the end of gun.

The Word of God is not a message of the freedom fighters, but one that focusses on personal repentance and God’s forgiveness. The victory of God’s Word will have eternal outcomes.

Prayer. Pray in the Spirit at all times in every prayer and supplication. To that end keep alert and always persevere in supplication for all the saints… (Ephesians 6:18).

In any battle, communication is vital. For God’s people prayer is our field telegraph. So Paul urges us to pray constantly, to persevere in prayer, and to be vigilant in prayer. We are to pray in the Spirit.

Romans 8:26f helps us understand this, for Paul tells us there that the Spirit works with us in our prayer. In the midst of suffering we’re often at a loss to know what we should say. In those times, Paul says, the Spirit comes to our aid, putting our inarticulate thoughts into meaningful prayer, speaking to God on our behalf.

God’s work is continuing to make inroads on the kingdom of darkness. When Jesus stood on the hills of ancient Israel with a handful of his followers, he said, ‘On this rock I will build my church, and the gates of hell will not stand against it’. His words were spoken to humble, un-influential men.

Christ is the legitimate ruler of this universe. Nothing in all creation will prevent the return of God’s King.

As we move towards a new season, let’s hold on to the shield of faith, wield the word of God with greater confidence, and most of all, pray – for one another and for others – that we will stand firm, not failing to live under God’s gospel, nor failing to take his gospel to those around us. Have you checked out: www.word121.com?

A prayer. Almighty God, give us grace so that we may cast away the works of darkness and put on the armor of light now in the time of this mortal life, in which your Son Jesus Christ came amongst us in great humility: so that on the last day, when he comes again in his glorious majesty to judge the living and the dead, we may rise to life immortal; through him who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, now and forever. Amen.

From: https://anglicanconnection.com/spiritual-conflict/

Daily Devotional 8-24-21

Daily Devotional 8-24-21

The Whole Counsel of God: Courageous Calvinism for the Twenty-First Century

The calling of Ligonier Ministries is to renew the churches through a growing knowledge of biblical Christianity, which is to say a knowledge of historic Calvinism. Ligonier is continuing the teaching ministry of R.C. Sproul, one of the best minds and one of the most balanced, faithful, and effective Reformed teachers of the last half-century. He inherited and continued a marvelous tradition: the militant stance for the fundamentals of the faith of J. Gresham Machen; the scholarship and Reformed orthodoxy of old Princeton Seminary; the evangelizing, Reformed revivalism of the First Great Awakening; the confessional and experiential Calvinism of the Westminster Confession of Faith; the teaching of John Calvin and the Reformation; and the legacy of Augustine and true catholicity. What a heritage is ours. How much we have inherited from those who have gone before. What a responsibility for us to preserve and advance what we have received.

We recognize that the great accomplishments of Christians in the past are now challenged in unique ways. After more than 1,500 years of Christianity’s providing the dominant worldview in the West, we now find ourselves living in a post-Christian world. Certainly in terms of Calvinism, our numbers, our influence, and our fervor seem much diminished. I was reminded of this in an essay by John Updike. Thinking about those beautiful Congregational churches on village greens in New England, he wrote: “Joy and aspiration have shaped these churches, but a certain melancholy may fill them. Puritanism faded into Unitarianism and thence to stoic agnosticism; these gallant old shells hold more memories than promises.”1 Has our movement come to hold more memories than promises? That is the great issue, it seems to me, before us today. My passion and my concern are that we be committed to the notion that Calvinism holds more promises than memories, as rich and glorious as those memories are.

The title of this essay, “The Whole Counsel of God,” comes from Acts 20:27, from the words of the Apostle Paul as he encouraged the Ephesian elders in their future service of the Lord. He said to them in part:

You yourselves know how I lived among you the whole time from the first day that I set foot in Asia, serving the Lord with all humility and with tears and with trials that happened to me through the plots of the Jews; how I did not shrink from declaring to you anything that was profitable, and teaching you in public and from house to house, testifying both to Jews and to Greeks of repentance toward God and of faith in our Lord Jesus Christ. And now, behold, I am going to Jerusalem, constrained by the Spirit, not knowing what will happen to me there, except that the Holy Spirit testifies to me in every city that imprisonment and afflictions await me. But I do not account my life of any value nor as precious to myself, if only I may finish my course and the ministry that I received from the Lord Jesus, to testify to the gospel of the grace of God. And now, behold, I know that none of you among whom I have gone about proclaiming the kingdom will see my face again. Therefore I testify to you this day that I am innocent of the blood of all, for I did not shrink from declaring to you the whole counsel of God. Pay careful attention to yourselves and to all the flock, in which the Holy Spirit has made you overseers, to care for the church of God, which he obtained with his own blood. I know that after my departure fierce wolves will come in among you, not sparing the flock; and from among your own selves will arise men speaking twisted things, to draw away the disciples after them. Therefore be alert, remembering that for three years I did not cease night or day to admonish every one with tears. And now I commend you to God and to the word of his grace, which is able to build you up and to give you the inheritance among all those who are sanctified. (Acts 20:18–32)

Paul called on the Ephesian elders to preserve and build on the Christian truth that he had brought to them. He had given them “the whole counsel of God” and called on them to live courageously on the basis of that truth. Today we need a courageous Calvinism for the unique time in which we live. What is the character of that courageous Calvinism that we need? What is the truth of God that we must embrace, live, and teach?

Comprehensive Calvinism

The first element of courageous Calvinism that we need is a comprehensive Calvinism. You notice how Paul talked about the “whole counsel of God” (v. 27), that he did not hold back from them “anything that was profitable” (v. 20). Paul spoke very much in the spirit of our Lord Jesus Christ, who sent out His disciples in the Great Commission to go and teach “all that I have commanded you” (Matt. 28:20). Scripture and our Calvinistic heritage are clear that we are committed to all that the Lord has revealed in His Word. We seek no shrunken religion. We seek no minimalist doctrine. We seek the fullness of what the Lord has revealed to us. We stand with Jeremiah as the Lord spoke to him: “Thus says the LORD: Stand in the court of the LORD’s house, and speak to all the cities of Judah that come to worship in the house of the LORD all the words that I command you to speak to them; do not hold back a word” (Jer. 26:2). The task that is committed to us is to speak the whole counsel of God, all that God has revealed. Ligonier exists to help Christians study that Word in its totality and grow in that Word.

Our growth is founded on and rooted in our commitment to the Word and its inerrant authority. We embrace the Word in the spirit of John Calvin, who said, “A soul, therefore when deprived of the Word of God, is given up unarmed to the devil for destruction.”2 Our conviction is that the Word must be our sword and our defense. The Word in its complete truthfulness is what we need and that to which we are committed.

Calvin, commenting on Jeremiah 42:5–6, said:

If we desire to prove our fidelity to God, the only way of acting is, to regard his Word as binding, whether it be agreeable or otherwise, and never to murmur, as the ungodly do; for when God would have a yoke laid on them, they complain that his doctrine is too hard and burdensome. Away, then, with all those things which can render God’s Word unacceptable to us, if we desire to give sure proof of our fidelity.3

We accept the Word of God in its fullness. We are committed to it, both where it is pleasing to us and where it pinches us. Because of our sins and our ignorance, we must have the Word of God to correct us. And that means that we stand committed to a full biblical theology. J. Gresham Machen expressed this forcefully, reminding us that the “Christian life is the fruit of Christian doctrine, not its root, and Christian experience must be tested by the Bible, not the Bible by Christian experience.”4 We are committed to this notion that the Word judges us; we do not judge the Word. The Word directs us; we do not direct the Word.

R.C. Sproul continued and deepened this commitment with his leadership in defending the doctrine of the inerrancy of the Bible during his ministry. Inerrancy became a touchstone of true biblical fidelity, helping to reveal those who tried to use traditional terms for biblical authority and reliability but used those terms in equivocal ways.

Because of our commitment to the Word, we are committed to the notion of the importance of theology. We are committed to the idea that theology is a reflection on the Word and an effort on the part of human beings to summarize that Word. We are convinced that theology is a useful, necessary discipline for appropriating the Scriptures for us. Evelyn Waugh, the British novelist, gave one of the best definitions of theology I know after his journey to Ethiopia for the coronation of the emperor Haile Selassie. After observing the extreme mystery of the rituals of the Ethiopian Coptic Church, he rejoiced in a theology that makes clear what God’s ways are. He wrote, “I saw theology as the science of the simplification by which nebulous and elusive ideas are formalized and made intelligible and exact.”5 The “science of simplification”—how seldom theology has been seen that way, but how true that is. Theology should make clear God’s will and God’s way as He has expressed them in His Word. And we here at Ligonier are committed to the full theology of the confessions to which we have subscribed, as they summarize biblical teaching for us.

Now, some have said that stressing the importance of theology makes Christianity too intellectualized. Some fear this means that only theologians have a role in the church. Perhaps in the tradition of our Reformed churches, there has been some danger of that. But it is not inherent in our tradition. We are not saying that theology is all there is to Christianity. But we are saying that theology must shape life. There must be life, but it must be shaped and directed by the Word of God.

Indeed, our Reformed heritage says that we do have more than theology. We also have piety; we have worship; we have loving service to the Lord. All these elements of Calvinism also flow out of the teachings of Scripture. We can see that clearly, for example, in the work of the Westminster Assembly. We need to remember that the Westminster Assembly not only gave us a confession of faith as a summary of doctrine, but it also gave us catechisms to teach the faith. It gave us a directory of worship to guide our meeting with God. It gave us a form of government to help in the organization of the church. And it gave us a Psalter to voice our praise to God. As we seek a comprehensive Calvinism, we must be sure that we have not shrunk it just to theology—however full our theology might be. We must be renewed in the fullness of a Reformed life flowing out of a Reformed theology. Our lives must follow a pattern of Bible study and prayer, of Word and sacrament, of self-denial and active love, and of Sabbath and of Psalm. We have seen a great decline in Reformed piety, in Reformed life, and I would suggest that decline is tied intimately to our loss of Sabbath and of Psalm. Too many of us have lost a day of rest, worship, study, and reflection and have lost the Psalms that put steel in our souls. We need to recapture that fullness of Calvinistic experience as well as Calvinistic theology.

We need the courage to be comprehensive in our Calvinism. We need to avoid the danger of minimalism and shallowness that pervades Christianity today. As David Wells so powerfully put it in his book No Place For Truth: “We laugh at those who think theology is important, and then are shocked to find in our midst the superficial and unbelieving.”6 We need a comprehensive Calvinism, and that takes courage in our time.

Consistent Calvinism

Second, we need a consistent Calvinism. We need Calvinism that grows out of its own inherent genius, a Calvinism that shows a coherence in its life, ministry, and message. We need Calvinism, therefore, that at every point and in every way seeks to ask how we build organically on the insights into Scripture that our forebears have given us. As Calvinists, we want to avoid a kind of eclecticism that goes through the religious world gathering tidbits here and there and in an artificial way tries to connect them to the Reformed heritage that we have inherited. We want to be consistent in our Calvinism. We want every aspect of our lives, our piety, and our worship to flow out of those Reformed convictions that we confess in our theology.

That consistency will not always be easy to achieve. The consistent answer will not always be obvious. But that should be our goal; that should be our determination—to allow the Scripture to guide us in all areas of life. It should guide our education of future leaders; it should guide our evangelism; it should guide our church planting; it should guide our worship. John Calvin said of worship, “There is nothing more perilous to our salvation than a preposterous and perverse worship of God.”7 God calls upon us in every area of our lives to ask how we can live consistently for Him. We do not want an accommodating or eclectic Calvinism. We want a consistent Calvinism.

From our commitment to consistent Calvinism comes our commitment to systematic theology. Our concern for systematic theology, as R.C. Sproul showed us so clearly, is not a concern to be ruled by logic but a concern to see the cohesion and interconnectedness of biblical teaching. For example, Paul reminded the Ephesian elders that he had preached to everyone “of repentance toward God and of faith in our Lord Jesus Christ” (Acts 20:21). But what is the relationship between faith and repentance? That is a question of connections, of systematic theology. Some might think such a question is not important, but Calvin rightly said that it is an extremely important question for understanding the essence of the gospel. Calvin wrote: “The sum of the gospel is held to consist in repentance and forgiveness of sins.” Repentance, which is “newness of life,” Calvin insisted, is “born of faith,” or justification by faith alone will be destroyed.8 Systematic relations are vital to truth and life.

Now, in calling for a consistent Calvinism, we are not saying that there is nothing to learn from others. We need to resist our all-too-present Reformed tendencies to be smug and self-satisfied. We need to listen to brothers and sisters of other traditions. We need to weigh what Now, in calling for a consistent Calvinism, we are not saying that there is nothing to learn from others. We need to resist our all-too-present Reformed tendencies to be smug and self-satisfied. We need to listen to brothers and sisters of other traditions. We need to weigh what they would say to us. We need to clearly recognize the reality of genuine Christianity in other traditions that can speak to us and can help us. But if we are committed to historic confessional Calvinism as the fullest and most faithful form of biblical teaching, then we must evaluate what we are hearing from other traditions by that root of faith from which we seek to grow and to be sure that we are being consistent Calvinists. We need courage, then, to be consistent Calvinists.

Christocentric Calvinism

Third, I would say that we need to be Christocentric Calvinists. Now there will be some, no doubt, who will think that this should have been my first point and not my third. Such a contention could well be argued, although I would say that in my notion of a comprehensive theology, Christ will be central. But I think a Christocentric Calvinism must be underscored because in all things Jesus Christ must be preeminent for the Christian. As Paul proclaimed in Ephesus the whole counsel of God, so he also especially taught “faith in our Lord Jesus Christ” (Acts 20:21) and “the gospel of the grace of God” (v. 24). In that comprehensive and consistent Calvinism to which we aspire, we must always remember that Christ must be at the center: Christ’s atoning work on the cross; Christ’s glorious victory over sin and death in His resurrection; Christ our great Prophet, Priest, and King; Christ our Lord through the Holy Spirit. Christ is at the very heart and center of our lives, our piety, our faith, our study, and our preaching. And so, we must always and again renew ourselves in that central commitment to Jesus Christ.

When we make Christ central, it will help us in the other decisions we have to make about a consistent Calvinism. When Christ is at the center, priorities become much clearer. We can distinguish more important and less important doctrines from one another. We can distinguish doctrines more certain and less certain. We see that in the priority R.C. Sproul placed on articulating and defending the doctrine of justification by faith alone. This doctrine shows powerfully the centrality and completeness of Christ as our Savior. We look away from ourselves and all our doing to find our rest and hope in Jesus alone.

Christocentrism will also help us be humble in the broader community of Christian churches as we seek to learn from one another and to live together in love, cooperating wherever possible with fellow Christians. Our goal must be Christocentric Calvinism that gives us an intense sense of spiritual union with all those who are truly in Christ by faith. Christocentric Calvinism will help us avoid the danger of a Reformed sectarianism that would say we alone are Christians, that we alone have the truth. We need the courage, then, to be Christocentric in our Calvinism.

Committed Calvinism

Fourth, I would say that we need a committed Calvinism. You notice how Paul in Acts 20 talked about not holding his own life dear but doing all that he could to finish his course (v. 24) and how he came to them in all lowliness of mind and with tears, to communicate the grace of God (v. 19). Paul was showing in all these statements how he had lived a committed life among his people.

Perhaps of all the dangers we face, the greatest is failing to be committed Calvinists. The commitment we need is well expressed in a statement of one of the founding documents of Princeton Theological Seminary, which pledged “to develop in those who shall aspire to the ministerial office, both that piety of heart which is the fruit of the renewing and sanctifying grace of God, and solid learning, believing that zeal without knowledge or knowledge without zeal must ultimately prove injurious to the Church.”9 Many traditions have a lot of zeal and not much learning. But our besetting danger today is that we have great learning and not much zeal. Our great danger is that we have become comfortable Calvinists, that life has become easy for us and we are contented with that ease. Long gone are the days when someone like King Charles II could observe, “Presbyterianism is no religion for gentlemen.”10 Those Scottish Presbyterians of whom King Charles spoke were anything but gentlemen. They did not compromise for king or noblemen. They were committed in the spirit of John Knox, of whom the regent Morton said at his grave, “Here lies one who never feared any flesh.”11

Do we still exhibit an appropriate lack of gentlemanliness, or have we fit all too well into the world in which we live? I was reading in the New York Review of Books an article on religion in which Elizabeth Hardwick wrote, “The Calvinists, in natural waning of the impractical notions of Election and Predestination, are today a mild and reasonable denomination, recessive in the manner of other traditional Protestant churches.” Has it really come to that? Are we just mild and recessive? I am afraid it may have come to that. It may have come to what William Butler Yeats wrote in his famous poem “The Second Coming”: “The best lack of all conviction, while the worst are full of passionate intensity.”

Where is our passionate intensity, assuming for the moment that we are closer to being the best than the worst? Where is our zeal? Where is our commitment? Where is our conviction that the comprehensive, consistent, Christocentric Calvinism that we teach is in fact what the Word of God teaches and what the world needs? Where is our passion? It has not died out altogether. We have examples in the twentieth century to inspire us. We have the zealous Calvinism of the Tiv people in Nigeria, where there are more people in church every Sunday, by far, than there are members of the church because they so carefully guard membership in the church. When I think of commitment, I also think of the great Scottish Presbyterian missionary Mary Slessor, who went to Nigeria in the late nineteenth century. As a woman alone, she journeyed into the jungle because the men were afraid to go, and she went to the most dangerous of tribes to bring them the gospel of Christ. She said, “I am ready to go anywhere, provided it be forward.”13

Do we have that commitment; do we have that zeal; do we have that passion? We need it in the church and in its ministers. It must be fueled by the Word of God and by continuing education in the truth. Almost a century ago, J. Gresham Machen wrote in Christianity and Liberalism, “Christian education is the chief business of the hour for every earnest Christian man.” We need Christian education. Machen said it starts in the family. It goes on through the schools, and it culminates in the seminary so that ministers can teach the people of God the truths of God. R.C. Sproul continued that passion for education in his many writings and in establishing Reformation Bible College. We want education so that Christians will know Scripture, will embrace the historic theological heritage of Christianity, and will be committed to teaching those things in this world.

Today we must all embrace the ideal of being missionaries. We must be missionaries who may be working in a culture that may not fully understand us, but with the commitment of missionaries who are willing to leave even family and home to teach the Word of God. We must be missionaries in the spirit of our Lord Jesus Christ, who, as we read in John 6, sought to make true disciples. He started with five thousand and finished with twelve (one of whom was to be a traitor), not because He preferred few to many but because He wanted true disciples rather than false disciples. We, too, must seek to make true, faithful disciples.

So, if we are to be committed Calvinists, we need to be committed to our heritage and we need to “hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering” (Heb. 10:23). We need to heed the Word of God spoken through the prophet Jeremiah: “Dress yourself for work; arise, and say to them everything that I command you. Do not be dismayed by them, lest I dismay you before them” (Jer. 1:17). It is not the world that we need to fear; it is the Lord, if we are faithless.

We must learn to pray for that commitment. We need fervent prayer as a foundation to our commitment. Again, Jeremiah recorded: “For I know the plans I have for you, declares the LORD, plans for welfare and not for evil, to give you a future and a hope. Then you will call upon me and come and pray to me, and I will hear you. You will seek me and find me, when you seek me with all your heart” (29:11–13). Are we wholehearted Calvinists? Do we single-mindedly seek the Lord and His will and His blessing and His service?

Confident Calvinism

Fifth, we know that promoting courageous Calvinism is a huge undertaking, one that may at times seem overwhelming. But I thought of the words of Robert Frost in his poem “Reluctance.” In the last stanza, he writes,

Ah, when to the heart of man Was it ever less than a treason To go with the drift of things, To yield with a grace to reason, And bow and accept the end Of a love and a season?15

We must not be traitors to our cause, accepting the end of a love and a season. Rather, we must go on, faithful to the Lord, trusting in Him, in His good timing, in His good purposes. God is sovereign, and we must be confident in His work and purposes.

Historically, some Calvinists have been dour and grim in their lives and piety. But R.C. Sproul was a great model of a joyful Calvinism because he was so confident in God’s work in Jesus in God’s world. He was completely confident in the reliability of God’s Word. He knew that our focus should be not on our failures but on God’s success.

In 1898, Abraham Kuyper came to America to give the Stone Lectures at Princeton University. The last lecture was titled “The Future of Calvinism.” Kuyper did not speak as a prophet, but he spoke to encourage God’s people to think about the future. He thought the future of Christianity was in Asia. (He was not such a bad prophet, perhaps!) But he said at the end of that lecture on Calvinism and the future:

And if you retort, half mockingly, am I really naïve enough to expect from certain Calvinistic studies a reversal in the Christian world view, then be the following my answer: The quickening of life does not come from men: it is the prerogative of God, and it is due to His sovereign will alone, whether or not the tide of religious life rise high in one century and run to a low ebb in the next. . . . Unless God send forth His Spirit, there will be no turn, and fearfully rapid will be the descent of the waters. But do you remember the Aeolian Harp, which men were wont to place outside their encasement, that the breeze might wake its music into life. Until the wind blew, the harp remained silent, while, again even though the wind arose, if the harp did not lie in readiness, a rustling of the breeze might be heard, but not a single note of ethereal music delighted the ear. Now, let Calvinism be nothing but such in an Aeolian Harp—absolutely powerless, as it is, without the quickening Spirit of God—still we feel it our God-given duty to keep our harp, its strings tuned aright, ready in the window of God’s Holy Zion, awaiting the breath of the Spirit.16

Our responsibility is not to produce great success in our strength. Our responsibility is to be faithful and thereby to be instruments that God may use just as He will. Our great concern should not be our success or our will, but it should be God’s will and God’s success. And as Calvinists, our confidence will be that God will accomplish His purpose. He will not be thwarted. And we can go forward in the marvelous words of Jonathan as he went out almost single-handed against the army of Philistines: “It may be that the LORD will work for us, for nothing can hinder the LORD from saving by many or by few” (1 Sam. 14:6). Perhaps the Lord will act for us, but we know that the Lord will save according to His good purpose whether by many or by few. May we in our work for Ligonier embrace the whole counsel of God and, in embracing it, become courageous Calvinists for the twenty-first century. May God bless us by His Spirit to that great end as we seek Him with all our hearts.

From: https://www.ligonier.org/learn/articles/courageous-calvinism

Daily Devotional 8-23-21

Daily Devotional 8-23-21

Jesus, the Only Savior

I cannot imagine an affirmation that would meet with more resistance from contemporary Westerners than the one Paul makes in 1 Timothy 2:5: “For there is one God, and there is one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus.”This declaration is narrow and downright un-American. We have been inundated with the viewpoint that there are many roads that lead to heaven, and that God is not so narrow that He requires a strict allegiance to one way of salvation. If anything strikes at the root of the tree of pluralism and relativism, it is a claim of exclusivity to any one religion. A statement such as Paul makes in his first letter to Timothy is seen as bigoted and hateful.

Paul, of course, is not expressing bigotry or hatefulness at all. He is simply expressing the truth of God, the same truth Jesus taught when He said: “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me” (John 14:6). Paul is affirming the uniqueness of Christ, specifically in His role as Mediator. A mediator is a go-between, someone who stands between two parties that are estranged or involved in some kind of dispute. Paul declares that Christ is the only Mediator between two parties at odds with one another — God and men.

We encounter mediators throughout the Bible. Moses, for example, was the mediator of the old covenant. He represented the people of Israel in his discussions with God, and he was God’s spokesman to the people. The prophets in the Old Testament had a mediatorial function, serving as the spokesmen for God to the people. Also, the high priest of Israel functioned as a mediator; he spoke to God on behalf of the people. Even the king of Israel was a kind of mediator; he was seen as God’s representative to the people, so God held him accountable to rule in righteousness according to the law of the Old Testament.

Why, then, does Paul say there is only one mediator between God and man? I believe we have to understand the uniqueness of Christ’s mediation in terms of the uniqueness of His person. He is the God-man, that is, God incarnate. In order to bring about reconciliation between God and humanity, the second person of the Trinity united to Himself a human nature. Thus, Jesus has the qualifications to bring about reconciliation — He represents both sides perfectly.

People ask me, “Why is God so narrow that He provided only one Savior?” I do not think that is the question we ought to ask. Instead, we should ask, “Why did God give us any way at all to be saved?” In other words, why did He not just condemn us all? Why did God, in His grace, give to us a Mediator to stand in our place, to receive the judgment we deserve, and to give to us the righteousness we desperately need? The astonishing thing is not that He did not do it in multiple ways, but that He did it in even one way.

Notice that Paul, in declaring the uniqueness of Christ, also affirms the uniqueness of God: “There is one God.” This divine uniqueness was declared throughout the Old Testament; the very first commandment was a commandment of exclusivity: “You shall have no other gods before me” (Ex. 20:3).

So Paul brings all these strands together. There is only one God, and God has only one Son, and the Son is the sole Mediator between God and mankind. As I said above, that is very difficult for people who have been immersed in pluralism to accept, but they have to quarrel with Christ and His Apostles on this point. The Bible offers no hope that sincere worshipers of other religions will be saved without personal faith in Jesus Christ. As Paul said in Athens, “The times of ignorance God has overlooked, but now he commands all people everywhere to repent” (Acts 17:30). There is a universal requirement for people to profess faith in Christ.

Perhaps you are concerned to hear me talk in such narrow terms of the exclusivity of Christ and of the Christian faith. If so, let me ask you to think through the ramifications of putting leaders of other religions on the same level as Christ. In one sense, there is no greater insult to Christ than to mention Him in the same breath as Muhammad, for example. If Christ is who He claims to be, no one else can be a way to God. Furthermore, if it is true that there are many ways to God, Christ is not one of them, because there is no reason one of many ways to God would declare to the world that He is the only way to God.

As we celebrate the death and resurrection of Christ this month, it is good for us to remember the uniqueness of Christ. May we never suggest that God has not done enough for us, considering what He has done for us in Christ Jesus.

From: https://www.ligonier.org/learn/articles/jesus-the-only-savior

Daily Devotional 8-20-21

Daily Devotional 8-20-21

David, the Psalmist

Among all the saints whose lives are recorded in Holy Scripture, David possesses an experience of the most striking, varied, and instructive character. In his history we meet with trials and temptations that are not found, as a whole, in other saints of ancient times, and as a result he provides us with a shadowy picture of our Lord. David knew the trials of all ranks and conditions of men. Kings have their troubles, and David wore a crown. The peasant has his cares, and David handled a shepherd’s crook. The wanderer has many hardships, and David hid in the caves of Engedi. The captain has his difficulties, and David found the sons of Zeruiah too hard for him.

The psalmist also faced trials from his friends; his counselor Ahithophel forsook him: “[He] who ate my bread, has lifted his heel against me.”1 His worst foes came from his own household: His children were his greatest affliction. The temptations of poverty and wealth, of honor and reproach, of health and weakness all tried their power upon him. He had temptations from without to disturb his peace and from within to mar his joy. David no sooner escaped from one trial than he fell into another, no sooner emerged from one season of despondency and alarm than he was again brought into the lowest depths and all God’s waves and billows rolled over him. This is probably the reason that David’s psalms are so universally the delight of experienced Christians. Whatever our frame of mind, whether ecstasy or depression, David has exactly described our emotions. He was an able master of the human heart because he had been tutored in the best of all schools—the school of heartfelt, personal experience.

As we are instructed in the same school, as we grow mature in grace and in years, we increasingly appreciate David’s psalms and find them to be “green pastures.”2 My soul, let David’s experience cheer and counsel you today.

1) Psalm 41:9

2) Psalm 23:2

From: https://www.truthforlife.org/resources/daily-devotionals/latest/?gclid=CjwKCAjwnK36BRBVEiwAsMT8WCR8UteIwaWlAyP4o9ZIuAWio8l7qmAM1nDcB3pFiYr-jOUNkgMsShoC68IQAvD_BwE

Daily Devotional 8-19-21

Daily Devotional 8-19-21

What God Created, God Will Grow

The first thing my kids do in the morning is give me a hug because waking up is hard. Sometimes it’s nice to just have someone put their arms around you, rub your back, and get the blood moving. The other morning, my youngest, who just turned five, woke up and came straight for me in his little alphabet pajamas. He curled up in my lap and I rubbed his back.

I teased him that his legs had gotten longer since the night before. We have a running joke between the two of us that he’s not allowed to get any bigger. I command him to stop growing, and stay my little boy, and each day, he defiantly inches taller.

“We need to figure this out,” I said. “Pretty soon, you’re going to be taller than me, and I just can’t tolerate any more of my kids getting taller than me. None of you are listening!”

He giggled at my joke, and said, “Mommy! We can’t control how we grow! I can’t help it! God just makes us grow! he said. “I didn’t do anything!”

With six kids, oftentimes I feel like managing their growth fills the majority of my hours. Actually, it’s not accurate to say “managing” their growth, rather: “keeping up with their growth” or “holding on for dear life.”

Children don’t worry about whether or not they will grow. They expect it. They wait for it with anticipation.

Every fall, we bring out the tubs of old clothes, go through them all, and see what will fit for winter. Finding shoes for them all, pants that might last a few months, meal planning, grocery shopping, cooking, washing dishes, getting them haircuts, clipping fingernails – all of these tasks are aimed at keeping up with their never ending growth. One time, when my oldest son was about 12 years old, I had hunted down and purchased a fall/winter wardrobe for him in September: 10 shirts and four pants, a new pair of shoes, snow boots, new snow pants, and a winter jacket. I thought each item had plenty of growing space for them to last him until spring. He outgrew them all by October. I literally cried. Thankfully, his younger brothers eventually used all the things I had purchased.

I can’t manage my children’s growth. I can only try to keep up. I don’t manage the timing of their growth spurts, I can only rub their legs when they have growing pains. I can measure how tall they’re getting and marvel at it. I can forbid them, in vain, to get any taller. But as they keep telling me, not even they can direct their growth.

“I can’t help it! God just makes us grow! he said. “I didn’t do anything!”

It’s funny with our knowledge of physical growth that we still think it will be different for our spiritual lives. We think that we should manage our sanctification or the sanctification of others.

You may say, “but you make your kids eat their vegetables, and go to bed!” My children grumble about eating their vegetables. As a parent, I’ve learned that they’ll eat when they’re hungry. To withhold food will starve them, but when there is food in front of them, they won’t starve. Their design to grow always overcomes any hunger strike. Children don’t worry about whether or not they will grow. They expect it. They wait for it with anticipation. They complain it’s taking too long. But they know they don’t control it. They may try, but they can’t force it, rush it, or hurry it along. Growing teaches us patience, like it or not.

As children of God, we are given food. We have attitudes about some of it. Hunger strikes are usually overcome with cyclical seasons of never being full. We take joy from running and playing in the freedom of our days. We devour books, and make friends. We learn how to be kind, and discover we were made for a purpose. But we don’t make ourselves grow. At best, we can reflect on growth in the past, and stand in awe that we didn’t see it coming. Sometimes circumstances grow and mature us, as we grow in understanding of the value of stubborn love, both given to us, and given to others.

But, as any child can tell you, growth comes when you sleep—when you rest. You can’t help it. Psalm 139 says to God, “You created my inmost being; you knit me together in my mother’s womb.” What God created, God will grow. We don’t add a few stitches onto his creation.

When I was a new mom, I believed I could micromanage my babies’ development: do these exercises so they will roll over a week before their peers, make sure they have tummy time, practice walking with them. I agonized over their growth, like there was some kind of prize for reaching each stage in record time.

What God created, God will grow. We don’t add a few stitches onto his creation.

Things change with each kid, and you discover no one hands out prizes for reaching a benchmark first, and it all evens out in the end. In fact, by the fourth or fifth kid, my husband noticed I was keeping the eight month old in footie pajamas all day long.

He said, “You know, she’s slipping with the pajamas on. If you let her wear shorts, and let her knees get a grip on the kitchen floor, she’ll crawl today.”

“I know.” I said. “I’m trying to slow her down a bit. She’ll crawl eventually.”

He laughed. I was trying to contain her mobility as long as I could, because life changes drastically when they can move with speed. But we both knew, my reluctance to have a child on the move would only last for so long. Her growth and development would overcome even her footie pajamas.

Because growth just happens. God says he will sanctify. We sometimes fight it, we sometimes encourage it, we sometimes have mixed feelings about it. But it happens – not because we always have the best of attitudes, but because God said he would sanctify us, and he will. His patience is perfect, and his timing is correct. Resting in Christ won’t impede our growth, anymore than sleeping well at night will impede a child’s growth. We don’t work on growing. All we can do is try to keep up with the constant change of growth that will come, like it or not.

“Now may the God of peace himself sanctify you completely, and may your whole spirit and soul and body be kept blameless at the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ. He who calls you is faithful; he will surely do it” (Thess 5:23-24).

From: https://www.1517.org/articles/what-god-created-god-will-grow

Daily Devotional 8-18-21

Daily Devotional 8-18-21

Spirit Filled…?

How are we to reach a world that insists there are no absolutes? In his recently released, Christians: The Urgent Case for Jesus in Our World, Dr. Greg Sheridan comments, ‘Popular culture has turned against God, especially against the Christian churches, and pretty often against Christians themselves, over the last 50 years’ (p.171).

In Ephesians, chapter 5 verse 15, Paul the Apostle says to every generation of God’s people: Be careful how you live, not as unwise but as wise,…

Commenting on these words, FF Bruce notes that Paul’s readers are ‘a small minority, and because of their distinctive ways, their lives will be scrutinized by others: the reputation of the gospel is bound up with their public behavior. Hence the need for care and wisdom, lest the Christian cause should be inadvertently jeopardized by thoughtless speech or action on the part of Christians’ (The Epistles to the Colossians, Philemon and Ephesians, p.378).

Significantly Paul continues in Ephesians chapter 5, verse 15, …making the most of every opportunity because the days are evil. Don’t be foolish. Understand what the Lord’s will is.

We all know how time flies. Paul knew this too: ‘Learn to use it well,’ or ‘Buy up the present opportunity’, he says. We need to understand that although God has opened a door for men and women to enter the new era of his kingdom of light, the present age continues to be shrouded in darkness. The toppling of a democratically elected government in Myanmar and the resurgence of the Taliban in Afghanistan, are just two examples. How much we need to pray for peoples everywhere where there is injustice, and especially for God’s people who face persecution for their faith in Christ.

Our awareness of the injustices around us should prompt us to understand God and his will. He has not simply wound the spring of his creation but is personally and vitally committed to rescue the lost. ‘To buy up the present opportunity’ involves, not only our living a new life as God’s people, but also our witness. For the present time has an end – a terminus ad quem. God will draw together all his people from throughout time to himself and close the great doors of the new era on this present age.

And, if you are beginning to think that all this is heavy and burdensome and rather joyless, it’s time to take in verses 18 through 20. Paul begins: Do not get drunk with wine, for that is debauchery; but be filled with the Spirit,…

The Spirit of God is not a fluid with which we may be filled up. Rather, as Paul points out in Romans chapter 8 verse 9, when we turn to Christ, the Spirit of Christ takes up residence within us. So, instead of being under the influence of alcohol we are to be under the influence of God’s Spirit, the Spirit of Christ within us.

Paul’s contrast here is striking. Alcohol can lead to drunkenness and debauchery, dehumanizing us. We become the reverse of what we were meant to be — no longer the glory of God’s creation, made in his image, but beasts. On the other hand, Paul is saying, when the Spirit of God fills our lives, he enables us to live and run as God’s people with love and joy in our hearts.

Two interesting exhortations follow – singing and thanksgiving.

Singing. Addressing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs,… singing and making melody to the Lord in your hearts… (5:19).

We don’t often think about the reality that the earliest churches expressed their joy in music and singing. The Psalms were their hymn book. FF Bruce also points out that one of the ancient testimonies – Pliny’s report of antiphonal singing ‘to Christ as God’ – has a bearing on two aspects of this verse: the singing is antiphonal, ‘addressing one another’, and is offered ‘to the Lord’.

This tells us that amongst God’s people, from the earliest times, praise has been offered alike to God and to Christ. One of the ways we worship God and build relationships with one another is through singing God’s truth.

Emotions are a very important part of our makeup. When the Spirit of God is at work in us our singing will have the rich sound that comes from people who have that deep joy which comes from knowing their God.

Thanksgiving: Always giving thanks to God the Father for everything, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ (5:20).

Nothing brings about tension and division more than ingratitude. To have a thankful spirit is to accept the situation in which you find yourself in the loving providence of God. A thankful heart trusts God, not just in good times, but also in tough times. Thankful people know that in every situation God is working out his good purposes for them – as we read in Romans 8:28-30. Thankful people are more likely to be happy people, because they know the Lord is in control.

God’s ‘spirit-filled’ people who display a great sense of indebtedness to his grace, are people who know peace, harmony and joy.

Be filled with the Spirit … addressing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs,… singing and making melody to the Lord in your hearts; … always giving thanks to God the Father for everything, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ

Here we have a response to the cacophony of voices of our day – voices of people who know not love and joy and peace, because they have not yet found the God who loves them with a greater love than they ever dreamed.

Don’t be drunk with wine; don’t be afraid. Rather, be filled with the Spirit and sing songs and hymns with gratitude to God in your hearts.

A prayer. Almighty God, we thank you for the gift of your holy word. May it be a lantern to our feet, a light to our paths, and strength to our lives. Take us and use us to love and serve all people in the power of the Holy Spirit and in the name of your Son Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

From: https://anglicanconnection.com/spirit-filled/

Daily Devotional 8-17-21

Daily Devotional 8-17-21

Spirit Filled…?

How are we to reach a world that insists there are no absolutes? In his recently released, Christians: The Urgent Case for Jesus in Our World, Dr. Greg Sheridan comments, ‘Popular culture has turned against God, especially against the Christian churches, and pretty often against Christians themselves, over the last 50 years’ (p.171).

In Ephesians, chapter 5 verse 15, Paul the Apostle says to every generation of God’s people: Be careful how you live, not as unwise but as wise,…

Commenting on these words, FF Bruce notes that Paul’s readers are ‘a small minority, and because of their distinctive ways, their lives will be scrutinized by others: the reputation of the gospel is bound up with their public behavior. Hence the need for care and wisdom, lest the Christian cause should be inadvertently jeopardized by thoughtless speech or action on the part of Christians’ (The Epistles to the Colossians, Philemon and Ephesians, p.378).

Significantly Paul continues in Ephesians chapter 5, verse 15, …making the most of every opportunity because the days are evil. Don’t be foolish. Understand what the Lord’s will is.

We all know how time flies. Paul knew this too: ‘Learn to use it well,’ or ‘Buy up the present opportunity’, he says. We need to understand that although God has opened a door for men and women to enter the new era of his kingdom of light, the present age continues to be shrouded in darkness. The toppling of a democratically elected government in Myanmar and the resurgence of the Taliban in Afghanistan, are just two examples. How much we need to pray for peoples everywhere where there is injustice, and especially for God’s people who face persecution for their faith in Christ.

Our awareness of the injustices around us should prompt us to understand God and his will. He has not simply wound the spring of his creation but is personally and vitally committed to rescue the lost. ‘To buy up the present opportunity’ involves, not only our living a new life as God’s people, but also our witness. For the present time has an end – a terminus ad quem. God will draw together all his people from throughout time to himself and close the great doors of the new era on this present age.

And, if you are beginning to think that all this is heavy and burdensome and rather joyless, it’s time to take in verses 18 through 20. Paul begins: Do not get drunk with wine, for that is debauchery; but be filled with the Spirit,…

The Spirit of God is not a fluid with which we may be filled up. Rather, as Paul points out in Romans chapter 8 verse 9, when we turn to Christ, the Spirit of Christ takes up residence within us. So, instead of being under the influence of alcohol we are to be under the influence of God’s Spirit, the Spirit of Christ within us.

Paul’s contrast here is striking. Alcohol can lead to drunkenness and debauchery, dehumanizing us. We become the reverse of what we were meant to be — no longer the glory of God’s creation, made in his image, but beasts. On the other hand, Paul is saying, when the Spirit of God fills our lives, he enables us to live and run as God’s people with love and joy in our hearts.

Two interesting exhortations follow – singing and thanksgiving.

Singing. Addressing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs,… singing and making melody to the Lord in your hearts… (5:19).

We don’t often think about the reality that the earliest churches expressed their joy in music and singing. The Psalms were their hymn book. FF Bruce also points out that one of the ancient testimonies – Pliny’s report of antiphonal singing ‘to Christ as God’ – has a bearing on two aspects of this verse: the singing is antiphonal, ‘addressing one another’, and is offered ‘to the Lord’.

This tells us that amongst God’s people, from the earliest times, praise has been offered alike to God and to Christ. One of the ways we worship God and build relationships with one another is through singing God’s truth.

Emotions are a very important part of our makeup. When the Spirit of God is at work in us our singing will have the rich sound that comes from people who have that deep joy which comes from knowing their God.

Thanksgiving: Always giving thanks to God the Father for everything, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ (5:20).

Nothing brings about tension and division more than ingratitude. To have a thankful spirit is to accept the situation in which you find yourself in the loving providence of God. A thankful heart trusts God, not just in good times, but also in tough times. Thankful people know that in every situation God is working out his good purposes for them – as we read in Romans 8:28-30. Thankful people are more likely to be happy people, because they know the Lord is in control.

God’s ‘spirit-filled’ people who display a great sense of indebtedness to his grace, are people who know peace, harmony and joy.

Be filled with the Spirit … addressing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs,… singing and making melody to the Lord in your hearts; … always giving thanks to God the Father for everything, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ

Here we have a response to the cacophony of voices of our day – voices of people who know not love and joy and peace, because they have not yet found the God who loves them with a greater love than they ever dreamed.

Don’t be drunk with wine; don’t be afraid. Rather, be filled with the Spirit and sing songs and hymns with gratitude to God in your hearts.

A prayer. Almighty God, we thank you for the gift of your holy word. May it be a lantern to our feet, a light to our paths, and strength to our lives. Take us and use us to love and serve all people in the power of the Holy Spirit and in the name of your Son Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

From: https://anglicanconnection.com/spirit-filled/

Daily Devotional 8-16-21

Daily Devotional 8-16-21

Responding to God’s Call

We live in daily submission to a host of authorities who circumscribe our freedom: from parents to traffic police officers to dog catchers. All authorities are to be respected and, as the Bible declares, honored. But only one authority has the intrinsic right to bind the conscience. God alone imposes absolute obligation, and He does it by the power of His holy voice.

He calls the world into existence by divine imperative, by holy fiat. He calls the dead and rotting Lazarus to life again. He calls people who were no people “My people.” He calls us out of darkness and into light. He effectually calls us to redemption. He calls us to service.

Our vocation is so named because of its Latin root vocatio, “a calling.” The term vocational choice is a contradiction in terms to the Christian. To be sure, we do choose it and can, in fact, choose to disobey it. But prior to the choice and hovering with absolute power over it is the divine summons, the imposition to duty from which we dare not flee.

It was vocation that drove Jonah on his flight to Tarshish and caused his terrified shipmates to dump him in the sea to still the vengeful tempest. It was vocation that elicited the anguished cry from Paul, “Woe is me if I do not preach the gospel” (1 Cor. 9:16). It was vocation that put a heinous cup of bitterness in the hands of Jesus.

The call of God is not always to a glamorous vocation, and its fruit in this world is often bittersweet. Yet God calls us according to our gifts and talents, and directs us to paths of the most useful service to His kingdom. How impoverished we would be if Jonah had made it to Tarshish, if Paul had refused to preach, if Jeremiah really had turned in his prophet’s card, or if Jesus had politely declined the cup.

Coram Deo

Think about it . . . what will be the tab of spiritual losses if you do not respond to God’s call?

From: https://www.ligonier.org/learn/devotionals/responding-gods-call

The BEST MISSIONARY is the BIBLE

“The greatest missionary is the Bible in the mother tongue. It needs no furlough and is never considered a foreigner.” William Cameron Townsend.

image of bible outreach ministry

From the Battlefield to the Mission Field

William Cameron Townsend was one of the most influential mission leaders in the last century. Born in California in 1896, raised in a Presbyterian Church, he was inspired to join the Student Volunteer Movement after hearing missionary John Mott speak at Occidental College in Los Angeles. In 1917, as William Townsend prepared to join the army and participate in the war, he was challenged by a missionary on furlough to make the Great Commission his priority and go to the mission field instead of the battlefield.

Does God Speak My Language?

He departed for Guatemala, August 1917, with a Bible Association that sold Spanish Bibles in the field. He had almost completed his first year of service in Guatemala when one of the Kaqchikel Indians approached his table, looked at the Spanish Bible and asked “If your God is so smart, why doesn’t He speak my language?” Cameron was shocked to learn that although this man lived in Guatemala, he was one of the 200,000 Kaqchikel people who spoke no Spanish. The cutting comment of this Indian so troubled Cameron, that he dedicated the next 13 years of his life to translating the Bible into their language.

Wycliffe Bible Translators

He then began an organization known as Wycliffe Bible Translators, named after The Morning Star of the Reformation, Professor John Wycliffe, who first translated the Bible into English.

Humble Beginnings

In 1937, Cameron Townsend opened up Camp Wycliffe in Arkansas to train young people in basic linguistics and translation methods. Two students enrolled in that first summer. The following year, five men attended. From the small beginnings grew the worldwide ministry of the Summer Institute of Linguistics, Wycliffe Bible Translators and Wycliffe Associates. No cultural group is considered too small, no language too great. Today thousands of mission workers are engaged in Wycliffe Bible translation projects.

Every Nation

William Townsend has been credited with launching the new Missions frontier which no longer focuses only on reaching continents and inland countries, but on every distinct ethnic group, or people group in the world. Jesus Christ focused on ethnolinguistic people groups in the Great Commission. When the Lord commanded us to make disciples of every nation, He used the word ethne, from where our word ethnic comes. The Great Commission is not merely to take the Gospel to every one of the 222 countries in the world, but to each of the, at least, 16,000 ethnolinguistic people groups in the world.

A Biblical Nation is an Ethno Linguistic People Group with a Shared Faith

In the Scriptures we see that the Hebrews remained Hebrews, even after 480 years in Egypt. They never became Egyptians. We are not geographic accidents but demographic descendants. The Scripture emphasize that all the families of the nations of the earth are to sing His praises in every language and tongue. “And they sang a new song, saying: ‘You are worthy to take the scroll and to open its seals; for You were slain and have redeemed us to God by Your Blood out of every tribe and tongue and people and nation’…” Revelation 5:9

Demographic Realities that Challenge Missionaries

As examples of how demographics have changed and present challenges to missionaries: There are 250,000 Arabs and 40,000 Iraqis living in Detroit. There are more than a million Japanese living in Sao Paulo, Brazil. In Buenos Aires, Argentina, a city of 8 million, 10% of the churches are Korean speaking. In Marseille, France, a city of 2 million inhabitants, 31% are from Africa, mostly of Arab origin. In Minneapolis/St. Paul, there are 136 languages and more than 70 ethnic groups represented. More than half a million people in the twin cities are immigrants. There are now more Buddhists, (56,000), living in the twin cities, than Assemblies of God adherents in the whole state of Minnesota. There are twice as many Muslims (111,000) living in the twin cities than Assemblies of God adherents in the whole state of Minnesota. There are more Bulgarians living in Chicago, than in the capital city of Bulgaria, Sophia.

The Mission Fields Next Door

World Missions are no longer only across oceans, deserts and mountains. Many nations have moved into our own neighborhoods. Some Mission frontiers are no longer that geographically distant, but culturally different and literally in our own neighborhoods.

The Power of the Printed Page

To reach these many nations, we need the Word of God in every language. “The Lord gave the Word; great was the company of those who proclaimed it.” Psalm 68:11

Faith Comes from the Word of God

“So then Faith comes by hearing and hearing by the Word of God.” Romans 10:17. Do you have Gospel booklets and Scriptures to distribute to those you encounter on a daily basis?

The Power of God

“For I am not ashamed of the Gospel of Christ, for it is the power of God to Salvation for everyone who believes…” Romans 1:16. Are you regularly giving Gospel booklets to your friends, co-workers, neighbors and strangers?

Living and Powerful

“For the Word of God is living and powerful and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the division of soul and spirit and of joints and marrow and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart.” Hebrews 4:12. Stock up on Spiritual ammunition. We are involved in a world war of world-views. This is a battle for hearts, minds and souls. What we do now will have consequences for eternity.

Invincible

“So shall My Word be that goes forth from My mouth; it shall not return to Me void, but it shall accomplish what I please and it shall prosper in the thing for which I sent it.” Isaiah 55:11

Dr. Peter Hammond

www.FrontlineMissionSA.org

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started