God Himself Teaches the Humble

November 24, 2014

What follows below is from an author (1700’s time period) that is not known to me. However, the author has a message that needs to be heard in our self-confident and rationalistic age.  Surely there are dangers and perhaps not everything is safe, but the general thrust should be listened to. We must always remember that our ability to reason is fallen as well.

It is certain from Scripture, that the Spirit of God dwells within us, that a “manifestation of this Spirit is given to us to profit withal,” and that this is “the true Light, which gives light to every man that comes into the world.” “This is the grace of God, which brings salvation, and which has appeared to all men; teaching us, that denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, righteously, and godly, in this present world.” But we make too little account of this internal Teacher, which is the soul of our soul, and by which only we are able to form good thoughts and desires. God ceases not to reprove us for evil, and to influence us to that which is good; but the noise of the world without, and of our own passions within, deafen us, and hinder us from hearing him.

We must retire from all outward objects, and silence all the desires and wandering imaginations of the mind; that in this profound silence of the whole soul, we may hearken to the ineffable voice of the Divine Teacher. We must listen with an attentive ear; for it is a still, small voice. It is not indeed a voice uttered in words as when a man speaks to his friend; but it is a perception infused by the secret operations and influences of the Divine Spirit, insinuating to us obedience, patience, meekness, humility, and all other Christian virtues, in a language perfectly intelligible to the attentive soul. But how seldom is it that the soul keeps itself silent enough for God to speak! The murmurs of our vain desires, and our self-love, disturb all the teachings of the Divine Spirit. Ought we then to be surprised, if so many persons, apparently devout, but too full of their own wisdom, and confidence in their own virtues, are not able to hear it; and that they look upon this internal Word as the chimera of fanatics? Alas! What is it that they aim at with their vain reasoning? The external word, even of the gospel, would be but an empty sound without this living and fruitful Word in the interior, to interpret and open it to the understanding.

Christ says, “Behold, I stand at the door and knock—if any man hear my voice, and open the door, I will come in unto him, and sup with him, and he with me.” His knocks are the monitions of His Spirit; which touch us, and operate in us. And to attend to these monitions and follow them, is to open unto Him.

He peaks to impenitent sinners; but these, engrossed in the eager pursuit of earthly pleasures, and the gratifications of their evil passions, are not able to hear Him. His word with them passes for a fable. But woe to those who receive their consolation in this life. The time will come when their vain joys shall be confounded.

He speaks in sinners who are in the way of conversion; these feel the remorses of their conscience, and these remorses are the voice of the Spirit, which upbraids them inwardly with their vices. When they are truly touched, they have no difficulty to comprehend the secret voice, for it is this that so pierces them to the quick. It is that two-edged sword within them, of which Paul speaks, which goes even to the dividing of the soul from itself; “The word of God is quick and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow; and it is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart.”

He speaks in persons enlightened, learned, and whose life, outwardly regulated, seems adorned with many virtues, but often these persons, full of themselves, and of their knowledge, give too much ear to themselves to listen to His teachings. God, who seeks only to communicate Himself, finds no place (so to speak) where to introduce Himself into these souls, that are so full of themselves, and so over-fed with their own wisdom and virtues. He hides His secrets from the wise and prudent, and reveals them to the low and simple; Jesus said, “I thank thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because You have hidden these things from the wise and prudent, and has revealed them unto babes.” It is with the humble and childlike that He delights to dwell, and to disclose to them His ineffable secrets. It is these who are more peculiarly qualified for receiving in a greater measure the gift of faith; for, being willing that the pride of reason should be laid in the dust, they obstruct not the entrance of this gift by their vain arguments, but believe with simplicity and confidence.

Preaching the Unsearchable Riches of Christ

November 23, 2014

When preachers do neglect to ground in the people’s heart great joy for the greatness of the free given treasures of Christ that work and cause filial fear, loving inclination, dutiful, and true sincere affections; and go about to square God’s children, according to the corrupt pattern of natural children, corrupted with slavish fear, with blows and beatings; they do quench in them the true filial fear, and establish in them the servile fear that should be cast out; {I Jn.4:18;} and cause in the children of God this eye service, which if it be taught in sanctified servants to their earthly masters, {as the Apostle saith, Eph.6:6,} how abominable is that much more in the children of God to their heavenly Father, and makes but hypocrites. – When preachers of the Gospel, not seeing in their hearts the vigor and power of the free given treasures of Christ, do not trust to, nor rely upon the pressing of them as sufficient {where they are felt and enjoyed} operative causes of all holy walkings and godly conversation; then they do degenerate and decline thereby to the legal teaching of the Old Testament, more agreeable to the light of nature described of constraining men to holiness and righteousness with legal arguments of large blessings, if they do well; and with terrors of correction and punishment for their evil doings, which either does little good at all, or at the best makes but self-deceiving zealous hypocrites, and so go not with a right foot to the truth of the Gospel, {Gal.2:14,} and purity of apostolic preaching of constraining men to holiness and righteousness by joy and love, by preaching with joyful inflamed hearts and fiery tongues, {Acts 2:4,} the exceeding excellency and glory of the unsearchable riches of Christ; which as it was the true course of the first manner of preaching of the Gospel in the primitive Church, as is evident in the Scriptures; {Acts 8:8, 38-39, 13:38,39, 42-44, 52, I Pet.1:8;} and which Paul defines to be the very essence of a true preacher of the Gospel, {Eph.3:8,} saying in the person of all true preachers of the Gospel, “Unto me, who am less than the least of all saints, is this grace given, that I should preach among the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of Christ;” {Eph.3:8;} so it is the only means sanctified with the blood of Christ, to cause people to abound in all godly and zealous conversation. And thus I have somewhat the more largely hunted and taken this little fox, {Cant.2:15,} because it is so nourished not only by the Papists that press it exceedingly out of the examples of the Old Testament against the perfection of justification maintained by Protestants; but also some of the Protestants by lisping the language of Ashdod do go about with the same to undermine the very root of the Lord’s Vine; that is, free justification, by going about to prove by it, that we are not by the wedding garment of Christ’s righteousness made perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sin in the sight of God freely, full sufficient of itself {the more it is rightly known} to constrain us with all joy to holiness and righteousness, not by fear, but by love and evangelical zeal as strong as fire and death. {Cant.8:6,7, Tit.2;14} (John Eaton, Honeycombe of Free Justification by Christ Alone, 1642).

Deceived as to Salvation

November 22, 2014

One sort of objectors to free justification are such as being in name Protestants, and professing themselves utter enemies to Papists, in that {as they say} they will not give the least piece of justification to works and holy walking, and will seem both to themselves and others to hold free justification perfectly; and yet, because of their being in the dead faith, they do not spiritually understand it; and because by conceiving it after a carnal human witted fashion, they feel no sweetness therein. Therefore declining in affection unto the establishing of their own righteousness, they not only nullify the truth regarding justification, and make it as good as nothing; but also making the light of nature, {described in Rom.2:14,15,} and natural reason their chiefest guide, they thus weaken the faith of others, by running into the very objections of the Papists; and shake hands with them in the main points of salvation, with whom they profess to be at utter variance. And all this because they lie in a dead faith, whereby they understand not the nature and excellency of free justification; and yet one such may do us more harm in weakening our faith than many Papists; not only, because they profess to be one with us and the same confession in letter, and so are like homebred flattering enemies; but also, because by great literal learning and teaching, they may bear a great name, as such as are alive, when by their false faith they be dead indeed. {Rev.3:1} Therefore that these objectors do not weaken our faith, we must learn to discern these underminers of truth.

Peradventure some will say, how may we discern them? I answer, by knowing and diligently marking the nature of dead faith; which is this, to hold the very truth of God’s Word after a sort, as far as the light of nature, good memory, and good human wit can reach; and herein to think themselves rich and increased in goods, having need of nothing; {Rev.3:17;} being ashamed not to hold as contrary to what a sound profession is thought to hold, sticking fast to such phrases of Scripture as seem to agree with their human wit and reason; but because such by hearing, do hear only after a literal manner, but do not understand; and by seeing, do see after a carnal human witted fashion, but do not perceive; {Mt.13:13,14;} therefore they talk of that which they hold, as men talk of things in their sleep, and can say Sibboleth, but not Shibboleth; {Judges 12:6;} that is, can say something, but not make a clear and perspicuous confession of the mysteries of Christ. – Then with Nicodemus they count it absurd, and do judge it very foolishness itself, {I Cor.2:14,} and cry out, “What thing is this? What new doctrine is this?” {Mk.1:27} “How can these things be?” {Jn.3:9} Then they fall a wrangling with Nicodemical conclusions, and do not keep neither in word nor deed to that which they hold; but speak like men in a spiritual frenzy with flat contradictions; and then fall to sophisticating, raging and calumniating; that is, to a changing and wresting one’s words and meaning; and finally, if at length they be not renewed and changed with Nicodemus, they fall to railing and persecuting. {Acts 13:45-50} Thus by the excellency of Christ’s benefits laid open, the thoughts of many hearts are opened to be very bad, that seemed a long time by an appearance of holy walking to be very good. {Lk.2:34,35} John Eaton {Honeycombe of Free Justification by Christ Alone, 1642}

Charnock on Regeneration

November 22, 2014

A new creation is the bringing forth the soul in a likeness to God. The end therefore of the new creature is the glory of God. As God is the cause, so he is the pattern of the new creature, according to which he doth frame the soul; it is “after God, created in righteousness,” &c. Eph 4:24. There can be no likeness to God, where the creature dissents from him in the chief end. Without such an agreement, there can be nothing but variance between God and the creature. All the commotions and quarrels upon earth, are founded upon the difference of ends. God aims at his own glory, so doth the new creature; otherwise it were impossible he should walk with God, or follow him, as a dear child. It consists also in a likeness to Christ; his resurrection is the pattern, and cause of our regeneration; “Ye are risen with Christ.” What, to contrary ends? Did Christ rise only to live to himself? No; but to live to God, as the great end for which he was appointed Mediator. Did he design to glorify God on earth, and doth he live to dishonor God in heaven? No, he lives to the same end there for which he lived and died here. Our spiritual resurrection is not only a restoring us to spiritual life, but to the ends of this life, a living to God and Christ, and to the ends of his mediation. Surely the new creature cannot be so brutish, as not to mind the honor of that nature, to which it is so nearly allied, the glory of that God unto whom it hath the honor to bear a resemblance. A new creature hath a mighty sprightliness, and a height of spirit in some measure, when any thing in his hands concerns God, more than when it concerns himself; for his will being framed according to the will of God, is filled with an ambition for promoting the excellency of his name.                  Stephen Charnock

Letters of Samuel Pierce 3

November 20, 2014

My prayer on your behalf, my good friend, to the Holy Ghost shall be, that it may please him to teach you how to make use of every thing you see and feel in yourself, to look wholly to Christ. There is in Christ every thing you want for life, death, and eternal glory. His person, blood, and righteousness, is the whole ground of all your hope in God; his word believed in, brings into your heart a sense of his love; “thou art,” saith Jesus, “all fair, my love; there is no spot in thee.” In Christ you are a perfection of beauty: he presents you in himself, holy, unblamable, and unreprovable in his sight.

May the Holy Spirit open to your view the very heart of Jesus, shew you the love with which he loves you, and give you some precious cordial draughts, such as may fill you with everlasting consolation. Jesus is your friend: as such he will make use, and take the advantage from all which befall you in this vale of tears, to prove himself your fast and faithful friend. There is no feeling of your mind, no sigh nor tear, no groan nor pain, you are the subject of, but Christ sees and keeps his eye on. He will cause all, every thing which befall you, to be for your real good; his everlasting arms are underneath you. He saith unto you, “Fear not, I have redeemed thee, I have graven thee on the palms of my hands; I will remember thee with everlasting kindness.” “I am thy shield, and thy exceeding great reward. I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee.” “I am thy God, and will by thine everlasting light and thy glory.”
You may safely venture to believe these exceeding great and precious promises, which the mouth of the Lord hath spoken. Trust, and be not afraid; Jesus saith to you, “Be not afraid, only believe.” Cast therefore all your cares and burthens on him, who saith, “Verily, verily, I say unto you, if a man keep my sayings he shall never see death.” “I am the resurrection and the life; he that believeth on me, though he were dead, yet shall he live; and whosoever liveth, and believeth in me, shall never die.”

All may fail, nature may fail; life, strength, flesh and heart may fail, but Jesus will not, Jesus cannot fail you. May you live and die, looking wholly to him. O that he may continually, in a manifestative influential way, look on you, and fill you with all peace and joy in believing, that ye may abound in hope through the power of the Holy Ghost.

Musings 61

November 19, 2014

The idea of “free-will” sounds so attractive and it seems to alleviate so many problems, but that is only on the surface. The doctrine of “free-will” and the things that must be true for it to be true are antithetical to the Gospel of Jesus Christ and to free grace alone. The doctrine of “free-will” is simply at war with grace since the only true grace is a sovereign grace. There is no real middle between “free-will” and free-grace. The two cannot be reconciled and there is no middle ground between the two. It is one or the other. Justification by grace alone will not admit of a work of the “free-will” and a “free-will” cannot admit of a free-grace which saves as it pleases apart from any and all works of men. While we live in a day where people are always trying to reconcile beliefs and find a place in the middle, this cannot be done with these two beliefs. Both cannot be true despite all the efforts of very nice people to do so.

Below are some quotes of men from the history of the Church, though all are after the Reformation. They saw the issue with great clarity and perhaps we need to wrestle with this once again in our time. This is not a simple issue and it is not an issue that we can stand to the side and let it slide. The Gospel of grace alone is at stake in this issue and we must take sides and we must stand strong on this one.

“This false idea of ‘free-will’ is a real threat to salvation, and a delusion fraught with the most perilous consequences” (Luther).

“God has surely promised His grace to the humbled: that is, to those who mourn over and despair of themselves. But a man cannot be thoroughly humbled till he realizes that salvation is utterly beyond his own powers, counsels, efforts, will and works, and depends absolutely on the will, counsel, pleasure and work of Another—God alone. As long as he is persuaded that he can make even the smallest contribution to his salvation, he remains self-confident and does not utterly despair of himself, and so is not humbled before God; but plans out for himself (or at least hopes and longs for) a position, an occasion, a work, which shall bring him final salvation. But he who is out of doubt that his destiny depends entirely on the will of God despairs entirely of himself, chooses nothing for himself, but waits for God to work in him; and such a man is very near to grace for his salvation.

“So these truths are published for the sake of the elect, that they may be humbled and brought down to nothing, and so saved. The rest of men resist this humiliation; indeed, they condemn the teaching of self-despair; they want a little something left that they can do for themselves. Secretly they continue proud, and enemies of the grace of God” (Luther).

“Again, ‘tis a disposition of soul natural to all men to have a high thought of their own righteousness. And hence, they are pone to reject those doctrines that teach man’s absolute dependence on the free and sovereign grace of God and salvation by the righteousness of Christ” (J. Edwards).

“Till you feel yourself in this extremity of weakness, you are not in a condition (if I may say so) to receive the heavenly help. Your idea of remaining ability is the very thing that repels the help of the Spirit, just as any idea of remaining goodness thrusts away the propitiation of the Savior. It is your not seeing that you have no strength that is keeping you from believing” (Pink).

Letter of Samuel Eyles Pierce 2

November 18, 2014

This love (which to use Dr. Goodwin’s expression) ran like a river under ground from everlasting, brake forth in the heart of Christ, when he hung on the cross, and was “made sin and a curse for us.” Here, my friend, you may view as in a mirror, the love of God towards you. It shines forth in Christ in a full blaze of splendour, yes, it shines and is reflected on us, in the person and mediation of Jesus Christ. “God commendeth his love towards us, in that while we were yet sinners, Chist died for us.” These are some of the greatest acts of God’s love to us in our fallen sinful state. His so loving, as to give his only begotten Son; his laying help on him; laying, and causing to meet on him the iniquities of us all: and this is one of the highest expressions of it, “it pleased the Lord to bruise him.”

When God gave his Son, he bestowed him on us, with all the love of his heart: gave him freely, gave him fully, to be the purifier; or, in other words, to be a covenant for the people. This was a gift indeed, which is unspeakable: you and I may well cry out, “Thanks be unto God for his unspeakable gift.” Our Christ hath openly displayed his love to us; and the highest acts of it towards us as sinners were, his covenant engagements on our behalf; his giving himself for us; his bearing our sins, and the curse due to them: “When we were yet without strength, in due time Christ died for the ungodly.” He hath purged away sin by the sacrifice of himself. His most precious blood, cleanseth us from all sin: his most perfect life of obedience is our righteousness in the sight of God; we are more pure in Christ, than we are sinful in our fallen nature; we are more righteous in Christ, than we are unrighteous in ourselves; we have life in Christ, which sin cannot destroy, Satan cannot reach, death cannot put an end to. We have a fulness of grace in Christ, which all our wounds and wants can never exhaust. We have a full, free, complete, and finished salvation in Jesus, in which we may trust with the utmost confidence, and shall never be confounded; in which we may make our boast, and perpetually triumph: on which we may live, and derive from it every blessing we need.

My dear friend, it is to be greatly lamented, few, very, very few know Christ; and it is impossible souls should be enamoured with the love, beauties, grace, and salvation of Jesus, who have no knowledge of him. The generality of professors trifle with the everlasting gospel of the blessed God. Ask questions, which, if they receive replies to, are of no service to their souls; it is the Holy Ghost alone, who can quicken souls, and make them alive to God by faith which is in Christ Jesus.

I look on you to be one of those who feed secretly on Christ by faith. My dear Mrs. Hodge, you find it is, as you contemplate Jesus and his finished work, your heart is revived. When you view his righteousness and blood to be the whole of your salvation; his word to be your ground and warrant to believing; and rest simply on this truth, that “the blood of Jesus Christ, (the Son of God) cleanseth from all sin:” it is this brings in peace to your mind.

My views of the gospel are, that it is the Father’s revelation of Jesus Christ, who is set forth in it, with all the love of his heart, in all the bowels of his mercy, with all the excellency and efficacy of his righteousness, in the full perfection of his sacrifice and most precious blood-shedding, to sinners as sinners. And this is God’s method of grace and salvation: it is no matter what the sinner is; be he as vile as hell, as guilty as sin can make him, stained and blackened as much as sin can; yea, could it be proved, that in point of sinfulness he had and did exceed all the damned in hell, yet Christ’s blood cleanseth from all sin; and in believing this, the sinner is justified from all things. This is God’s remedy for guilty conscience, for filthy sinners, for lost guiltly men,–“Whoever will, let him come, and take of the water of life freely: whosoever will, let him come to me,” saith Jesus; “and him that cometh unto me, I will in no wise cast out, nor cast off.”

Letter of Samuel Eyles Pierce

November 17, 2014

My Dear Mrs. Hodge,
From the interview I had yesterday with your beloved partner, I find you are unwell. As I sincerely respect you for the Lord’s sake, I thought I would address a few lines to you, it being probable I may see London before I return to Cornwall; if so, then I shall not return by way of Plymouth and Dock.

In a certain sense this is a truth, that it matters not where a believer in Christ is, at home or abroad; nor in what circumstances he is, whether sick or in health; because Jesus Christ is with him. His eye is upon him for good; his everlasting arms are underneath him; yea, the believer is in Christ, one in him, and one with him–bound up in the bundle of life with him; and Jesus saith, “because I live, ye shall live also.”

I do conclude, you have tasted that the Lord is gracious; found that in his favour there is life, and his loving-kindness is better than the life itself: that Jesus is to you precious. Blessings on the slaughtered Lamb, he hath “loved us, and washed us from our sins in his own blood.” This love is everlasting. It is the standing miracle of heaven. The heights, depths, lengths, and breadths of it, cannot by unfolded, no not in glory. It is infinite, it is incomprehensible; and Jesus hath in a most amazing way and manner expressed his love to the many which the Father hath given him. Before time began, he undertook as their head and surety, in the covenant of the Trinity, to be their Saviour and Redeemer, from sin, Satan, death, and hell. In the fulness of time he became incarnate, and bore all the sins of his people, “on his body on the tree,” and was made “a curse for us.” He hath made his soul “an offering for sin,” and his blood “cleanseth us from all sin.” In him we are saved with an everlasting salvation; in him we are sanctified, justified, accepted; have redemption, even the forgiveness of sins; in him we are complete.
My dear friend, look off every object and thing, look wholly out of yourself, and look immediately to and intensely on the Lord Jesus, as having borne your sins, and carried your sorrows. Mount higher, and consider what you were in Christ before the foundation of the world. As the object and subject of God’s everlasting love, you were chosen by the Father in Christ, before the foundation of the world: so that before all time you were in Christ, united to, interested in, and related to the Lord Jesus. Here is the believer’s blessedness; he is in Christ, and the whole heart of Christ is immutably fixed on his beloved ones. He was their Head before time began: they had a virtual representative being and existence in him from everlasting. They had grace given them in him before the world was. What the love of God is–how great, how immense–it is out of the power of all saints on earth or in heaven to say!

Do but think with yourself what it must be to shine in Christ before Jehovah the Father, to be viewed by him in Jesus our head and representative, to be beloved of him with all the love of his heart, and for that love to extend from eternity to eternity; to be kept up, fed, and continued in the infinite mind of God with perpetual pleasure, with infinite delight, in continual vigour; so that the Lord is fain to express himself thus,—“I have loved thee with an everlasting love, therefore with loving-kindness have I drawn thee. The Lord thy God in the midst of thee is mighty, he will save, he will rejoice over thee with singing!” Here I must stop; it is ineffable, it is incomprehensible love! and must cry out, “O the depth!”

Musings 61

November 17, 2014

Question: Why is it so hard for men to believe that God is really sovereign and that they (men) are really helpless?

The most basic reason is that because of the fall, where man believed the words of the evil one that man could be as God, sinful man wants to be sufficient in and of himself and to determine his own actions and eternal destiny for himself. Man does not want God to rule over him and does not want God to decide what is right or wrong for man. The heart of man has been given over to self and the love of self rather than to God and the love of God and so man is at enmity to God and will not have God to rule over him.

The Scriptures tell us that man does not want the knowledge of God and in the rejection of God man goes deeper and deeper into sin. As seen from the passage in Romans 1:18-31, man is constantly at war with God over who determines what is right and wrong and for who has the right to rule the human heart and behavior. Man does not just blindly enter into sin, but the God he knows is rejected and sin is willingly and lovingly pursued. It is hard for man to understand that he is not free to do good and to love God when he understands that he does what he wants to do and does not do what he does not want to do. What this blinded (to spiritual things) person does not understand is that his very loves and desires are in bondage and he is in bondage to his sinful nature. So a sovereign and holy God is hated by man because there is enmity in the heart of man against the God who will judge the sin that the man loves.

Romans 1:18 For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men who suppress the truth in unrighteousness, 19 because that which is known about God is evident within them; for God made it evident to them. 20 For since the creation of the world His invisible attributes, His eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly seen, being understood through what has been made, so that they are without excuse. 21 For even though they knew God, they did not honor Him as God or give thanks, but they became futile in their speculations, and their foolish heart was darkened. 22 Professing to be wise, they became fools, 23 and exchanged the glory of the incorruptible God for an image in the form of corruptible man and of birds and four-footed animals and crawling creatures. 24 Therefore God gave them over in the lusts of their hearts to impurity, so that their bodies would be dishonored among them. 25 For they exchanged the truth of God for a lie, and worshiped and served the creature rather than the Creator, who is blessed forever. Amen. 26 For this reason God gave them over to degrading passions; for their women exchanged the natural function for that which is unnatural, 27 and in the same way also the men abandoned the natural function of the woman and burned in their desire toward one another, men with men committing indecent acts and receiving in their own persons the due penalty of their error. 28 And just as they did not see fit to acknowledge God any longer, God gave them over to a depraved mind, to do those things which are not proper, 29 being filled with all unrighteousness, wickedness, greed, evil; full of envy, murder, strife, deceit, malice; they are gossips, 30 slanderers, haters of God, insolent, arrogant, boastful, inventors of evil, disobedient to parents, 31 without understanding, untrustworthy, unloving, unmerciful; 32 and although they know the ordinance of God, that those who practice such things are worthy of death, they not only do the same, but also give hearty approval to those who practice them.

In the verses above we see this enmity against God and His reign and rule (sove-reign rule) over man. God is clearly seen in creation, but man does not honor God and so becomes futile in his speculations. While man does not think he will ever be in gross sin and that there are things he will not do, when man is in bondage to sin God will punish that man by hardening his heart and turning him over to greater and greater sin. God is the One who gives hearts over to impurity, because men exchange the truth of God for a lie. Men who are turned over to degrading passions do not acknowledge God any longer and so they are given over to a depraved mind. These people, though down deep they know that there is a true and living God, hate God and continue on in their practice of things that are worthy of death.

Men, who think that they are in control and can live as their wicked hearts desire, will love “God” as long as they think that God will not run contrary to their desires. But when the heart of man who is his own god runs counter to the living God, man hates the true God who is the sovereign God and wants another god to serve man and that can be controlled by man. Religious man will use religion to try to control God as well.

Musings 59

November 14, 2014

Amos 8:11 “Behold, days are coming,” declares the Lord GOD, “When I will send a famine on the land, Not a famine for bread or a thirst for water, But rather for hearing the words of the LORD.

In prison camps during war (in most nations in history) prisoners are only given enough food and drink to keep them barely alive. Because of their lack of food, they have a severe lack of nutrition. They seem to be sick more than people with a healthy diet and many die. The lack of food is terrible on the body, but also on the mind. In countries where there has been severe famine or perhaps when cities with walls were put under siege for months at a time, people starved to death and some resorted to cannibalism. These things, which used to be frequent, were horrible. However, even more horrible is a famine for hearing of the Word.

A famine of hearing the Word is something like people who can hear about food but cannot eat it. They can see the food, they can smell the food, but they cannot taste it or eat it. The food can do no good for the person who cannot or will not eat it, but neither will the Word do people any good if they have no understanding or true hearing of it. When the Spirit does not open the eyes of people to see the glory of the Gospel or give them hearing of the voice of God, no man has the ability to see or hear the Gospel in truth and reality. The Gospel is a message, yes, but apart from the Spirit working what the words say in the heart and working on and in the heart, it is nothing more than words. The Gospel is the power of God unto salvation, but it is not just words, but instead it is God doing in the heart what the words say.

In the modern day we have many words about the Bible and perhaps many words about the Gospel, but we have no power. God has withdrawn the power and energy of the Word and preachers are preaching dead words that are coming from dead hearts. The real issue of not hearing the Word, then, is that God has withdrawn Himself and is not saving sinners and is not giving people a true hearing of the Word. We are as helpless as we can be and we have no ability until God comes in grace and gives hearing and gives new hearts.

As long as the modern day keeps focusing on the words of the Gospel and not the God who gives power to the Gospel and is the One who must work these in the heart, we will be a people who cannot hear the Word. The modern professing Church is in the midst of a famine and it is sickly and without nourishment at best. Most likely, in reality, most of the people in the modern professing Church are dead in sins and trespasses while they go on thinking that they are converted.

The point is that we must be broken from all of our supposed ability and seek the Lord for grace. We must be broken from thinking that we can say a prayer or walk an aisle and that God will save us. We must be saved from thinking that if we can come up with faith God will save us. We must be broken from any help or hope from self and turned to look to grace alone and that must happen by grace alone. We must bow before the God who saves by grace alone and His Spirit blows as He will. Oh for preachers who would preach the power of God in the Gospel rather than the power of the sinner! Oh for preachers who would preach the utter inability of man so that they will look to Christ alone! What a terrible famine of the Word we are in while we live in the lap of plenty in external things. Perhaps all of our plenty is God’s way of blinding us to our utter poverty in the spiritual realm. Where oh where is God? Where are those who will seek the Lord and nothing else? Are they too busy with planning a new building? Are they too busy with planning some outreach? Perhaps, but the famine goes on.