What self-deceptions we are willing to employ to justify refusal of submission to God! How far we will wander from obedience because we are too proud to repent. We say, "I will not commit because I know I cannot. I am unable to perfectly keep my word." So out of pride we fashion a pious cloak to cover our rebellion. "God would not have me agree to something I cannot do." But can a man do anything perfectly before God? You cannot do anything for God! We are powerless to do the first works, much less be fruitful, progress in sanctification, or even cease a single sin unless God helps us. It begins with faith in Him and agreement with God. Then we must commit to give no place to the devil, walk in obedience, and continually humble ourselves before Him. No wonder pride in all its forms and disguises is abominable before God!
While struggling with a particular sin years ago, I remember in church when the hymn "I Surrender All" was played. During the refrain which goes, "I surrender all, I surrender all, all to thee my precious Savior I surrender all" I did not sing the words. I sang "I will ever love and trust Him, in His presence daily live" but not "I surrender all." What blatant hypocrisy, what pride! I could not enter into His presence because I would not surrender all. I refused to mouth the words "I surrender all" not because I was incapable of surrender, but because I would not. The pretense of keeping my "word" was more important to me than holiness, and therefore preferred wickedness instead. There I was concerned about keeping my word while I remained in sin!
It wounds a man's pride to admit he cannot do something. Conversely, his pride is bolstered the more he refuses to yield. As I stood that day with the outward appearance of piety, mouth closed with "intellectual" objections, praise of sin and pride was substituted for worship and obedience to God. What a horrible, detestable thing pride is! Pride is death posing as an angel of light! Should we refuse to commit ourselves to Christ because we cannot follow Him perfectly when we are not perfect ourselves? Ridiculous!
Let us seek God's favor to weed-out pride in us wherever we find it creeping through our hearts. Pride is the secret identity of sin. It is a slippery monster that sounds so convincing, has huge crushing teeth, and convinces us it cannot hurt us to be friends with it. It is time to sever the relationship, once and for all! Let us call Pride sin, and ask God to purify us of all the numbing poisons it has injected into our minds and hearts with its fangs. It makes a man self-righteous, arrogant, spiritually drowsy and dull, unaffected by the Spirit, caustic, selfish, and judgmental. Like a leech it fastens onto our souls and we cannot know it except the LORD reveal it. It seems to always fog our spiritual vision.
Have you ever hesitated to sing, "Search me O God, and know my heart, see if there be anything at all that might keep me from hearing you, keep me from knowing you, keep you from loving you, dear LORD?" I have. Pride keeps us from opening our hearts to the LORD's searching gaze. "You are not that bad, you have already repented," the soothing voice says. "You have victory! No need to worry!" When we entertain pride, there is always cause for concern! Are you willing to be examined by God today? Do you fear He might find something? Brothers and sisters, there is always something! But He has the power to heal, cleanse, and restore. Pride will only drag us to hell. God leaves the choice to us!
20 October 2010
19 October 2010
Doctrine of Doing
"First, all preaching should be practical. The proper end of all doctrine is practice. Anything brought forward as doctrine, which cannot be made use of as practical, is not preaching the Gospel. There is none of that sort of preaching in the Bible. That is all practical. "All Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness: that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good works" (2 Tim. 3:16-17). A vast deal of preaching in the present day, as well as in past ages, is called doctrinal as opposed to practical preaching. The very idea of making this distinction is a device of the devil. And a more abominable device Satan himself never devised. You sometimes hear certain men talk a wonderful deal about the necessity of "indoctrinating the people." By which they mean something different from practical preaching; teaching them certain doctrines, as abstract truths, without any particular reference to practice. And I have known a minister in the midst of a revival, while surrounded with anxious sinners, leave off labouring to convert souls, for the purpose of "indoctrinating" the young converts, for fear somebody else should indoctrinate them before him. And there the revival stops! Either his doctrine was not true, or it was not preached in the right way. To preach doctrines in an abstract way, and not in reference to practice, is absurd. God always brings in doctrine to regulate practice. To bring forward doctrinal views for any other object is not only nonsense; it is wicked." Charles G Finney (quoted from Revival Lectures, pg. 222, emphasis mine)Jesus never preached to satisfy the curiosity or men, to excite their senses, or simply for the sake of sharing information. He aimed to move the hearts, minds, and man's complete being to repentance and righteousness. Jesus did not seek to only engage the mind but move the soul. Finney wrote these words quoted above almost two hundred years ago, yet we still see this practice continually in the church. "Feeding the sheep" today often constitutes the sharing of information rather than motivation to action. Quite often I find that abstract doctrines, or teaching in an abstract manner does little more than please the minister. People politely sit through message after message, sift through the material, and though there is an abundance of information there is no direction concerning how to live in light of it. Therefore the material exists to quiet a man's conscience: he has done his duty in listening to a sermon rather than the sermon being an impetus used by the Holy Spirit to cause a man to draw nearer to God in faith. He has had a healthy meal at the LORD's table and returns hungrily back to the slop served up in the world's trough.
The result of this kind of preaching is overfed and overweight sheep due to lack of exercise - actual exercise of the Christian walk with Christ. Like cows we chew and chew, digest, and stand around talking about what we're eating. We have the scripture on our breath but it doesn't have practical impact. Take for instance the doctrine of the pre-tribulational rapture of the church. People happily take a position, but for what? Unless this doctrine moves you to action, it is like standing in the batter's box to hit without a bat. Your stance may be textbook, your uniform spotless, and you may have memorized word-for-word the rules of baseball. But without a bat you cannot perform your purpose in the box: to hit the ball! The doctrine of the rapture can and should move us to action: the necessity for personal repentance and evangelism; the knowledge that our time is short causes us to labor with earnest, urgent diligence; to desire and labor so our conversation will glorify God more and more as we see the Day approaching; we will be sober, watchful, and godly and on.
It has never been good enough in God's eyes for a man to know something. Knowledge brings a man under greater condemnation! It is the application of this knowledge that constitutes wisdom. The fear of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom. A preacher does Christ disservice when he does not specifically apply the Biblical truths of doctrine to practical life. Knowledge puffs up, but love edifies! When we think of any doctrine in scripture, how does it move us to greater love? How does doctrine stir up our hearts to glorify God with our lives? These are questions which I must address not only with my mouth through preaching or discourse, but also through my thoughts, words, and actions. The most essential doctrines can be degraded to information regurgitation rather than life transformation. How we need the Spirit to teach us and guide us in our daily lives! Let us not only be good students but servants of the Most High God. May our lives be display of true doctrine, an outflow of the life of Christ which speaks volumes of wisdom no one can deny.
18 October 2010
Divine Acceptance
It's not often when an object lesson literally jumps into your lap. While reading today Poncho, the Tooke's dog, did something he has never done before. He came up very close to the chair I was sitting in, stared at me with his tail wagging, and suddenly jumped into my lap. Before I could put what I was reading on the table beside me, he had settled down in a comfortable position. Poncho is a medium-sized dog (poodle/cocker mix) that weighs around 50lbs, likely not the ideal size of a lap dog! As I stroked his coat Ross remarked, "Now there's the ultimate in acceptance. He's found a friend." Poncho proved his acceptance of me by his actions.
As I sat with Poncho spread across me, there was a deep sense of pleasure in this display of confidence and trust. Unfortunately today the word "pleasure" tends to have a sexual connotation, but this was nothing of the sort. If Poncho suspected I would injure or hurt him he would refuse even to be touched by me, much less leap into my lap. What had I done to deserve such favor over the last week? Nothing unusual. I had given him a few treats, opened a door for him when he wanted out or in, and scratched his belly. Though it is likely he rested on me motivated by selfishness for attention, it made me happy he displayed such trust and desire. It was no trouble for me to put down my papers and make him the object of attention and affection.
There was something sweet in the familiarity and closeness we shared for those moments. After a while he moved on and I continued to read, thinking about this lesson. If I can take pleasure in a dog seeking attention, does not God take greater pleasure when His creation seeks after Him? Do our actions confirm that we have accepted Christ as LORD, Savior, and Friend? Am I willing, with humility as Poncho, to approach God and climb into His lap? Won't it give God great pleasure to know that with all the toys, diversions, and cares I might have, I will lay them all aside to spend quiet time with Him alone? I am not Poncho's owner but God is my Owner, having bought me with a price: the blood of Jesus. He deserves such time with me but will not legally require me to spend a set amount of time with Him. He could put me on a leash, threaten me with violence, and heave me onto His lap - but that would not be according to God's character. He has freely given me His love, and desires I would freely love Him back.
Remember the longing in the words of Jesus? He says in Matthew 23:37: "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the one who kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to her! How often I wanted to gather your children together, as a hen gathers her chicks under her wings, but you were not willing! God has all the comfort to give, but we so often are unwilling to receive. Jesus offered love, acceptance, forgiveness, and salvation, and men instead plotted to kill Him! There is little in a human relationship that compares with the closeness of a hen to her chicks. She has the capability to cover them all, warms them with her body, and protects them from harm. Each chick nestled beneath has all of her. We hold our babies, but a hen covers them. What a picture of closeness Christ desires to share with us if we are willing!
What a blessing that God rejoices in companionship with us! We climb up in His lap with our dirty old selves, complete with wet muddy paws, bad breath, drool, rancid gas, and stickers all through our coat because of where we've been. But God delights in us even though there is nothing we can do to earn his divine acceptance. Psalm 147:11 says, "The LORD takes pleasure in those who fear Him, In those who hope in His mercy." Instead of taking this grace for granted, may we avail ourselves of it by offering ourselves a living sacrifice unto God. When we trust God, we have no fear of abuse by Him. He delights in our advances and will never turn us away because we are not worthy. We are not worthy anyway! Yet when we admit our unworthiness and seek Him with desire He is pleased. God will make us the attention of His affection and acceptance if we allow Him. Have you climbed up in the LORD's lap today?
As I sat with Poncho spread across me, there was a deep sense of pleasure in this display of confidence and trust. Unfortunately today the word "pleasure" tends to have a sexual connotation, but this was nothing of the sort. If Poncho suspected I would injure or hurt him he would refuse even to be touched by me, much less leap into my lap. What had I done to deserve such favor over the last week? Nothing unusual. I had given him a few treats, opened a door for him when he wanted out or in, and scratched his belly. Though it is likely he rested on me motivated by selfishness for attention, it made me happy he displayed such trust and desire. It was no trouble for me to put down my papers and make him the object of attention and affection.
There was something sweet in the familiarity and closeness we shared for those moments. After a while he moved on and I continued to read, thinking about this lesson. If I can take pleasure in a dog seeking attention, does not God take greater pleasure when His creation seeks after Him? Do our actions confirm that we have accepted Christ as LORD, Savior, and Friend? Am I willing, with humility as Poncho, to approach God and climb into His lap? Won't it give God great pleasure to know that with all the toys, diversions, and cares I might have, I will lay them all aside to spend quiet time with Him alone? I am not Poncho's owner but God is my Owner, having bought me with a price: the blood of Jesus. He deserves such time with me but will not legally require me to spend a set amount of time with Him. He could put me on a leash, threaten me with violence, and heave me onto His lap - but that would not be according to God's character. He has freely given me His love, and desires I would freely love Him back.
Remember the longing in the words of Jesus? He says in Matthew 23:37: "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the one who kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to her! How often I wanted to gather your children together, as a hen gathers her chicks under her wings, but you were not willing! God has all the comfort to give, but we so often are unwilling to receive. Jesus offered love, acceptance, forgiveness, and salvation, and men instead plotted to kill Him! There is little in a human relationship that compares with the closeness of a hen to her chicks. She has the capability to cover them all, warms them with her body, and protects them from harm. Each chick nestled beneath has all of her. We hold our babies, but a hen covers them. What a picture of closeness Christ desires to share with us if we are willing!
What a blessing that God rejoices in companionship with us! We climb up in His lap with our dirty old selves, complete with wet muddy paws, bad breath, drool, rancid gas, and stickers all through our coat because of where we've been. But God delights in us even though there is nothing we can do to earn his divine acceptance. Psalm 147:11 says, "The LORD takes pleasure in those who fear Him, In those who hope in His mercy." Instead of taking this grace for granted, may we avail ourselves of it by offering ourselves a living sacrifice unto God. When we trust God, we have no fear of abuse by Him. He delights in our advances and will never turn us away because we are not worthy. We are not worthy anyway! Yet when we admit our unworthiness and seek Him with desire He is pleased. God will make us the attention of His affection and acceptance if we allow Him. Have you climbed up in the LORD's lap today?
17 October 2010
The Good Personal Shepherd
I have spent the last few days driving around town, familiarising (Aussie spelling!) myself with the local roads. It's been great to visit with people from the congregation, share great food, and have the freedom to travel without requesting a lift! The car shown is a Lancer the church has provided for my transport and has been a blessing.
A huge key to my successful navigation of Sydney roads is me not having to navigate them alone! The Tookes have been kind to loan me their G.P.S. and what a great help it has been. It prompts me in advance for turns, warns me of the abundant red-light and speed cameras, and monitors my speed. The function I like most of all is when I make a wrong turn or have to detour because of road work it automatically adjusts the route to my destination. It is also encouraging there are multitudes of ways to arrive at any destination. The question is: how long do I want it to take?
One aspect of the TomTom I appreciate is it does not become frustrated with long lights, traffic, my choice of music, or operating error. Without a shred of anger at my wrong turns it immediately reconfigures my path to the right way. It never says, "You are an idiot. Turn around, fool!" The G.P.S. does not turn off if I make more than one wrong turn as punishment for my poor decisions behind the wheel. It does not overwhelm me with criticism about being in the wrong lane or mock my confusion. It is almost as if the TomTom really wants to say with a smile, "You have reached your destination."
This reminds me of the gentle way God leads us through this life. He has a purpose and a design for every person's life in bringing Him glory. Like Pilgrim in Bunyan's allegory, though there is a clear path laid before us we can be tempted to turn any which way. We can lose our sense of direction when we walk contrary to God's Word, forsake the Good Shepherd, and the leading of the Holy Spirit. All of us have been that dying, pathetic, helpless, bleating sheep caught in thorns on a precipice. Without the intervention of the Good Shepherd, our souls would be lost for eternity. Jesus does not drive the sheep but chooses instead to lead them. God has given us the choice as human beings to follow Him or not. Praise God that when we wander from His care, protection, and guidance, He will come after us. The Good Shepherd will leave the 99 in safety to find that single lost sheep. When Jesus recovers the sheep He does not dole out violence in anger, but rejoices and celebrates that what was lost has been found. The horrible experience of separation from Him disciplines us to follow Him closer and more faithfully in the future.
A fitting end to this post is the third and fourth verses of "Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing" by Robert Robinson written back in 1757. The truth of these words has not changed over that time. Let us never forget to thank God for His great faithfulness unto us!
A huge key to my successful navigation of Sydney roads is me not having to navigate them alone! The Tookes have been kind to loan me their G.P.S. and what a great help it has been. It prompts me in advance for turns, warns me of the abundant red-light and speed cameras, and monitors my speed. The function I like most of all is when I make a wrong turn or have to detour because of road work it automatically adjusts the route to my destination. It is also encouraging there are multitudes of ways to arrive at any destination. The question is: how long do I want it to take?
One aspect of the TomTom I appreciate is it does not become frustrated with long lights, traffic, my choice of music, or operating error. Without a shred of anger at my wrong turns it immediately reconfigures my path to the right way. It never says, "You are an idiot. Turn around, fool!" The G.P.S. does not turn off if I make more than one wrong turn as punishment for my poor decisions behind the wheel. It does not overwhelm me with criticism about being in the wrong lane or mock my confusion. It is almost as if the TomTom really wants to say with a smile, "You have reached your destination."
This reminds me of the gentle way God leads us through this life. He has a purpose and a design for every person's life in bringing Him glory. Like Pilgrim in Bunyan's allegory, though there is a clear path laid before us we can be tempted to turn any which way. We can lose our sense of direction when we walk contrary to God's Word, forsake the Good Shepherd, and the leading of the Holy Spirit. All of us have been that dying, pathetic, helpless, bleating sheep caught in thorns on a precipice. Without the intervention of the Good Shepherd, our souls would be lost for eternity. Jesus does not drive the sheep but chooses instead to lead them. God has given us the choice as human beings to follow Him or not. Praise God that when we wander from His care, protection, and guidance, He will come after us. The Good Shepherd will leave the 99 in safety to find that single lost sheep. When Jesus recovers the sheep He does not dole out violence in anger, but rejoices and celebrates that what was lost has been found. The horrible experience of separation from Him disciplines us to follow Him closer and more faithfully in the future.
A fitting end to this post is the third and fourth verses of "Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing" by Robert Robinson written back in 1757. The truth of these words has not changed over that time. Let us never forget to thank God for His great faithfulness unto us!
Jesus sought me when a stranger,
Wandering from the fold of God;
He, to rescue me from danger,
Interposed His precious blood;
How His kindness yet pursues me
Mortal tongue can never tell,
Clothed in flesh, till death shall loose me
I cannot proclaim it well.
O to grace how great a debtor
Daily I’m constrained to be!
Let Thy goodness, like a fetter,
Bind my wandering heart to Thee.
Prone to wander, Lord, I feel it,
Prone to leave the God I love;
Here’s my heart, O take and seal it,
Seal it for Thy courts above.
Wandering from the fold of God;
He, to rescue me from danger,
Interposed His precious blood;
How His kindness yet pursues me
Mortal tongue can never tell,
Clothed in flesh, till death shall loose me
I cannot proclaim it well.
O to grace how great a debtor
Daily I’m constrained to be!
Let Thy goodness, like a fetter,
Bind my wandering heart to Thee.
Prone to wander, Lord, I feel it,
Prone to leave the God I love;
Here’s my heart, O take and seal it,
Seal it for Thy courts above.
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