Tidbits of Faith
Quotes from some of the Puritans
and those who read their books.
The following tidbits are quotes from some of church histories
greats. Some are long, some are short, but all are edifying.
They are quotes from the puritans, Jonathan Edwards and Charles Spurgeon.
I found them helpful, and encouraging at the time (and even now) and I
hope you will as well.
Violence
Sabbath
Satan
Great
Things
Glory
Perfect
Hypocrites
Conscience
Almost
Tenfold
Ownership
The
Voice of the Turtles
Terror
Exalted
Present
Help
Out
Pondering
Pray
Spiders
The
Right Approach to Election
Holy
Zeal
The
Devil's Expertise
Are
there Grades of sin?
A
Frowning Providence
Can I be sure?
SUBJECT:
Violence
With
what violence, temptations, especially more dangerous ones, are to be
resisted. Modest, maidenly, gingerly dealing here is not good. They are
called "fiery darts", Ephesians 6; we must therefore deal as
with quenching fire. Thus
violent was Paul, when he beat down the flesh with a club, 1 Cor. 9, and
so here Christ deals violently with Satan. He would not endure with him, nor stand debating with him,
but commands him away: as wicked men deal, making themselves intractable
to all good persuasions, stopping their ears against them, Acts 7. So we
should do against the Devil's enchantments. Here is Eve was wanting.
Where are we wanting before the commands of Christ?
Are we to be glibly throwing off such self-examinations by
saying, "O such wretched men we are--thanks be to Christ" and
leave things at that? What
kinds of "wantings" do we have?
Where are our trespasses and our sins the sum of Satan's attacks
to our flesh, and then our simple minds giving into such wicked
adversity? How have we entered into true combat?
Where is Christian warfare? Satan is no lazy dog, but a roaring
lion. Daniel Dyke "Christ Tempted and Satan Foiled"
Do
we want to foil Satan as well? (Luke 6:46)
Only
thus much we may observe, that Christ being now occupied in heavenly and
spiritual meditations, and contemplations, and talking secretly with his
Father, this saucy Satan yet durst come, and interpose himself, and
offer to interrupt, and to disturb these sweet soliloquies of our
Savior. No marvel then if
he deal thus with us in our prayers, meditations and the hearing of the
Word. No such disturbance
we feel at play. At gaming
can some sit up all night without any heaviness, but at a sermon how
quickly doth the Devil rock men to sleep? This shows that the one is of
God, and for our good; the other is against God, and to our hurt.
It cannot but be good which the Devil is an enemy to.
It cannot be but evil, which he is a friend to.
---Daniel
Dyke, "Christ Tempted, and Satan Foiled"
SUBJECT:
Sabbath
The
correct observance of the Sabbath requires 2 things: rest, and
sanctification of that rest. The
rest required is the cessation from all work which might hinder divine
worship. We must,
therefore, abstain on that day from all works properly called servile.
We may conclude from the subsequent words of the commandment,
"On the Sabbath you shall not do any work." that all work
which may be properly called ours is forbidden. All work is included which pertains to our use of life, i.e.,
work which concerns natural and civil things and leads to our gain and
profit. So work which of
its own nature is not servile but befits a freeman, such as studying and
the pursuit of the liberal arts, is prohibited.
Especially included are those which are common to free men and
servants, namely, traveling and handling business affairs. Likewise
forbidden is work which either directly or remotely pertains to such
holy things as the building of the tabernacle, Ex. 16, or the visiting
of markets or fairs, Neh. 13. On this day public worship ought to b the chief matter and
for this reason the sabbath is called a holy convocation Lev. 23:3; Acts
13:14; 15:23; 16:13. The
public convocation of the church ought to be held both before and after
the noon on the Lord's Day; the double burnt offering of the sabbath in
the morning and in the evening, Numbers 28:9 is the ample precedent.
---Williams
Ames, "The Marrow of Theology."
SUBJECT:
Satan
"And
no marvel; for Satan himself is transformed into an angel of
light..."
2
Cor. 11:14
It
is observable that a forester goes usually in green, suitable to the
leaves of the trees and the grass of the forest.
By this means the most observant in all the herd never so much as
distrusts him till the arrow pierces his side.
And thus the devil shapes himself to the fashions of all men.
If he meets with a proud man, or a prodigal man, then he makes
himself a flatterer; if a covetous man, then he comes with a reward in
his hand. He has an apple
for Eve, a grape for Noah, a change of raiment for Gehazi, a bag for
Judas. He can
dish out his meat for all palates.
He has a lace to fit every show
He has something to please all conditions, to suit with all
dispositions whatsoever.
--William
Jenkyn
"Saul
has slain his thousands, and David his ten thousands; but Satan his
millions."
---Thomas
Adams
SUBJECT:
Great Things
"The
Lord hath done great things for us, wherefore we are glad."
Psalm
126:3
Some
Christians are more prone to look on the dark side of everything, and
dwell more upon what they have gone through instead of what God has done
for them. Ask for a
description of the Christian life and they will describe for you their
dark afflictions, their sad adversities and the sinfulness of their
hearts, yet with a scarcity to alluding to the great mercy which God
always helps them get through the darkest hours.
What has God done? Has
he not pulled us out of the miry clay and from adverse afflictions?
Has he not sent His Son Jesus to rescue us from the power of sin
and darkness? So, for the
Christian, he is not to dwell upon the deep dark sin which is truly
transient in his life, but rather the hopefulness of the Savior who
delivers him from every trial and tribulation, giving him the hope of
perfect blessedness in heaven. Our
griefs cannot mar the joy he brings us.
Our tribulations can never shut out the glory of his countenance
upon us. He outshines the
stars and sun, shall he outshine our sin?
So each day brings us another time to receive great things from
God. And since he brings us
these great things, we are glad.
---C.
H. Spurgeon
SUBJECT:
Glory
"...and
some for dishonour..."
If
man be not made to glorify his Creator, then there is no purpose that
such a creature should exist.
--Jonathan
Edwards, from "The Wicked Useful in their Destruction Only"
SUBJECT:
Perfect
"made
perfect..." Heb. 12:23
Recollect
that there are two kinds of perfection which the Christian needs--the
perfection of justification in the person of Jesus, and the perfection
of sanctification wrought in him by the work of the Holy Spirit. At
present, corruption yet remains even in the breast of the
regenerate--experience soon teaches us this.
Within us are still lusts and evil imaginations.
But I rejoice to know that the day is coming when God shall
finish the work which He has begun; and He shall present my soul, not
only perfect in Christ, but perfect through the Spirit, without spot or
blemish, or any such thing. Can
it be true that this poor sinful heart of mine is to become holy even as
God is holy? Can if be that
this spirit that often cries, "O wretched man that I am who shall
deliver me from this body of this sin and death?"--shall get rid of
my sin and death--that I shall have no evil things to vex my ears, and
no unholy thoughts to disturb my peace? Oh happy hour! may it be
hastened! When I cross the Jordan, the work of sanctification shall be
finished; but not till that moment shall I claim perfection for myself.
Then my spirit shall have its last baptism in the Holy Spirit's
fire. Methinks I long to
die to receive that last and final purification which shall usher me
into heaven. Not an angel
more pure than I shall be, for I shall be able to say in a double sense,
"I am clean" through Jesus' blood and through the Spirit's
work. O how shall we extol
the power of the Holy Ghost in thus making us fit to stand before our
Father in heaven! Yet not
the hope of perfection hereafter make us content with imperfection now.
If it does this, our hope cannot be genuine; for a good hope is a
purifying thing, even now. The work of grace must be abiding in us now, or it cannot be
perfected then. Let us pray
to be filled "with the Spirit" that we may bring forth
increasingly the fruits of righteousness.
---C.H.
Spurgeon
SUBJECT:
Hypocrites
"...woe
to you Pharisees, you hypocrites..."
Hypocrites
are like pictures of canvas, they show fairest at farthest.
A hypocrite's profession is in folio, but his sincerity in decimo-sexto,
nothing in the world to speak of. A
hypocrite is like the Sicilian Etna, flaming at the mouth when it has
snow at the foot: their mouths talk hotly, but their feet walk coldly.
The nightingale has a sweet voice, but a lean carcass; a voice
and nothing else but a voice: and so have all hypocrites...
Hypocrites labour to seem saints, not to be so; but the holy
labour to be saints, more than to seem saints.
The kite may fly aloft but her eye and mind is to the earth.
She seems to be a gallant bird at her pitch, till she falls down
upon a carrion. Oh how the
pretentious zealot makes a show to honor Christ with his lofty
profession, as if he were altogether a man of heaven: tarry but a
little, throw the bait of glory in his way, and he will stoop to a
carrion, and be taken with the pride of His own commendation.
If you have an angel's tongue and a devil's heart,
you are no better than a post in the crossway, that rots itself to
direct others; or a torch that, having pleasured others with the light,
goes out itself in smoke and stench.
---Thomas
Adams
"Feigned
equity is double iniquity."
---George
Downname
SUBJECT:
Conscience
"...and
their conscience being weak is defiled...”
1
Cor. 8:7
Conscience,
as an expression of the law or will and mind of God, is not now to be
implicitly depended on. It
is not infallible. What was
true of its office in Eden, has been deranged and shattered by the fall.
It now lies, as I have seen a sundial in the neglected garden of
an old desolate ruin, thrown from its pedestal, prostrate on the ground,
and covered by tall rank weeds...Conscience has often lent its sanction
to the grossest errors, and prompted the greatest crimes.
Did not Saul of tarsus, for instance, drag men and women to
prison; compel them to blaspheme; and stain his hands in saintly blood,
while conscience approved the deed--he believed that he was doing God'
service... Read the "Book of Martyrs", read the sufferings of
our own forefathers; and under the cowl of a shaven monk, or the
trappings of a haughty churchman, you shall see conscience persecuting
the saints of God, and dragging even tender women and children to the
bloody scaffold or the burning stake.
With eyes swimming in tears, or flashing fire, we close the
painful record, to apply to conscience the words addressed to Liberty by
the French heroine. When passing its statue, she rose in the cart that bore her
tot he guillotine, and throwing up her arms, exclaimed, "O Liberty,
what crimes have been done in thy name!"
And what crimes in thine conscience. So far as doctrines and
duties are concerned, not conscience, but the revealed Word of God, is
our only sure and safe directory.
---William
Guthrie
SUBJECT:
Almost
"Then
Agrippa said unto Paul, Almost thou persuadest me to be a
Christian..."
Acts
26:28
What
will become of those that have grown weary before they got half way to
heaven? Why, man, it is he
that holds out to the end that must be saved. It is h that overcomes that shall inherit all things--not
every one that begins. Agrippa
gave a fair step for a sudden, he steps almost into the bosom of Christ
in less than a half an hour. "thou", said he to Paul, has
"almost persuaded me to be a Christian."
Ah! but it was almost; and so he might as well have been never a
whit. He stepped fair
indeed, but yet he stepped short. he
was hot while he was at it, but he was quickly out of wind. All this but
almost! I tell you, this is but almost, it lost his soul. Sometimes I
imagine how these poor wretches that get but almost to heaven, how
fearful their almost, and their but almost, will torment them in hell.
They shall carry it in the bitterness of their souls, saying: "I
was almost a Christian. I
almost got into the Kingdom. Almost
out of the hands of the devil. Almost
out of my sins. Almost from
under the curse of God. Almost and that was all. Almost,
but not altogether. O that
I should be almost at heaven, and should not go quite through!"
Friend, it is a sad thing to sit down before we are in heaven, and to
grow weary before we come to the place of rest.
If this should be your case, I am sure it is because you did not
so run as to obtain.
--John
Bunyan, from "The Heavenly Footman"
SUBJECT:
Tenfold
"I
am the rose of Sharon."
Song
2:1
Whatever
there may be of beauty in the material world, Jesus Christ possesses all
that in the spiritual world to a tenfold degree.
Amongst flowers the rose is deemed the sweetest but Jesus is
infinitely more beautiful in the garden o the soul than a rose in the
garden of the earth. He
takes the first place in the fairest of ten thousand. He is the sun, and al others are the stars; the heavens and
the day are dark in comparison with Him for the king in his beauty
transcends all. "I am the rose of Sharon."
This was the best and rarest of roses.
Jesus is not "the rose" alone, he is the "rose of
Sharon" just as He calls His righteousness "gold" and
then adds the "gold of Ophir."--the best o the best. He is positively lovely and superlatively the loveliest.
There is variety in His charms.
The rose is delightful to the eye, and its scent is pleasant and
refreshing; so each of the sense of the soul, whether it be the taste or
hearing, the feeling or sight, or the spiritual smell, finds appropriate
gratification in Jesus. Even
the recollection of His love is sweet. Take the rose of Sharon and pull it leaf from leaf, and lay
the leave in the jar of memory and you shall find each leaf fragment
long afterwards filling the house with perfumes.
Christ satisfies the highest taste of the most educated spirit to
the very full. The greatest amateur in perfumes is quite satisfied with
the rose; and when the soul has arrives at her highest pitch of true
taste she shall still be content with Christ, nay, she shall be the
better able to appreciate him. Heaven itself possesses nothing itself
which transcends the rose of Sharon. What emblem can fully set forth its
beauty? Human speech and
earth-born things fail to tell of Him.
Earth's choicest charms commingled feebly picture his abounding
preciousness. Blessed rose,
bloom in my heart forever!
----C.H.
Spurgeon
SUBJECT:
Ownership
"God,
even our own God."
Psalm
67:6
It
is strange how little we make of the spiritual blessings which God gives
us, but it is stranger still how little use we make of God Himself.
Though he is "our own God" we apply ourselves but
little to Him, and ask but little of Him.
How seldom do we ask counsel at the hands of the Lord.
How often do we go about our business without seeking His
guidance! In our struggles how constantly do we strive to bear our
burdens ourselves, instead of casting them upon the Lord, that He may
sustain us. This is not
because we may not, for the Lord seems to say "I am thine soul,
come and make use of me as thou wilt; thou mayest freely come to my
store, and the oftener the more welcome."
It is our own fault if we make not free with the riches of our
God. Then since thou hast
such a friend, and He invites thee, draw from Him daily. Never want
while thou hast a God to go to; never fear or faint while thou hast God
to help thee; go thy treasures and take whatever thou needest-there is
all that thou can want. Learn the divine skills of making God all things
to thee. He can supply thee
with all, of better still, He can be to thee instead of all.
Let me urge thee then to make use of thy God.
Make use of Him in prayer. Go
to Him often because is thy God. O
wilt thou fail to use so great a privilege?
Fly to Him, tell Him all thy wants.
Use Him constantly by faith at all times.
If some dark providence has beclouded thee, use thy God as a sun;
if some strong enemy has beset thee, find in Jehovah a shield; for he is
a sun and a shield to His people. If
thou hast lost thy way in the mazes of life; use Him as a guide for he
will direct thee. Whatever thou art and wherever thou art, remember that God is
just what thou wantest, and just where thou wantest, and that he can do
all thou wantest.
----C.H.
Spurgeon
SUBJECT:
The voice of the turtles
"The
flowers appear on earth; the time of the singing of birds is come, and
the voice of the turtle is heard in our land."
Song
of Songs 2:12
Sweet
is the season of spring; the long and dreary winter helps us to
appreciate its genial warmth, and its promise of summer enhances it
present delights. After
periods of depression of spirit, it is delightful to behold again the
light of the Sun of Righteousness; then our slumbering graces rise from
lethargy, like the crocus and the daffodil from their beds of earth;
then is our heart made merry with delicious notes of gratitude, far more
melodious than the warbling of birds--and the comforting assurance of
peace, infinitely more delightful than the turtle's note, is heard
within the soul. Now is the time for the soul to seek communion with her
beloved; now must she rise from her native sordidness, and come away
from her old associations. If
we do not hoist the sail when the breeze is favorable, we shall be
blameworthy: times of refreshing ought not to
pass over us unimproved. When
Jesus Himself visits us in tenderness, and entreats us to arise, can we
be so base to refuse His request? He
has Himself risen that he may draw us after Him; He now by his Holy
Spirit has revived us, that we may, in newness of life, ascend into the
heavenlies, and hold communion with Himself.
Let our winter state suffice us for coldness and indifference;
when the Lord creates spring within, let our sap flow with vigor, and
our branch blossom with high resolve.
O Lord, if it be not spring time in my chilly heart, I pray Thee
make it so, for I am heartily weary at living at a distance from Thee.
Oh! the long and dreary winter, when wilt Thou bring it to an end?
Come, Holy Spirit and renew my soul!
quicken Thou me! restore
me, and have mercy upon me! This very night I would earnestly implore
the Lord to take pity upon His servant, and send me a happy revival of
spiritual life!
----C.H.
Spurgeon
SUBJECT:
Terror
"Thou
shalt not be afraid for the terror by night."
Psalm
91:5
What
is this terror? It may be
the cry of fire, or the noise of thieves, or fancied appearances, or the
shriek of sudden sickness or death.
We live in the world of death and sorrow, we may therefore look
for ills as well in the might-watches as beneath the glare of the
broiling sun. Nor should
this alarm us, for be the terror what it may, the promise is that the
believer shall not be afraid. Why
should he? Let us put it
more closely, why should we? God
our Father is here, and will be here all through the lonely hours; He is
an almighty Watcher, a sleepless Guardian, a faithful Friend.
Nothing can happen without His direction, for even hell itself is
under His control. Darkness is not dark to Him.
He has promised to be a wall of fire around His people--and who
can break through such a barrier? Worldings
may well be afraid, for they have an angry God above them, a guilty
conscience within them, and a yawning hell beneath them; but we who rest
in Jesus are saved from all these through rich mercy.
If we give away to foolish fear we shall dishonor our profession,
and lead others to doubt the reality of godliness. W ought to be afraid
of being afraid, let we should vex the Holy Spirit with foolish
distrust. Down, then, ye
dismal forebodings and groundless apprehensions, God has not forgotten
to be gracious, nor shut up His tender mercies; it may be night in the
soul, but there need be no
terror, for the God of love changes not.
Children of light may walk in darkness, but they are therefore
not cast away, nay, they are now enabled to prove their adoption by
trusting in their heavenly Father as hypocrites cannot do.
Though
the night be dark and dreary
Darkness
cannot hide from Thee
Thou
art He, who, never weary
Watchest
where Thy people be.
--C.H.
Spurgeon, Evening, April 22
SUBJECT:
Exalted
"Him
hath God exalted..."
Acts
5:31
Jesus,
our lord, once crucified, dead and buried, now sits upon the throne of
glory. The highest place
that heaven affords is by His undisputed right. It is sweeter to remember that the exaltation of Christ in
heaven is a representative exaltation.
He is exalted at the father's right hand, and though as Jehovah
he has eminent glories, in which finite creatures cannot share, yet as
the mediator, the honors which Jesus wears in heaven are the heritage of
all the saints. It is
delightful to reflect how close is Christ's union with His people.
We are actually one with Him; we are members of His body; and His
exaltation is our exaltation. He
will give us to sit upon His throne, even as he has overcome, and is set
down with His Father on His throne; He has a crown, and He gives us a
crown too; He has a throne, but he is not content in having a throne to
himself, on His right hand there must be a queen, arrayed in "gold
Ophir." He cannot be
glorified without His bride. Look up, believer, to Jesus now; let the eye of your faith
behold Him with many crowns upon His head; and remember that you will
one day be like Him, when you see Him as He is; you shall not be so
great as he is, you shall not be so divine, but still you shall, in a
measure, share the same honors and show forth the same happiness and the
same dignity which He possesses. Be content to live unknown for a little
while, and walk your weary way through the fields of poverty, or up the
hills of affliction; for by-and-by you shall reign with Christ, for he
has made us "kings and priests unto God, and we shall reign for
ever and ever." Oh!
wonderful thought for children of God!
We have Christ for our glorious representative in heaven's courts
now, and soon He will come to receive us to Himself, to be with Him
there, to behold His glory and share in His joy.
---C.H.
Spurgeon, April 22, morning, from "Morning and Evening"
SUBJECT:
Present help
"A
very present help..."
Psalm
46:1
Covenant
blessings are not meant to be looked at only, but to be appropriated.
Even our Lord Jesus is given to us for our present use.
Believer, thou dost not make use of Christ as thou ought to do.
When thou art in trouble, why dost thou not tell him all they
grief? Has He not a
sympathizing heart, and can he not comfort and relieve thee?
No, thou art going about to all thy friends, save thy best
Friend, and telling thy tale everywhere except in the bosom of the Lord.
Are thou burdened with this days sins? Here is a fountain filled
with blood; use it saint, use it. Has
a sense of guilt returned upon thee?
The pardoning grace of Jesus may be proved again and again.
Come to Him at once for cleansing.
Dost thou deplore thy wickedness?
He is thy strength, why not lean upon Him?
Dost thou feel naked? Come
hither soul; put on the robe of Jesus' righteousness. Stand not looking
at it but wear it. Strip
off thine own righteousness and thine own fears too; put on the fair
white linen, for it was meant to wear. Dost thy feel thyself sick?
Pull the night-bell of prayer and call upon thy Beloved
Physician! He will give the cordial that will revive thee.
Thou art poor; but thou hast a "kinsman, a mighty man of
wealth. What! Wilt thou not go to Him and ask Him to give thee of His
abundance, when He has given thee this promise, that thou shall be joint
heir with him, and has made over all that He is and all that He has to
be thine? There is nothing
that Christ dislikes more than when His people make a show-thing of Him,
and not to use Him. He
loves to be employed by us. The
more burdens we put on His shoulders the more precious he will be to us.
"Let
us be simple with him, then
Not
backward, stiff or cold,
As
though our Bethlehem could be
What
Sinai was of old."
---C.H.
Spurgeon
SUBJECT:
Out
"I
pray not that Thou shouldest take them out of the world."
John
17:15
It
is a sweet and blessed event which will occur to all believers in God's
own time--the going home to be with Jesus.
in a few more years the Lord's soldiers, who are now fighting
"the good fight of faith", will have done with conflict, and
have entered into the joy of the Lord. But although Christ prays that His people may eventually be
with Him where He is, he does not ask that they may be taken at once
away from this world to heaven. He
wishes them to stay here. Yet
how frequently does the wearied pilgrim put up the prayer, "O that
I had wings like a dove! for then I would be able to fly away and be at
rest." but Christ does
not pray like that, He leaves us in the Father's hands, until, like
shocks of corn fully ripe, we shall each other be gathered into our
Master's garner. Jesus does
not plead for our instant removal by death, for to abide in the flesh in
needful for others if not profitable for others.
He asks that we may
be kept from evil, but he never asks that we may be admitted into the
inheritance in glory till we are full of age.
Christians often want to die when they have any trouble.
Ask them why, and they will tell you, "Because we would be
with the Lord." We
fear it is not so much because they are longing to be with the Lord, as
because they desire to get rid of their troubles; else they would feel
the same wish to die at other times when not under the pressure of
trial. They want to go
home, not so much for the Savior’s company, as to be at rest.
Now it is quite right to desire to depart if we can do it in the
same spirit Paul did, because to be with Christ is far better, but the
wish to escape from trouble is a selfish one.
Rather let your care and wish be to glorify God by your life here
as long as he pleases, even though it be in the midst of toil, and
conflict, and suffering, and leave Him to say when "it is
enough."
---C.H.
Spurgeon
SUBJECT:
Pondering
"But
Mary kept these things and pondered them in her heart."
Luke
2:19
There
was an exercise on the part of this blessed woman, of three powers of
her being: her memory-she kept these things; her affections-she kept
them in her heart; her intellect-she pondered them; so that memory,
affection, and understanding, were all exercised about the things which
she had heard. Beloved, remember what you have heard of your Lord Jesus,
and what he has done for you; make your heart the golden pot of manna to
preserve the memorial of the heavenly bread whereon you have fed on days
gone by. Let your memory
treasure up everything about Christ which you have either felt, or
known, or believed, and then let your fond affections hold Him fast for
evermore. Love the person
of your Lord! Bring forth
the alabaster box of your heart, even though it be broken, and let all
the precious ointment of your affection come streaming on His pierced
feet. Let your intellect be
exercised concerning the Lord Jesus.
Meditate upon what you read: stop not on the surface; dive into
the depths. Be not as the
swallow which toucheth the brook with her wing, but as a fish which
penetrates the lowest wave. Abide with your Lord: let Him not be to you
as a wayfaring man, that tarrieth for a night, but constrain Him saying,
"Abide with us, for the day is far spent."
Hold Him, and do not let Him go.
The word "ponder" means to weigh. Make ready the
balances of judgment. Oh, but where are the scales that can weigh the Lord Christ?
"He taketh up the isles as a very little thing"--who
shall take Him up? "He
weigheth the mountains in scales"--in what scales shall we weigh
Him? be it so, if your
understanding cannot comprehend, let your affections apprehend; and if
your spirit cannot compass the Lord Jesus in the grasp of understanding,
let it embrace Him in the arms of affection.
---C.H.
Spurgeon, "Morning and Evening", p. 55
SUBJECT:
Pray
"Brethren,
pray for us."
1
Thess. 5:25
This
one morning in the year we reserved to refresh the reader's memory upon
the subject of prayer for ministers, and we do not most earnestly
implore every Christian household to grant the fervent request of the
text first uttered by an apostle and now repeated by us.
Brethren, our work is solemnly momentous, involving weal or woe
to thousands; we treat with souls for God on eternal business, and our
word is either savour of life unto life, or of death unto death.
A very heavy responsibility rests upon us, and it will be no
small mercy if at last we be found clear of the blood of all men.
As officers in Christ's army, we are the especial mark of the
enmity of men and devils; they watch for our halting, and labor to take
us by the heels. Our sacred
calling involves us in temptations from which you are exempt, above all
it too often draws us away from our personal enjoyment of truth into a
ministerial and official consideration of it.
We meet with many knotty cases, and our wits are at a non plus;
we observe very sad backslidings, and our hearts are wounded; we see
millions perishing, and our spirits sink.
We wish to profit you by our preaching; we desire to be blest to
your children; we long to be useful to both saints and sinners;
therefore, dear friends, intercede for us with our God.
Miserable men are we if we miss the aid of your prayers, but
happy are we if we live in your supplications.
You do not look to us but our Master for spiritual blessings, and
yet how many times has He given those blessings through His ministers;
ask then, again and again, that we may be the earthen vessels into which
the Lord may put the treasure of the gospel.
We, the whole company of missionaries, ministers, city
missionaries, and students, do in the name of Jesus beseech you
"BRETHREN, PRAY FOR US."
---C.H.
Spurgeon
SUBJECT:
Spiders
"They
weave the spider's web."
Isaiah
59:5
See
the spider's web, and behold in it a most suggestive picture of the
hypocrite's religion. It is
meant to catch his prey: the spider fattens himself on flies, and the
Pharisee has him reward. Foolish
persons are easily entrapped by the loud professions of pretenders, and
even the more judicious cannot escape.
Philip baptized Simon Magnus, whose guileful declaration of faith
was so soon exploded by the stern rebuke of Peter. Custom, reputation,
praise, advancement, and other flies, are the small game which the
hypocrite takes into his nets. A
spider's web is a marvel of skill: look at it and admire the cunning
hunter's wiles. Is not a
deceiver’s religion equally wonderful?
How does he make so barefaced a lie appear to be a truth?
How can he make his tinsel answer so well the purpose of gold?
A spider's web comes all from the creature's own bowels.
The bee gathers wax from her flowers, the spider sucks no
flowers, and yet she spins out her material to any length.
Even so hypocrites find their trust and hope within themselves;
their anchor was forged on their own anvil, and their cable twisted by
their own hands. they lay their foundation, and hew out the pillars of their
own house, disdaining to be debtors to the sovereign grace of God.
But a spider's web is very frail.
It is curiously wrought, but not enduringly manufactured.
It is no match for the servant's broom, or the traveler's staff.
The hypocrite needs no battery of Armstrongs to blow his hope to
pieces, a mere puff of wind will do it.
Hypocritical cobwebs will soon come down when the besom of
destruction begins it purifying work.
Which reminds us of one more thought, viz., that such cobwebs are
not to be endured in the Lord's house.
He will see to it that they and those who spin them shall be
destroyed forever. O my
soul, be thou resting on something better than a spider's web.
Be thou Lord Jesus thine eternal hiding-place. --C.H. Spurgeon
SUBJECT:
The Right Approach to Election
"Wherefore
the rather brethren, give diligence to make your calling and election
sure."
2
Peter 1:10
Some
are in trouble because they proceed by a false method and order in
judging their estates. They
begin with election, which is the highest step of the ladder; whereas
they should begin from a work of grace wrought in their hearts, from
God's calling by His Spirit, and their answer to His call, and then
raise themselves upward to know their election by their answer to God's
calling. "Give
diligence" says Peter, "to make your calling and election
sure." your election by your calling.
God descends to us from election to calling, and so to
sanctification. We must
ascend to Him beginning where He ends. Otherwise it is a great folly as
in removing a pile of wood, to begin at the lower first, and so, besides
the needless trouble, to be in danger to have the rest to fall upon our
heads.
---Richard
Sibbs
You
begin at the wrong end if you first dispute about your election.
Prove your conversion, and then never doubt your election.
--Joseph
Alleine.
SUBJECT:
Holy Zeal
"...be
zealous..."
Rev.
3:19
Zeal
has been little practiced, less studied.
Zeal is everywhere spoken against; it has many enemies and few
friends. The world can no
more abide it, than beasts can the elementary fire...He is a zealot
whose affections are passionately disposed; his love is ever fervent,
his desires eager, his delights ravishing, his hatred deadly, and his
grief deep. This being the
nature of zeal in general, Christian zeal differs from carnal worldly
chiefly in its causes and objects.
It is a spiritual heat wrought in the hearts of men by the Holy
Ghost, improving the good affections of love, joy, etc., for the
furtherance of God's glory, His word, His house, His saints, and
salvation of souls; directing the contrary of hatred, anger grief, etc.,
towards God's enemies, the devil, his angels, sin, the world, with the
lusts thereof. A zealot,
like David has zeal in every affection (Psalm 119).
Love-"How I love thy law."
Hatred-"Thine enemies I hate...with a perfect hatred."
Joy-"Thy testimonies...are my delight." Grief-"Rivers of
waters run down my eyes, because they kept not thy law."
The fervency of the true zealot is in the spirit, not in show;
for God, not himself; guided by the Word, not by His humors; such a
man's worth cannot be set forth with the tongues of men and angels.
---Samuel
Ward, A Plea for Zeal, vol. 1 p.15
SUBJECT:
The Devil's Expertise
"...for
we are not ignorant of his devices"
2
Cor. 2:11
The
world is Satan's bait. He
seldom throws out a naked hook. Let
murder, fraud, lying, or idolatry be presented in their undisguised
turpitude, and only a few people of good education and correct morals
will be taken in by him. But
he conceals the hook in a godly bait, and like a skillful angler, he
knows how to use the temptation best suited to our palate....For one he
has a golden bait; for another, pleasure,; for a third, worldly fame and
honors. And this line is
thrown out everywhere--in our place of business, in our families, in our
studies, at our tables, and on our pillows.
---Arthur
Jackson, A Homiletic Encyclopedia, p. 4680
"The
devil hath an apple for Eve, a grape for Noah, a change of raiment for
Gehazi, a bag for Judas. He
can dish out his meat for
all palates."
---William
Jenkyn
SUBJECT:
Are there Grades of sin?
"...he
that delivered me unto thee hath the greater sin..."
John
19:11
Some
sins, in themselves, and by reason of several aggravations, are more
heinous in the sight of God than others...The Stoic philosophers held
all sins were equal; but some are greater than others; some are
"mighty sins", and "crying sins". Every
sin has a voice to speak, but some sins cry.
As some diseases are worse than others, and some poisons more
venomous, so some sins are more heinous. "Ye have done worse than
your fathers," your sins have exceeded theirs (Jer. 16:12)... 1.
There was a difference in the offerings under the law; the sin
offering was greater than the trespass offering.
2. Some sins are not capable of pardon as others are, therefore
they must needs be more heinous, as the blasphemy against the Holy Ghost
(Matthew 12:31). 3. Some sins have a greater degree of punishment than
others. "Ye shall
receive greater damnation..." (Matthew 23:14)
God would not punish one more than the other if one was not
greater. ---Thomas Watson SUBJECT:
The Battle of Short Duration "...to
him that overcometh..." (Rev. 2:7)
Let this encourage you, O Christian, in your conflict with Satan:
the skirmish may be sharp, but it cannot be long. Let him tempt you, let
his wicked agents trounce you, it is only for a little while, and you
shall be rid of both of them. The
cloud while it drops rain is passing over you, and then comes fair
weather and eternal sunshine of glory.
Can't you watch with Christ a couple of hours? And keep the field a few days?
If you give up, you are finished forever. Persevere, and when the battle is over your enemy shall never
rally again. Ask faith to
look through the keyhole of promise, and tell you what it sees laid up
for him that overcomes. Ask
it to listen and tell you whether it can hear the shouts of the crowned
saints, just as if they were dividing the spoils and receiving rewards
for all their services and sufferings.
Those sufferings and temptations that come to you are like a
little splash of water coming between you and glory.
---William
Gurnall, A Homiletic Encyclopedia, Page 4795
"If
thou hast fallen into sin through violent temptations, seek speedily for
repentance for it, recovery out of it, and reformation from it."
---Vavasor
Powell
SUBJECT:
A Frowning Providence
"...wait
for the promise of the Father..."
Acts
1:4
The
providences of God are sometimes dark, and our eyes dim, and we can
hardly tell what to make of them. But
when we cannot unriddle providence, believe that it will work together
for the good of the elect. (Rom. 8:28) God is to be trusted when His
providences seem to run contrary to His promises. God promised David to
give him a the crown, to make him king; but providence runs contrary to
His promise. David was
pursued by Saul, in danger of his life; but all this while it was
David's duty to trust God. The Lord does, oftentimes, by cross
providence, bring to pass His promises.
God promised Paul all the lives that were with him in the ship;
but now the providence of God seems to run quite contrary to His
promise. The winds blow, the ship splits and breaks into pieces; and
thus God fulfilled His promise. Upon
the broken pieces of the ship, they all come safe to shore. Trust God
when providences seem to run quite contrary to His promises.
---Thomas
Watson, A Homiletic Encyclopedia, Pages 4051-3
A
word of caution: For the most part we live upon successes, not
promises:---unless we see and feel the print of victories, we will not
believe.
---John
Owen
SUBJECT:
Can I be sure?
"The
Spirit bears witness with our spirit, that we are the children of
God."
Romans
8:16
If
it be demanded on how a believer may be assured that the Spirit does
certainly witness with our spirits; I answer: he may be assured by two
things: 1) First, by that special distinguishing light that accompanies
the testimony of the Spirit, which manifests itself so as to overcome
all doubts and disputes both about our spiritual estate and about this
testimony itself. Just as
the light of the sun does not only discover other things and reveal
them; but manifests itself by its self-evidencing property, which is
bale to convince every beholder. 2)
Secondly, by the harmony and agreement that is between the testimony of
the Spirit of God and our spirits; just as we know the testimony of our
spirits to be certain and true by its agreement wit the Word. Except all
three agree in one, there can be no certainty; but a believer's
assurance is always confirmed by the concurring testimony of three
things: 1) the word, 2) the conscience, 3) and of the Spirit--all
witnessing one and the same thing: 1) the sure word of God lays down
certain signs and marks of true grace, and witnesses these signs to be
good evidences. 2) Then conscience, or our own spirit, witnesses that
these signs are sound in a believer. 3) Then God super-adds the witness
of His own Spirit, which enables us yet more fully to know the things
which are freely given us of God. And
now what doubts can remain?
---Richard
Fairclough, Puritan Sermons, Vol. 6, pp404-405
"Let
the saints know that unless the devil can pluck Christ out of heaven, he
cannot pull a true believer out of Christ."
---John
Bunyan.
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