tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-40866681384933468442024-03-13T14:33:33.180-04:00In Others WordsQuotations that try to touch upon the subtle wonders of the Good NewsUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger306125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086668138493346844.post-29464301552624459332017-10-28T09:01:00.002-04:002017-10-28T09:05:08.984-04:00Assurance<br />
"It is when I look away from myself to Christ that I find my assurance."<br />
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- Alistair Begg<br />
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Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086668138493346844.post-34357638264297401172016-09-10T21:53:00.000-04:002016-09-10T22:00:37.867-04:00Nothing you do will make you Holy to God<div class="tr_bq">
Audio: 1 min. 37 sec.</div>
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You know, as clear as these words are, if you have read them like I did much of my life, <b>we will miss the point</b>.<br />
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Now here's Paul's take, what he intends to say: </blockquote>
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I appeal to you brothers by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, Holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship.<br />
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Now, I just read you exactly what the words say. I must tell you, deep into my adulthood, it's not what my ears heard. What did I hear? Despite what the words say, here's what I heard: </blockquote>
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I urge you therefore brothers, by the mercy of God, to offer your bodies as living sacrifices, and then you'll be Holy and acceptable to God, which is your reasonable act of worship. </blockquote>
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Is that what it says? That's not what it says, <b>but isn't it what you often hear</b>. You be a good living sacrifice, and then you'll be acceptable to God. </blockquote>
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You know, the word "Holy" should have been a cue. <b>Nothing you are going to do is going to make you Holy to God</b>. What makes you Holy to God? It's not your performance. We know our weaknesses. We know our sin. We know our failures. So how can we possibly be Holy to God? <b>In view of God's mercy</b>. There was one who provided for us what we could not provide for ourselves.</blockquote>
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--Bryan Chapell<br />
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Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086668138493346844.post-79915822358789818572016-05-07T21:42:00.001-04:002016-05-07T21:42:44.140-04:00What we give up, and what we secure<br />
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Dear E.,<br />
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Here are some thoughts on two qualities of the christian life:<br />
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<b>1. Giving up what needs to be given up.</b><br />
<b>2. Securing what needs to be secured.</b><br />
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First, regarding giving up what needs to be given up:<br />
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Yes, it is true. The one who trusts all to Jesus gives up himself, but not as an offering found in himself, as though coming up with a form of payment in order to receive something in return. Rather, he surrenders all because, in Christ, he <b>has come to the end of himself</b>. His hands are now empty. If he is to find life, he must <b>receive</b> it as a gift - without money, and without price.<br />
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On an imperfect, human scale, consider the nature of your union with your future husband. In joining yourself to him, you will vow to "forsake all others". Allow this word, "forsake", to have its full weight. You will renounce, abandon, relinquish, dispense with, disown, discard, give up, jettison, and do away with all that threatens to come between you and your beloved. You will make this vow because you have come to the end of a previous way of life, to a life that now cherishes (and is bound to) someone "other". <b>This forsaking will not make it "hard" to love</b>. It is not a burden or "hardship" that you bring to the alter as the cost of holy matrimony. It is the fruit of your love for your husband, a love ready to bear all things, believe all things, hope all things, and endure all things. What you receive as a gift casts out fear. Without fear, lies lose their grip on you. And the truth sets you free - free to give up yourself.<br />
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You see, it is God's loving kindness that leads us to repentance, not the calculation of costs and benefits. I do not forsake in order to find. Like the bride and groom, <b>I forsake because of what I have found</b>. I forsake because I once was lost, but now AM found.<br />
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Make no mistake, your life "from this day forth" in Christ will be a life of repentance. Is this life of repentance, this life of forsaking, going to be a life of ease or self centered gain? Of course not. There is real hardship that lies in store. But your strength and assurance will lie, not in treating the hardship as payment for a reward, but in understanding hardship as <b>the first part of a promise</b> -- "In the world you shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world." ... "These things I have spoken unto you, that in me you might have peace." (Jn 16:33) It is through His promises that you will look back and say, "His yoke is easy, and His burden light."<br />
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Second, regarding securing what needs to be secured:<br />
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Here I will be brief but no less urgent. I've already hinted at this most vital truth: <b>We do not forsake in order to secure</b>. So what does securing the promises of Jesus look like?<br />
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The marriage analogy may break down here, but I'll trust you to apply it to the one who first loved us, and made us alive while we were yet sinners with no strength to contribute and no merit to bring to the alter.<br />
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What will it take to secure the love of your husband? Understand when I say that <b>you will do NOTHING to secure his love</b>. Securing his love will not depend on the quality of your sacrifice to him. The security of his love for you rests on <b>a quality of who he is</b>, not who you are.<br />
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For the bride, the "true faith" question, then, becomes this... Does she trust HIM that the promises he has made, (to love and provide for her always), are secure, apart from anything she can bring?<br />
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If faith is "hard", it is because, when faced with this standard, where <b>the adequacy of our savior puts an end to any adequacy in us</b>, we of ourselves can't even come up with a mustard-seed sized portion of this kind of trust. Faith of this nature is a gift from God.</blockquote>
<br />Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086668138493346844.post-52499457178700857172016-04-24T15:03:00.001-04:002016-04-24T15:09:38.595-04:00Seeing the Gospel for what it is: Good News.<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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When we speak of evangelism, what we're really talking about, you could say, is good-news-ism. Now, here's the funny thing to me. It's generally not difficult to tell somebody good news, right? So why is it, then, if Jesus is good news, why is it difficult for us to tell people about Jesus? And the only reason for this is that <b>I don't think that we're really seeing the gospel for what it is, that it is good news</b>.<br />
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Evangelism is often equated with trying to get them to believe the way that you believe, to try to get them to do what you want them to do. It's trying to sell them something that they don't want, manipulating others, maybe even deceiving others into your way of thinking, your way of acting.<br />
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Our effectiveness in evangelism and ministry does not originate in our cleverness, our methods, our hard work, but in the one who calls us to this task. When you really come to know the gospel as good news, when it's no longer like, "ahh I've got to be a christian, I've got to be a good little boy or girl." And it's no longer this guilt trip sort of a thing. As a matter of fact you realize this isn't a guilt trip, this is the end of guilt, right? It's transformative, and you want to tell others about it.<br />
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But here's the problem. <b>The battle is always about being blinded to the natural beauty of the gospel</b>, whether for yourselves, or the people that you're trying to tell that gospel to. And maybe this blindness is from your own perspective because of false ideas that you have of the gospel, or maybe it's because you're not in a church where <b>the radical freeness of salvation</b> of Christ, the absolute riches of Christ's grace, are being lavishly unpacked week after week.<br />
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Maybe that's it, and all you're hearing is just <b>one more thing I've got to do, one more thing I've got to be</b>. But this is good news. Jesus isn't trying to sell you anything.<br />
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Richard Halverson, he was the chaplain of the United States senate, he put it this way. He said... Evangelism is not salesmanship. It's not urging people, pressuring them, coercing them, overwhelming them, or subduing them. Evangelism is telling a message. Evangelism is reporting good news.<br />
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<br />Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086668138493346844.post-38147959579396866432016-04-03T21:55:00.002-04:002016-04-07T03:32:49.435-04:00By Faith Alone ... But?<br />
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<blockquote class="tr_bq">
"You may receive forgiveness -- if you have sufficiently forsaken sin." </blockquote>
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
"You may know the message of grace -- if you have experienced a sufficient degree of conviction of sin."</blockquote>
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. . . But this was to put the cart before the horse and <b>turn the message of the gospel on its head</b>. For whenever we make the warrant to believe in Christ to any degree <b>dependent upon our subjective condition</b>, we distort it. Repentance, turning from sin, and degrees of conviction of sin do <u>not</u> constitute <b>the grounds on which Christ is offered to us</b>.<br />
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Neither conviction nor the forsaking of sin constitutes the warrant for the gospel offer. <b>Christ himself is the warrant</b>, since he is able to save all who come to him. He is offered without conditions. We are to go straight to him! It is not necessary to have any money in order to be able to buy Christ.<br />
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-- Sinclair Ferguson<br />
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The Whole Christ: Legalism, Antinomianism, and Gospel Assurance—Why the Marrow Controversy Still Matters<br />
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<br />Unknownnoreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086668138493346844.post-43635221257839128492016-02-13T13:43:00.001-05:002016-04-05T20:09:10.749-04:00Faith's implications? Believing + "what must I do"?I've heard it said that you can't have faith in Christ without accepting that faith has certain "implications". There's believing, and then there is believing "in a saving way". There are implications in play, such that any sin, left unchecked, is an occasion for stumbling and falling away. <br />
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It sounds something like this:<br />
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Audio: 3 min. 35 sec. <br />
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This is the gospel in its most distilled and pure form ... Christ dies for our sins, Christ rises from the grave victorious. This is what has to be believed. This is the gospel of free grace, it's the offer God's making to the world. And it's received by faith alone.<br />
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<b style="text-decoration: underline;">But</b> you have to understand ... it's received by faith, but it's not believed in a saving way merely by accepting that assertion as factually true. You can believe that Jesus said this, and <b>you can believe that Jesus did this without believing in a saving way</b>.<br />
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And this is what Jesus proceeds to flesh out. He shows the implications that must also be accepted. You know what I mean. You understand. Implications ... You enter into something, you accept all the implications that come with it. Implications are things that necessarily flow, they necessarily follow. Jesus is laboring to make things plain. He wants those <b>implications to be in play</b> as He calls them to faith because He knows there's no true faith without the embrace of true faith's implications.<br />
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So I'm wondering about you this morning. Are you embracing the implications of the faith that Christ calls you to? As a christian have you gotten confused to think that you can have faith in Christ without accepting faith's implications.<br />
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Jesus sat them down and He taught them about one of the necessary implications of faith ... it's an implication of lowliness. He said if you want to be first you have to be last, and you have to be the servant of all. Disciples, if they would believe, must become lowly, they must become humble, they must become servants.<br />
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Stumbling is appearing to embrace the path of life, only to fall off of it at some point. Stumbling is going to hell. He's showing us that unbelief stumbles. It might look like faith but it stumbles, and He says don't stumble. <b>Do anything you have to do</b> not to stumble.<br />
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Jesus put sacrifice (did you catch it) over against stumbling. <b>Either sacrifice or stumble</b>. What sacrifices are we talking about? Any sin, left unchecked, is <b>an occasion for stumbling</b>, for falling away.<br />
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Maybe your pet sin is drinking too much. You just ease into it and then you kind of glide over the line from a sanctified use to an unholy use of the substance. You start down that <b>slippery slope</b>. Is it a sin to have a hobby like golfing or hunting or playing cards? Of course it's not. Is it a sin to travel? No. But can pursuing those things as priorities temp you to stumble away from the pursuit of the kingdom as the only thing that matters? Yes it can. The last pet I'm going to point out is pet worries. You may have never considered that your pet <b>worries can also provide the occasion to stumble away from the gospel</b>. So long as you feed and care for a pet worry, you're engaging in a temptation to unbelief that's on the <b>slippery slope of stumbling</b>.</blockquote>
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Two other perspectives to consider:<br />
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Audio: 3 min. 17 sec. <br />
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So the question of course is: If you were to die tonight, and you were to stand before God in His heaven, and He were to say to you, "Why should I let you in?" What would you say? Paul gives the answer...<br />
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"For by grace you have been saved, through faith. And this is not your own doing. It is the gift of God, not a result of works, so that no one may boast." And so the claim here is of a profound gift.<br />
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...It's almost as though this faith is the channel, or the canal, by which grace itself travels. The faith and the grace are the gift of God -- now think of what that means. It means I'm never going to stand before God and say, God, my faith is sufficient -- I have enough of it, or it's strong enough or it's adequate quality -- I've got enough of this faith thing.<br />
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Instead faith is <b><span style="font-size: large;">entirely confidence in another</span></b>. It's what pushes us away from any confidence in self. It's faith in what He provides, so that we begin to recognize, if this faith is the channel, that every trial, every disappointment, every confession of weakness, every acknowledgement of sin, is God's working in our lives, digging this canal in our hearts, saying "it's not you", "it's not you", "it's not you". So that ultimately in that emptiness of trust in us, we are ready for the freight that's going down the canal.<br />
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And the freight that's going down the canal is God's grace. I have to provide for you what you cannot provide for yourself. Faith is <b>not so much something we build in ourselves</b>. It's an emptying of ourselves. It's ultimately saying <b>there's nothing in me</b>. I rely entirely upon God. In the historic christian statements, <b>faith is receiving and resting upon Christ</b> alone for our salvation.<br />
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<b>It's not trust in my faith.</b> It's not trust in my belief. You know, that's that trap. Do you understand that? That's the trap -- that we will forever go through our lives saying alright, do I have enough of this faith thing? Do I have sufficient quality or quantity of it? Instead of saying, no, listen, my faith is that God provides everything I need. I'm just collapsing upon Christ. I'm not looking to something in me.<br />
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So if you were to stand before God and His heaven, and He were to say to you, why should I let you in? What would you say? "God I'm just your workmanship. You made me right through Jesus. Nothing in me. Not my works, not my wisdom, not my strength. None of that. <b>Not even the strength of my faith. I just rest on you</b>." And the wonder of that is that that is now the canal that the grace that is life travels on.</blockquote>
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We are very uncomfortable with the freeness of that gospel of grace. But unless you get that freeness, you'll never be able to understand the power the gospel. You'll never be able to understand the power of love. </blockquote>
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<b>The freer the gospel, the more sanctifying is the gospel</b>. And the more that it is received as a doctrine of grace, the more it will be felt as a doctrine according to godliness. This is absolutely, utterly counter-intuitive. You would think that the more the gospel came at you and said:<br />
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You better do these things. You better be a godly person. You better start obeying the law.<br />
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The more you would be motivated to do it. No. It's the exact opposite of that. The freer the gospel, the more sanctifying its force. The more gracious the gospel, the more a power for godliness it is in our life. In the gospel (he goes on), we so behold God, as we may love God. It is there, and there only, where God stands revealed as an object of <b>confidence to sinners</b>. And where our desire after Him is not chilled by the barrier of human guilt.<br />
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That very peculiararity, which so many dread as the germ of antinomianism, that is, lawlessness ... You know, that idea where we can preach grace, we can preach the grace of the gospel, but you still need to tell people [that] they've got to be good people, or ... you won't be as good a christian as other christians if you're not (you know) living up to all these standards and keeping up with all these things. </blockquote>
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No, Absolutely not. You can't even begin to really obey the law until you have no fear of punishment from the law.</blockquote>
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<br />Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086668138493346844.post-80529539731626179372016-01-23T08:48:00.000-05:002016-01-23T08:54:58.443-05:00Is Christ's death an "offer" of forgiveness? ... if conditions are met?I've heard it said that Jesus came to die, but only those who deny themselves, and identify with Him in cross-bearing, are the ones who receive his salvation.<br />
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The gospel: How unconditional should it be?<br />
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Audio: 2 min. 47 sec. (If audio does not show, click on the individual post title.)<br />
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<blockquote class="tr_bq">
Who is this God with whom we have to do? And what manner of God is He? Is He a God who comes to sinners lost and broken, <b>and brings to them conditions by which they may be saved?</b> Or is He a God who deals with men on the basis of free, unmerited, unearned grace?<br />
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You see the Pharisees preached that men could be saved if they met conditions. And <b>Jesus preached that He would save those who could meet no conditions</b>. Jesus' message was, "oh every one who thirsts come to the waters". And he who has no money, come buy and eat, come buy wine and milk without money and without price. Unconditional grace from an unconditional God.<br />
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You see, what had happened amongst these men, in the early decades of the 18th century, was this ... <b>They had mastered the pattern by which grace works</b>. They knew their confession of faith forwards and backwards and upside-down. And yet while they were familiar with the pattern by which grace works, and had mastered it, they had never really been mastered by the grace of God in the gospel, in their hearts.<br />
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Why is that so significant for us in the pastoral ministry? ... For this reason ... Because men who have only a conditional offer of the gospel will have only a conditional gospel. The man who has only a conditional gospel knows only conditional grace. And the man who knows only conditional grace knows only a conditional God. And the man who has only a conditional God will have a conditional ministry to his fellow man. And at the end of the day he will only be able to give his heart, and his life, and his time, and his devotion to his people on condition.<br />
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And he will love and master the truths of the great doctrines of grace, but until grace in God himself masters him, the grace that has mastered him will never flow from him to his people.</blockquote>
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-- Sinclair Ferguson<br />
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<br />Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086668138493346844.post-58981907416700441432016-01-15T22:00:00.003-05:002016-01-15T22:15:24.723-05:00The gospel is unconditional<br />
Audio: 1 min. 15 sec. (If audio does not show, click on the individual post title.)<br />
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<blockquote class="tr_bq">
It has always been <b>a danger in reformed thinking and preaching</b> that we express the gospel in such a way <b>that men have to merit grace</b> by a degree of conviction experience. At the end of the day that is to make the offer of Christ conditional. When Christ bids all men to come and believe in Him freely and fully.<br />
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In His gracious providence God mightily uses conviction of sin in various ways and to various degrees to bring men and women to His Son. But He never bids us to go to preach conviction of sin as the warrant of faith. He bids us go and <b>freely offer Jesus Christ and all His sufficiency as the warranty of faith</b> to any man to come and bow before Him as a suppliant penitent, and believe in the Lord Jesus Christ. <b>Conviction of sin is never a condition for the free offer of the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ</b>.</blockquote>
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--Sinclair Ferguson<br />
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<blockquote class="tr_bq">
As [Paul] describes our dead condition before conversion, he realizes that <b>dead people can’t meet conditions</b>. If they are to live, there must be a totally unconditional and utterly free act of God to save them. This freedom is the very heart of grace.<br />
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What act could be more one-sidedly free and non-negotiated than one person raising another from the dead! This is the meaning of grace.</blockquote>
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-- John Piper<br />
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<br />Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086668138493346844.post-23956503936435954402016-01-09T17:29:00.002-05:002016-01-23T09:03:16.941-05:00What was it that fueled our first love?<div class="tr_bq">
"But I have this against you, that you have abandoned the love you had at first."</div>
(Rev. 2:4)<br />
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What was it that fueled our first love?<br />
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If we lose the first love we will find ourselves in serious spiritual peril. </blockquote>
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Sometimes we make the mistake of substituting other things for it. We become active in the service of God ecclesiastically; <b>we become active evangelistically and in the process measure spiritual strength in terms of increasing influence</b>. But no position, influence, or involvement can expel love for the world from our hearts. Indeed, they may be expressions of that very love. </blockquote>
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Others of us make the mistake of <b>substituting the rules of piety for loving affection for God</b>. Such disciplines have an air of sanctity about them, but in fact they have no power to restrain the love of the world. <b>The root of the matter is in my heart</b>. </blockquote>
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
It is all too possible, in these different ways, to have the form of genuine godliness without its power. Only love for Christ, with all that it implies, can squeeze out the love of this world. </blockquote>
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How can we recover a new affection for Christ and his kingdom? <b>What was it that created that first love in any case? Do you remember? It was our discovery of Christ’s grace in the realization of our own sin.</b> </blockquote>
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Forgiven much, we loved much. We rejoiced in the hope of glory, in suffering, even in God himself. Christ, grace, Scripture, prayer, fellowship, service, living for the glory of God ... all filled our vision and seemed so large, so desirable that other things by comparison seemed to shrink in size and become bland to the taste. </blockquote>
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The way in which we maintain “the expulsive power of a new affection” is <b>the same as the way we first discovered it. Only when grace is still “amazing” to us does it retain its power in us</b>. Only as we retain a sense of our own profound sinfulness can we retain a sense of the graciousness of grace. </blockquote>
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And there is no right living that lasts without it.</blockquote>
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-- Sinclair Ferguson<br />
<a href="http://www.alliancenet.org/eternitymagazine/expelling-worldliness-with-a-new-affection" target="_blank">link to full essay</a><br />
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This preacher dovetails Ferguson's words so well on how the gospel fuels our ability to love:<br />
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Audio: 3 min. 45 sec. (If audio does not show, click on the individual post title.)<br />
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Audio link for smartphones: <a href="https://app.box.com/s/kwhdlvn467eta9hjypo8d2wg5xwk5ng1" target="_blank">Audio Link</a><br />
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<blockquote>
The law comes with the power of coercion, it comes with the power of fear, and of punishment. And it says essentiall this:<br />
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Do these things and you will live. So in other words, if you will: Love God with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength, and you will live.<br />
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But never in a million years can mere external force, mere commandment, produce that. The gospel comes along different (gospel means good news), and it says not, do these things and live, but it comes along totally free, totally unilateral and says:<br />
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Done! ... Now you will be able to live.<br />
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[But] we are very uncomfortable with the freeness of that gospel of grace. But unless you get that freeness, you'll never be able to understand the power the gospel. You'll never be able to understand the power of love.<br />
I'm just reading [Chalmer's] here: The freer the gospel, the more sanctifying is the gospel. And the more that it is received as a doctrine of grace, the more that it will be felt as a doctrine according to godliness. This is one of the secrets of the christian life.<br />
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What he means by secret is that this is absolutely, utterly counter-intuitive. You would think that the more the gospel came at you and said:<br />
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You better do these things. You better be a godly person. You better start obeying the law.<br />
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The more you would be motivated to do it. [For] Chalmers, [he's] right on. He's right in line with Paul. He says, "No". It's the exact opposite of that. The freer the gospel, the more sanctifying its force. The more gracious the gospel, the more a power for godliness it is in our life. In the gospel (he goes on), we so behold God, as we may love God. It is there, and there only, where God stands revealed as an object of confidence to sinners. And where our desire after Him is not chilled into apathy by the barrier of human guilt. For this purpose the freer it is the better it is.<br />
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That very peculiararity, which so many dread as the germ of antinomianism, that is, lawlessness ... You know, that idea where we can preach grace, we can preach the grace of the gospel, but you still need to tell people [that] they've got to be good people, or ... you won't be as good a christian as other christians if you're not (you know) living up to all these standards and keeping up with all these things. </blockquote>
<blockquote>
... and Chalmer's says, "No, Absolutely not". We know of no other way by which to keep the love of the world out of our hearts than to keep in our hearts the love of God. And there's no other way by which to keep our hearts in the love of God than by building ourselves on the gospel of grace.<br />
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You can't even begin to really obey the law until you have no fear of punishment from the law. Listen to John, in 1st John 4: By this love is perfected in us, so that we may confidence in the day of judgement. Confidence in the day of judgement!? What could be more terrifying than standing before all mighty God as the judge of the universe who knows, not only the things that you've done externally, but your thoughts? <br />
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[John] says: There is no fear in love, but perfect love casts out fear, because fear involves punishment, and the one who fears has not been perfected in love. (And then he says). We love BECAUSE He first loved us. You see? There's the power of love.</blockquote>
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<br />Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086668138493346844.post-81685490332793964812015-11-14T12:32:00.002-05:002015-11-14T12:33:15.370-05:00The Gospel is not a new way to win at the old game<blockquote class="tr_bq">
There are those who are astonished at grace and those who are not.<br />
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Both would agree that we have continuing struggles with sin.<br />
Both would agree that Jesus has died for our sins.<br />
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But the non-astonished seem to think that the important end-game, the goal of being Christian, is to be <b>more successful at keeping the law</b>. If there is grace, it is to produce this success under the law. And the presence and gift of the Holy Spirit is a <b>means to this end</b>. In the end, it's <b>a new way to win at the old game</b>.<br />
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On the other hand, astonishment dawns on us when we realize that <b>the blood of Jesus has won the old game completely</b>. Instead of saying that the blood of Christ is the beginning of our entry into righteous living, we say that we have been declared completely and eternally righteous.</blockquote>
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Jim McNeely<br />
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Remember:<br />
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Link: <a href="http://in-others-words.blogspot.com/2015/05/our-being-in-christ-is-goal-of-law.html" target="_blank">Our being in Christ is the goal of the law</a><br />
(Our being under the law is not the goal of Christ.)<br />
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Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086668138493346844.post-40845383046327103202015-10-28T22:47:00.001-04:002015-10-30T20:12:41.660-04:00When is trusting in Christ alone, just not enough?<br />
Audio: 1 min. 38 sec. (If audio does not show, click on the individual post title.)<br />
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<blockquote class="tr_bq">
...That other voice, which says, "you know faith just isn't enough." Trusting in Christ alone, it's just not enough. After all, how are you behaving? <br />
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And I'm so uncertain and insecure... that I have to do something to give myself some assurance that I'm at least trying to compensate for myself.<br />
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That's the trap, you see. And that's what these other preachers were saying to the Galations...<br />
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You've got to demonstrate faithfulness in specific deeds and actions. Faith alone is not enough. Confidence and <b>trust in what God has said about me is replaced by how I feel about myself and how I measure my own performance</b>. <br />
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Now this is epidemic, and it always has been, in the church...<br />
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Are you sure you're living a christian life the way you should? I mean your salvation's at stake here. Are you sure that you're living a godly life in every way you ought to be, in what you think and what you say and what you do? Are you sure?<br />
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Well I don't know, maybe I'm not. Let me start looking inside myself ... And there you go. You see, you've taken your eyes off of Christ, and now the focus is on me, and my performance ... And Paul got wind of this ... and ohh boy... Paul opens up the shot-gun, loads both barrels, and blasts away at them.</blockquote>
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- Pastor Mark Anderson</div>
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Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086668138493346844.post-76586450306826552212015-10-24T16:51:00.001-04:002015-10-28T22:58:31.385-04:00We're not saved from judgment, but through it<br />
Audio: 3 min. (If audio does not show, click on the individual post title.)<br />
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<blockquote>
Noah walked with God. Why did Noah walk with God?, because God had mercy on Noah.<br />
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What I want you to see is <b>how profound this mercy is</b>.<br />
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We tend to think of mercy, we tend to think of forgiveness, we tend to think of grace as God kind of winking at our sin, sweeping it under the rug. That's not at all the picture that you have here of God's grace.<br />
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But this mercy, and this grace, this salvation comes through judgment. <b>Noah wasn't saved from the flood, he was saved through the flood.</b> He wasn't saved from the judgment, he was saved through the judgment.<br />
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<b>Our salvation always comes, not apart from judgment, but through judgment.</b> And in the midst of judgment God protects us. How does He do it? He does it with an ark, doesn't he? He does it with an ark, and as the judgment comes, the ark rises above the water.<br />
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"Ark" is an old English term that actually means "box". It's not an original Hebrew word, it's an Egyptian word. And what does this Egyptian word mean? It means "coffin". God says to Noah, I want you to build me a box, and I want you to get in that box and I'm going to seal you in there, the very symbol of death. And when the judgment comes, that death will rise above the other death. When the judgment comes you will rise above the judgment.<br />
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My friends, do you see who's in view here? This is none other than the Lord Jesus Christ. <b>What does it mean to be a christian? I means to be in the death of Jesus Christ.</b> And then as the judgment comes on Jesus Christ ... what happened to Him on the cross?, He was judged by God for your sin and my sin, and we were in Him, just as Noah is in the ark. And when the judgment came, and it came down hard, where He cries out, "My God, my God, why have you forsaken me." What happens? He rises from the dead.<br />
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What does it mean to be a christian? It means that you are in Him. My friend, if you are a christian, you are in the ark. And no matter what comes, it could be a judgment that takes down the entire world, you will rise above. Not because of yourself but because of the favor of God, the grace and mercy of God. Because of the ark, because of Jesus Christ, because of the cross, because of His resurrection.<br />
<br /></blockquote>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086668138493346844.post-76236349025606903502015-10-24T09:24:00.001-04:002015-10-24T09:24:32.477-04:00Are you depending on faith?, repentance? - Never rest on them.<blockquote class="tr_bq">
Our tendency is to try to do something in order to save ourselves; but we must beat that tendency down, and look away from self to Christ. Labour to get away from your own labours; labour to be clean rid of all self-reliance; labour in your prayers never to depend upon your prayers; labour in your repentance never to rest upon your repentance; and <b>labour in your faith not to trust your faith, but to trust alone to Jesus</b>. <br /><br />When you begin to rest upon your repentance, and forget the Saviour, away with your repentance; and when you begin to pray, and you depend upon your prayers, and forget the Lord Jesus, away with your prayers. When you think you are beginning to grow in grace, and you feel, “Now I am somebody,” away with such spurious growth as that, for you are only being puffed up with pride, and not really growing at all. <b>Labour not to labour</b>; labour to keep down your natural self-righteousness and self-reliance; labour to continue where the publican was, and cry, “God be merciful to me a sinner.”
</blockquote>
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--Charles Spurgeon,“The Believer’s Present Rest,” June 6, 1873, in Spurgeon’s Expository Encyclopedia, 13:176<br />
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Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086668138493346844.post-8479967682912338952015-06-05T18:36:00.000-04:002015-06-05T18:36:10.903-04:00Something solid and tangible to preach<blockquote class="tr_bq">
Our faith is a person; the gospel that we have to preach is a person; and go wherever we may, <b>we have something solid and tangible to preach</b>, for our gospel is a person. If you had asked the twelve Apostles in their day, ‘What do you believe in?’ they would not have stopped to go round about with a long sermon, but they would have pointed to their Master and they would have said, ‘We believe him.’ ‘But what are your doctrines?’ ‘There they stand incarnate.’ ‘But what is your practice?’ ‘There stands our practice. He is our example.’ ‘What then do you believe?’ Hear the glorious answer of the Apostle Paul, ‘<b>We preach Christ crucified.</b>’ Our creed, our body of divinity, our whole theology is summed up in the person of Christ Jesus.</blockquote>
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--C. H. Spurgeon, in Lectures Delivered before the Young Men’s Christian Association in Exeter Hall 1858-1859 (London, 1859), pages 159-160.<br />
<br />Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086668138493346844.post-52289306337224276932015-05-15T14:35:00.002-04:002015-05-15T14:41:15.958-04:00Our Being in Christ is the Goal of the Law<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-h1cvu0krncc/VVOboNGsqDI/AAAAAAAADOg/DJSE4MHqc4c/s1600/LawTablets.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="224" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-h1cvu0krncc/VVOboNGsqDI/AAAAAAAADOg/DJSE4MHqc4c/s320/LawTablets.jpg" width="320" /></a></div>
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Audio: 3 minutes. (If audio does not show, click on the individual post title.)<br />
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<blockquote>
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What's wrong with the picture? It's a very dangerous picture. Because the picture puts the law at the center and makes Christ the servant of the law, instead of putting Christ at the center and making the law the servant of Christ. <b>Such a delicate difference here</b>. Try to get with me here.<br />
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Put it in other words: The picture makes the law the goal of our being in Christ instead of making <b>our being in Christ the goal of the law</b>. And the danger here is that we may want to get into this house, this house of law, this house of commandments. And once we get in be so thankful (thank you Jesus, thank you) and leave Him at the door, while we move from room to room using the keys He gave us. And we say, "We finally got the law. We got where we wanted to be. We figured out the real meaning of the law. And now I can do the law. (Thank you Jesus, by the way, thank you.)"<br />
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There's something wrong there. <b>There's something deeply, deeply wrong there</b>. Oh how easy for us to come so close to getting the Christian life right. Newness of the Spirit, not oldness of the letter. Christ, not law. And then fall right back into the old legal way, <b>with Christ as the new list giver</b>! Or the one who gave us the key to all the rooms in the house so that we can enjoy the law. Doing the law, finally I can do the law. And He's out there, He's out there at the door.<br />
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I don't think that's what verse 4 means, here in our text. Die to the law, it says, <b>so that we can belong to another</b>, to Him who has been raised from the dead. I don't think that verse means die to the law so that you can belong to the one who will cause you to now belong to the law. That verse does not mean die to the law so that you can belong to Him who can figure out the law, and give you the keys to the law, and now hand you over to good law keeping.<br />
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That's not what it says, and it's not what it means. <b>It skews things terribly to make Christ a means to the law</b>, instead of the law a means to a relationship with Christ.<br />
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-- John PiperUnknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086668138493346844.post-59203643329113463112015-05-13T14:56:00.002-04:002015-05-13T15:04:36.936-04:00Don't reduce love for Jesus to Law-keeping<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Audio: 3 minutes. (If audio does not show, click on the individual post title.)<br />
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<blockquote>
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So... key question... What do christians do with God's holy, just and good law? Do we do anything with it?<br />
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<b>We die to it as law keeping.</b> We're dead to it, we don't exist to it, we belong wholly to Jesus. We devote all our time to knowing Him and loving Him and trusting Him and seeing Him and savoring Him and walking with Him and resting with Him and being shaped by Him and defined by Him and controlled by Him. <b>He's our everything</b>. Christ is all, and in all.<br />
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And thus we become loving people, and thus we, through the back door, fulfill the law. But do we do anything with the written law? Should you ever look at it? I have two answers.<br />
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One, we should look into the written law to see Christ. To know Him, and trust Him, and love Him more. Remember what Jesus said in John 5:39? "You search the scriptures because you think that in them you have eternal life, and it is they which speak of me!" Yeah, go there, to find "Me". <b>Not a new list. </b><br />
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[The] First thing we do with the law, now, is we read it to know God in Christ... To know a person, and love him, more. ... Trust Him more. That's why you read the bible.<br />
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Second, you look into the law in order to test to see if you do know Him, trust Him, and love Him, as you ought. Because Jesus said, "If you love me, you'll keep my commandments." <br />
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<b>Don't ever turn that around.</b> So many people who don't get the personal relationship of christianity turn it around and say, <b>"keeping commandments is loving Jesus" ... It's not!</b> If you try to reduce love to Jesus to commandment keeping, you're right back at the front door fiddling with that lock.<br />
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What the text says is, "if you love me" ... <b>If I carry you and you love being carried</b>, if you see into my face and love what you see, if you trust me and know me and depend upon me and my cross and my resurrection to make you right with God <b>and to fill you with everything you need filling with</b>. ... You'll fulfill the law. You'll never be perfect in this life, but you'll begin to become a loving person, with me, if you love me.</blockquote>
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--John PiperUnknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086668138493346844.post-6532067422226773722015-03-31T11:25:00.000-04:002015-03-31T12:23:09.305-04:00Is your faith in Christianity? Or in Christ?<br />
<b>"There really is no place for Christ in many people's Christianity. </b><br />
<b> Their faith is not actually in Christ; </b><br />
<b> it is in Christianity and their ability to live it out."</b><br />
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- Paul David Tripp<br />
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A sermon delivered this past Sunday has some words I think Paul Tripp would want us to hear:<br />
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Audio: 3 minutes. (If audio does not show, click on the individual post title.)<br />
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What I want you to see here is simply this ... is how simple, how utterly simple a thing faith is. <b>Faith is not a power</b>. It's absolutely, utterly, and completely weak and empty. Faith has no power. Faith is the smallest thing in the world, it finds all its strength, all its power, all of its impressiveness, <b>in its object</b>. Faith grabs hold of, it receives that which it does not intrinsically own, that which it does not intrinsically have. The only thing Abraham could do is say, "Amen, be it done to me according to your word." Utterly helpless.<br />
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Faith actually comes about by God's word. In other words, it's God's word, it's God's promise that created, [and] called out the faith, in Abraham even. Biblical faith is not some human achievement or invention, it comes from the word of God. This is what the New Testament says ... faith comes by ... what? ... Hearing. I mean what's more helpless than hearing? <b>What's more passive than that?</b> Faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the word of God. Believing comes by hearing.<br />
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You see, what this means, christian friend, if you're a christian, is that God doesn't accept you because you're such a good person, or are trying to be a good person, or someday hope to be a better person. God accepts you <b>because you believed his promise</b> ... not because of anything that you've done, not because of anything you promise to do. It's simply a gift received by faith. Moreover, God doesn't accept you because your faith is so strong, or so perfect. No, Abraham's faith is not. But God accepts you simply because in your helplessness you believe His promise.<br />
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Nothing can separate you from the love of God in Christ Jesus because God himself has already been sacrificed for you. This is what strengthens faith, <b>this is what gives assurance</b> of faith. What you need is to hear, not from conjured up within you some strength, but you need to hear again and again that God Himself has given everything at the cost of His own blood, for you. This is good news, and there's no other place that we can go to find our faith reassured than in this. We can no sooner fail, we can no sooner sink, than the Lord Jesus sink, for we have been wedded to Him, we have been given His righteousness.<br />
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-- from a sermon by Don Willeman<br />
<br />Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086668138493346844.post-44034655984930139312015-03-24T14:35:00.003-04:002015-03-31T11:37:28.639-04:00What does perseverance look like?<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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What does perseverance look like?<br />
<br />
<b>"For we have become partakers of Christ, </b><br />
<b>if we hold fast </b><br />
<b>the beginning of our assurance </b><br />
<b>firm until the end."</b> (Heb. 3:14)<br />
<br />
So...<br />
<br />
- What <u>assurance</u> did you have at the <u>beginning</u>?<br />
- What part did you play in this <u>assurance</u>?<br />
- To <u>persevere</u>, what is it that you are supposed to hold firm until the end?<br />
<br />
<br />
Sinclair Ferguson speaks about what we are to hold firm.<br />
<br />
Audio: 5 min. 17 sec. (If audio does not show, click on the individual post title.)<br />
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<br />
<blockquote>
The great question of Martin Luther's church world was the question of how God gives you grace.<br />
<br />
--------------------------------------------------------<br />
-- The Roman Catholic perspective described<br />
--------------------------------------------------------<br />
In your baptism, God gives you a gift of grace. And throughout the whole course of your life, by means of your response to God's grace, you grow in righteousness. Yes you slip back, but if you slip back there is grace for those who slip back. There are sacraments in the church to help you. But over an extended period of time, what God does is He gives you more grace as you respond to His grace. And as you respond to His grace, He gives you more grace.<br />
<br />
Grace was thought of, even spoken of, as though it were a substance that was infused into people's souls. Actually,<b> it's surprising, almost alarming, how many protestants speak that way too</b>. And speak about grace as though it were a thing, as though it were a substance ... "I got grace." Not having an appreciation that when the bible speaks about grace it always means the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, it means Christ.<br />
<br />
The goal was, that a time would come when your faith would be so suffused with love for God that God's grace would have worked righteousness into your life, and because God had worked righteousness into your life, it was righteous of God to justify you.<br />
<br />
So it wasn't that they didn't believe in the righteousness of God. It wasn't, from one point of view, that they denied that justification was by grace. They insisted that justification was by grace, but it was by grace on the basis of the righteousness that had been worked into you. You were justified because you were justifiable. And Luther's problem was very simple. How can I ever be sure that grace has done enough in my life.<br />
<br />
<br />
-------------------------------------------------------<br />
-- The Protestant perspective responds...<br />
-------------------------------------------------------<br />
<b>This is not the righteousness that God is looking for</b> at the end of my life, as the result of the work of His grace in me.<br />
<br />
[Rather it is His own righteousness.]<br />
<br />
Oh blessed be His name. This is the righteousness of God which God gives to me as a free gift at the beginning of my christian life. As I come with the empty hands of faith, He gives me this righteousness in my justification. And so it's not something that I'm striving for for the rest of my life. It's something that the rest of my life is actually grounded in.<br />
<br />
And now [Luther] understood that he was as righteous before God as Jesus Christ is righteous, because<b> the only righteousness he had</b> was Jesus Christ's righteousness.<br />
<br />
The non-christian lives his or her life forwards, to the future. The christian lives his or her life backwards from the future. We've already seen the future. We've already seen the final verdict. And all fear is gone because we are as righteous in God's sight, and therefore we are permanently righteous. We could no more lose our justification than Christ could lose His righteousness, because the righteousness that is ours is not the righteousness that is wrought within, but <b>the righteousness that lies outside</b>. So Luther said, in this sense, <b>the gospel is entirely outside of us</b>.<br />
<br />
Some of us are so inward. Some of us can get so caught up in how am I doing spiritually. And that's all very well, but it's not all very well if we dislocate it from the ground in which we start ... that we are justified in Christ, with the justification that God gives to us in Christ, and therefore we are as permanently, and as irreversibly, and as fully righteous in the sight of God as Jesus Himself is.</blockquote>
<br />
<br />
<br />
-- from a sermon by Sinclair Ferguson<br />
<br />Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086668138493346844.post-20722258072463217322015-03-07T10:16:00.001-05:002015-03-31T11:37:38.902-04:00It's not trust in my belief. (That's the trap)<br />
Audio: 1 min. 10 sec. (If audio does not show, click on the individual post title.)<br />
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<br />
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
Instead faith is entirely confidence in another. It's what pushes us away from any confidence in self. So that ultimately in that emptiness of trust in us, we are ready for the freight that's going down the canal. </blockquote>
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
And the freight that's going down the canal is God's grace. I have to provide for you what you cannot provide for yourself. Faith is not so much something we build in ourselves. It's an emptying of ourselves. It's ultimately saying there's nothing in me. I rely entirely upon God. In the historic christian statements, faith is receiving and resting upon Christ alone for our salvation.<br />
<br />
<b>It's not trust in my faith. It's not trust in my belief. You know, that's that trap.</b> Do you understand that? That's the trap -- that we will forever go through our lives saying alright, do I have enough of this faith thing? Do I have sufficient quality or quantity of it? Instead of saying, no, listen, my faith is that God provides everything I need. I'm just collapsing upon Christ. I'm not looking to something in me.</blockquote>
-- Bryan Chapell
Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086668138493346844.post-87589180275559122162015-02-19T10:18:00.000-05:002015-03-31T11:38:11.824-04:00Saving faith is not, at root, a decision<br />
Audio: < 4 min. (If audio does not show, click on the individual post title.)<br />
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<br />
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
Your saving faith is not at root a decision about Christ's truth, but a sight of Christ's glory.<br />
<br />
When you are confronted with infinite, all satisfying beauty, the question is not, "so what's your decision?" The question is, "what do you see?"<br />
<br />
Do you see Christ in the gospel as beautiful? More beautiful, more glorious, more satisfying than anything else? That's the question. The question is not, "so, what's your decision?"<br />
<br />
Picture yourself in an art class, and the teacher holds up a beautiful painting. And the teacher says to you, "Decide. Is it beautiful or is it boring?" Your proper response to the teacher is, "It doesn't work like that! You show me a painting. I think it's boring. And you tell me 'decide'. Decide. It's not what you do when you see something. You don't decide. You just either see it as boring, or you see it as beautiful. You don't decide."<br />
<br />
You can't decide yourself into seeing as beautiful what you think is boring. It doesn't work like that. Deciding isn't what gets you there.<br />
<br />
I was 18 once. And I sang a song. "I have decided to follow Jesus. I have decided to follow Jesus. I have decided to follow Jesus. No turning back. No turning back." I sang that. I loved that. I meant that. And I'm singing it now! And meaning it! It's a good song!<br />
<br />
However, I have learned something. Beneath and before I could ever decide to lay my life down in the discipleship of Jesus Christ, I had to SEE HIM! Otherwise I'm playing with Him. But I had seen. I had. So when I sang it, now I meant it. I'd go anywhere with you. I'll do anything for you, because I've seen [that] you are infinite, all satisfying beauty for ever. There is no religion, no movement, nothing in the world that could ever come close to what you are for me now that I have seen.<br />
<br />
So, deciding is good. You can make decisions all your life long about Jesus, and about your life. And those decisions must be made. And they are either good or bad. And they must be, if they are going to be authentic discipleship, they must be rooted in: "Have you seen Him?"<br />
<br />
Your saving faith is not at root a decision. It is at root, seeing.</blockquote>
<br />
<br />
--John Piper<br />
from his talk at the 2015 Passion conference<br />
<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MjQitXGyvJ8" target="_blank">link</a><br />
<br />
<br />Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086668138493346844.post-69003668273794635362014-09-27T09:58:00.000-04:002014-09-27T10:04:19.666-04:00Part 3: In a letter, to my daughter, after a sermon.<br />
Audio: 1 min. 2 sec. <br />
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<br />
<br />
But Jesus said to him, "No one, after putting his hand to the plough and looking back is fit for the kingdom of heaven." So what is Jesus saying? What is he trying to do? He's trying to drive home a key component of true faith, and it's this... You can't follow Christ without giving up your life.
<br />
<br />
And right in the middle of it is a cost-benefit analysis. Do you see it? He's really saying don't go down this path if you're not really willing to pay the cost. Calculate the cost. Make sure you're really willing to pay the price that is necessary in order to be my follower. This isn't a time to be flippant, or glib, or impulsive. This is a time to be very thoughtful. And make sure that you're really willing to do this. You see, you can't follow Christ ... there's no reward of resurrection ... without giving up your own life. That's true faith.
<br />
<br />
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
Dear E.,<br />
<br />
It is true that many of the words of Jesus are hard sayings indeed. And yet, perhaps He is describing less how we are to <b>rise to the occasion</b>, and desires more for us to understand just how <b>unfit</b> we really are. And that's a good thing. It drives us, with nothing to offer and nowhere else to go, ... to Him.
<br />
<br />
You've probably heard the saying, "don't put the cart before the horse". When we hear words that describe a "key component of true faith", it is important not to think of these components of faith as something we are supposed to generate or procure beforehand to make us fit to come to God. <b>Faith is a gift from God</b>, it is not the result of a cost-benefit analysis.
<br />
<br />
Instead of fumbling with more words of my own, I leave you once more with better words from Charles Spurgeon:
<br />
<br />
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
"I would like to make this very plain. ... It does at first seem most amazing to an awakened man that salvation should really be for him as a lost and guilty one. <b>He thinks that it must be for him as a penitent man</b>, forgetting that his penitence is a part of his salvation.
<br />
<br />
'Oh,' says he, 'but I must be this and that,' -- all of which is true, for he shall be as the result of salvation; but salvation comes to him before he has any of the results of salvation. It comes to him, in fact, while he deserves only this bare, beggarly description ... "ungodly". <b>That is all he is when God's gospel comes to justify him</b>.
<br />
<br />
May I, therefore, urge upon any who have no good thing about them -- who fear that they have not even a good feeling, or anything whatsoever that can recommend them to God -- that they will firmly <b>believe</b> that our gracious God is able and willing to take them <b>without anything to recommend them</b>, and to forgive them spontaneously, not because they are good, but because He is good.
<br />
<br />
Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners: forgiveness is for the guilty. Do not attempt to touch yourself up and make yourself something other than you really are; <b>but come as you are</b> to Him who justifies the ungodly."
</blockquote>
</blockquote>
<br />
<br />
All is grace,<br />
DadUnknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086668138493346844.post-13046116113296161722014-09-25T22:10:00.002-04:002014-09-25T23:09:52.181-04:00In a letter, to my daughter, after a sermon. (Part 2)<br />
Audio: 41 sec. <br />
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<br />
"So here's the question ... What's the going price for a happy resurrection? Now the bible consistently answers that question with one word, Faith. But what is faith? How do I recognize if I have true faith? True faith is not cheap. No, true faith is very costly.<br />
<br />
So what's the key word here in Peter's call? ... Repent. Right away we see something of faith's nature in that word, don't we. For the apostles often use repentance as a synonym for faith."<br />
<br />
<br />
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
Dear E.,<br />
<br />
It is certainly true that faith and repentance go hand in hand. To quote Charles Spurgeon once more, he says:<br />
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
"Repentance goes well, side by side with believing. If I were asked whether a man repented first, or believed first, I should reply, 'Which spoke in a wheel moves first when the wheel starts?' When Divine life is given to a man, these two things are sure to come — repentance and faith."</blockquote>
<br />
And yet, we must be very careful not to think of repentance as a kind of sacrifice, or payment that we offer in order to secure God's mercy. <br />
<br />
As I have shared in the past, John Piper makes this important distinction between faith and repentance. Repentance must never be viewed as something we bring to the table as a qualification for God's blessing:<br />
<br />
Audio: 30 sec. <br />
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<blockquote class="tr_bq">
"Faith is the peculiarly receiving grace, which none other is. Were we said to be justified by repentance, by love, [or] by any other grace, it would convey to us the idea that something good in us is the consideration on which the blessing was bestowed."</blockquote>
<br />
And yet I'd like to suggest that even Piper might be missing an important quality of repentance here. He seems to characterize repentance as a positive virtue that represents "something good in us". I would suggest that repentance is not defined by what it offers, but rather it is better defined as being born out of the essence of our emptiness. <b>It is only best understood in the context of what we lack, not what we bring</b>. It is the receiving of Christ into our emptiness that germinates repentance in our being. Let's consider Spurgeon's words again to help us better understand repentance:<br />
<br />
------------------
<br />
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
There are some who think that repentance is a preparation for Grace. They hope they shall receive the Grace of God if they repent. There are others who think that repentance is a qualification for faith in Christ.<br />
<br />
“Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners.” The only qualification a physician seeks in his patient is that he is sick. <b>The qualification for imparting His fullness is your emptiness</b> — that is all!<br />
<br />
The ground of a man’s belief that he is saved is not that he repents, but that he has trusted Jesus Christ, who is able to save him, and that God has declared that whoever trusts Christ is saved!<br />
<br />
Nothing is to be trusted but the finished work of Jesus Christ upon Calvary’s bloody tree! No feelings, no emotion, no believing, no conversion, even, must ever be put into the place of that one eternal Rock of refuge. Cast your guilty self on Christ and rest there, for there alone can you find salvation!<br />
<br />
Learn this lesson — not to trust Christ because you repent, but trust Christ to make you repent — not to come to Christ because you have a broken heart, but to come to Him that He may give you a broken heart — not to come to Him because you are fit to come, <b>but to come to Him because you are unfit to come</b>! You are to be nothing, in fact, and to come to Christ as nothing — and when you so come, then will repentance come!<br />
<br />
<b>We do not repent in order to be saved, but we repent because we are saved</b>. We do not loathe sin and, therefore, hope to be saved, but, because we are saved, we therefore loathe sin and turn altogether from it.<br />
<br />
Now, dear seeking Soul, do you see the tack to go upon? Your business is to believe in Christ Jesus just as you are and to trust Him to save you — and then to believe what the Word of God says concerning those who trust in Jesus, namely, that they are saved, forgiven, loved of God and at peace with Him. Do you believe that? As you believe it, you will feel, “My heart melts under a sense of this superlative love. <b>Now I can and do repent of sin — the very thing which seemed impossible to me before</b>.”<br />
------------------
<br />
<br />
Finally, Pastor Fisk concurs:</blockquote>
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</blockquote>
<br />
<br />
All is grace,<br />
DadUnknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086668138493346844.post-84032472822038282182014-09-24T14:59:00.000-04:002014-09-24T15:02:42.812-04:00In a letter. To my daughter. After a sermon. (Part I)<br />
Audio: 34 sec. <br />
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<br /><br />
Most of us understand the cost-benefit concept. And it boils down to a simple question ... Is the benefit (the reward) worth the cost? Every decision that you make, every day of your lives, is controlled by that idea. Now last week we said that the resurrection is the cornerstone of our hope. So here's the question ... What's the going price for a happy resurrection?<br />
<br />
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
Dear E.,<br />
<br />
On Sunday, we heard a sermon together that began with the words above. As I've pondered them, I'd like to share with you some of what's been stirring in my heart. Yes, in a very real sense, it is true that every decision you make, every day of your life, will be controlled by weighing the costs and the benefits as they apply to you.<br />
<br />
And yet, on a deeper level, I keep coming back to this question: <b>Does this cost-benefit idea really best describe the method by which we "lay hold" of salvation?</b> Perhaps a cost-benefit approach is less a feature of our awakening, and more a feature of our brokenness. Perhaps it best describes our lot in life as fallen creatures who are in bondage to our own selfish desires. Since the time of Adam and Eve, hasn't our sin centered around having our own view of what's best for "ME", and then acting on it as a way of having control?<br />
<br />
I do not say that the words we heard are "wrong". The benefits of faith are real, but perhaps in this case discernment has a bigger role to play. A great preacher named Charles Spurgeon once defined discernment this way: "Discernment is not knowing the difference between right and wrong. It is knowing the difference between right and almost right."<br />
<br />
One of the problems of a cost-benefit model is that it characterizes every decision as a "means to an end". My choice ends up nothing more than the means by which I get what benefits me in my own eyes. And yet, do you remember what Paul says in 1st Corinthians, chapter 13? "Love does not insist on its own way"(RSV). Love "seeketh not her own"(KJV). There you have it. Love, as described here, does not operate as a means to obtain a beneficial end for the self. It seeks something "other".<br />
<br />
We catch a glimpe of this even in the ordinary blessings of life. There will hopefully come a time in your own life when your love for your husband, or your love for your children, will cause you to think and act in ways that have very little regard for yourself. And for a few moments your heart will not entertain even a hint of a cost-benefit analysis. You will see your loved ones in an "other" centered light, not as a means to an end, but as ones who, each in their own right, are ... PRECIOUS.<br />
<br />
So love is not bound by the laws of the cost-benefit model. And what's many times hard to grasp is ... neither is the gospel and the salvation that it proclaims. If I could be granted one wish with regard to the gospel and my children it would be this ... that they might fully receive the gospel, not as a means to an end, but as a finished promise that is PRECIOUS in their sight.<br />
<br />
Faith is trust in someone "other". It is not a means by which we lay hold of a benefit. We walk by this trust and not by sight. It is the very substance of what is hoped for, not the prerequisite cost for securing what is in reality a free gift.<br />
<br />
There are places in the bible where we catch a glimpse or two of how the gift of God, "the cornerstone of our hope", transcends a cost-benefit view of life. I offer you these few:<br />
<br />
-----------------------------------------------
<br />
"In this is love, not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the expiation for our sins." (1 John 4:10)<br />
<br />
"We love, because he first loved us." (1 John 4:19)<br />
<br />
"And you will know the truth, and the truth will make you free." (John 8:32)<br />
<br />
"We know that in everything God works for good with those who love him, who are called according to his purpose." (Romans 8:28)<br />
<br />
"I do not understand my own actions. For I do not do what I want, but I do the very thing I hate." (Romans 7:15)<br />
<br />
"For I know that nothing good dwells within me, that is, in my flesh. I can will what is right, but I cannot do it. For I do not do the good I want, but the evil I do not want is what I do." (Romans 7:18-19)<br />
-----------------------------------------------
<br />
<br />
In closing, permit me to state one last time that one of the most precious truths of the gospel is that Christ is not a means to an end. George W. Peters says it well I think:<br />
<br /><blockquote class="tr_bq">
"Salvation is not a detached gift of God in some gracious and miraculous way bestowed upon man. Salvation is Christ, and to experience salvation is to experience Christ. It is not the experience of something, but of someone.<br />
<br />
The Bible does not teach that Christ has salvation and dispenses it like a benevolent master giving gifts to his servants who obey him. Christ is our salvation and gives Himself to us as our salvation. He is our life; He is our strength; He is our peace; He is our joy; He is our wisdom, righteousness, sanctification and redemption."<br /></blockquote>
<br />
All is grace,<br />
Dad
</blockquote>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086668138493346844.post-20787541848826353742014-09-10T09:23:00.002-04:002014-09-12T10:06:27.462-04:00Free will. It's UP TO ME. Or is it?I attended a sermon on Sunday which reminded me that words alone on the topic of "free will", while defendable and containing much truth, can be approached with differing emphasis that appear to conflict. Sometimes the wonders of the Good News involve subtleties. I begin with words from Sunday's sermon, followed by more words for your discernment.<br />
--------------------------------<br />
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Audio: 2:06 min. <br />
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<br />
And God already knew that they weren't going to listen to Him. He was going to preach to call them to covenant renewal, to faithfulness, to repentance from their sins. That's what the gospel always calls for. It says come back to God, which means turn from your sins. The gospel call, the covenant call, is always a call to repent. God's way is the way of righteousness. You always have to turn from your sins to come to God. To come to Christ.<br />
<br />
I'm pleading with you this morning. Some of you get lost in this idea because you're Calvinist kids like my kids are. So you've been raised to understand that God's sovereign over everything and then you've become confused to think that God must be to blame for everything. And you're all mixed up about your own sin. The bible's just plain. The bible doesn't neglect the obvious. God is making an obvious offer of life for all who will believe. <br />
<br />
And God is sending out messengers like me, and some better than me, to plead with you to stop it, to listen, to give your life to Jesus Christ, to receive the free gift, to know forgiveness of sins, to know the freedom that comes in Christ. All you have to do is believe. Hear, believe. Faith comes by hearing, hearing by the word of Christ. <br />
<br />
Don't blame God, but wake up. Would you wake up this morning, and put your faith in Christ. Some of you are still in desperate need and right this moment God is causing me to offer grace to you. Do you hear that? Right this moment, God is extending a kind hand to you. Far from being to blame for you situation, God's trying to lift you out of it, right now. Right this second, Jesus is opening His arms to you through the gospel, and I'm telling you, as the bible plainly says, <b><span style="font-size: large;">it's up to you</span></b> to believe it, or not.<br />
<br />
Just like it was up to the Jews who walked away that day, <b><span style="font-size: large;">it's up to you</span></b> ... to come to Christ, and I call you to Him.<br />
<br />
--------------------------<br />
<br />
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Audio: 1:30 min. <br />
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Well God has offered Christ, but we have to accept Him. God has put Christ forward, but we have to believe in Him. God has put Christ out there, He's put the parts in place but we have to assemble it, and make it our own. Well that of course is exactly wrong. <br />
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So Luther drives it home. When it comes to the work of God, the very power of God to create faith, I believe that I can't believe it. By my own reason or effort I cannot believe in my Lord Jesus Christ or come to Him. <br />
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If we believe at all in Christ as our savior, if we have any hope in Him, if we have any faith ... It is not because we've sized Him up and decided He's worth the effort. It's not because we've taken the bits and pieces of the story of salvation that God has laid on the table and managed to assemble them in such a way that now they fit for us. It's because the Holy Spirit has reached into our hearts and minds somewhere along the life that we've been living, and has called out of us trust and faith even against ourselves.<br />
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And so, with great freedom and courage and honesty, Luther gives us the language to say I believe that I can't believe. I know this is true. I see it evidenced in my life every single day. As I take up the business of god-hood and deity into my own hands and take charge of my own affairs, often at the expense of my neighbor.<br />
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Audio: 4:16 min. <br />
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So again, election is the loving choice by God the Father to give to His son a bride, the church. But now our question is this. What is the basis of that choice? Is it conditioned on something man is or does? Or is it unconditional, dependent on God alone? <br />
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Election is not based on what man does. God's choice had nothing to do with what they did. The twins were not even born. They hadn't done anything good or bad. That means they didn't enter into the equation at all. That's what it's saying. You see, it's based on God's pleasure, on God's prerogative. Look again at verse 16, chapter 9, "So then, it does not depend on the man who wills or the man who runs, but on God, who has mercy." This is dependent on God. Salvation is dependent on God, not man. <br />
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A sinner cannot believe in Christ. Because he's enslaved. He's imprisoned. You see, when Adam sinned, he lost his free will. He lost his ability to choose Christ. He and his posterity became slaves to sin, that's why it says there's none who does good. And he can't even believe the gospel. This moral impotence extends all the way to his ability to receive Christ. And thus man's fallen nature in Adam requires God's initiative. Lest no one be saved. And that initiative is the election of grace.<br />
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God is omni-everything. And therefore He's omni, or all sovereign, even in the matter of salvation. No one resists His will. He decides, unilaterally, on whom to have mercy, and whom to reject. He is the sovereign potter, who does with the clay as He wishes, and we must be content and submissive to that.<br />
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God gave His son to redeem sinners, out of His great love, and it all boils down (so it seems and so it is) to one's willingness to believe in Him. Now here's the UN-biblical assumption: Man must therefore have the freedom to believe. If the gift is predicated on his believing, doesn't it seem to follow that man must have the freedom to take that gift. It would seem that way, but the bible says 'NO'. God does promise eternal life to all who will believe, but none are able to believe. And it's not because of election, it's because of sin. God's electing love is actually the key that unlocks the cell of moral impotence, and marks sinners as recipients of that quickening ray from heaven, and always in the context of the hearing of the gospel. <br />
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So if you're here this morning, and you don't know Christ, and you've been tempted to hide behind the doctrine of election. Oh let's get rid of that excuse right now. And let's not view election as a foe. Election is a friend. Do you realize, dear sinner, if you're outside of Christ, there's not a chance in the world that you can believe of your own. You are lost. You are impotent. You are morally bankrupt. I might as well go try and dunk the ball in today's basketball session. I can't do it, and you can't believe the gospel.<br />
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Audio: 1:15 min. <br />
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Whereas faith, biblically understood, connotes an empty receiving, an empty-handed receiving. Out there is the virtue I need, not in here. I'm the problem, that's the solution. Faith welcomes the solution. That's all it is.<br />
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God intends to make it crystal clear the He does the decisive saving outside of us. That the work and person of Christ are the sole ground of our acceptance with God. In other words, don't replace faith with any other virtue, because faith is tailor made to say, all I need as the ground of my salvation is out there.<br />
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Faith is the peculiarly receiving grace, which none other is. Were we said to be justified <b>by repentance</b>, by love, [or] by any other grace, it would convey to us the idea that something good in us is the consideration on which the blessing was bestowed.<br />
<br />Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086668138493346844.post-28418298271122733592014-08-27T12:47:00.001-04:002014-08-27T13:02:21.327-04:00By far the hardest part of my calling<blockquote class="tr_bq">
If I may speak of my own experience, I find that <b>to keep my eye simply on Christ</b>, as my peace and my life, is <b>by far the hardest part of my calling</b>. Through mercy he enables me to avoid what is wrong in the sight of men; but it seems easier to deny self in a thousand instances of outward conduct, than in its ceaseless endeavors to act as a principle of righteousness and power.</blockquote>
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-- John Newton<br />
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<b><u>Important note</u></b>: The last part of this quote contains grammar that I find difficult to untangle. I offer my own interpretation here:<br />
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<b>It seems easier:</b><br />
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<b>To deny self in a thousand instances of outward conduct,</b><br />
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<b>than</b><br />
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<b>To deny self in the midst of its ceaseless endeavors to act as a principle of righteousness and power.</b><br />
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An interpretation shared by this <a href="http://thewelfareblogger.blogspot.com/2010/02/i-must-go-on-boasting-in-my-weaknesses.html" target="_blank">blogger</a>:<br />
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"I have a very real sickness that attempts daily and even hourly to supplant Jesus from His rightful place in my life. It attempts to act, like Newton put it, "as a principle of righteousness and power." Yet what power have I? What righteousness have I?"</blockquote>
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<br />Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0