“Let us declare
concerning our Lord that we found him better and better and better and better,
even till we entered into his rest. He has been at first better than our fears,
then better than our hopes, and finally better than our desires. So good, so
blessed a God do we serve, that he always by his deeds of grace outruns our
largest expectations. What cause we have for the worship of grateful praise;
let us not be slow to render it…
Do you remember when he
[Jesus Christ] came to you personally, and wrestled with you and tore away your
self-righteousness, and made you limp upon your thigh? This it may be was your
first introduction to him. You saw him by night, and thought him at the first
to be rather your enemy than your friend. Do you recollect when he took your
strength away from you, and then at last saved you, because in utter weakness,
as you were about to fall to the ground, you laid hold of him and said, “I will not let thee go except thou bless me,”
and so you won a blessing from him? You had thought aforetime that you had
strength in yourself, but now you learned that you were weakness itself, and
that only as you became consciously weak would you become actually strong. You
learned to look out of self to him, and do you not bless him for having taught
you such a lesson? Will you not when you come to die bless him for what he did
for you then, and all your life long? O my brethren, we owe all things to the
redeeming Angel of the covenant [Jesus Christ]. The evils which he has warded
off from us are terrible beyond conception, and the blessings he has brought us
are rich beyond imagination. We must adore him, and, though we see him not, we
must in life and in death by faith worship him with lowly love."
— C. H. Spurgeon (1878). The
Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit Sermons (Vol. 24, pp. 130).
Question. 1. What is the chief end of man? Answer. Man's chief end is to glorify God, and to enjoy him for ever.
Showing posts with label the love of God. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the love of God. Show all posts
Wednesday, May 7, 2014
Sunday, January 19, 2014
the ark of salvation Jesus Christ — John Owen
"When a soul is turned out of its self-righteousness,
and begins to look abroad, and view the heaven and earth for a resting-place,
and perceives an ocean, a flood, an inundation of wrath, to cover all the
world, the wrath of God revealing itself from heaven against all ungodliness, so
that it can obtain no rest nor abiding, — heaven it cannot reach by its own
flight, and to hell it is unwilling to fall; — if now the Lord Jesus Christ do
not appear as an ark in the midst of the waters, upon whom the floods have
fallen, and yet has got above them all for a refuge, alas! what shall it do?
When the flood fell there were many mountains glorious in the eye, far higher
than the ark; but yet those mountains were all drowned, whilst the ark still
kept on the top of the waters. Many appearing hills and mountains of
self-righteousness and general mercy, at the first view, seem to the soul much
higher than Jesus Christ, but when the flood of wrath once comes and spreads
itself, all those mountains are quickly covered; only the ark, the Lord Jesus Christ
though the flood fall on him also, yet he gets above it quite, and gives safety
to them that rest upon him.
Let me now ask any of those poor souls who ever have been wandering and tossed with the fear of the wrath to come, whether ever they found a resting-place until they came to this:— God spared not his only Son, but gave him up to death for us all; that he made him to be sin for us; that he put all the sins of all the elect into that cup which he was to drink of; that the wrath and flood which they feared did fall upon Jesus Christ (though now, as the ark, he be above it, so that if they could get into him they should be safe). The storm hath been his, and the safety shall be theirs. As all the waters which would have fallen upon them that were in the ark fell upon the ark, they being dry and safe, so all the wrath that should have fallen upon them fell on Christ; which alone causeth their souls to dwell in safety? Hath not, I say, this been your bottom, your foundation, your resting-place? If not (for the substance of it), I fear you have but rotten bottoms."
—John Owen, The Death of Death in the Death of Christ
Let me now ask any of those poor souls who ever have been wandering and tossed with the fear of the wrath to come, whether ever they found a resting-place until they came to this:— God spared not his only Son, but gave him up to death for us all; that he made him to be sin for us; that he put all the sins of all the elect into that cup which he was to drink of; that the wrath and flood which they feared did fall upon Jesus Christ (though now, as the ark, he be above it, so that if they could get into him they should be safe). The storm hath been his, and the safety shall be theirs. As all the waters which would have fallen upon them that were in the ark fell upon the ark, they being dry and safe, so all the wrath that should have fallen upon them fell on Christ; which alone causeth their souls to dwell in safety? Hath not, I say, this been your bottom, your foundation, your resting-place? If not (for the substance of it), I fear you have but rotten bottoms."
—John Owen, The Death of Death in the Death of Christ
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Saturday, September 21, 2013
God's preserving care — Charles H. Spurgeon
"Do we
sufficiently praise God for guarding us from disease? I am afraid that his
preserving care is often forgotten. Men will go thirty or forty years almost
without an illness, and forget the Lord in consequence. That which should
secure gratitude creates indifference. When we have been ill we come up to the
house of the Lord and desire to return thanks because of our recovery; ought we
not to give thanks when we are
not ill, and do not need to be recovered? Should it not be to you healthy folk
a daily cause of gratitude to God that he keeps away those pains which would
keep you awake all night, and wards off those sicknesses which would cause your
beauty to consume away like the moth?…
Oh, come let us sing unto Jehovah who hath said,—“I am the Lord that healeth thee” (Exodus 15:26). Do not attribute to secondary means that which ought to be ascribed to God alone. His fresh air, and warm sun, or bracing wind, and refreshing showers do more for our healing than we dream of, or if medicine be used, it is he who gives virtue to the drugs, and so by his own Almighty hand works out our cure. As one who has felt his restoring hand, I will personally sing unto him who is the health of my countenance and my God.”
— Charles H. Spurgeon
Oh, come let us sing unto Jehovah who hath said,—“I am the Lord that healeth thee” (Exodus 15:26). Do not attribute to secondary means that which ought to be ascribed to God alone. His fresh air, and warm sun, or bracing wind, and refreshing showers do more for our healing than we dream of, or if medicine be used, it is he who gives virtue to the drugs, and so by his own Almighty hand works out our cure. As one who has felt his restoring hand, I will personally sing unto him who is the health of my countenance and my God.”
— Charles H. Spurgeon
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Wednesday, June 19, 2013
God is no philosophic concept — Martyn Lloyd-Jones
"My dear friends, God is no philosophic concept! God is a person and, as a person, God is, and God loves, and the essence of the life of the blessed Trinity is the love of the Father to the Son and the Spirit, and the love of the Son to the Father and the Spirit, and the love of the Spirit to the Father and the Son. We cannot conceive of that perfect unity, that perfect bliss, that absolute love, and yet it is all found in salvation. ‘God so loved the world that he gave …’ (John 3:16)—yes, and I put it negatively, too, as Paul puts it in writing to the Romans: ‘He that spared not his own Son’ (Romans 8:32). It is there, you see, the love of God, in that he sent the Son of his love, the only begotten Son, into this cruel, sinful world; allowed him to live life in that way as a man, and allowed him to suffer ‘such contradiction of sinners against himself’ (Hebrews 12:3). And he placed your sins and mine upon him on the cross in such a way that at that moment Father and Son were separated, and the Son cried out, ‘My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?’ (Matthew 27:46) When I believe that that is possible within the Father-heart of God, then I cannot believe the doctrine of the impassivity of God. I say that God in his love suffered in his Son, and it is there I see the marvellous love of God displayed. And this great gospel manifests, too, the glory of God in revealing his character in this way."
— Martyn Lloyd-Jones (2000). The assurance of our salvation: Exploring the depth of Jesus' prayer for His own: Studies in John 17 (51). Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books.
Saturday, April 6, 2013
The greatest ground of security in this world — Martyn Lloyd-Jones
"There is no greater ground of
security in this world of time than to feel that you are a part of the grand
plan and purpose of God. None of these things are accidental, none of them are
fortuitous. It does not matter what may happen in the future, nothing can
disturb this plan. My friend, if you are a Christian, do you know that you were
the object of God’s interest and concern before the foundation of the world?
All these things have been worked out in eternity, before time, so we must
always remember that nothing can happen in time which will make the slightest
difference. That is the argument which we find so constantly in the Scriptures.
We must never be tired of quoting those great words: ‘For I am persuaded, that
neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor 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 our
Lord’ (Rom 8:38–39). And if you have ever been in any doubt about that, read
this prayer and see the security as he outlines it here…
Can you imagine anything that is more comforting than this, that the Lord Jesus Christ has prayed for you: ‘Neither pray I for these alone, but for them also which shall believe on me through their word’? (John 17:20) Do you realize that when he was praying this prayer the Lord Jesus Christ was praying for you? Now, if we are Christians, we all like to have people praying for us… Is there anything that gives greater consolation than to know that people are praying for you? I know of nothing that is a greater encouragement to me, in my work and in my ministry, than to know that people are praying for me. They are going to God who is the source of all power and asking him to fill me with power.
So, then, if you believe in the prayer of a saintly person, how much more should you believe in the prayer of the Son of God for you. Here (John 17) he lets us know that he prayed for us and he goes on praying for us, and, most wonderful of all, what he does is to put us into the hands of God. He says: ‘Holy Father, keep through thine own name those whom thou hast given me, that they may be one, as we are. While I was with them in the world, I kept them in thy name: those that thou gavest me I have kept … and now come I to thee’ (John 17:11–13). ‘Father,’ he says in effect, ‘I hand them back to you, you keep them.’ If only we could somehow take hold of this wonderful truth, that the Lord Jesus Christ, himself, has put us into the safe keeping of God and that we are therefore in God’s safe keeping!"
Can you imagine anything that is more comforting than this, that the Lord Jesus Christ has prayed for you: ‘Neither pray I for these alone, but for them also which shall believe on me through their word’? (John 17:20) Do you realize that when he was praying this prayer the Lord Jesus Christ was praying for you? Now, if we are Christians, we all like to have people praying for us… Is there anything that gives greater consolation than to know that people are praying for you? I know of nothing that is a greater encouragement to me, in my work and in my ministry, than to know that people are praying for me. They are going to God who is the source of all power and asking him to fill me with power.
So, then, if you believe in the prayer of a saintly person, how much more should you believe in the prayer of the Son of God for you. Here (John 17) he lets us know that he prayed for us and he goes on praying for us, and, most wonderful of all, what he does is to put us into the hands of God. He says: ‘Holy Father, keep through thine own name those whom thou hast given me, that they may be one, as we are. While I was with them in the world, I kept them in thy name: those that thou gavest me I have kept … and now come I to thee’ (John 17:11–13). ‘Father,’ he says in effect, ‘I hand them back to you, you keep them.’ If only we could somehow take hold of this wonderful truth, that the Lord Jesus Christ, himself, has put us into the safe keeping of God and that we are therefore in God’s safe keeping!"
— Martyn Lloyd-Jones (2000). The
assurance of our salvation: Exploring the depth of Jesus' prayer for His own:
Studies in John 17 (18–21). Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books.
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