Friday, September 25, 2009

“A heavenly conversation brings much glory to the saints” – Jeremiah Burroughs

“A heavenly conversation is one that will bring much glory to yourselves. Though it’s true that the saints should aim at the glory of God most, there will come glory upon themselves whether they wish it or not if their conversations are in heaven. It’s impossible for the consciences of men not to be honored if they are walking in a heavenly conversation. There’s an excellent Scripture that shows that in glorifying God we glorify ourselves. In 2 Thessalonians 1:11-12, the apostle prays for them:
“Wherefore also we pray always for you, that our God would count you worthy of this calling, and fulfill all the good pleasure of His goodness, and the work of faith with power.”
To what end?
“That the name of our Lord Jesus Christ may be glorified in you, and you in Him, according to the grace of our God and the Lord Jesus Christ.”
He prays for the Thessalonians that they might walk so that they might have so much of the grace of God in them, that the name of our Lord Jesus Christ might be glorified in them. Oh, this is that which all the saints should desire and endeavor after, that the name of our Lord Jesus Christ should be glorified in them, and you in Him, he says. Labor that Christ may have glory in our glory, and then we shall have glory in Christ’s glory. This is a sweet and blessed life when the saints have such hearts that they can say, “Lord, let me have no glory, but that you may have glory in.” Then God says, “Is it so? Do you desire no further glory in this world but that I may have glory in? Then I will have no glory in this world but what you shall have glory in!” Christ will make us partakers of His glory as well as we shall make Him partaker of our glory. Oh, heavenly conversation that glorifies God will glorify the saints, too!”

– Jeremiah Burroughs, A treatise on earthly-mindedness

Monday, September 21, 2009

"Traders for heaven trust God much" - Jeremiah Burroughs

“Tradesmen who trade for great matters must trust much. They cannot expect to have present pay in great sums. It’s true, men who trade for little matters trade by retail. They usually take in their pence and two pence as their commodities go forth. But it’s not so with merchants who trade for great things in wholesale. Traders for heaven trust much and, indeed, the grace of faith is the great grace that helps in the trading for heaven; they have a little earnest for the present.

You who are traders and go to exchange and sell bargains for many thousands, you may not have more than twelve pence or a crown for the present, the first fruits of the Spirit, or a bare promise from Christ. This is that which binds the whole bargain, and they expect to have the full pay hereafter when they come to heaven. It is a happy thing when God gives men and women hearts to be willing to trust God for eternity; and if they have just a little comfort and grace now, they ought to look at that as an earnest penny of all the glory that Jesus Christ has purchased by His blood and that God has promised in His Word. You are not fit to be a tradesman for heaven if you cannot trust, if you cannot be content that great bargains should be bound with a little earnest. But that’s the soul that trades in heaven, that can be content to wait for the fulfilling of the promises, and to take what they have from God for the present, though it is but a very little, as an earnest to bind all those glorious things that God has promised in His Word.”

Jeremiah Burroughs, A Treatise on earthly-mindedness

http://www.puritanlibrary.com

Saturday, September 19, 2009

"Look to God and the record of what He has done in Jesus Christ" - D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones

“If you regard the gospel merely as a plan and scheme of life, whether social or personal; if you regard it merely as something that calls you to the high and the heroic and to a certain order of morality; you will never know the joy and the happiness which it offers. Regard the Christian life as being something primarily that you have to do and far from making you happy it will make you miserable, for you will be constantly aware of your own failure. But the glory of the gospel is that it is based upon something that God has done once and for all in Christ. What has He done?...God has acted. He has sent His only begotten Son into the world to live and die and rise again for us and for our salvation. ‘How can I feast and rejoice?’ Look unto Jesus Christ on the cross and see your guilt borne by Him and wiped out by Him. ‘How can I be happy’, you say, ‘when I am so filled with a sense of shame because of what I have been?’ To which the gospel answers:

The past shall be forgotten,
A present job be given.

In Christ there is a new beginning and you are no longer the slave of sin. And, in like manner, it tells you that your whole status and your situation are also changed. In Christ you become a child of God and are regarded as such by Him. You have been an enemy and an alien but now you are a son. Do not look to your own feelings, or your own record. Look to God and the record of what He has done in Jesus Christ. Rejoice, sing, cry aloud, be glad, Christ has cleansed away your sin and restored you to the favour of God which you had lost. Yes, the rejoicing is based purely upon what God has done.”

- D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones, Old Testament Evangelistic Sermons,
No Feasting: No Christianity

http://www.monergismbooks.com/Old-Testament-Evangelistic-Sermons-p-18605.html

Friday, September 18, 2009

“Pass me not, O gentle Savior” - Fan­ny Cros­by

“Pass me not, O gentle Savior,
Hear my humble cry;
While on others Thou art calling,
Do not pass me by.

Savior, Savior,
Hear my humble cry;
While on others Thou art calling,
Do not pass me by.

Let me at Thy throne of mercy
Find a sweet relief,
Kneeling there in deep contrition;
Help my unbelief.

Trusting only in Thy merit,
Would I seek Thy face;
Heal my wounded, broken spirit,
Save me by Thy grace.

Thou the Spring of all my comfort,
More than life to me,
Whom have I on earth beside Thee?
Whom in Heav’n but Thee?”

- Fan­ny Cros­by

http://www.cyberhymnal.org/htm/p/a/passment.htm

"What is a true Christian?" - D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones

“The man who is truly Christian is the man who has come to realize that God is the most important Person in all his life. What is a Christian? I define him as the man who has come to realize he has a soul and that he has lost that soul in a spiritual sense. He is a man who realizes he is guilty before God. He is a man who has come to see that what matters is the destiny of his soul. He was interested in other things, but he knows they will all disappear when the soul still goes on. He sees judgment to come, and because of all this, he now sees the most important thing of all – ‘I need salvation, I need forgiveness, I need a new life, I need to be reconciled to God!’ Is there anyone who can help? Yes, there is, and he turns to Christ and says, ‘I will not let Thee go, I must have this blessing.’ For this he pleads, for this he cries – it is now the supreme interest in his life. May I again put my simple question. Is this the biggest thing in your life? If I ask tonight from this pulpit what is the one thing to which you would hold if everything else has to go, what would you say? Would you hold on to Christ at the expense and the cost of everything else? That is the mark of the Christian. He sees that it is Christ dying on the cross that alone can give him forgiveness of sin. He sees it is in Christ alone he is given a new life and a new nature and a new standing before God. He sees it is in Christ, who has conquered death and the grave, that he is given an eternal and glorious inheritance. He sees all that in Christ and he says, ‘Though I am bereft of everything, as long as I have him all is well.’ Is Christ supreme in our lives? Do we know that this is the most vital thing and would we gladly sacrifice everything else for the sake of this? That is what Jacob came to feel. It has always been the feeling of every true Christian.”

- D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones, Old Testament Evangelistic Sermons,
Before and After Penuel: The Evidence of True Conversion

http://www.monergismbooks.com/Old-Testament-Evangelistic-Sermons-p-18605.html

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

“Be meditating on the death of Christ in order to get your heart free from earthly-mindedness” – Jeremiah Burroughs

“But above all, set Jesus Christ before you and be meditating on the death of Jesus Christ. That’s the great thing that will take the heart from the things of the earth. Be looking upon Christ crucified, how He who was the Lord of heaven and earth put Himself into such a low condition merely to redeem us! Conversing much with the death of Jesus Christ deadens the heart much to the world. In Philippians 3 we have a notable text for that, in the example of Paul. He counted all things as dung and dross for Jesus Christ. Verse 8: “I account all things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord, for whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and do count them but dung that I may win Christ.” Then in verse 10: “That I may know Him, and the power of His resurrection, and the fellowship of His sufferings, being made conformable to His death.”
Paul desired to be so conformable to the very death of Christ, that he counted all things in the world but as dung and dross in comparison of that. Paul had the death of Christ before his eyes, and meditated much on the death of Christ: and that meditation had a great impression upon his spirit. That made him count all these things as dross, as dog’s meat by comparison, that he might have fellowship with the death of Christ.”

Jeremiah Burroughs, A Treatise on earthly-mindedness

http://www.puritanlibrary.com/

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

"I fear a great many Christian people do not think much about their religion" - C H Spurgeon

"I fear to a very large extent in this age the minds even of good people are empty, and void, and waste. Years ago, when the influence of the Puritan age yet lingered among us, the female members of Christian churches were generally women of very considerable education, whose range of reading was very different from that of their sisters in these days, and whose theological knowledge was profound; while the men who were members of our Nonconformist churches, were as a rule persons of very clear doctrinal knowledge - perhaps rather too much given to controversy, and to pushing their own views without sufficient tolerance for the views of others - and on the whole, Nonconformist Christianity was highly intelligent, thoughtful, and meditative. Men and women then when they joined the church, knew what they believed, and believed what they knew; they were prepared to be counted singular for their belief, but were equally prepared to justify themselves for talking up so separated a position. They were students of the word of God and of such books as opened up to them the word of God; so that our armies of believers, if they were fewer than now, were nevertheless very strong, because the warriors handled their weapons well, were well drilled, and at home in the holy war. I fear a great many Christian people do not think much about their religion. They give their guinea subscription, they occupy their seat at the meetinghouse, they attend the prayer meetings, but they are little given to thinking out a system of doctrines, or to ransacking the weaning of Scripture. Contemplative pursuits are not so general among Christian professors as I could wish."

- C. H. Spurgeon, Think well and do well

http://www.recoverthegospel.com/Old%20Recover%20the%20Gospel%20Site/Spurgeon/Spurgeon%201-1000/956.pdf