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Wednesday, July 09, 2008

  • article I've written for our next church newsletter

    Grateful for Grace Ordered Steps

    This month, we are delighted to introduce you to Jon and Kelly S*.  They have been attending G*C*C* for about a year, now.  Perhaps you’ve noticed a recent opportunity presented by the Shower Basket Ministry to rejoice with them by way of giving to them as they look forward with eager expectation to the arrival of their first child in September!

    Jon and Kelly met at C* where both were students a few years ago.  Jon, the middle child of three, hails originally from B*C*.  He was attending C*on a soccer scholarship when during his freshman year, he felt the conviction of the Lord concerning his sin and need for salvation.  He is grateful for the Lord’s perfect wisdom in ordering his steps so that at just the right time, Christ was more clearly revealed to him, and he was saved.  Please pray with Jon and Kelly for Jon’s parents who, while professing to be believers, have not attended any church for many years and exhibit little to no evidence of the “abundant life” to which Christ saves us.

    Kelly transferred to C* having started her college career at Ce*, in Ohio.  She looks back and sees the Lord’s hand in the decisions that led her, ultimately, to where she is now.  “It’s so amazing to see how God has worked everything out at each step along the way!”  Kelly and her brother had grown up with the Gospel, having attended church regularly with their mom.  Ultimately, it was the dynamic teaching of the speaker at a youth group retreat during her high school years through which Christ made himself known to Kelly, and her own relationship with God by faith began.  While her dad has remained supportive of their faith, he was and is not yet persuaded to entrust himself to Christ.  Please pray that the Lord will intervene and open his eyes to his need for salvation by God’s grace.

    Jon and Kelly are members of the Young Marrieds class which meets during Sunday’s Bible study hour, and were delighted to get actively involved with the Wednesday night Bible studies this past year.  They have especially appreciated the open and firm commitment they have witnessed at GCC to the teaching of and living faithfully by the Word of God.

    Please take a moment to introduce yourselves to Jon and Kelly S*!  Let us commit to pray for them as they prepare for the arrival of their Little One, and as they also look for opportunities to be living witnesses of God’s grace to their families.  Please also pray for Kelly as she continues to work as an office manager for a local doctor’s office, and for Jon as he works diligently both for A*S* and his MBA.  They desire the Lord’s continuing wisdom and direction, and look forward to growing in their relationships here, with our “community of Grace.”

Tuesday, July 08, 2008

  • Currently Watching
    Sola Scriptura & Beyond (2pc)
    By Neal Morse
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    "All the days of my trouble - I will wait for my change...."

    OUR LIFE, OUR WORK, OUR CHANGE

    No. 764. Delivered on August 4th, 1867,
    By C. H. Spurgeon, at the Metropolitan Tabernacle

    "All the days of my appointed time will I wait, until my change comes." Job 14:14.

    Job was well near driven to desperation by the fearful torment of his bodily pains, by the exasperating remarks of his friends, and the cutting suggestion of his wife. It is no wonder if he became somewhat impatient. Never were words of complaint more excusable than in the sad case of Job when he cried, "O that you would hide me in the grave!" Everything that could make life bearable had been taken from him, and every evil which could make death desirable came upon him. Yet, after Job had uttered those exclamations, he seems to have been half ashamed of his weakness, and girding up his loins, he argues with himself, reasoning his soul into a cooler, calmer frame. Job looks his life in the face: he perceives that his warfare is severe, but he remembers it is but once, and that when once over and the victory won, there will be no more fighting; and therefore he encourages himself to put up with his present sorrows, and even with future evils, be they what they may, and registers this solemn resolution—far more glorious than the resolve of Alexander to conquer the world—to conquer himself, and to abide with patience the will of God. He fixed it steadfastly in his heart, that all his appointed days until a change should come, he would endure the divine decree with constancy of resignation.

    None among us can afford to cast a stone at the patriarch for sighing and complaining, for we would not act one half so well ourselves. We are too much at times like Jonah; we turn cowards, and would fain flee from our work when it becomes arduous or yields us no honor. If we do not seek a ship to convey us to Tarshish, we sigh for a seraph to bear us to heaven. This huge Nineveh has made most of us quail in times of depression. I fear that frequently we act like lineal descendants of those children of Ephraim who, being armed and carrying bows, turned back in the day of battle. We shrink as a bone out of joint, which slips aside under pressure. We are not only like Jacob, who halted upon one thigh, but we limp upon both legs at times. We are often disinclined for conflict, and pine for rest, crying, "When will the day be over? When shall we be perfectly at ease? It is against such a spirit as this that we must struggle; and to help us in the struggle, it seemed to me to be good to consider the text now before us; and to that end may God bless it, that we maybe "steadfast, unmovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord." "All the days of my appointed time will I wait, until my change comes." We shall call your attention this morning, first, to the aspect of life which Job gives us; secondly, to his estimate of our work; and thirdly, to his view of the future.

    I. First, let us observe THE ASPECT UNDER WHICH JOB REGARDED THIS MORTAL LIFE. He calls it an "appointed time," or, as the Hebrew has it, "a warfare." Observe that Job styles our life a time. Blessed be God, that this present state is not an eternity! What though its conflicts may seem long, they must have an end. We are in the finite state at present, in which all grief's have their closes and conclusions. Long as the night may last, it must yield in due season to the light of the morning. The winter may drag its weary length along, but the spring is hard upon its heels; the tide may ebb out until nothing remains but leagues of mud, and we lament that all the bright blue deep will vanish, but it is not so, the tide must flow again, for God has so decreed. Our whole life is brief indeed. Compared with eternity, a mere span, a hand's-breadth. From the summits of eternity, how like a flying moment will this transient life appear. The pains of this mortal life will seem to be a mere pin's-prick to us when we get into the joys never ending and overflowing. And the toils of this life will be as child's play when we reach the everlasting rest. Let us then, my brethren, judge immortal judgment; lets us not weigh our troubles in the ill-adjusted scales of this poor human life, but let us use the shekel of eternity. We are born for eternity; and although it is true we have to struggle through this one brief hour of toil and conflict, an hour with our God in glory will make up for it all. "I reckon," said that master of heavenly arithmetic, the apostle Paul, who was never wrong in his reckoning, "that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory, which shall be revealed in us." The longest and most sorrowful life is but a "time." Whisper that simple truth into the ear of the languishing sufferer; tell this glad truth to the son of sorrow, poor and despised; tell it to every daughter of grief, life is but a time; it is not eternity. O mourner, contrast your present sorrows with the griefs of lost spirits, to whom there is no time—who are cast away forever—who cannot expect a termination to their bitter grief's, but who see this word written in letters of fire before their weeping eyes, "Forever! forever! forever! forever!" Job also calls our life an "appointed" time. You know who appointed your days. You did not appoint them for yourself, and therefore you can have no regrets about the appointment. Neither did Satan appoint it, for the keys of hell and of death do not hang at his girdle.

    "An angel's arm can't cast me to the grave,
    Millions of angels cannot keep me there."

    To the almighty God belong the issues of death! He alone can speak the irrevocable word, and bid the spirit return to God who gave it. God, alone can wing the arrow that shall end this mortal existence: until he puts his hand to the bow, all the archers of earth and hell shall shoot in vain. Our pilgrimage has an appointed beginning and end. In yonder hour-glass, which measures your existence, the sands which trickle to the lower globe were all measured into the upper bulb by the divine hand. There is not a sand too few, nor a grain too many. You shall find that God has appointed with exact wisdom, with profound knowledge, and with irreproachable love, all the days and the doings of your life. Remember that you will live out, but not outlive your allotted years. You will live up to the last minute, and neither plagues, nor pestilence's, nor dangers of flood, or field, or battle, can deprive you of the last second which God has measured out to you.

    But beyond that boundary you shall not pass, though you take great care, and call in the physician, yet can you not add an inch of time to your determined termination. Inexorable death will make no tarrying, but perform his errand promptly when the Master sends him. "Then to the dust, return you must—Without delay."

    Should not this cheer us—that the appointment of our lot has been made by a loving Father's prudence, and that the days and bounds of our habitation are not left to the winds of chance or to the waves of uncertainty, but are all decreed immutably by our Father who is in heaven. In the volume of the book our life-story is written—in that same volume wherein the Savior's covenant engagements were recorded. You will observe, dear friends, also that Job very wisely speaks of the "days" of our appointed time. It is a prudent thing to forbear the burden of life as a whole, and learn to bear it in the parcels into which providence has divided it. Let us live as life comes, namely, by the day. Our God does not trust us with so much life as a month at once—we live as the clock ticks, a second at a time. Is not that a wiser method of living rather than to perplex our heads by living by the month, or by the year? You have no promise for the year: the word of mercy runs, "As your days so your strength shall be." You are not commanded to pray for supplies by the year, but, "Give us this day our daily bread."

    Said a good man to me the other day who had many troubles, who has borne them manfully to my knowledge, for these fifteen or twenty years, when I asked him how his patience had held out—"Ah," said he, "I said to my afflicted wife the other day, when the coals come in, it takes several big fellows to bring in the sacks, but yet our little kitchen-maid Mary, has brought the whole ton up from the cellar into our parlour; but she has done it a bucket-full at a time. She has as surely moved those tons of coal as ever did the wagons when they brought them in, but she has moved them by little and little, and done it easily." This is how to bear the troubles of life, a day's portion at a time. Wave by wave our trials come, and let us breast them one by one, and not attempt to buffet the whole ocean's billows at once. Let us stand as the brave old Spartan did, in the arena of the day, and fight the Persians as they come on one by one, thus shall we keep our adversities at bay, and overcome them as they advance in single file. But let us not venture into the plain amidst the innumerable hordes of Persians, or we shall speedily be swallowed up, and our faith and patience will be overcome. I would fain live by the day, and work by the day, and suffer by the day, until all my days are over, and I see the Ancient of Days in that land where days are lost in one eternal day, and the soul swims in seas of joy forever!

    I must not fail to remind you of the Hebrew: "All the days of my warfare will I wait." Life is indeed a "warfare;" and just as a man enlists in our army for a term of years, and then his service runs out, and he is free, so every believer is enlisted in the service of life, to serve God until his enlistment is over, and we sleep in death. Our charge and our armor we shall put off together. Brethren, you are soldiers, enlisted when you believed in Jesus. Let me remind you that you are a soldier, you will be always at war, you will never have a furlough or conclude a treaty. Like the old knights who slept in their armor, you will be attacked even in your rest.

    There is no part of the journey to heaven which is secure from the enemy, and no moment, not even the sweet rest of the Lord's-day, when the trumpet may not sound. Therefore, prepare yourselves always for the battle. "Put on the whole armor of God," and look upon life as a continued battle. Be surprised when you have not to fight; be wonderstruck when the world is peaceful towards you; be astonished when your old corruptions do not rise and assault you. You must travel with your swords always drawn, and you may as well throw away the scabbard, for you will never need it. You are a soldier who must always fight, and by the light of battle you must survey the whole of your life.

    Taking these thoughts together as Job's view of mortal life, what then? Why, beloved, it is but once, as we have already said—we shall serve our God on earth in striving after his glory but once. Let us carry out the engagements of our enlistment honorably. He who enters into Her Majesty's service for a term of years, if he be an honorable man, resolves that he will act worthily, so long as he is in the ranks. So let it be with us: we shall never enter upon another war; let us wage the present warfare gloriously. We carry in our hands a sword, we have but to use it in one great life-battle, and then it shall be hung up on the wall forever. Let us use our weapon well, that we may not have to resign it, rusty and dishonored, as a memorial of our disgrace. Let us march cheerily to the fight, since it is but once.

    Let us play the man, and be like David's mightiest, who feared no risks, but accepted deadly odds, and won and held their own against all comers. Come, beloved, we have an appointed time, and it is running out every hour, let us rejoice to see it go. Our Captain appointed it, he commanded us to stand sentry, or to rush into the front of the battle. Since the time is appointed by our well-beloved King, let us not dishonor his appointment, but in the name of him who gave us our commission to live and fight, let us war a good warfare, living at the highest bent of our force, and the utmost strength of our being. And since, dear friends, it is the Lord's war that we are engaged in, we are enlisted under the great Captain of our salvation, who leads us on to sure and certain victory, let us not be discouraged; let not our hearts fail us; let us be bold, courageous and strong, for the Lord our God is with us, and we have the mighty One of Israel to be our Captain. Let us glorify the grace of God while we are permitted to remain on earth to glorify it. Let us be up and at our enemies while there are enemies for us to fight. Let us carve out victory while we have the raw material of conflict to carve. There are no battles to be fought, and no victories to be won in heaven. So now, in this life let us resolve in the name and strength of God the Holy Spirit, with all our force and vigor to glorify God, who has appointed us our warfare. We now leave this head to turn to the second, and may God the Holy Spirit bless us in so doing.
     

    II. JOB'S VIEW OF OUR WORK while on earth is that we are to wait. "All the days of my appointed time will I wait." The word "wait" is very full of teaching. It contains the whole of the Christian life, if understood in all its various senses. Let us take up a few very briefly.

    In the first place, the Christian life should be one of waiting; that is, setting loose by all earthly things. Many travelers are among us this morning; they are passing from one town to another, viewing several countries; but if they are only travelers, and are soon to return to their homes, they do not speculate in the various businesses of Lombard Street or Cheapside. They do not attempt to buy large estates and lay them out, and make gold and silver thereby; they know that they are only strangers, and they act as such.

    They take such interest in the affairs of the country in which they are sojourning as may be becoming in those who are not citizens of it; they wish well to those among whom they sojourn and dwell; but that is all, for they are going home, therefore, they do not intend to bind themselves with anything that might make it difficult to part from our shores. They know that they are on the wing, and therefore they live like strangers and sojourners. As a Bedouin wandering across the desert, so is a Christian—a bird of passage; a voyager seeking the haven. This present world is not our rest: it is polluted. Sad thought were this world to be our home!

    The wisdom of the Christian is to disentangle himself as much as possible of the things of this life. He will act kindly towards the citizens of the country where he is called to dwell, and he will seek their good: still he will remember that he is not as they are. He is an alien among them! He may have to buy and sell in this world, but that is merely as a matter of transient convenience.

    He neither buys nor sells for eternity; for he has "bought the truth," and he "sells it not." He has received God to be his treasure, and his heart and his treasure too he has sent on ahead. On the other side of the river of death are all his joys and all his treasures to be found. Here he looks upon his earthly joys as things that are lent him—borrowed comforts. If his children die, he does not wonder: he knew that they were not immortal. If his friends are taken away, he is not astonished: he understood that they were born of women, and therefore would die like the rest. If his wealth takes to itself wings, he does not marvel: he knew that it was a bird of passage, and he is not astonished when, like the swallows, it flies elsewhere.

    He had long ago learned that the world is founded on the floods and therefore, when it moves beneath him, he understands that this is the normal state of things, and he is not at all amazed, but rather wonders that the world is not all panic and confusion, since it is so unsubstantial. As Samson shook the Philistine temple, so shall the word of the Lord in the hour of final doom lay all nature prone in one common ruin; and vain is he who boasts of his possessions where all is waiting to be overturned. Brethren, are you doing so?

    Some of you professors, I am afraid, are living as though this world was your rest. You do not wish to go home, do you? The nest is very comfortable: you have feathered it warmly. You have all that heart could wish. Here you would fain abide for ages. Ah! well, may this worldliness be cast out of you, and may you be seized with home-sickness, that sweet disease which every true patriot ought to have, an insatiable longing for his dear fatherland. Have you never heard of the Swiss soldiers in the French army, who would fall sick when they heard the music of the song which reminded them of their native mountains, with their chalets and peasants, and the cowboy's song? Ill could they rest in sunny France, when their hearts were among Helvetia's rugged hills. Are there no sweet songs of Zion which remind you of that blessed land where our best friends, our kindred dwell, where God our Savior reigns? If we are true citizens of the New Jerusalem, we shall long for that fair country, the home of the elect.

    "Ah! then my spirit faints
    To reach the land I love,
    The bright inheritance of saints,
    Jerusalem above."

    It is your duty, Christian, and your privilege, to set loose by the things of earth, and say with Job, "All the days of my appointed time I will wait"-like a mere waiter—"until my change come."

    A second meaning of the text, however, is this: we must wait expecting to be gone—expecting daily and hourly to be summoned by our Lord. The proper and healthy estate of a Christian is to be anticipating the hour of his departure as near at hand. I have observed a great readiness to depart in many dying saints, but the same readiness ought to characterize living saints also. Our dear friend, Mr. James Smith, whom some of you remember as preaching the word at Park Street, and afterwards at Cheltenham, when I saw him, some little while before his departure, described himself thus: "You have seen a passenger that has gone to the station, taken his ticket, all his luggage brought in, all packed up, strapped, directed; and you have seen him sitting with his ticket in his hand waiting until the train comes up." That, said he, "is exactly my condition. I am ready to go as soon as my heavenly Father pleases to come for me." And is not that how we should always live-waiting for the Lord's appearing?

    Whitefield used to say, of his well-known order and regularity, "I like to go to bed feeling that if I were to die tonight, there is not so much as a pair of my gloves out of their proper place." No Christian man ought to live without having his will made, and his estate put in proper condition, in case he should die suddenly. That hint may be useful to some of you who have neglected to set your house in order. No Christian man should live expecting to live another day. You cannot reckon upon an hour. You should rather be so ready, that if you were to walk out of this tabernacle and fall down dead upon the steps, it would not make any derangement in your affairs, because you are equally ready for life or death. One of our beloved sisters this week was walking down Paternoster Row: her mourning friends sit here, but they have no cause to mourn sudden faintness came over her: she was taken into a shop, and water was offered to her, but she could not drink; no, she was already drinking of the water of the river of life that flows from the throne of God and of the Lamb. In a moment she closed her eyes to the sorrows of earth, and she opened them to the joys of heaven.

    When we visit the graves of those who have died in Christ, we ought not to weep for them; or, if we weep at all it should be with the regret that we are not yet admitted to the same reward. To "die daily" is the business of Christians. It is greatly wise to talk with our last hours, to make ourselves familiar with the grave. Our venerable forefathers had a peculiar habit of placing on the dressing-table a death's head, as a memento—either a real skull, or else an ornament fashioned in the form of it—to remind them of their end; yet, so far as I can gather, they were happy men and happy women, and none the less so because they familiarized themselves with death. A genuine Puritan, perhaps, never lived a day without considering the time when he should put off the garments of clay, and enter into rest; and these were the happiest and holiest of people, while this thoughtless generation, which banishes the thought of dying, is wretched with all its hollow pretense of mirth. I exhort you, brethren, wait! wait ever for the trumpet call! Live as looking for the Lord to come and take you from this mortal state, waiting for the convoy of angels to waft you to the city of the blessed, in the land of the hereafter.

    Nor is this all. Waiting means enduring with patience. We are put into this world for one appointed time of suffering, and in sacred patience we must abide steadfast, the heat of the furnace. The life of many Christians is a long martyrdom: they are patiently to bear it. "Here is the patience of the saints." Many believers go from one sickness to another, from one loss to another; but herein they fulfill their life's design, if through abundant grace they learn to bear their woes without a murmur, and to wait their appointed time without repining.

    Serving is also another kind of waiting. The Lord Jesus gives us plain directions as to service in the parable recorded in the seventeenth of Luke: "But which of you, having a servant plowing or feeding cattle, will say unto him by and by, when he is come from the field, go and sit down to eat? And will not rather say unto him, make ready wherewith I may dine, and gird yourself and serve me, until I have eaten and drunken; and afterwards you shall eat and drink?" In this world we are to wait upon the Lord Jesus, running his errands, nursing his children, feeding his lambs, fighting his foes, repairing the walls of his vineyard, doing anything and everything which he may please to give to us. And mark you, this is to be attended with perseverance, for Job says, "All the days of my appointed time will I wait."

    He would not be a servant sometimes, and then skulk home in idleness at another season, as if his term of service were ended. Every saint should say, "I will wait upon you, my God, as long as I live; so long as I have breath to draw, it shall be spent for you. So long as I have life to spend here below, I will spend it and be spent in your service." This should be the spirit of the Christian all his days, to his last day. Waiting still, like a holy man of God among the American Indians, who, when he lay dying, was observed to be teaching a poor little Indian to read his letters, and he said, "What a mercy, now I am laid aside from preaching, that I can teach this poor little child to read his letters; God has still something for me to do, and my prayer is, that I may not live an hour after I cannot do anything for Christ." May we be in just such a state of heart. Moreover, to close this aspect of Christian life, we should be desirous to be called home. No Christian ought to desire to go out of the field of battle until the victory is won, nor to leave the field until the plough has gone up to the headland for the last time, but still he may desire to be at home, and must desire it because of the love which he bears his Lord. I cannot understand you if you do not sometimes sing that hymn—

    My heart is with him on his throne,
    And ill can brook delay;
    Each moment listening for the voice,
    ‘Rise up, and come away.'

    Do you love your husband, wife, if you do not really wish to see him? Do you love your home, child, if you do not wish for the time when the school shall break up, and you shall leave for home? Oh! it is a weary world, even though our Lord makes it bearable by the sweet glimpses we get of him through the telescope of faith, when he throws the lattices aside and shows himself. Yet these sweets only cause us to long for more. I tell you, heavenly food on earth is a hunger-making thing; it makes you desire fresh supplies. You cannot sip from the waters of grace on earth without longing to lie down at the well-head and drink your full of glory. Do you ever have a heart-sickness after heaven? Do you ever feel the cords that bind you to Christ tugging at your heart-strings to draw you nearer? Oh, yes! You must feel this; and if you are mixing up these longings to be with Christ, these expectings to depart, with a patient endurance of the divine will, you have hit upon Job's true idea of life. May you not only have the idea, but carry it out practically; may all the saints do so to the praise and glory of divine grace.
     

    III. Now comes JOB'S ESTIMATE OF THE FUTURE. It is expressed in this word, "Until my change come." He refers to the two great changes which he views at one glance—the change of death when we shall "shuffle off this mortal coil.". and the change of resurrection when we shall put on our imperishable garments-shall be girt about with eternal gladness.

    Beloved, let it be observed that, in a certain sense, death and resurrection are not a change to a Christian: they are not a change as to his identity. The same man who lives here will live forever. The same saint who serves God on earth will wake up in the image of Christ, to serve him day and night in his temple, and that identity will exist, not only with regard to the soul, but the body; "My eyes shall see him and not another." These very eyes which have wept for sin, shall see the King in his beauty; and these hands which here have served the Lord, shall embrace him in his glory. Do not think that death will destroy the identity of the resurrection body: it will be as much the same as the full-blown flower is the same as the seed out of which it grew.

    There will be a mighty development, but it will still be the same, it is sown a natural body, and the same it is raised a spiritual body. There will also be to the regenerate no change as to his vitality. We are quickened now by the life of Christ, which is the same life that will quicken us in heaven; the incorruptible seed which lives and abides forever. "He that believes on the Son has everlasting life." He has it now—the same life which he is to live in heaven, where it will be more developed, more glorious, but still the same.

    There will be no difference in the Christian's object in life when he gets to heaven. He lives to serve God here: he will live for the same end and aim there. Here holiness is his delight; it shall be his delight there.

    And his occupation will not change either. He served his Master like a waiting-servant during his day on earth: he will be taken up to serve him day and night in his temple.

    And the Christian will not experience a very great change as to his companions. Here on earth the excellent of the earth are all his delight; Christ Jesus his Elder Brother abides with him; the Holy Spirit, the Comforter, is resident within him; he communes with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ. The fact is, heaven and earth to the Christian are the same house, only the one is the lower floor, and the other is the upper story; the one is so low and near the ground, that sometimes the water of trouble rushes into it, and the windows of the rooms below are so dark, that but a small degree of the light of heaven ever enters them, and the view is contracted; but the other rooms upstairs have a fair view, and the sun shines always through its windows, and it is furnished with a matchless skill; but still it is the same house. Heaven is thus but a slight change in some respects, yet it is a change, and we shall see that readily enough.

    To the Christian it will be a change of place. He will be away from the dull and coarse materialism of this defiled, sin-stricken earth, where thorns and thistles grow, and he will arrive at the place where the inhabitants shall no more say I am sick—the paradise of God, where flowers wither not. He will change his neighborhood. He is vexed here with the ungodly conversation of the wicked; he often finds his neighbors to be like the men of Sodom, exceeding vile; but there angels shall be fellow citizens with him, and he shall commune with the spirits of the just made perfect. No vain discourse shall vex his ear, no sin shall come before him to disgust his mind; he shall not be a stranger in a strange land, but a child at home.

    There, too, will be a great change as to his outward circumstances. No sweat will need to be wiped from his brow, no tear from his eye. There are no funeral knells to be heard in heaven; no open graves to be filled with the dead. In heaven there is no poverty, no proud man's scorn, no oppressor's heavy heel, no persecutor's fiery brand; but there "the wicked cease from troubling; and there the weary be at rest."

    Especially will it be a change to the Christian as to that which will be within him. No body of this death to hamper him; no infirmities to cramp him; no wandering thoughts to disturb his devotion; no birds to come down upon the sacrifice, needing to be driven away. As the body shall be free from the corruption which engenders death, so shall the soul be free from the corruption which engenders strife against the new law which is in the believer's members. He shall be perfectly free from sin! There will be this change too, that he will be delivered from that dog of hell who once howled in his ears: as the world will be afar off, and cannot tempt, so Satan will be afar off, and cannot molest. A change indeed it will be, in an especial manner, to some. Have you ever visited the hospital, and sat by the side of the poor Christian woman who has lain upon that bed for months—her hearing almost gone, her sight failing, scarcely able to breathe, palpitations of the heart, life a protracted agony? Oh! what a change from the bed of languishing to the throne of God! What a difference between that hospital, with its sounds of sickness and of sorrow, and yonder New Jerusalem and the shout of them that triumph, the song of them that feast!

    What an escape from the dying bed to the living glory—from the glazing eye, and the wasting frame, and the cold death-sweat, to the glory which excels, and the harps of angels, and the songs of the glorified! What a change, too, for some of the poor, for some of you sons of penury who are here this morning, from that hard work which scarcely knows a pause, from those weary fingers, and that flying needle, and that palpitating heart; from that sleep which gives but little rest, because the toil begins so soon that it seems to pervade and injure the sleep itself. What an exchange from that naked room, that unfurnished table! that cup which, so far from running over, you find it difficult to fill! from all those various pains and woes that penury is heir to, to the wealth and happiness of paradise!

    What a change for you, to the mansions of the blessed, and the crowns of immortality, and the company of the princes of the blood royal, with whom you shall dwell forever! And what a change, again, for the persecuted! I know how a father's angry word breaks your heart, and how a husband's cruel remarks grieve you; but you shall soon escape from it all. The jeer of the workshop sometimes reminds you of the cruel mockings you have often read of. What a change for you to be in sweet company, where friends shall cheer and make you glad! My brethren, what a leap it must have been for the martyrs, right away from their stakes to their thrones! What a change for the men who rotted in dungeons until the moss grew on their eyelids, to the immortal beauty of the fairest of the fair, midst the bright ones doubly bright! What a change!

    Right well, good patriarch, did you use the term, for it is the greatest of all changes. If you require a commentary upon this word "change," turn to the fifteenth chapter of the first epistle to the Corinthians, and read it through; we read it in your hearing just now. You will there see that all that needs to be changed, will be changed. All that must be changed to make the believer perfectly blessed, will be transformed and transfigured by the Master. If you desire a glimpse of what we shall be in heaven, remember the face of Moses when it glowed so that he covered it with a veil! remember Stephen's face when they looked upon him and saw as it were the face of an angel! remember our Lord transfigured until he was whiter than any fuller could make him! Those were transient gleams and glimpses of the beatific glory, which shall surround and environ every one of the blessed before long.

    My brethren, perhaps to you it will be a sudden change. Last Sunday our sister sat here; this Sunday she sits there in heaven. Others, too, have gone this week to their home. I suppose week by week about two in this congregation die almost as regularly as I come into this pulpit So you melt away one after the other, and you disappear; but blessed thought if, when you disappear, it is to shine forever in heaven! Well, let the change come suddenly. There is much to be envied in sudden death. I never could understand why it should be put in the litany, "From sudden death, good Lord deliver us." O brethren, sudden death may God send to us so long as we are but prepared, for then we miss the pain of sickness in the gradual breaking down of the frame. It must be desirable, a choice favor which God only gives to some of his peculiarly beloved ones: a thing to pray for, not to pray against. Well it may be sudden. There is this about it, however, that if we be in Christ, let it come suddenly, we are fully prepared, "For you are complete in him." "He that believes has everlasting life." "He that lives and believes in me shall never die." Death has lost all its terror to you who are in Christ.

    And there is one very sweet thought to my mind, and that though a change, it is the last change. Glory be to God, there will be no more of it, once changed into the likeness of Christ, and there will be no more changes, but immortality forever. "Forever with the Lord." We may well add—"Amen! so let it be." O you who have no hope in Jesus, death must be to you a gloomy thing indeed! It puts out your candle and leaves you forever in the dark. But you who have a good hope through grace, and have built your house upon the rock, you may joyfully look forward to the end of your appointed days, waiting until your change comes, blessing God that it will come in its appointed time, and that when it comes it will be a change for the better to you in all respects—a change which shall never be followed by another change, a change which shall make you like your Lord forever and ever! May God give his blessing! Amen!

     

Wednesday, July 02, 2008

  • Currently Listening
    Sola Scriptura
    By Neal Morse
    see related

    One of the "Big God" passages from Isaiah (ch. 40)


    One of the "Big God" passages from Isaiah (ch. 40)


    (Herald the good news!  BEHOLD YOUR GOD:
      At once GENTLE....and incomprehensible....we are utterly frail, and laid bare before Him; more vulnerable, but thus ultimately "safe" and preserved....renewed, strengthened!)

    Isaiah 40:1-14, 25, 27-31
    Comfort, comfort my people, says your God.
    Speak tenderly to Jerusalem,
       and cry to her
    that her warfare is ended,
       that her iniquity is pardoned,
    that she has received from the LORD’s hand
       double for all her sins.

    A voice cries: "In the wilderness prepare the way of the LORD;
       make straight in the desert a highway for our God.
    Every valley shall be lifted up,
       and every mountain and hill be made low;
    the uneven ground shall become level,
       and the rough places a plain.
    And the glory of the LORD shall be revealed,
       and all flesh shall see it together,
       for the mouth of the LORD has spoken."

    The Word of God Stands Forever
    A voice says, "Cry!"
       And I said, "What shall I cry?"
    All flesh is grass,
       and all its beauty is like the flower of the field.
    The grass withers, the flower fades
       when the breath of the LORD blows on it;
       surely the people are grass.
    The grass withers, the flower fades,
       but the word of our God will stand forever.

    Get you up to a high mountain,
       O Zion, herald of good news;
    lift up your voice with strength,
       O Jerusalem, herald of good news;
       lift it up, fear not;
    say to the cities of Judah,
       "Behold your God!"
    Behold, the Lord GOD comes with might,
       and his arm rules for him;
     behold, his reward is with him,
       and his recompense before him.
    He will tend his flock like a shepherd;
       he will gather the lambs in his arms;
     he will carry them in his bosom,
       and gently lead those that are with young.

    Who has measured the waters in the hollow of his hand
       and marked off the heavens with a span,
    enclosed the dust of the earth in a measure
       and weighed the mountains in scales
       and the hills in a balance?
    Who has measured the Spirit of the LORD,
       or what man shows him his counsel?
    Whom did he consult,
       and who made him understand?
    Who taught him the path of justice,
       and taught him knowledge,
       and showed him the way of understanding?

    .... To whom then will you compare me,
       that I should be like him? says the Holy One.

    ...Why do you say, O Jacob,
       and speak, O Israel,
    "My way is hidden from the LORD,
       and my right is disregarded by my God"?

    Have you not known? Have you not heard? 

    The LORD is the everlasting God,
       the Creator of the ends of the earth.
    He does not faint or grow weary;
       his understanding is unsearchable.
    He gives power to the faint,
       and to him who has no might he increases strength.
    Even youths shall faint and be weary,
       and young men shall fall exhausted;
    but they who wait for the LORD shall renew their strength;
       they shall mount up with wings like eagles;
    they shall run and not be weary;
       they shall walk and not faint.


    (Lord over the nations - HE turns the path of all politics and nations by the power of HIS will and might)

    Isaiah 40:15-17, 21-24, 26
    Behold, the nations are like a drop from a bucket,
       and are accounted as the dust on the scales;
       behold, he takes up the coastlands like fine dust.
    Lebanon would not suffice for fuel,
       nor are its beasts enough for a burnt offering.
    All the nations are as nothing before him,
       they are accounted by him as less than nothing and emptiness.....

    Do you not know? Do you not hear?
       Has it not been told you from the beginning?
       Have you not understood from the foundations of the earth?
    It is he who sits above the circle of the earth,
       and its inhabitants are like grasshoppers;
     who stretches out the heavens like a curtain,
       and spreads them like a tent to dwell in;
    who brings princes to nothing,
       and makes the rulers of the earth as emptiness.

    Scarcely are they planted, scarcely sown,
       scarcely has their stem taken root in the earth,
    when he blows on them, and they wither,
     and the tempest carries them off like stubble.

    ...Lift up your eyes on high and see:
       who created these [stars]?
    He who brings out their [starry] host by number,
       calling them all by name,
    by the greatness of his might,
       and because he is strong in power
       not one is missing....

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

  • Currently Listening
    My Island
    By Starflyer 59
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    "self-counseling project" - Questions

     

    "self-counseling project" - Questions

     

    · what were/are the (potential) thorns that were/could-have-been produced by the situation?

    · what was I believing?

    · what was I worshipping?

    · what was I craving?

    · what does the Lord have to say to ME with regards to this situation?

    · is there anything of which I need to repent?

    · what could I have done differently?

    · what was or could/should have been the good fruit produced by the situation?

     

     

Monday, June 09, 2008

  • Currently Listening
    The Wake of Magellan
    By Savatage
    see related

    "self-counseling project" --> My Verbose Nature

     

    I have been meeting with the woman who is my mentor/discipler for over a year, nearly 18 months, now.  She happens to also be taking some classes thru a distance learning program with CCEF (click HERE), and one of her assignments this past semester was to do a "self-counseling project."  Aside from the obvious benefits of using yourself as a "test subject" in this kind of endeavor before you are actually engaging with another human being, the intent here is to follow the biblical injunction to "examine yourself" and/or to "not think more highly of yourself than you ought" but rather with "sober judgment"....etc.  Not to be confused with naval-gazing which is wildly popular, it seems, in virtually all world religions/spiritualities, this is an intentional application of Scripture to one area of your life - to examine yourself in the Psalm 139 sense, prayerfully, and specifically with the desire and goal of rooting out sin.

    I am now the "happy beneficiary" of my mentor's endeavors as she is beginning to have me go through this same process. 

    "self-counseling project" --> My Verbose Nature

    A recurrent theme has emerged in our talks over these past 18 months, and it resurfaced again in our last meeting (last Thursday), this self-consciousness-come-conviction concerning what I refer to as "my verbose nature."  This is not merely a "woe is me" kind of story.  There is much evidence over the course of my life to suggest that I just plain talk too much, too quickly, too loudly, too often, to too many people about too much stuff....More recently (and I may have remarked on it even here or on Facebook in recent months?), as the result of a very painful ending to a friendship, my brother made a comment that stuck with me, and seems to be just the right "color" to depict my ongoing awareness of the problem.  He (Zachry) said something to the effect of borrowing from the Nativity story in which Scripture says of Mary that she "treasured up all these things and pondered them in her heart" and synthesizing that word picture with the notion of precisely what it means for a woman (in particular) to cultivate within herself that "quiet and gentle spirit which is precious in the sight of the Lord."  Zach kindly but firmly suggested that this was what I needed to do - especially in light of the particular situation we were discussing.  But I've since come to grab on to that truth as a necessary one by which to learn to navigate my life....and in discussing more in this same theme with my mentor, she readily suggested I apply this "self-counseling" technique to this aspect of my life.

    So, I am now doing data-gathering homework.  In fact, I need to go home tonight and start to journal in earnest - I have (5) incidents that I have noted over the past few days (there are likely many more that I either didn't notice or didn't think to note down to bring to my recollection later) in which my speech did not conform to the biblical pattern (a very helpful guide is 1 Cor. 13).  And the goal is for me to identify, in each situation, what "thorns" (a) were produced as a result of what was said (versus what "good fruit" (b) might otherwise have been produced), and how that reveals what, in each situation, I was first believing (identifying the lie the precipitated the sinful behavior because all behavior begins in the mind), second worshipping (ascribing value to, very likely in place of God), and third craving (as in - identifying, perhaps, an idol of my heart).

    1.  What was I believing?

    2.  What was I worshipping?

    3.  What was I craving?

    I am to journal on these questions each time I make note of a time in which I am not exhibiting godly speech.  The intent, at this stage, is (I assume) to bring to my conscious awareness not only THAT my speech is ungodly, but to help identify the erroneous fountain of thought from which my speech has sprung.  Already I am finding the old wisdom of thinking before one speaks to be largely absent in my life!  This is surprising to me in one respect - because I typically think I am speaking to share and/or engage in further THOUGHT on a given topic!  And instead what I am already finding is that it is more often than not true that I am talking to hear myself talk....(This has been an accusation leveled against me many a time by many a person, and I have not received it in a spirit of humility.  The result, as I realize this is all too often true, is a rather grave humility, and the fear of opening my mouth ever again!  But there - do you see?  Even in that, I am believing/worshipping/craving something, no?  At least craving that I be thought well of by others....can we say "fear of man issues"....So I must keep this "naval gazing" in submission to the Word, and pray for grace as I proceed.)

    Intentionality. 

    My favorite word.....Now, I am endeavoring to apply it to my life.  :)  Intentionally. 

    At least this promises to be a fruitful exercise.  It's the first time in all the months I've been meeting with my mentor that I can honestly say I am ready to undertake this project.  (That is, I'm "emotionally stable" enough to withstand the whirlwind of other-worldly accusation which seems to flood my soul.)  In truth, I can only ask the Lord to be merciful.

Philotheosopher

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    • Name: Leah
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About Me

  • Loves: My Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, through whom is salvation alone by grace alone through faith alone. Deeply thoughtful conversation and my relationships with friends and family. Music. Journalling. Movies. Walking in the newness of life, and growing in my dependence on the power of the Holy Spirit. :) Want to know more? Just ask me! :)

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