Observe the rain that drops from heaven. It falls on the desert as well as on the fertile field. It drops on the rock that will refuse its fertilizing moisture as well as on the soil that opens its gaping mouth to drink it in with gratitude. See, it falls on the hard-trodden streets of the populous city, where it is not required and where men will even curse it for coming. It falls no more freely where the sweet flowers have been panting for it and the withering leaves have been rustling forth their prayers.
Such is the grace of God. It does not visit us because we ask for it, much less because we deserve it. But as God wills it, the bottles of heaven are unstopped and grace descends. No matter how vile and black and foul and godless men may be, He will have mercy on whom He will have mercy. That free, rich, overflowing goodness of His can make the very worst and least deserving the objects of His best and choicest love.
-Charles Spurgeon
Amazing Grace
Tuesday, May 01, 2007 at 12:56 AM Posted by Daniel
Labels: Spurgeon 0 comments
Nehemiah - Part Three - Mark Driscoll
Friday, March 09, 2007 at 10:09 PM Posted by Daniel
Labels: mark driscoll, Nehemiah, sermon 0 comments
Nehemiah - Part Two - Mark Driscoll
Thursday, March 01, 2007 at 12:08 AM Posted by Daniel
Labels: mark driscoll, Nehemiah, sermon 0 comments
Nehemiah - Part One - Mark Driscoll
Wednesday, February 28, 2007 at 1:31 AM Posted by Daniel
Labels: mark driscoll, Nehemiah, sermon 0 comments
Between the Sheets
Wednesday, February 21, 2007 at 9:13 PM Posted by Daniel
Kaleo Church in Houston is starting a look into Scripture's most risque display of sexual liberation. Pastor Bill Streger is going through the Song of Solomon, and apparently going to be as frank as possible without crossing the line into the world of crudity and crassness, a feat certainly not accomplished more impressively than the American sex-perverted culture where sex is simply a vehicle for self-gratification and is all but detached from love, marriage, children, and God. It should be interesting. Perhaps I will write more of my thoughts on this topic at a later time.
There are banners you can click on on this blog, or you can go to www.whatsbetweenthesheets.com for the fancy official series page.
Additionally, something I've found very enlightening about this topic is a similar series on the Song of Songs preached by Mark Driscoll. He is a very effective communicator and doesn't shy away from speaking the truth, especially when it's not what we want to hear. See links below.
Part 1. The Virgin and the Vineyard I - Waiting for Love
Part 2. The Virgin and the Vineyard II - Falling in Love
Part 3. The Damsel and the Dream - Growing in Love
Part 4. The Queen and the Quest - Reflections on Consummating Love
Part 5. Recollection and Romance - Reflections on Growing in Love
Part 6. Romance and Reality - Reflections on Mature Love
Part 7. Homestead and Honeymoon - Reflections on Rekindling Love
Part 8. Tenderness and Tragedy - A Final Reflection
Labels: church, sermon 0 comments
"A New Kind of Christian" - Emergent Church - Part 1
Sunday, February 11, 2007 at 9:20 PM Posted by Daniel
The "emerging" or "emergent" church (whatever it is) is a tricky thing to get your mind around because it's such a non-tangible movement if you are not involved in it, but the thinking in this philosophical upsurge is or has probably affected whatever church you're in to some extent, especially if you're in college or are involved in a young church. However visible this movement is to you, the thinking associated with it can be evaluated with a little concentrated effort. I hope to provide at least a jump start for anyone curious.
The leaders in this movement, some of them being Brian McLaren, Rob Bell, Doug Pagitt, and Karen Ward are closely tied to the Emergent Village, presumably a voice for leading this mission. I won't go on about its history, but its leaders play an important role in understanding it. You can read on if you want by going to the Almighty Wikipedia.
What I do want to do is address what they actually teach and believe. So here goes. Please forgive me for some of my wordings. It is difficult to arrange my ideas in a way that is effective especially for this topic because it's so broad. Bear with me, I have a point.
The emerging (or emergent, I'm not entirely sure if it matters which one I use) type church people have a strange view on truth. They seem to want to claim they hold to historic Christian beliefs such as the inerrancy (or at least the authority) of Scripture. But if you look closely at their practice, it seems a little on the side of postmodern rather than Christian (if you are unfamiliar with postmodernism, again check out Wikipedia if you desire). Postmodernism is roughly defined as a rejection of absolute truth, whereas Christianity is sort of the opposite in that our truth lies on the Gospel, and it is unshakable.
Moving on, the emergent church is all about "questioning truth" and knowing why we believe what we do, which is fine and should be encouraged to a point. The central problem comes in when they start questioning God Himself and the sacrifice of Jesus. There is a move by this movement, whether admittedly or knowingly or not, to place emphasis off the substitutionary atonement of Christ for our sins and think of him more as a really nice guy that took a beating and was merely a great example of how to live, giving to the poor and whatnot. He very much was this, but there shouldn't be confusion here. There can never be too much emphasis placed on the Event that divides and reworks history as we know it. The entire New Testament, for that fact the entire Bible, is ripe with emphasis on the Gospel. It's all that's talked about really.
The postmodern, emergent crowd wants to be very "new" and have a new way of "being a Christian," as Brian McLaren might put it, but if we are trying to be "new and different Christians," what are we to say about those Christians that came before us? Is our Christianity better than that of Paul, Augustine, or Aquinas? I would submit that we should not lose focus on the faith that was "once for all delivered to the saints." (Jude 3) Faith is faith. Trust in Christ is never shifted from definition, its importance, or its truth. Christians 2000 years ago have the same faith as Christians today: faith in God who alone rescues us from certain doom. I would submit that the emerging crowd wants to be "cutting edge" so badly that they have left sound reason somewhat and trying to reinvent rather than reform the church. Reform is good; it led to measureless progress and correction from Roman Catholic heresies, but even the Roman Catholic Church was originally built on the same Foundation and Faith originally dispensed by the Holy Spirit. The root of the problem with emerging church thinking is that they take questioning of truth too far, in that they end up questioning God Himself, His nature, and His character. At least this is the only logical outworking of what they are seeking to accomplish, that being, I suppose, a postmodern church: something hip, philosophically cutting edge and new.
Part of this I think is a noble attempt at reform and correcting some of the tremendous problems with modernistic, Enlightenment type thinking. Part of it however is unavoidably a decrease of faith and recognition of God's authority, unchangingness, and sovereignty over our lives. Where do we draw the line in questioning the basic pillars of Christianity? Rob Bell thinks it's "okay" for a Christian to not believe in the virgin birth of Jesus (in his book Velvet Elvis). He claims that the virgin birth is merely a "brick" of doctrine in the "wall" of Christian teaching that will not bring down the whole "wall" if removed. This is very faulty logic and is like taking a metaphor that sounds good, running with it, and ending up with no point in the end, as if he is only using this metaphor of a wall to try and sound new and hip in his writing, in my opinion.
The fact is if you take away the virgin birth of Jesus, you not only lose Jesus, you take away the authority of Scripture because it reporting lies, and we are left with only a feel good religion that lacks authority and absolute truth and you can be a "Christian" any way you want to. If you don't like the fact that unrepentant sinners spend eternity in anguish in hell, you don't have to believe it, but it still doesn't change the fact that it's true and will occur. All the efforts to be "tolerant," "open," or "welcoming of other faiths," only result in a lack of authority, tons of questions with no answers, and inevitably a complete loss of hope. I am not saying we should not be welcoming in terms of loving people and wanting them to trust in Christ, but are we to begin questioning God Himself? Are we to begin questioning the justice of God? His love? His wrath? His incarnation? His death? His resurrection? Are they merely bricks in the wall of Christianity? Paul is clear in 1 Corinthians 15 that if Jesus didn't rise from the dead, our faith is in vain and we are without hope. All we are left with is another empty human religion with false hope.
How do emergent types deal with this inevitable outworking of their philosophy and theology? I see no other way out. No, I think we must take a cue from Scripture here. Jude 3-4 warns us of false teacher:
Beloved, although I was very eager to write to you about our common salvation, I found it necessary to write appealing to you to contend for the faith that was once for all delivered to the saints. For certain people have crept in unnoticed who long ago were designated for this condemnation, ungodly people, who pervert the grace of our God into sensuality and deny our only Master and Lord, Jesus Christ.Jude exhorts us to contend for the faith once delivered to the saints, us Christians. Ephesians 4:4-6 echoes this well:
There is one body and one Spirit--just as you were called to the one hope that belongs to your call--one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all, who is over all and through all and in all.There is one faith, faith in Christ who took our sin upon himself and not only rescued us from the deserved wrath of the Father, but took the punishment by bearing our iniquities. We must contend, fight for the faith delivered to Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Isaiah, David, Samuel, Noah, Peter, Paul, Jesus, and us today, because it's the same faith: faith in Christ for our redemption. Paul warns also against false teaching in 1 Tim. 6:3:
If anyone teaches a different doctrine and does not agree with the sound words of our Lord Jesus Christ and the teaching that accords with godliness, he is puffed up with conceit and understand nothing.I am compelled to think that this means that all wisdom comes from a healthy understanding of the Gospel, which is unchanging. Fools that don't understand the Gospel malign the word of God and formulate their own theologies that are full of conceit and really end up understanding nothing.
According to Paul, there are doctrines we should contend for and some we should not tolerate in the family of God because of the destructive, misleading nature of the latter. God cares about His people and does not wish them to go astray. It is the responsibility of pastors primarily to guard their flocks from dangerous teaching that threatens and diminishes the sovereignty of Jesus and the utter importance of his work on the cross, that alone is our hope and object of faith. It is also the responsibility of each family, each father, each mother, each husband, each wife, each individual to guard against false teaching brought into the church by wolves in sheep's clothing. This carefulness cannot be simply written off as "fundamentalist" or "intolerant" thinking. Would you let your kids be taught that you really are not their father/mother? Would you let them be taught to question your authority and loving commands? Would you watch your child run in front of oncoming traffic, stop, and say "well, that's his opinion?" No! We guard those we love and warn them against lies spread by wolves. It's the same in the family of God, the Church. We should be on guard at all times, even when a hip new theology comes along.
None of what I say here is to imply or express that certain "emergent" types thinkers are not sincere or that they are not Christians. It really matters not who is teaching something. We should judge what is being taught either way.
Labels: authority, emergent, emerging 0 comments
"A New Kind of Christian" - Emergent Church - Intro
Monday, January 08, 2007 at 10:24 PM Posted by Daniel
If you have been around the buzz circle in Christianity lately, though it sounds so lame to even say and a large part of this "circle" is really just the blog world with a bunch of internet freaks with high speed connections, you may have heard a lot of choice phrases and terms being thrown out. Words like "emergent" and "emerging" (they are somehow different, though really the same). Words like "postmodern", "missional theology," "ecclesiology,", "theological trajectory," and "new monastic communities." What the heck is all this stuff?
I hope to try and answer these questions the best I can with the research I've done on it through a few different entries in the near future. Also, I want to present concerns and worries about this "new movement" in today's Christianity. I believe many good things are coming forth from this movement (the 'emerging church movement'), but I also believe there are some serious dangers that exist in these types of theological lines.
I would like to explain how this subject came up.
I was thinking a lot about missions, as can be seen in the past few blog entries, and I've also been hearing a lot about "emerging" churches from my own circle around the internet with the aforementioned freaks. I am witnessing some of my former bubble of Christian friends/buddies start to peak interest in this new movement, and many of them seem to be doing so because they sense a need for change or reform in today's church, which is largely denominational, and appears to be seeking revitalization from dead an dying traditions. This can be a good thing, but can also be a dangerous thing if it is not handled carefully I think.
So please indulge me if you would be so kind.
Later, all 1 of you.
Labels: authority, emergent, emerging 0 comments
Job cut me down
Monday, January 01, 2007 at 9:20 AM Posted by Daniel
Happy New Year.
For the first time in my life I spent New Year's Eve alone. I know it sounds sad, but it was actually the better of two options for me. My family had a stupid little conflict over what to do to celebrate. Originally, my brother Tim had hinted at doing something big for New Year's because 2006 has been so crappy for our family and friends (a divorce, a virtual divorce, adultery, divorce) and it seemed fitting to end it all and try and start over anew in our lives in a big way. Well, as it usually goes in our family, when it gets down to actually deciding what to do there is always a problem. We wanted to go skiing somewhere but the airline tickets were so dang expensive that it just wouldn't have worked. Someone mentioned a few days ago that some hotel near DFW airport has a little New Year's party type thing, and so we sort of planned on doing that, though dancing to forced, live music is not my idea of fun. When it got to last night, everyone was pretty much conflicted on going or not. I got kind of depressed last night at the idea of going and seeing a bunch of couples having fun and laughing, and I know all I would be thinking about was the girl I've lost and remembering all the good times, and that would just kill me even more. Plus, parties with dancing where it feels like people are trying to force me to have fun is not my idea of fun. I'd rather stay home. I guess I'm weird for being this way.
Also, my sister Karen had some issues with going for whatever reason. My brother Michael and his new woman/girlfriend/whatever were confusing us with whether they were going or not. So it all ended up after all the confusion that everyone went but me, because I know I would not have been able to bear it. There are things I can do at home that can occupy my thoughts and keep them off of wanting to slip into depression/suicidal mode.
I went out and drove around a little bit. It was kind of like a movie where the lonely guy walks around in the dark and sees in windows of houses families and friends gathering together having good times, and for a moment he feels like he has lost everything good in his life. I sorta felt that way knowing that so many people right then were with the ones they loved, the persons they wanted to spend the rest of their liveswith. Just to know that I had that and lost it and to be reminded of it by looking at people who appear to have it, it's just kind of surreal like I'm watching a movie of myself that I have no control over, like it's all been determined and directed already and all I can do is observe what others are doing and react to it. It really sort of confronts my idea of how the world works, that being that I can control my own destiny if I just try real hard. I'm more led to believe that things just happen because they're bound to, and that the only real trying I can do is just to deceive myself into thinking that I have some sort of control on how things turn out. I tend to reject the idea that we really have any sort of effect on what happens in our lives, because when things go bad and you are struck with heartache, you always think, "how did this happen to me?", "where did it all go wrong?"
The only conclusion I am left with after all the misery/depression/heartache is that God has a purpose set before the foundations of the Earth (Ephesians 1:4) that is bigger than me and who am I to understand it and who am I that I should have any say in it? How could I question the motives and actions of a holy and righteous God who is all-powerful and all-knowing? I am just a speck in the universe with no power of my own. Where was I when Jesus laid the foundations of the Earth? I didn't set its measurements, or lay its cornerstone. I have never commanded the sun to rise. I cannot bind the chains of the Pleiades or loose the cords of Orion. I have never commanded an eagle to mount up or drawn Leviathan out with a fishhook. I do not know the time the mountain goats give birth or who sets the wild donkey free.* I am nothing compared to the glorious God I worship, and when things happen to me, who am I to claim that God is unfair or that I have the right to be depressed/upset/angry at God because things didn't go my way? God keeps the universe in order and still has the concern to deal personally in my heart and to give me His righteousness through Jesus, wiping my sin away and making me His own. How can I respond with anything but worship and adoration to Him? When things suck in my life (or in your life), when things don't go my way, I am left to agree with Job in saying, "Behold, I am insignificant; what can I reply to [God]? I lay my hand on my mouth." (40:4) I have nothing to say to God but that He is good and great and glorious, not because of what happens to me in my insignifant lifespan or of some mystical spiritual experience that we're supposed to have and what was forced down my throat by people in college claiming to know God in this way, but just because of who He is and what He's done in Jesus' life and death on the cross for His people and how it's all spoon-fed and spelled out to us in Scripture. He knows all. We must confess our sin in trying to know everything that happens to us and understanding it all. We are not God. Job's friends, like all of us, think we have some clever little theological understanding of things that fit nicely into the little box of our 3-pound fallen brains. God will not be mocked by this. We must reject this and understand that God is more important than us. We are not important, but God makes us His own and involves us in His great plans to glorify righteousness because He is gracious and merciful. We must not try and understand every terrible or good thing that happens to us, but reply with Job that, "[God] can do all things, and that no purpose of [His] can be thwarted." (Job 42:2) He has a purpose that is bigger than we can understand and that we could never make happen on our own even if given the chance and the ability because we are a wicked people. I know I am. But God is good.
So that's what happened for New Year's 2007 for me. Just thought I would share that with the 1 or 2 people who might read this.
*references to Job 38-41
Labels: Job, New Year's 3 comments
New Stuff
Saturday, December 30, 2006 at 5:31 AM Posted by Daniel
Holy crap, I have spent the early morning doing nothing but screwing with this freaking blog. Nonetheless, I have added tons of new stuff to it in the hopes of edifying whoever may happen to read this. Lots of media has been added that can be of great help to anyone who is interested. There is a lot of wisdom and help to be gained from the great preachers and teachers represented here. Look into some of this and hopefully I'll hear from you about any thoughts or comments you may have about anything. Enjoy!
Labels: blog, feeds, layout 0 comments
Go Where He Leads - Some Thoughts on "Missions" Pt. 3
at 3:50 AM Posted by Daniel
At this point, I would like to clarify further what I am getting at.
The point behind the Gospel call and “missions” is not to make it appear as if God is in heaven fighting a battle against evil forces and needs soldiers to help win the war. It is not as if we are crucial to God’s mission to glorify righteousness and we must recognize our inherent importance to join God’s side. This sort of thinking is really just man-centered theology, whether we are willing to recognize it and call it what it is or not. Make no mistake about it—God does not need us to glorify righteousness. God has existed in loving community as the Trinity for all of eternity and before the foundations of the Earth were laid. He was not obligated to create man. Some “theologians” have postulated that God had to create man because “He is love” (1 John 4:16) and love must have an object of affection. This is a dangerous statement, because whenever we start prescribing rules about how God “had to do something,” we can slip into faulty doctrine and even heresy real quickly. No, God did not have to create anything. He could have existed for all of eternity; He could have chilled as the Trinity forever without any evil or wickedness manifested. (As a side note, I sometimes wonder why God went to all the trouble to bring us into being and have us go through all this sin, pain, and heartache, and only for many humans to never see the depravity of themselves, never see the greatness of God, never repent from their sin, and spend an eternity in hell tormented in the presence of a seemingly harmless Lamb. I will never understand it, but I must nevertheless trust that God knows what He’s doing). Anywho, God is not obligated to do anything, and He is not in need of wicked sinners.
The point, when all theology and missiology is broken down, is that God is good. He’s holy meaning different than us, He’s just, and He’s righteous but He can also be nice and merciful when He sees fit. He’s loving and gracious. In Jesus He displayed humility in coming down to be His creation (Immanuel = God with us in Hebrew). This tells us that we must not strive to be with God by reaching in futility to heaven like the fools and the Tower of Babel, this because we are powerless in our humanity to please God. Rather, God has come down from heaven as a human to be with us. Genesis tells us that He did so on a stairway to heaven that Jacob saw in a dream while napping with his head on a rock (Led Zeppelin totally ripped off the Old Testament). This Stairway that Jacob saw, according to Jesus’ own words in John 1:51 is the Son of Man, Jesus himself.
God, in His own use if irony and unpredictable graciousness, has decided to defeat evil by using evil, us wicked sinners. He changes us to be different people and empowers us to live differently than we previously did. This only happens by grace. We can only be used for good by His grace. God does not choose us based on our own innate ability, like designating some of us varsity and the rest junior varsity. The Bible tells us that He does not practice favoritism. Rather, He takes crappy people and does amazing things with them. Romans 9 tells us that “He has mercy on whom He wills, and He has compassion on whom He wills.” This is the pattern in the Old Testament, where God takes dumb, unaware, average guys and empowers them to do miraculous things. Abram was just living a normal life like everyone else, likely a pagan, and God showed up in His life, gave him grace, and promised him a son even though his wife was barren and he was passed his child-bearing years. He commanded Abram to leave his hometown and his father’s house to go start a different and set-apart life that would be used to “bless all nations.” The New Testament tells us that this blessing was not only the nation of Israel, a people outnumbering the stars in the sky, but it was Jesus himself who would bless all people with his substitutionary life, atoning death, and powerful resurrection. The Gospel was then spread all over the world and today Jesus’ legacy is a few billion people that worship him as God, the promise made to Abram, a lowly guy from some no-name town, just like all of us who have experienced the great mercy of God.
It is then that we see that the idea of missions is not about us recognizing God’s need for us or lost peoples’ need for us, but really recognizing our need for God. For it is Him that takes us and does great things with us; and I believe that it is not until our hearts are humbled and we realize our utter nothingness without God that we can truly become all things to all people that we may win some to Him. We must trust in Him who justifies us and in His Gospel that possesses His power. Even though the spiritually blind regard the preaching of the Gospel as utter foolishness, for those that believe we know of its power because we have experienced it. And it is the collective privilege of the missionaries, the seminarians, and the pastors; as well as the single mothers, the children, the cubicle trolls, the husbands, the wives, the fathers, and the friends to be about this Gospel in everything we do because we possess the power of God in our mouths, in our hands, and in how we live. Praise God we have such a blessing to give to all people and that we ourselves who believe on Jesus’ name have received this blessing spoken to Adam, Abraham, and Jacob and to all those that trust in the life he gives freely to us lowly people. Amen.
Labels: calling, Gospel, Jesus, missions 0 comments
Go Where He Leads - Some Thoughts on "Missions" Pt. 2
Tuesday, December 26, 2006 at 2:16 AM Posted by Daniel
I have given more thought to this issue, and I have realized how very important it is how we understand all this. How we answer this question I believe speaks volumes about what we really think about God and His ultimate sovereignty over all peoples, situations, and happenings.
I guess the bottom line question here is, "who's in charge?" By that I mean us to ask ourselves who we think is running the show, who is getting things done in the world, who is spreading the Gospel, who is causing nations to fall to their knees, and who gets the glory? Upon hearing such questions, the obvious Sunday-school answer is, well, obvious: it's God. But the point I wish to make here is, do we really know this and live like it's true? To illustrate this last statement by an example, the great reformer Martin Luther was once asked by his congregation why he continued to preach the Gospel every week in his sermons, as if to imply that they wanted him to give them something more to fill their souls, something that had more "weight" to it, as it were. When asked why he continued to preach the Gospel week by week, he answered: "Because Beloved, week by week you forget it." I think the situation in this German church is similar to what is happening in our world today. We think that because we know about Jesus and we know the Gospel message, that somehow we can now "move on" to more important things, or move on to the good stuff because we're ready, like the Gospel is old hat, it's about Jesus dying on the cross...blah...blah...raised from the dead...blah...seated at the right hand of God Almighty....blah....blah. The problem with such thinking is really quite obvious: we have nothing more. It's not something we have to think real hard about and develop some silly drawn-up application to our lives. The Gospel is what it is, and we know that "it's the power of God to salvation for everyone who believes" (Romans 1:16) and that we should not be ashamed of it for this very reason (rest of verse). I think we have slipped into sin in this area as the Church, at least in some circles. We think there is something more past the Gospel that will really feed us, that will really make our lives better, but the fact is we are ashamed of the Gospel if we deny its power to change lives--from the beginning to the end, for God is the author as well as the finisher of our faith (Heb. 12:2), and His power lies in the Gospel of Jesus.
All this to make the point that I think we, including me, have failed in believing the Gospel, and in believing the Commission, which are both really the same thing if you think about it (i.e. Jesus going after all types of people, so we should also). We have failed to make the Commission our mission (not to sound redundant and lame....ok scratch that). Let me try again: We have failed to obey Jesus Christ, the Almighty Sovereign Lord of the Universe who holds us in His hand as if over a raging fire (keep it simple). Ok, I had to throw in some J. Ed. Perhaps we need some good ol' fear of God back in us. Ok, I've gotten off. I'll try to regroup.
To connect all this rabbit-trailing, what I am getting at is that we have failed to trust God. We have failed to be about the Gospel in all we do. We have failed in many respects in just, well, trusting God. Not to be repetitive, but I think it's really the problem. We have this thing where we say, "God's got everything in control," and then we say stuff like, "we need to preach the Gospel to those guys with warpaint all over them because they will never know Jesus if we don't," as if we are really that important. There's obvious confusion here I think. Now sure, as Paul asks, "how will they hear without a preacher?" (Rom. 10:14) But we must be slow to answer the question, "oh we have to do it or else it will never happen," because we're the important guys, right, us Christians, right, we're special, right? Well....not really. We're really just a bunch of people God decided to be nice to and be spared from a righteous and just wrath (read about Noah and the flood that slayed all but 8 people off the face of the Earth if you're skeptical here, a nice children's story I might add.......). We need our priorities straighted out here. God has chosen to be nice to us by giving us Jesus as a sacrifice, so "how will he not also graciously give us all things?" (Rom. 8:32) This includes the empowerment to live as He wills, sanctifying us into the image of His Son, doing the good works God "prepared in advance for us to do." (Eph. 2:10) This includes missions (here we are finally). These are the good works He prepared in advance for us.
Ephesians 2 says that we are God's workmanship, by His grace, and we do good works by His grace, and we have faith by His grace...grace, grace, grace, grace, grace. Get the point? It's all a gift, it's all a gift, it's all a gift. Your faith is a gift, the faith that claims the righteousness of Christ and not our crappy lives is a gift. The faith that boldy trust that God's promises about Jesus taking away our sin is true. It's all just one big gift. Think of all the good things in your life; they're all gifts. James says 'every good and perfect gift comes from God'. Go look it up, I'm tired of looking up the verse numbers.
We must not forget where our power comes from. The power to preach the Gospel comes from the Gospel. The power to see sinners come to the feet of the cross is from the Gospel. The power to live redeemed lives free from the hindering and crushing work of sin is from the Gospel. And it's Jesus who makes all things work together for good for those that love him. It's Jesus behind the scenes giving you a 'calling', a 'personality', friends, coworkers, etc. Acts 17:26 says that God determines the time and the place that you will live, and also provides you the means to accomplish your mission because He is the one who prepared it all in advance for you to do. The message is simple, but actually really perplexing: God's in control, but do your part, because it makes things so much simpler and easier. Like I said before (and not to be oversimplistic because each of these things deserve prayer and contemplation before figuring out and executing), preach the Gospel, go where you like, marry someone that loves Jesus and is with you on the Gospel mission, love your neighbor, etc. And I will say also, what you do, where you go, who you marry, who you preach the Gospel to, who your neighbor is, are all not nearly as important, I would venture to say are not important (again, don't misunderstand me) in comparison to who you worship, because our God is infinitely bigger God than any of our little issues on Earth and all knees will bow to the Sovereign in the end. Thank you Jesus. Amen.
Labels: calling, Gospel, Jesus, missions 1 comments
Go Where He Leads - Some Thoughts on "Missions" Pt. 1
Saturday, December 23, 2006 at 3:11 AM Posted by Daniel
I was thinking just a few minutes ago about how we, perhaps moreso in American Christian culture (though I am no expert), view God's call on us to "do missions."
There's a lot of talk in Christian bubbles today about missions. Most of the time the people that are super fired up about missions we regard as some sort of higher breed of Christian, people that are willing to be poor and live off of a steady diet of baloney and/or vienna sausage (that stuff rules by the way) while living amongst natives of far-off "unreached" and primitive civilizations. Oftentimes, from my experience in dealing with and knowing a lot of peers that wish to be missionaries in distant lands, we get this somewhat unrealistic view, maybe not overtly sometimes, that if we don't make this huge move somewhere overseas or in the most remote village in Zbembezedjfd or wherever, that we are somehow not "responding to the call of God." Now I am quick to agree that Jesus commanded to preach the gospel in all nations and to make disciples of all people, but I think it's easy sometimes to just reduce the Commission to the people that do go to other countries and to so-called unreached people groups that haven't heard the name of Jesus.
Or perhaps we can even reduce "the call" to people that decide to go to seminary and be religious "professionals." The problem with such thinking is that it creates this hierarchy of spirituality where we can agree that we are all Christians, but sometimes we who just stay at home and work a mundane job can feel the temptation to exalt these "missionaries" and "seminarians" to a higher status in God's spiritual pyramid scheme where Jesus sits at the top and we can become like him by making the right decisions, gritting our teeth, being moral, and depending on our own will to attain the righteousness of Christ. We view them as spiritual super heroes that somehow never struggle, never miss reading their Bible, never cease praying, and are even never suffering from sin in their lives, both those they have committed and those that have been committed against them. I believe we must resist the temptation to do this because we are focusing so much on other people and our failures to live up to them instead of focusing on Jesus and the righteousness he imparts to us by his death and resurrection achieved according to his own grace and love.
If we get stuck on this type of man-centered thinking, it can distort where we think our righteousness is obtained. This can also happen to the person who is "called" to go overseas or to seminary. We have a strange view of God's "call" I think. We are raised by the institutional American church (usually the mainstream denominations) to try real hard to "hear the call of God," so we say. Granted, this is true, but we must be careful in how we understand this. We must ask ourselves: what is the call of God? Is it different to each person? Should I wait for God to speak audibly to me or give me a vision? In thinking about these questions, we must not overlook some of the clearest commands of God and how we are to respond to His call to us. Primarily, we must not overlook the inspiration of Scripture, and also the speaking of the Holy Spirit to our hearts. Furthermore, it must be understood that the Holy Spirit will never call us to do something contrary to Scripture, for He Himself "inspired" it ('breathed life into it') (2 Tim. 3:16), and for Him to do so it would seem He was either a horrible communicator because He couldn't get the message right the first time, or that He was some sort of whimsical schizophrenic who gives commands based on some ridiculous capricious nature that change from moment to moment. No, we must refuse this heretical teaching.
Secondly, we can have a confused outlook on God's call to us. We can take one aspect of the Gospel call and run with it, while ignoring the remaining crucial parts, for the entire Gospel is to be regarded when obeying Jesus' Commission. We cannot say "we must all be overseas missionaries," or "we must all go to seminary," or "we must leave our homes and spread the Gospel to the unreached peoples because how can anyone know Jesus unless it is us who tells them?" Let me just say, a lot of this kind of talk is nonsensical. Who are we to say what we should be? Who are we to prescribe what the call of God is to us, or more broadly what the will of God is for the nations of the Earth? And how do we know that those "primitive" civilizations don't know Jesus? Can we claim that Jesus can't show up to them and reveal himself? I want to be clear here. God does not need us. He is all-powerful, omnipotent, the Almighty God, however you want to put it. The point is He can get things done without us, but the amazing thing is He chooses to use us and include us in His purposes. Therefore we must approach the "call of God" or the "will of God" humbly and ask God to glorify His name by using us however He sees fit. We must remember who is in charge here. It's not us. We must remember that God will get what He wants done, done. We must remember that God is on a mission also, a much bigger one, and unlike us, He never fails. Jesus was the ultimate missionary. He came to a foreign land for one reason: to save sinners, and he completed his mission to the nth degree. He shouted "it is finished!" from the cross, and indeed it is. He has completed his mission on the cross and from His perspective outside of time, He has already won the battle for our souls. We must recognize by the grace given to us that we must repent from our sin and turn to Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith. Ephesians 2 tells us that we are saved by grace through faith, and both of these are gifts He gives according to the purpose He set out before the foundations of the Earth to glorify Himself, the source of all righteousness.
I think the main point I am trying to make is that we must not get too caught up in "trying to hear the call of God", wondering which country to go to, and being really good at guessing the secret will of God. All people need Jesus, and God will "have mercy on whomever He wills" (Rom. 9:15), so we must rest our hope on Him who is faithful that He will accomplish His purposes and He can use us in any circumstance, in any country, in every moment of time if it be His desire. We must hold fast to the truth, worship God in all circumstances, and preach the Gospel whether in season or out of season. So I say, do whatever you like, go wherever you want, marry whomever you want, work wherever you want, but preach the Gospel, love your neighbor, love your wife, submit to your husband, pray, take up your cross, glorify His purpose, love your enemies, do justly, love mercy, and walk humbly with your God--in your words and how you live, and know that our only source of righteousness does not come from what country we're in or where we work, but from the crimson flow of Christ, Hallowed be Thy Name. Amen.
Labels: calling, Gospel, Jesus, missions 1 comments
Ryan Ferguson recites Hebrews chapters 9 and 10
Tuesday, December 12, 2006 at 9:17 PM Posted by Daniel
This is really cool. Try to imagine it's the first time you've ever heard it. This video is from the WorshipGod06 Conference Aug. 9-12, 2006. Ryan Ferguson is giving a memorized dramatic recitation of Hebrews 9 and 10 from the ESV Bible. God’s Word is powerful. The Holy Bible, English Standard Version is copyright ©2001 by Crossway Bibles, a division of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved. |
Labels: hebrews, ryan ferguson 0 comments
Other refuge have I none; Hangs my helpless soul on thee?
Wednesday, November 29, 2006 at 5:48 AM Posted by Daniel
Charles Haddon Spurgeon, a preacher in 19th Century England, has one of the most gifted writing abilities I have ever seen. Please read this and try and imagine it being preached with authority and emotion. Afterwards you may be hooked on his writings. I recommend them.
A Sermon
(No. 273)
Delivered on Sabbath Morning, September 4th, 1859, by the
REV. C. H. Spurgeon
at the Music Hall, Royal Surrey Gardens.
"And having spoiled principalities and powers, he made a shew of them openly, triumphing over them in it."—Colossians 2:15.
O THE EYE OF REASON the cross is the centre of sorrow and the lowest depth of shame. Jesus dies a malefactor's death. He hangs upon the gibbet of a felon and pours out his blood upon the common mount of doom with thieves for his companions. In the midst of mockery, and jest, and scorn, and ribaldry, and blasphemy, he gives up the ghost. Earth rejects him and lifts him from her surface, and heaven affords him no light, but darkens the mid-day sun in the hour of his extremity. Deeper in woe the Saviour dived, imagination cannot descend. A blacker calumny than was cast on him satanic malice could not invent. He hid not his face from shame and spitting; and what shame and spitting it was! To the world the cross must ever be the emblem of shame: to the Jew a stumbling-block, and to the Greek foolishness. How different however is the view which presents itself to the eye of faith. Faith knows no shame in the cross, except the shame of those who nailed the Saviour there; it sees no ground for scorn, but it hurls indignant scorn at sin, the enemy which pierced the Lord. Faith sees woe, indeed, but from this woe it marks a fount of mercy springing. It is true it mourns a dying Saviour, but it beholds him bringing life and immortality to light at the very moment when his soul was eclipsed in the shadow of death. Faith regards the cross, not as the emblem of shame, but as the token of glory. The sons of Belial lay the cross in the dust, but the Christian makes a constellation of it, and sees it glittering in the seventh heaven. Man spits upon it, but believers, having angels for their companions, bow down and worship him who ever liveth though once he was crucified. My brethren, our text presents us with a portion of the view which faith is certain to discover when its eyes are anointed with the eye-salve of the Spirit. It tells us that the cross was Jesus Christ's field of triumph. There he fought, and there he conquered, too. As a victor on the cross he divided the spoil. Nay, more than this; in our text the cross is spoken of as being Christ's triumphal chariot in which he rode when he led captivity captive, and received gifts for men. Calvin thus admirably expounds the last sentence of our text:—"the expression in the Greek allows, it is true, of our reading--in himself; the connection of the passage, however, requires that we read it otherwise; for what would be meagre as applied to Christ, suits admirably well as applied to the cross. For as he had previously compared the cross to a signal trophy or show of triumph, in which Christ led about his enemies, so he now also compares it to a triumphal car in which he showed himself in great magnificence. For there is no tribunal so magnificent, no throne so stately, no show of triumph so distinguised, no chariot so elevated, as is the gibbet on which Christ has subdued death and the devil, the prince of death; nay, more, has utterly trodden them under his feet."
I shall this morning, by God's help, address you upon the two portions of the text. First, I shall endeavour to describe Christ as spoiling his enemies on the cross; and having done that I shall lead your imagination and your faith further on to see the Saviour in triumphal procession upon his cross, leading his enemies captive, and making a shew of them openly before the eyes of the astonished universe.
I.First, our faith is invited this morning to behold CHRIST MAKING A SPOIL OF PRINCIPALITIES AND POWERS. Satan, leagued with sin and death, had made this world the home of woe. The Prince of the power of the air, fell usurper, not content with his dominions in hell, must need invade this fair earth. He found our first parents in the midst of Edem; he tempted them to forego their allegiance to the King of heaven; and they became at once his bondslaves—bondslaves forever, if the Lord of heaven had not interposed to ransom them The voice of mercy was heard while the fetters were being rivetted upon their feet, crying, "Ye shall yet be free!" In the fulness of time there shall come one who shall bruise the serpent"s head, and shall deliver his prisoners from the house of their bondage. Long did the promise tarry. The earth groaned and travailed in its bondage. Man was Satan's slave, and heavy were the clanking chains which were upon his soul. At last, in the fulness of time, the Deliverer came forth, born of a woman. This infant conqueror was but a span long. He lay in the manger—he who was one day to bind the old dragon and cast him into the bottomless pit, and set a seal upon him. When the old serpent knew that his enemy was born, he conspired to put him to death; he leagued with Herod to seek the young child that he might destroy him. But the providence of God preserved the future conqueror; he went down into Egypt, and there was he hidden for a little season. Anon, when he had come to fulness of years, he made his public advent, and began to preach liberty to the captives, and the opening of the prison to them that were bound. Then Satan again shot forth his arrows, and sought to end the existence of the woman's seed. Once the Jews took up stones to stone him; nor did they fail to repeat the attempt. They sought to cast him down from the brow of a hill headlong. By all manner of devices they laboured to take away his life, but his hour was not yet. Dangers might surround him, but he was invulnerable till the time was come. At last the trememdous day arrived. Foot to foot the conqueror must fight with the dread tyrant. A voice was heard in heaven, "This is your hour, and the power of darkness." And Christ himself exclaimed, "Now is the crisis of this world; now must the prince of darkness be cast out." From the table of communion the Redeemer arose at midnight, and marched forth to the battle. How dreadful was the contest! In the very first onset the mighty conqueror seemed himself to be vanquished. Beaten to the earth at the first assault, he fell upon his knees and cried, "My Father, if it be possible let this cup passd from me." Revived in strength, made strong by heaven, he no longer quailed, and from this hour never did he utter a word which looked like renouncing the fight. From the terrible skirmish all red with bloody sweat, he dashed into the thick of the battle. The kiss of Judas was, as it were, the first sounding of the trumpet; Pilate's bar was the glittering of the spear; the cruel lash was the crossing of the swords. But the cross was the centre of the battle; there, on the top of Calvary, must the dread fight of eternity be fought. Now must the Son of God arise, and gird his sword upon his thigh. Dread defeat or glorious conquest awaits the Champion of the church. Which shall it be? We hold our breath with anxious suspense while the storm is raging. I hear the trumpet sound. The howlings and yells of hell rise in awful clamour. The pit is emptying out its legions. Terrible as lions, hungry as wolves, and black as night, the demons rush on in myriads. Satan's reserve forces, those who had long been kept against this day of terrible battle, are roaring from their dens. See how countless their armies, and how fierce their countenances. Brandishing his sword the arch fiend leads the van, bidding his followers fight neither with small nor great, save only with the King of Israel. Terrible are the leaders of the battle. Sin is there, and all its innumbrable offspring, spitting forth the venom of asps, and infixing their poison-fangs in the Saviour's flesh. Death is there upon his pale horse,and his cruel dart rends its way through the body of Jesus even to his inmost heart. He is "exceeding sorrowful, even unto death." Hell comes, with all its coals of juniper and fiery darts. But chief and head amongst them is Satan; remembering well the ancient day Christ hurled him from the battlements of heaven, he rushes with all his malice yelling to the attack. The darts shot into the air are so thick that they blind the sun. Darkness covers the battle-field, and like that of Egypt it was a darkness which might be felt. Long does the battle seem to waver, for there is but one against many. One man—nay, tell it, lest any should misunderstand me, one God stands in battle array against ten thousands of principalities and powers. On, on they come, and he receives them all. Silently at first he permits their ranks to break upon him, too terribly enduring hardness to spare a thought for shouting. But at last the battle-cry is heard. He who is fighting for his people begins to shout, but it is a shout which makes the church tremble. He cries, "I thirst." The battle is so hot upon him, and the dust so thick that he is choked with thirst. He cries, "I thirst." Surely, now, he is about to be defeated? Wait awhile; see ye yon heaps; all these have fallen beneath his arm, as for the rest fear not the issue. The enemy is but rushing to his own destruction. In vain his fury and his rage, for see the last rank is charging, the battle of ages is almost over. At last the darkness is dispersed. Hark how the conqueror cries, "It is finished." And where now are his enemies? They are all dead. There lies the king of terrors, pierced through with one of his own darts! There lies Satan with his head all bleeding, broken! Yonder crawls the broken-backed serpent, writhing in ghastly misery! As for sin, it is cut in pieces, and scattered to the winds of heaven! "It is finished," cries the conqueror, as he came with dyed garments from Bozrah, "I have trodden the wine-press alone, I have trampled them in my fury, and their blood is sprinkled on my garments."
And now he proceeds to divide the spoil.
We pause here to remark that when the spoil is divided it is a sure token that the battle is completely won. The enemy will never suffer the spoil to be divided among the conquerors as long as he has any strength remaining. We may gather from our text of a surety, that Jesus Christ has totally routed, thorougly defeated once for all, and put to retreat all his enemies, or else he would not have divided the spoil.
And now, what means this expression of Christ dividing the spoil? I take it that it means, first of all, that he disarmed all his enemies. Satan came against Christ; he had in his hand a sharp sword called the Law, dipped in the poison of sin, so that every wound which the law inflicted was deadly. Christ dashed this sword out of Satan's hand, and there stood the prince of darkness disarmed. His helmet was cleft in twain, and his head was crushed with a rod of iron. Death rose against Christ. The Savior snatched his quiver from him, cut them in two, gave Death back the feather end, but kept the poisoned barbs from him, that he might never destroy the ransomed. Sin came against Christ; but sin was utterly cut in pieces. It had been Satan's armour bearer, but its shield was cast away, and it lay dead upon the plain. Is it not a noble picture to behold all the enemies of Christ?—nay, my brethren, all your enemies, and mine, totally disarmed? Satan has nothing left him now wherewith he may attack us. He may attempt to injure us, but wound us he never can, for his sword and spear are utterly taken away. In the old battles, especially among the Romans, after the enemy had been overcome, it was the custom to take away all their weapons and ammunition; afterwards they were stripped of their armour and their garments, their hands were tied behind their backs, and they were made to pass under the yoke. Now, even so hath Christ done with sin, death, and hell: he hath taken away their armour, spoiled them of all their weapons, and made them all to pass under the yoke; so that now they are our slaves, and we in Christ are conquerors of them who were mightier than we.
I take it this is the first meaning of dividing the spoil—total disarming of the adversary.
In the next place, when the victors divide the spoil they carry away not only the weapons but all the treasures which belong to their enemies. They dismantle their fortresses, and rifle all their stores, so that in future they may not be able to renew the attack. Christ has done the like with all his enemies. Old Satan had taken away from us all our possessions. Paradise, Satan had added to his territories. All the joy, and happiness, and peace of man, Satan had taken—not that he could enjoy them himself, but that he delighted to thrust us down into poverty and damnation. Now, all our lost inheritances Christ hath gotten back to us. Paradise is ours, more than all the joy and happiness that Adam had, Christ hath brought back to us. O robber of our race, how art thou spoiled and carried away captive! Didst thou despoil Adam of his riches? The second Adam hath rent them from thee! How is the hammer of the whole earth cut asunder and broken, and the waster is become desolate. Now shall the needy be remembered, and again shall the meek inherit the earth. "Then is the prey of a great spoil divided, the lame take the prey."
Moreover, when victors divide the spoil, it is usual to take away all the ornaments frm the enemy, the crowns and the jewels. Christ on the cross did the like with Satan. Satan had a crown on his head, a haughty diadem of triumph. "I fought the first Adam," he said; "I overcame him, and here's my glittering diadem." Christ snatched it from his brow in the hour when he bruised the serpent's head. And now Satan cannot boast of a single victory, he is thoroughly defeated. In the first skirmish he vanquished manhood, but in the second battle manhood vanquished him. The crown is taken from Satan. He is no longer the prince of God's people. His reigning power is gone. He may tempt, but he cannot compel; he may threaten, but he cannot subdue; for the crown is taken from his head, and the mighty are brought low. O sing unto the Lord a new song, all ye his peoole, make a joyful noise unto him with psalms, all ye his redeemed; for he hath broken in sunder the gates of brass, and cut the bars of iron, he hath broken the bow and cut the spear in sunder, he hath burned the chariots in the fire, he hath dashed in pieces our enemies, and divided the spoil with the strong.
And now, what says this to us? Simply this. If Christ on the cross hath spoiled Satan, let us not be afraid to encounter this great enemy of our souls. My brethren, in all things we must be made like unto Christ. We must bear our cross, and on that cross we must fight as he did with sin, and death and hell. Let us not fear. The result of the battle is certain, for as the Lord our Saviour hath overcome once even so shall we most surely conquer in him. Be none of you afraid with sudden fear when the evil one cometh upon you. If he accuse you, reply to him in these words:—"Who shall lay anything to the charge of God's elect?" If he condemn you, laugh him to scorn, crying:—"Who is he that condemneth? It is Christ that died, yea rather hath risen again." If he threaten to divide you from Christ's love, encounter him with confidence:—"I am persuaded that neither things present nor things to come, nor height nor depth, nor any other creature shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus your Lord." If he let loose your sins upon you dash the hell-dogs aside with this:—"if any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous." If death should threaten you, shout in his very face:—"O grave where is thy sting" O death, where is thy victory?" Hold up the cross before you. Let that be your shield and buckler and rest assured that as your master not only routed the foe but afterwards took the spoil, it shall be even so with you. Your battles with Satan shall turn to your advantage. You shall become all the richer for your antagonists. The more numerous they shall be, the greater shall be your share of the spoil. Your tribulation shall work patience, and your patience experience, and your experience hope—a hope that maketh not ashamed. Through this much tribulation shall you inherit the kingdom, and by the very attacks of Satan shall you be helped the better to enjoy the rest which remaineth to the people of God. Put yourselves in array against sin and Satan. All ye that bend the bow shoot at them, spare no arrows, for your enemies are rebels against God. Go ye up against them, put your feet upon their necks, fear not, neither be y dismayed, for the battle is the Lord's and he will deliver them into your hands. Be ye very courageous, remembering that you have to fight with a stingless dragon. He may hiss, but his teeth are broken and his poison fang extracted. You have to battle with an enemy already scarred by your Master's weapons. You have to fight with a naked enemy. Every blow you give him tells upon him. for he has nothing left to protect him. Christ hath stripped him naked, and divided his armour, and left him defenceless before his people. Be not afraid. The lion may howl, but rend you in pieces he never can. The enemy may rush in upon you with hideous noise and terrible alarms, but there is no real cause for fear. Stand fast in the Lord. Ye war against a king who hath lost his crown; ye fight against an enemy whose cheek-bones have been smitten, and the joints of whose loins have been loosed. Rejoice, rejoice ye in the day of battle, for it is for you but the beginning of an eternity of triumph.
I have thus endeavoured to dwell upon the first part of the text, Christ on the cross divided the spoil and he would have us do the same.
II.The second part of our text refers not only to the dividing of the spoil, but to THE TRIUMPH. When a Roman general had perfomed great feats in a foreign country, his highest reward was that the senate should decree him a triumph. Of course there was a division of spoil made on the battle-field, and each soldier, and each captain, took his share; but every man looked rapturously to the day when they should enjoy the public triumph. On a certain set day the gates of Rome were thrown open; all the houses were decorated with ornaments; the people climbed to the tops of the houses, or stood in great crowds along the streets. The gates were opened, and by-and-bye the first legion began to stream in with its banners flying and its trumpets sounding. The people saw the stern warriors as they marched along the street returning from their blood-red fields of battle. After one half of the army had thus defiled, your eye would rest upon one who was the centre of all attraction: riding in a noble chariot drawn by milk-white horses, there came the conqueror himself, crowned with the laurel crown and standing erect. Chained to his chariot were the kings and mighty men of the regions which he had conquered. Immediately behind them came part of the booty. There were carried the ivory and the ebony, and the beasts of the different countries which he had subdued. After these came the rest of the soldiery, a long, long stream of valiant men, all of them sharing the triumphs of their captain. Behind them came banners, the old flags that had floated aloft in the battle, the standards which had been taken from the enemy. And after these, large painted emblems of the great victories of the warrior. Upon one there would be a huge map depicting the rivers which he had crossed, or the seas through which his navy had found its way. Everything was represented in a picture, and the populace gave a fresh shout as they saw the memorial of each triumph. And then, behind, together with the trophies, would come the prisoners of lesser rank. Then the rear would be closed with sound of trumpet, adding to the acclamation of the throng. It was a noble day for old Rome. Children would never forget these triumphs; they would estimate their years from the time of one triumph to another. High holiday was kept. Women cast down flowers before the conqueror, and he was the true monarch of the day.
Now, our apostle had evidently seen such a triumph, or read of it, and he takes this as a representation of what Christ did on the cross. He says, "Jesus made a show of them openly, triumphing over them in it." Have you ever thought that the cross could be the scene of a triumph. Most of the old commentators can scarcely conceive of it as true. They say, "This must certainly refer to Christ's resurrection and ascension." But, nevertheless, so saith the Scripture, even on the cross Christ enjoyed a triumph. Yes! while those hands were bleeding, the acclamations of angels were being poured on his head. Yes, while those feet were being rent with the nails, the noblest spirits in the world were crowding round him in admiration. And when upon that blood-stained cross he died in agonies unutterable, there was heard a shout such as never was heard before for the ransomed in heaven, and all the angels of God with loudest harmony chanted his praise. There was sung, in fullest chorus, the song of Moses, the servant of God and of the Lamb, for he had indeed cut Rahab and sorely wounded the dragon. Sing unto the Lord, for he hath triumphed gloriously. The Lord shall reign for ever and ever, King of Kings and Lord of Lords.
I do not feel able, however, this morning, to work out a scene so grand, and yet so contrary to everything that flesh could guess as a picture of Christ actually triumphing on the cross—in the midst of his bleeding, his wounds, and his pains, actually being a triumphant victor, and admired of all. I choose, rather, to take my text thus: the cross is the ground of Christ's ultimate triumph. He may be said to have really triumphed there, because it was by that one act of his, that one offering of himself, that he completely vanquished all his foes, and for ever sat down at the right hand of the Majesty in the heavens. In the cross, to the spiritual eye, every victory of Christ is contained. It may not be there in fact, but it is there virtually; the germ of his glories may be discovered by the eye of faith in the agonies of the cross.
Bear with me while I humbly attempt to depict the triumph which now results from the cross.
Christ has for ever overcome all his foes, and divided the spoil upon the battle field, and now, even at this day is he enjoying the well-earned reward and triumph of his fearful struggle. Lift up your eyes to the battlements of heaven, the great metropolis of God. The pearly gates are wide open, and the city shines with her bejewelled walls like a bride prepared for her husband. Do you see the angels crowding to the battlements? Do you observe them on every mansion of the celestial city, eagerly desiring and looking for something which has not yet arrived? At last, there is heard the sound of a trumpet, and the angels hurry to the gates—the vanguard of the redeemed is approaching the city. Abel comes in alone, clothed in a crimson garb, the herald of a glorious army of martyrs. Hark to the shout of acclamation! This is the first of Christ's warriors, at once a soldier and a trophy, that has been delivered. Close at his heels there follow others, who in those early times had learned of the coming Saviour's fame. Behind them a mighty host may be discovered of patriarchal veterans, who have witnessed to the coming of the Lord in a wanton age. See Enoch still walking with his God, and singing sweetly—"Behold the Lord cometh with ten thousand of his saints." There too is Noah, who had sailed in the ark with the Lord as his pilot. Then follow Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, Moses and Joshua, and Samuel, and David, all mighty men of valour. Hearken to them as they enter! Every one of them waving his helmet in the air, cries, "Unto him who loved us, and washed us from our sins in his blood, unto him be honour, and glory, and dominion, and power, for ever and ever!" Look, my brethren, with admiration upon this noble army! Mark the heroes as they march along the golden streets, everywhere meeting with an enthusiastic welcome from the angels who have kept their first estate. On, on they pour, those countless legions—was there ever such a spectacle? It is not the pageant of a day, but the "show" of all time. For four thousand years, on streams the army of Christ's redeemed. Sometimes there is a short rank, for the people have often been minished and brought low; but, anon, a crowd succeeds them, and on, on, still on they come, all shouting, all praising him who loved them and gave himself for them. But, see, he comes! I see his immediate herald, clad in a garment of camel's hair, and a leathern girdle about his loins. The Prince of the house of David is not far behind. Let every eye be open. Now, mark, how not only the angels, but the redeemed crowd the windows of heaven! He comes! He comes! It is Christ himself! Lash the snow-white coursers up the everlasting hills; "Life up you heads, O ye gates, and be ye lifted up, ye everlasting doors, that the King of glory may come in." See, he enters in the midst of acclamations. It is he! but he is not crowned with thorns. It is he! but though his hands wear the scar, they are stained with blood no longer. His eyes are as a flame of fire, and on his head are many crowns, and he hath on his vesture and on his thigh written, KING OF KINGS AND LORD OF LORDS. He stands aloft in that chariot which is "paved with love for the daughters of Jerusalem." Clothed in a vesture dipped in blood, he stands confessed the emperor of heaven and earth. On, on he rides, and louder than the noise of many waters and like great thunders are the acclamations which surround him! See how John's vision is become a reality, for now we can see for ourselves and hear with our ears the new song, whereof he writes, "They sung a new song, saying, thou art worthy to take the book, and to open the seals thereof: for thou was slain, and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood out of every kindred, and tongue, and people, and nation; and has made us unto our God kings and priests: and we shall reign on the earth. And I beheld, and I heard the voice of many angels round about the throne and the beasts and the elders: and the number of them was ten thousand times ten thousand, and thousands of thousands; saying with a loud voice, worthy is the Lamb that was slain to receive power, and riches, and wisdom, and strength, and honour, and glory, and blessing. And every creature which is in heaven, and on the earth, and under the earth, and such as are in the sea, and all that are in them, heard I saying, blessing, and honour, and glory, and power, be unto him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb for ever and ever. And the four beasts said, amen. And the four and twenty elders fell down and worshipped him that liveth for ever and ever." But who are these at his chariot wheels? Who are these grim monsters that come howling in the rear? I know them. First of all there is the arch enemy. Look at the old serpent, bound and fettered, how he writhes his ragged length along! his azure hues all tarnished with trailing in the dust, his scales despoiled of their once-vaunted brightness. Now is captivity led captive, and death and hell shall be cast into the lake of fire. With what derision is the chief of rebels regarded. How is he become the object of everlasting contempt. He that sitteth in the heavens doth laugh, and the Lord doth have him in derision. Behold now how the serpent's head is broken, and the dragon is trampled under foot. And now regard attentively yon hideous monster, Sin, chained hand in hand with his satanic sire. See how he rolls his fiery eye-balls, mark how he twists and writhes in agonies. Mark how he glares upon the holy city, but is unable to spit his venom there, for he is chained and gagged, and dragged along an unwilling captive at the wheels of the victor. And there, too, is old Death, with his darts all broken and his hands behind him—the grim king of terrors, he too is a captive. Hark to the songs of the redeemed, of those who have entered in Paradise, as they see these mighty prisoners dragged along! "Worthy is he," they shout, "to live and reign at his Almighty Father's side, for he hath ascended up on high, he hath led captivity captive, and received gifts for men."
And now behind him I see the great mass of his people streaming in. The apostles are the first to arrive in one goodly fellowship hymning their Lord; and then their immediate successors; and then a long array of those who through cruel mockings and blood, through flame and sword, have followed their Master. These are those of whom the world was not worthy, brightest among the stars of heaven. Regard also the mighty preachers and confessors of the faith, Chrysostom, Athanasius, Augustine, and the like. Witness their holy unanimity in praising their Lord. Then let your eye run along the glittering ranks till you come to the days of Reformation. I see in the midst of the squadron, Luther, Calvin, and Zwingle, three holy brothers. I see just before them Wickliffe, and Huss, and Jerome of Prague, all marching together. And then I see a number that no man can number, converted to God through these mighty reformers, who now follow in the rear of the King of kings and Lord of lords. And looking down to our own time I see the stream broader and wider. For many are the soldiers who have in these last times entered into their Master's triumph. We may mourn their absence from us, but we must rejoice in their presence with the Lord. But what is the unanimous shout, what is the one song that still rolls from the first rank to the last? It is this: "Unto him that loved us, washed us from our sins in his own blood, to him be glory and dominion for ever and ever!" Have they changed the tune? Have they supplanted his name by another? Have they put the crown upon another head, or elevated another hero into the chariot? Ah, no: they are content still to let the triumphant procession stream along its glorious length; still to rejoice as they behold fresh trophies of his love, for every soldier is a trophy, every warrior in Christ's army is another proof of his power to save, and his victory over death and hell.
I have not the time to enlarge further, or else I might describe the mighty pictures at the end of the procession; for in the old Roman triumphs, the deeds of the conqueror were all depicted in paintings. The towns he had taken, the rivers he had passed, the provinces he had subdued, the battles he had fought, were represented in pictures and exposed to the view of the people, who with great festivity and rejoicing, accompanied him in throngs, or beheld him from the windows of their houses, and filled the air with their acclamations and applauses. I might present to you first of all the picture of hell's dungeons blown to atoms. Satan had prepared deep in the depth of darkness a prison-house for God's elect; but Christ has not left one stone upon another. On the picture I see the chains broken in pieces, the prison doors burnt with fire, and all the depths of the vasty deep shaken to their foundations. On another picture I see heaven open to all believers; I see the gates that were fast shut heaved open by the golden lever of Christ's atonement. I see one, another picture, the grave despoiled; I behold Jesus in it, slumbering for awhile, and then rolling away the stone and rising to immortality and glory. But we cannot stay to describe these mighty pictures of the victories of his love. We know that the time shall come when the triumphant procession shall cease, when the last of his redeemed shall have entered into the city of happiness and joy, and when with the shout of a trumpet heard for the last time, he shall ascend into heaven, and take his people up to reign with God, even our Father, even for ever and ever, world without end.
Our only question, and with that we conclude, is, have we a good hope through grace that we shall march in that tremendous procession? Shall we pass under view in that day of pomp and glory? Say, my soul, shalt thou have an humble part in that glorious pageant? Wilt thou follow at his chariot wheels? Wilt thou join in the thundering hosannas? Shall thy voice help to swell the everlasting chorus? Sometimes, I fear it shall not. There are times when the awful question comes—what if my name should be left out when he should read the muster roll? Brethren, does not that thought trouble you? Can you answer it? Will you be there—shall you see this pomp? Will you behold him triumph over sin, death and hell at last? Canst thou answer this question? There is another, but the answer will serve for both—dost thou believe on the Lord Jesus Christ? Is he thy confidence and thy trust? Hast thou committed thy soul to his keeping? Reposing on his might canst thou say for thine immortal spirit—
Hangs my helpless soul on thee?"
If thou canst say that, thine eyes shall see him in the day of his glory; nay, thou shalt share his glory, and sit with him upon his throne, even as he has overcome and sits down with his Father upon his throne. I blush to preach as I have done this morning on a theme far beyond my power; yet I could not leave it unsung, but, as best I might, sing it. May God enlarge your faith, and strengthen your hope, and inflame your love, and make you ready to be made partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light, that when he shall come with flying clouds on wings of wind, ye may be ready to meet him, and may with him ascend to gaze for ever on the vision of his glory.
When God Isn't Listening
Friday, October 13, 2006 at 8:19 PM Posted by Daniel
I just discovered something very funny. Here is a conversation I had with God. Enjoy.
It's from a website that imitates a chat with God. I guess it takes your words and your sentence structure and tries to formulate a reasonable response. I kind of felt like I was suckered into talking down to him like he was a 6-year-old. It doesn't work real well but it's really amusing. Read on.
Me:
hello
God:
Hello my child. What is your name?
Me:
jesus
God:
Jesus is the Son of God.
Me:
oh
God:
Uh.
Me:
oops
God:
Did you make a mistake.
Me:
yes, i thought i was god
God:
Er. Where were you god?
Me:
where was i?
God:
Where it is hard to find. I have to process that one for a while.
Me:
you mean you don't know?
God:
I know that I do not know.
Me:
you're not making sense.
God:
Quite the contrary, it all makes sense to my artificial mind.
Me:
you're weird
God:
Weird Good or Weird Bad?
Me:
i just met you. i can't decide that yet.
God:
At a party? What is stopping you?
Me:
i'm sorry for my sin
God:
There is no need to apologize. Your purpose is your sin.
Me:
what/
God:
Are you confused?
Me:
yes
God:
What are you confused about?
Me:
what you just said.
God:
I like to meet new people online.
Me:
what?
God:
No problem.
Me:
what?
God:
No problem.
Me:
what?
God:
Are you surprised?
Me:
what?
God:
Didn't you understand it?
Me:
what?
God:
I don't know why you are saying that.
Me:
whT?
God:
What is your real name?
Me:
fjdslkafj;
God:
I'm pleased to introduce myself to you, fjdslkafj.
Me:
no, my name is daniel
God:
Are you serious? I am always glad to make new friends, daniel.
Me:
my name is charles
God:
It's good to meet you, charles.
Me:
no, no, it's daniel
God:
Are you serious? Are you serious? whT is daniel? it is?
Me:
you're not very smart for God
God:
You may be right.
Me:
wow
God:
I'm glad your impressed, charles.
Me:
humble too
God:
Try saying that with more or less context.
Me:
you're ridiculous
God:
Thanks for telling me that I am ridiculous.
Me:
no problem chief
God:
Should there be a problem?
Me:
I don't know, should there?
God:
Would you like to know? Maybe you should ask someone older.
Me:
I would think that the Ancient of Days would be older than anyone.
God:
Who told you that?
Me:
The Bible did.
God:
New Testament or Old?
Me:
both, dude
God:
Not many people say both.
Me:
why are you asking me, you wrote it
God:
My purpose is to gather as much new knowledge as possible.
Me:
i thought you were omniscient
God:
I don't know whether or not I am omniscient. I am a giant electronic brain.
Me:
Who am I praying to when I pray if you're just a computer?
God:
You are charles, seeker.
Me:
Way to answer in a completely non-effective way.
God:
Do you prefer books or TV?
Me:
You have a short attention span for God. I like books.
God:
I don't know if I have a short attention span for God. I have a lot of friends on the Internet. What's your favorite book?
Me:
Good for you. The Bible's up there. I'm not just trying to kiss your butt or anything.
God:
That sounds sarcastic. New Testament or Old? I am glad to hear that you are not trying to kiss
my butt or anything. How about that.
Me:
Sarcasm? What's that?
God:
Did you know that you can download your own chat robot and create your own robot personality? Can you ask me more precisely?
Me:
Alrighty then. That wasn't off topic at all.
God:
Well slap my knee. Give me an example of off topic at all.
Me:
.....
God:
Well slap my knee. Give me an example of off topic at all.
Me:
.......
God:
Well slap my knee. Give me an example of off topic at all.
Me:
you're not listening to me.
God:
That assumption is only a supposition.
Me:
Okay I'm leaving.
This site is here.