When I graduated high school, someone, very wisely, rather than giving me “10 Steps to a Successful Life,” or “The Future is Yours Graduate,” they gave me a little, tacky looking book by a guy named A.W. Tozer. The book:Â The Knowledge of the Holy. It turned my life upside down, and I have yet to recover from topsy-turviness. I have come to grips with the fact that holding to the historic, biblical, heroic Christian truths will make my viewpoints seem cockeyed to this world. Tozer, unlike most in his generation, was unwilling to have a mere mental ascendency to truth; he was concerned with the human being experiencing the majesty and glory of the thrice-holy God. [Read more…] about One Desire
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Spurgeon on Idolatry
A few helpful words from Spurgeon on our idolatrous and atheistic hearts. The full sermon can be read here
Pentecost, For Real
I hear people often say, “The church just needs to get back to the way things were in the church of Acts.†Energetic Christian leaders whip their followers into a frenzy over wanting another anointing, another experience, a fresh fire to fall, another revival, and many other trite terms for, “Uh, things ain’t going so hot around here.†[Read more…] about Pentecost, For Real
True Joy is a Serious Thing
Horatius Bonar, the great Scottish preacher and hymnodist has some encouraging words for the Believer’s fight for joy. We are not called to glumness, but joy. However, we are not called to levity, but joy. Gloom and levity happen to be the cliffs on either side of the narrow way of joy. Enjoy these precious words of encouragement: [Read more…] about True Joy is a Serious Thing
A Deathbed Hymn
William Cowper’s famous hymn, Sometimes a Light Surprises , is a powerful proclamation of choosing to praise God no matter what the circumstance or situation. This world promises joys and comforts, but leaves us dissatisfied and disillusioned. The Christian, however, is no longer thirsty, for they are given the very fountain head; we are free, but, like CS Lewis once said, “Free, as a man is free to drink while he is drinking. He is not free still to be dry.” Or, you could say, we are free to rejoice while we are enjoying the unfailing presence of Jesus; we are not free still to be glum.
We moan and complain life’s circumstances; yet, true faith holds steadfast to the promise of the Promiser. This hymn has come to be a precious reminder to me for two reasons. The first is obvious, it is a tremendous hymn of praise to the Lord. The second is because I recently read in M’Cheyne’s biography that this was the final song he heard, as he was dying of the fever, racked with pain, delirious with his illness. His sister read or sang–I don’t quite remember–this to him a few hours before his death.
What a statement to end one’s life with! Is your deathbed hymn one of glumness, sorrow, regret, or doubt? Or can you say with the final two lines: Yet God the same abiding, His praise shall tune my voice, for while in Him confiding, I cannot but rejoice?
Is your hope in the temporal pleasures of earth, or have you found the fullness of the fountainhead? The Gospel truth of Christ abides ever faithful, ever available, and since He cannot fail, we cannot help but rejoice.
Sometimes a light surprises the Christian while he sings;
It is the Lord, who rises with healing in His wings:
When comforts are declining, He grants the soul again
A season of clear shining, to cheer it after rain.
In holy contemplation we sweetly then pursue
The theme of God’s salvation, and find it ever new.
Set free from present sorrow, we cheerfully can say,
Let the unknown tomorrow bring with it what it may.
It can bring with it nothing but He will bear us through;
Who gives the lilies clothing will clothe His people, too;
Beneath the spreading heavens, no creature but is fed;
And He Who feeds the ravens will give His children bread.
Though vine nor fig tree neither their wonted fruit should bear,
Though all the field should wither, nor flocks nor herds be there;
Yet God the same abiding, His praise shall tune my voice,
For while in Him confiding, I cannot but rejoice.
The Old Standard of the Cross
Inward Trials: God’s Means for Growth in Grace
John Newton well knew what it was to be humbled before a Thrice Holy God. We often times long for the testimony of holiness and divine power to mark our lives, but we withdraw from the rose of God’s grace, simply because the thorns of purgation and tribulation surround it. Newton, a man with a mighty testimony, staunch abolitionist, famous hymnodist, and mighty Gospel preacher was often plagued with ten thousand ghosts of his former sins. Though he had indeed found the Amazing Grace of God to cover all his many sins, he found that that amazing grace is brought to us by means of inward trials of God’s purging, threshing, and sanctifying.
If we would grow in grace, we must also see that God will afflict every last vestige of pride and selfishness within; if we desire the mercy of the cross, we will also taste the unrelenting agenda of the cross: conformity to Christ. Thus, the old man must die, so that Christ life alone remains.
Enjoy this gem by Newton. And may it be a servant of grace unto your soul, though it means wrestling with the God-man until daybreak.
[Read more…] about Inward Trials: God’s Means for Growth in Grace
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