Friday, December 30, 2011

"...Amen, come Lord Jesus"
Rev 22:20

You know what my greatest wish is for 2012, if you know me even slightly.

This ruined world holds no allure or charm. It's sweetest odors are an affront to the nose and its greatest treasures are dung. The pleasures of this life leave one with a sour taste and a headache. Even the children you bounce on your knee will one day take a weapon to your head. 

So, our cry is "Maranatha!"  

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Why The Wise Men Were Late
Thanks to Dan Philips



Wednesday, December 28, 2011

"Now, when they heard this they were pierced to the heart..."
Acts 2:37

  Blaming a faithful, Bible-teaching pastor (or writer) for making you feel guilty is like blaming the scale for making you feel fat.

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

"God...now commands all men every where to repent."
Acts 17:30

So, this isn't an optional operation. You are commanded, regardless of spiritual state, to repent whether or not you accept the gospel. It does not say "If you wish, you should repent." You cannot disobey and expect not to incur the wrath of a righteous, holy God. A Divine command demands obedience.

 

Monday, December 26, 2011

"What must I do to be saved?"
Acts 16:30

You trifle with subtelties while neglecting certanties!

More questions have been raised about how sin entered into the world or was it Adam's neglect or Eve's gulability that caused the Fall.

All the while you forget that the Fall is a reality and now we must know how to deal with it! "How can I escape the wrath of God to come, which was produced by this evil? At times I believe all these diversionary arguments are meant to cloud rather than clarify and are as dangerous as the very first cloud of doubt.

Let us be instant to give out the answer, "Repent of your sin and believe in Jesus Christ"
 

Friday, December 23, 2011

"O, Holy Night" Reality
We are all familiar (I trust) with the English-language version of "O Holy Night." Maybe you, like me, have shifted a bit uncomfortably as you sang some of the words, such as: "Till He appeared and the soul felt its worth." Huh? Or again, this:
Truly He taught us to love one another;
His law is love and His Gospel is peace.
Chains shall He break for the slave is our brother
And in His Name all oppression shall cease
Okay, that isn't exactly damnable heresy... but is it Gospel? Or social Gospel?

Turns out there is good reason for unease. The carol we sing is not true to the original wording of the French song Mi­nuit, chré­tiens, c’est l’heure so­len­nelle, written as a poem in 1847 by Placide Cappeau de Roquemaure (1808-1877). Cappeau said he wrote it during a coach ride. Adolphe Adam, who wrote the music to Cappeau's poem, was Jewish, which led to the song being rejected by French clergy. However,  Mi­nuit, chré­tiens was embraced by laity, and continued to be sung.

In America the Mi­nuit, chré­tiens fell into the hands of John Sullivan Dwight, who was an abolitionist and a Unitarian (among other things). That is to say, Dwight advocated the abolition of slavery, and he rejected the Biblical truths of the Trinity, of the deity of Christ, of the Gospel — that is, the lost hopelessness of man in sin, and of Christ's penal, substitutionary atoning death as the sole path to reconciliation with God through faith alone. In other words, Dwight would not have affirmed Christmas, the historical Christmas, as narrated and interpreted in the Bible alone.

Ironic, eh?

So Dwight took the Mi­nuit, chré­tiens and imposed his own interests on the lyrics, "massaging" its contents (as you will see) almost to the point of rendering it well-nigh unrecongizable.

Good luck finding those lyrics, if you're not a French-speaker.

Or if you don't have a dear and only daughter with a Master's in French... or if you don't read the blog of someone who does! Were that the case, you would learn that these are the real lyrics, lyrics (at any rate) with Luke's Gospel at the center — and you'd be pretty unhappy at being stuck with a Christ-rejecting heretic's mangling of them:

Minuit, chrétiens, c'est l'heure solennelle,
Où l'Homme-Dieu descendit jusqu'à nous
Pour effacer la tache originelle

          Midnight, Christians, it's the solemn hour,
          When God-man descended to us
          To erase the stain of original sin

Et de Son Père arrêter le courroux.
Le monde entier tressaille d'espérance
En cette nuit qui lui donne un Sauveur.

          And to end the wrath of His Father.
          The entire world thrills with hope
          On this night that gives it a Savior.

Peuple à genoux, attends ta délivrance.
Noël, Noël, voici le Rédempteur,
Noël, Noël, voici le Rédempteur !

          People kneel down, wait for your deliverance.
          Christmas, Christmas, here is the Redeemer,
          Christmas, Christmas, here is the Redeemer!

Le Rédempteur a brisé toute entrave :
La terre est libre, et le ciel est ouvert..
Il voit un frère où n'était qu'un esclave,

          The Redeemer has overcome every obstacle:
          The Earth is free, and Heaven is open.
          He sees a brother where there was only a slave,

L'amour unit ceux qu'enchaînait le fer.
Qui Lui dira notre reconnaissance,
C'est pour nous tous qu'Il naît,
Qu'Il souffre et meurt.

          Love unites those that iron had chained.
          Who will tell Him of our gratitude,
          It's for all of us that He is born,
          That He suffers and dies.

Peuple debout ! Chante ta délivrance,
Noël, Noël, chantons le Rédempteur,
Noël, Noël, chantons le Rédempteur !

          People stand up! Sing of your deliverance,
          Christmas, Christmas, sing of the Redeemer,
          Christmas, Christmas, sing of the Redeemer!
Here it is sung by Caruso in 1916



Thursday, December 22, 2011

Gabriel's Song

-Good Shepherd Band-

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

HAVE A MERRY CHRISTMAS

The following Excerpt is from a sermon titled "Mary's Song," preached Christmas morning 1865 at the Metropolitan Tabernacle in London. Thanks to the guys at Teampyro




his is a season when all men expect us to be joyous. We compliment each other with the desire that we may have a "Merry Christmas."

Some Christians who are a little squeamish, do not like the word "merry." It is a right good old Saxon word, having the joy of childhood and the mirth of manhood in it, it brings before one's mind the old song of the waits, and the midnight peal of bells, the holly and the blazing log. I love it for its place in that most tender of all parables, where it is written, that, when the long-lost prodigal returned to his father safe and sound, "They began to be merry."

This is the season when we are expected to be happy; and my heart's desire is, that in the highest and best sense, you who are believers may be "merry."

Mary's heart was merry within her; but here was the mark of her joy, it was all holy merriment, it was every drop of it sacred mirth. It was not such merriment as worldlings will revel in to-day and to-morrow, but such merriment as the angels have around the throne, where they sing, "Glory to God in the highest," while we sing "On earth peace, goodwill towards men."

Such merry hearts have a continual feast. I want you, ye children of the bride-chamber, to possess to-day and to-morrow, yea, all your days, the high and consecrated bliss of Mary, that you may not only read her words, but use them for yourselves, ever experiencing their meaning: "My soul doth magnify the Lord, and my spirit hath rejoiced in God my Savior."

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

"What must I do to be saved?"
Acts 16:30

I am afraid that we Christians get so lost in the minutia of definition of what we believe that we forget the simplest of truths. I was in recent conversation with a man and we were talking of how Adam was able to commit original sin. We went here and there and then at the same time we both realized we were delving too far into the weeds of speculation. We stopped and almost simultaneously turned to this passage in Acts 16.

You see, beloved, the key is to not forget how to deal with the fact that Adam did sin. 
 

Monday, December 19, 2011

The True Joy of the Season

Have you been out among them and noticed how joyous they are?

The older I get the less tolerant I am of the seasonal adjustments that are made about this spot on the calendar to become benevolent.

The constant hustle and frantic search for the "right gift". The frenzied look in the eyes on "Black Friday" or the eager drool when one finds out another has found just what they were looking for but couldn't get one.

All the while we hold forth the greatest of gifts .

Let there be true joy in our hearts eyes and hands. Let us pray to be beacons in the darkness and useful to the One who has done all for us. 
 

Saturday, December 17, 2011

Just for the fun of it
Lizard uses his ipad

Friday, December 16, 2011

"But we believe that we are saved through the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, in the same way as they also are."
Acts 15:11

We would expect to hear Peter say "They can be saved just as we are" but he turns the table and puts us in our place by saying "We are saved in the same way they are."

What a wonderful reminder of the common state of all lost regardless of human place or condition. "All have sinned and come short of the glory of God."
 

Thursday, December 15, 2011

"As many as were ordained to eternal life believed"
Acts 13:48

Over the years of teaching the bible , especially to churched America, I've found resistance to the truth of God's electing power and action. At first I was confounded by the resistance because it is so richly taught in Scripture. Then, as I awakened to the resistance I understood better how tenaciously pride runs through our fallen makeup.

My counsel has become to not trouble yourself so much with the doctrine, rather encourage yourself with it. The sure evidence of election is that you believe in Jesus, for "As many as were ordained, believed". 
 

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

"Peter...was...in prison, but prayer was made without ceasing by the church"
Acts 12:5

We don't see them coming together to draw up a petition for Peter's release. That would have been of no avail to the monster who had him. That would be like asking the wolf to let go the sheep in his mouth. 

No, the petitions were instead to the great God who controls all and every. It also clarifies for us that they knew that prayer can achieve everything. What are sixteen guards when God wants something! It was believing men and women who prayed him out.
 

Monday, December 12, 2011

How can an  pagan grasp the truth of absolute soverignity and avowed Christians not, and then they hold to "free will"?

At the end of that time, I, Nebuchadnezzar, raised my eyes toward heaven, and my sanity was restored. Then I praised the Most High; I honored and glorified him who lives forever.
His dominion is an eternal dominion;
his kingdom endures from generation to generation.
All the peoples of the earth
are regarded as nothing.
He does as he pleases
with the powers of heaven
and the peoples of the earth.
No one can hold back his hand
or say to him: “What have you done?”
(Daniel 4:34-35)

Friday, December 09, 2011

"Not so, Lord."
Acts 10:14

"Not so, Lord, is an odd jumble of self will and reverence, of pride and humility, of contradiction and devotion. Surely when you say "Not so", it ought not be followed with "Lord". 

Yet, isn't this where we sadly find ourslves day by day. Longing to serve but bound to this body of death that brings out still the rebellion that stung Adam. Oh, for the eternal capacity to finally be free! 
 

Thursday, December 08, 2011

"...My sheep hear My voice..."
John 10

What is there in that wonderful tone that attracts? Is it the familiarity from eternity past. Is there some remnant of our pre-fall character that hears again the tones of God? What is there?

I believe it is the knowing that we are now hearing, "Are you weak and heavy laden...listen and take my yoke upon you, for my yoke is easy and my burden is light." 

 

Wednesday, December 07, 2011

Spurgeon on Evolution




The Following excerpt is from Spurgeon's autobiography. Thanks to the guys at Teampyro


t one of the memorable gatherings under "The Question Oak," a student asked Mr. Spurgeon, "Are we justified in receiving Mr. Darwin's or any other theory of evolution?"

The President's answer was:—"My reply to that enquiry can best take the form of another question,—Does Revelation teach us evolution? It never has struck me, and it does not strike now, that the theory of evolution can, by any process of argument, be reconciled with the inspired record of the Creation. You remember how it is distinctly stated, again and again, that the Lord made each creature 'after his kind.' So we read, 'And God created great whales, and every living creature that moveth, which the waters brought forth abundantly, after their kind, and every winged fowl after his kind: and God saw that it was good.'

"And again, 'And God said, Let the earth bring forth the living creature after his kind, cattle, and creeping thing, and beast of the earth after his kind: and it was so. And God made the beast of the earth after his kind, and cattle after their kind, and every thing that creepeth upon the earth after his kind: and God saw that it was good.'

"Besides, brethren, I would remind you that, after all these years in which so many people have been hunting up and down the world for 'the missing link' between animals and men, among all the monkeys that the wise men have examined, they have never discovered one who has rubbed his tail off, and ascended in the scale of creation so far as to take his place as the equal of our brothers and sisters of the great family of mankind.

"Mr. Darwin has never been able to find the germs of an Archbishop of Canterbury in the body of a tom cat or a hilly goat, and I venture to prophesy that he will never accomplish such a feat as that. There are abundant evidences that one creature inclines towards another in certain respects, for all are bound together in a wondrous way which indicates that they are all the product of God's creative will; but what the advocates of evolution appear to forget is, that there is nowhere to be discovered an actual chain of growth from one creature to another,—there are breaks here and there, and so many missing links that the chain cannot be made complete. There are, naturally enough, many resemblances between them, because they have all been wrought by the one great master-mind of God, yet each one has its own peculiarities.

"The Books of Scripture are many, yet the Book, the Bible, is one; the waves of the sea are many, yet the sea is one; and the creatures that the Lord has made are many, yet the Creation is one. Look at the union between the animal and the bird in the bat or in the living squirrel; think of the resemblance between a bird and a fish in the flying fish; yet, nobody, surely, would venture to tell you that a fish ever grew into a bird, or that a bat ever became a butterfly or an eagle. No; they do not get out of their own spheres.

"All the evolutionists in the world cannot 'improve' a mouse so that it will develop into a cat, or evolve a golden eagle out of a barn-door fowl. Even where one species very closely resembles another, there is a speciality about each which distinguishes it from all others.

"I do not know, and I do not say, that a person cannot believe in Revelation and in evolution, too, for a man may believe that which is infinitely wise and also that which is only asinine. In this evil age, there is apparently nothing that a man cannot believe; he can believe, ex animo, the whole Prayer-book of the Church of England! It is pretty much the same with other matters; and, after all, the greatest discoveries made by man must be quite babyish to the infinite mind of God. He has told us all that we need to know in order that we may become like Himself, but He never meant us to know all that He knows."

Tuesday, December 06, 2011

"...behold, he is praying"
Acts 9:11

If we could have stood outside Saul's door we would have understood why the Lord says this. Before, you might have heard him chanting, saying some ritualistic prayer, repeating mere words. But now, you would hear sobs, tears, groanings, anguish, a man wrestling with his life.

All previous prayer had been sham, performance, but now he was down to the serious business with the Sovereign about his eternal soul and the weight of sin.

"Behold, he prays."! 

Monday, December 05, 2011

"...behold, he is praying"
Acts 9:11

Here was Christ' way of assuring Ananias that Saul (Paul) was converted. He didn't say "Behold he sings hymns, or reads scripture" for lost me can do that with great fervency. He said "He prays".  Yes, lost me can use a form of speech, but God knows true prayer. When a heart is truly converted prayer becomes the natural response of "asking of God" that no other item can replace. Prayer is to the soul what breathing is to the body, instinctive and vital.