Catford Lectures 2009-2010
Ponente
Conference, Catford Lectures
Attwood, Simon
Dronsfield, Paul
Clark, Hugh
Fleet, Nick
Bell, C.
Poots, Andrew
Hardt, Michael
Best, M.
Hawes, Geoff
Attwood, Simon
Dronsfield, Paul
Clark, Hugh
Fleet, Nick
Bell, C.
Poots, Andrew
Hardt, Michael
Best, M.
Hawes, Geoff
Publicado
29.03.2012
Lugar
Fecha
01.11.2009
ID
ccl003
Idioma
EN
Duración
12:19:34
Cantidad
12
Pasajes de la biblia
sin información
Descripción
- The Lord’s ways and words in John’s gospel, particularly with regard to seven women (Simon Attwood)
- Psalm 133 (Paul Dronsfield)
- How do we please God (Derek Cooper)
- Boast in the cross, boast in the Lord, boast in hope and boast in God (Charlie Bell)
- The Lord as King (Hugh Clark)
- The Lord’s coming (Nick Fleet)
- The Trinity (Andrew Poots)
- The Temple of God (Geoff Hawes)
- Men of God (Graham Warnes)
- The dispensation of the grace of God (Mark Best)
- Christian Service in the Face of Opposition (Michael Hardt)
- Our Great High Priest (Brian Price)
Transcripción automática:
…
Good evening everyone. Can we begin this meeting by singing hymn 267? All fullness resides in Jesus
our head, and ever abides to answer all need. The Father's good pleasure has laid up a store,
a plentiful treasure to give to the poor. Number 267.
The Father's good pleasure has laid up a store, a plentiful treasure to give to the poor.
Whatever distress awaits us below, such plentiful grace the Lord will bestow,
and still shall support us, and silence our fear, and nothing can hurt us while Jesus is near.
When sorrows assail us, or terrors draw nigh, His love will not fail us, He'll guide with His eye,
and when we are fainting and ready to fail, He'll give what is wanted and make us prevail.
We trust His protection, we'll lean on His might, we'll show His direction, He'll guide us aright.
We know who surrounds us, almighty to save, and no one confounds us, the Savior who hath.
Jesus. Amen. I would like to turn to a number of scriptures this evening, but I would like to read
them as we come to them. So the first passage is from John's Gospel. Now, Paul told me some time
ago that he was exercised to speak about Psalm 133 and Ephesians 4. But as I was listening to him,
he referred so many times to John's Gospel that I began to be a little concerned because all my
scriptures are from John's Gospel. But I'm sure the Lord has His hand in all these things. We can
trust Him to direct according to His mind and will. So John's Gospel, chapter 2, verses 1 to 5.
And the third day there was a marriage in Cana of Galilee, and the mother of Jesus was there.
And both Jesus was called and His disciples to the marriage. And when they wanted wine,
the mother of Jesus saith unto him, They have no wine. Jesus saith unto her, Woman, what have I to
do with thee? Mine hour is not yet come. His mother saith unto the servants, Whatsoever he saith unto
you, do it. My exercise this evening is to speak about the Lord's encounters with His people in
this Gospel. There are seven I would like to draw attention to, and they all concern sisters,
women, who met with the Lord Jesus in their lives. And it's fitting perhaps that the first one we
start with is the mother of Jesus. And what's presented to us here in these verses is the
all-sufficiency of the Lord Jesus. He had been invited to this marriage, but they wanted wine.
There was a deficiency of wine. And Mary, she said to the Lord Jesus, They have no wine.
Perhaps it seemed to her natural to do this. It was indeed natural in one sense for her to do this,
to speak to the Lord Jesus about it. To imply in what she said to Him that He should do something
to make up this deficiency, to make up this need. She knew that He could do this.
But sometimes we've been surprised by the reply the Lord Jesus gives her. Woman, what have I to
do with thee? To our ears in this day and age, that sounds a little disrespectful.
But of course it can't be, because these are words from the Lord Jesus Himself.
Now what the Lord Jesus is saying to Mary here is that He was about to embark upon His
three, three and a half years of public ministry. And supremely in those three and three and a half
years, He would display what we learnt about this afternoon, that He would be doing that which
His Father showed to Him. He would be working with His Father.
He would not be directed by those who had a natural link with Him. Remember,
in the other Gospels, we get instances when His mother and His brethren, those who were the
offspring of Joseph and Mary, sought to intervene. They were concerned about what He was doing.
But He was taking His direction entirely from His God and from His Father.
And this reminds us of a verse in 2 Corinthians chapter 5,
verse 16.
Wherefore henceforth know we no man after the flesh, yea, though we have known Christ
after the flesh, yet now henceforth know we Him. No more. We've been learning about those wonderful
spiritual links which we have with the Lord Jesus. Each one of us has that link with Him and with
each other. We're members of His body. Now, as we had explained to us, that originated, that came
into being on the day of Pentecost, when the Lord Jesus sent the Holy Spirit down, when we were
baptised into one body by that Spirit. That doesn't mean we forget about our natural relationships.
That doesn't mean that we discard them, that we ignore them.
It's made quite clear to us, particularly in the writings of Paul, but also Peter, that we have
responsibilities that relate to the fact that we have mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters, children.
We're responsible to the government. All those things should be exemplified in our lives as
believers on the Lord Jesus perfectly. We should be the true exponents of those relationships
in our lives.
But the most important thing when it comes to serving the Lord is to be directed by Him and Him alone.
When we think of ourselves individually, He is our Lord. When we think of ourselves
as members of His body, He is our head. We can't really know all the preciousness that relates to
Him as the head of the church until we really work out what it is individually to live
our Christian lives owning Him practically, not just with the lips, as our Lord.
His mother accepted what He said. She said,
whatsoever He saith unto you, do it. We haven't got enough time to go into the detail of what's
happened, but really this scene at Cana of Galilee looks forward to that day of which
Paul was speaking, when the Lord Jesus will be King of kings and Lord of lords, when He will
be acknowledged in this world, when He will rule over this world, and there will be joy in this
world in a way there's never been joy in it before. We look around us today, we see the very
antithesis of joy today. There's conflict everywhere. There's no certainty. There's no
peace. Men believe that they are making a better world, but every step they take, well, as we say,
one step forward, proverbially two steps back. That's the state of things today. Man is making
more and more problems for himself. Why? Because he's refused the one in whom all fullness resides,
Jesus, our head, and it's when we practice that truth, as Paul exhorted us to do earlier today
in the meeting, that we are a witness to those around us, that we are in touch with the one
who can bring real blessing in their lives. May it be that we show this out day by day.
It says here it was the third day. If you look back into the previous chapter, you can see the
second day, which seems to speak of a future day still for us, when the remnant of Israel will be
exercised to be true to the Lord before he comes in his power and his glory. And if you go back to
the day before that, and you see those who wanted to follow the Lord Jesus, and he said to them,
come and see, when they asked him where he abode, that seems to speak of our day, the day when we
can gather to the name of the Lord Jesus. We can have him at the center. We can behold him.
Remember how it says John the Baptist looked upon the Lord Jesus as he walked and he said,
behold the Lamb of God. But of course, we can only really do that if we've realized that we're sinners
and we've realized that he is the Lamb of God that taketh away the sin of the world. And each one of
us has to put, as it were, by faith our sin upon him and say, yes, I believe that when he suffered
and died upon Calvary's cross, he bore my sin and I'm trusting him that the work he did there
deals with my sin for the glory of God, for my eternal salvation.
But here in this story, we need to recognize, and that's one of the reasons why the Lord Jesus says
woman to Mary, not mother, woman. He disowns that relationship for the purposes of the service of
God, not in his normal life. We'll see that later on before we get to the end of the address.
We have to see that, first of all, the Lord comes first in our lives. For him it was
the will of his Father, for us it's the will of the Lord. And then joy can flow, there can be
blessing as there will be in this world, there can be joy individually in our lives, in our lives as
families, in our lives too as companies of God's people. The next encounter is in John's Gospel
chapter 4 verse 21. It doesn't actually name Mary.
In that passage we've just read, it just speaks of her as the mother of Jesus.
And here we have a woman who's not named, not identified at all for us.
We know this story very well, don't we? She was a Samaritan woman.
She knew her place. The Samaritans have no dealings.
The Jews have no dealings with the Samaritans, she says in verse 9. But let's just read on later in
the story. Verse 21.
For the Father seeketh such to worship him. God is a spirit and they that worship him must worship
him in spirit and in truth. If in that first story we've seen there's a deficiency, there's no real
joy, the Lord Jesus needs to supply that joy. Here we see that the Lord Jesus and the Father
in particular are looking for a response from us. They're looking for something from us.
How can that be? When we need so much, how can we give anything to God?
Here was this woman, as we've said, she wasn't part of the people of Israel.
The Lord Jesus had come to the lost sheep of Israel. But here was one he met, he encountered
on his way. He must needs go through Samaria, it says. And his love is flowing out and he would
make this one, who seemingly had nothing to give, whose life seemed to be a life that was full of
disappointed hopes. He was going to make her one who could be a witness of him and a worshipper
of the Father. We're told elsewhere, aren't we, in the Gospels that the Son of Man has come to
seek and to save that which was lost. God is seeking lost ones, not just to be saved,
but here we learn in these verses to be worshippers.
We're not to be left in a situation where we're constantly receiving
and never giving. We're to give out as well. And this woman did give out. In verse 25, it tells
us that she said to the Lord Jesus, I know that Messiah's cometh, which is called Christ. When he
has come, he will tell us all things. Jesus saith unto her, I that speak unto thee, am he? And that
seems to have really spoken to our heart. She seems to have believed what the Lord Jesus said.
And it says in verse 28, the woman then left her water pot and went her way into the city and saith
to the men, come see a man which told me all things that ever I did is not this the Christ.
Here's her witness. But in the earlier verses, she is brought to know that there's an hour coming.
In fact, it now is. They were right on the tips of it. That's what that expression means. When it
says the hour cometh and now is. When they that worship the father wouldn't do it in a particular
place such as Jerusalem, certainly not there in Samaria, but it will be those who worshiped in
spirit and in truth. The whole of what the Lord Jesus speaks about to this woman in this chapter
is to do with the gift of the Holy Spirit, that which meets our innermost needs. But the idea
is that it springs up to the source from which it came in worship and response to the Lord. It
doesn't just refresh us, but it enables us to give something back to God from our lives.
God is a spirit, the Lord Jesus says, and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and
in truth. Have we got that exercise in our hearts to respond to the father who gave his son to be
our saviour? The Lord looked for it, indeed revealed it to this Samaritan woman. We could say
humanly speaking she was the least likely candidate to be told a truth like this,
but the Lord told her. The Lord looks for those who will worship the father in spirit and in truth.
Once we've trusted the saviour, we're no longer those who are simply needy ones, who need to be
saved. We're transformed into those who can then respond to the father, who can worship him in
spirit and in truth. The spirit shows us it's no longer a physical thing like it was for the people
of Israel. They had to observe all kinds of rules and procedures. We might call it ritual in their
worship of God. Of course it had value, it taught them certain things, it still teaches us certain
things, but now the worship is spiritual and is aided by the Holy Spirit of God. We're able to
worship him in spirit. Paul speaks about this in Philippians chapter 3 and of course it's worship
which is in truth as well. It's no longer the thoughts that the people in Samaria may have had
or the people in Jerusalem may have had. It's in truth. It's in a completely right setting with
regard to God. It's what is in accord with his mind and will. But this woman was given this wonderful
truth here. Maybe it's a surprise to us why the Lord did it to her, but he did. And for me it
illustrates very much the teaching we get in Ephesians chapter 2 that we Gentiles who were
once without hope and without God in this world have now been brought nigh. We've been enabled to
be worshippers of the Father. Jew and Gentile together. One new man. No longer separated by
that middle wall of partition, but peace being made with God are brought nigh by his blood and
are enabled by the Spirit of God to worship him in the way that he's always desired to be worshipped.
We move on. John's Gospel chapter 8.
Verse 7.
This is one of those stories which seems to me to often be misused.
It's the story of the woman who was caught apparently in the act of adultery.
We'll break into it at verse 11.
This refers of course to the people that had caught her. So when they continued asking him
and what they were asking him was in verse 5. Now Moses in the law commanded us that such should
be stoned but what sayest thou? He lifted up himself and said unto them he that is without
sin among you let him first cast the stone at her. And again he stooped down and wrote on the ground.
They which heard it being convicted by their own conscience went out one by one
beginning at the eldest even unto the last. And Jesus was left alone and the woman standing in
the midst. When Jesus had lifted up himself and saw none but the woman he said unto her
woman where are those thine accusers? Hath no man condemned thee? She said no man Lord.
Jesus said unto her neither do I condemn thee. Go and sin no more.
We often find in the gospels these religious people trying to catch the Lord Jesus out.
It's important for us particularly when we're younger we're brought up in a Christian family
never to allow this kind of attitude to get into our hearts and minds.
Of course we should ask questions when we don't know the answers.
And our older brethren will not always know the answers. Sometimes we have to search the scriptures.
Sometimes we have to wait for some time before the Lord gives us the answer to a particular
problem we have. But he will always give us an answer from his word. But of course it's
important to ask in faith. It's important to ask trustingly. We started off our
meeting all fullness resides in Jesus our head. He desires to give. He's the giver of every good
and perfect gift. And therefore we should always ask in a way which has confidence that he will
bless us. We're never to distrust the Lord. And this shows the true state of heart of these people.
These people they wanted to catch the Lord Jesus out. They had no real relationship with him.
But here they thought they had him reverently speaking we could say they thought they
had him in a bind. They thought that they would show that what he was saying would be in complete
contradiction of what Moses has said in the law. But instead the Lord Jesus turns the spotlight of
the law on them. And they find that they're the ones in the bind instead. And they continued asking
often in men and women today there's no sense of reverence about the things of God. They will go
on arguing about things regardless of what said to them from the scripture. So it was here they
went on questioning him. And there we get these words he lifted up himself in his majesty in his
dignity in his personal glory and said unto them he that is without sin among you let him first
cast a stone. And then he stooped down and wrote on the ground as he had done before.
Contrast indeed with the finger of God on the stone tables when the law was given to Israel
in the first place. Here it is on the ground.
And as they see the Lord Jesus tracing on the ground.
His words sink down into their hearts. Convicted by their own conscience they went out the eldest
first. He had more in his life to accuse him than the younger one. And in the end Jesus was left
alone. But you know the woman was still there. The woman was still there. This is the love of God
to the sinner. He is holy. He is righteous. But he never repels the one who comes to him
in faith. She was bruised. She didn't come. But now she was there. She didn't want to
go away from him. She waited upon what he had to say. He lifted up himself and saw none but the
woman. And said to her, woman where are those thine accusers? Have no man condemned thee?
Now the reason I said this story seems to be often misapplied is it seems to be used as an
excuse to allow, to permit sin. And to say we can't deal with it because who of us can cast a
stone at another person. But that's not what the story means. What it brings before us is that
there's no condemnation in Christ to the one who will acknowledge their sinnership and come to him
in obedience. The obedience of faith. And we get something of that in her words. She says to him,
no man Lord. She acknowledges him as Lord. And Jesus said unto her, neither do I condemn thee.
Go and sin no more. She wasn't to commit
sin. The sin that she had been caught in or they knew to be
characteristic of her life. Whether they actually caught her in it or not is another
matter. But the point is she wasn't to be marked by that anymore. And neither as we,
as believers who know the Lord Jesus, it's important that we're not characterized by the sin
that's all around us in the world today, which is thrust at us in many different ways
in our lives, particularly when we're younger. It's important that we're not characterized by this
sin. It's a wonderful thing to be saved. And as Paul was explaining to us, it's not just a question
of salvation from the penalty of sin. It's salvation in a practical ongoing way in our lives,
knowing his power to enable us to overcome sin in our lives day by day for the glory of the Lord.
And also, of course, it's in the end, salvation from the very presence of sin in his presence
for ever more. No condemnation. We stand in liberty, Paul says in Galatians, but we're not
to make any provision for the flesh. We're not to allow our liberty to be used for the flesh to
have its way in our lives, but rather we're to show forth the righteousness of God in our lives
in a practical way day by day. John chapter 11.
The story of the raising of Lazarus. We'll start to read at verse 20.
Then Martha, as soon as she heard that Jesus was coming, went and met him. But Mary sat still in
the house. Then said Martha unto Jesus, Lord, if thou hadst been here, my brother had not died.
But I know that even now whatsoever thou would ask of God, God will give it thee. Jesus said unto her,
thy brother shall rise again. Martha said unto him, I know that he shall rise again in the
resurrection at the last day. Jesus said unto her, I am the resurrection and the life. He that believeth
in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live. And whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die.
Believest thou this? She said unto him, yea, Lord, I believe that thou art the Christ,
the son of God, which shall come into the world. And then we just dropped down to verse 32.
Then when Mary was come where Jesus was and saw him, she fell down at his feet saying unto him,
Lord, if thou hadst been here, my brother had not died. When Jesus therefore saw her weeping
and the Jews also weeping, which came with her, he groaned in the spirit and was troubled
and said, where hath he laid him? They said unto him, Lord, come and see. Jesus wept. Then said
the Jews, behold how he loved him. And some of them said, could not this man have opened the
eyes of the blind, which open the eyes of the blind have caused? Even this man should not have
died. Jesus therefore, groaning in himself, cometh to the grave. It was a cave and a stone lay upon
it. Jesus said, take ye away the stone. Martha, the sister of him that was dead, saith unto him,
Lord, by this time he stinketh, for he hath been dead four days. Jesus saith unto her,
said I not unto thee, if thou wouldest believe thou shouldest see the glory of God.
Then they took away the stone from the place where the dead was laid.
Jesus lifted up his eyes and said, Father, I thank thee that thou hast heard me. And I knew that thou
hearest me always, but because of the people which stand by, I said it, that they may believe that
thou hast sent me. When he had thus, when he had thus had spoken, he cried with a loud voice,
Lazarus, come forth. He that was dead came forth, bound head and foot with grave clothes,
and his face was bound about with a napkin. Jesus saith unto them, loose him and let him go.
Well, there's much that we could say about this passage, and we haven't got enough time to say
much. But what we can say about it is that the Lord loved this family at Bethany. It says in
verse five, now Jesus loved Mary. No, it says Martha. We might have expected it to say Mary,
because after all, she was the one who in Luke chapter 10 sat at his feet and listened to his
word. And the Lord Jesus had had to reprove Martha in that incident when she had said, Lord,
bitter, come and help me. But no, we see here in these words, the love of the Lord Jesus
flows out to all his people. Even when we make mistakes, even when we act in a way which isn't
becoming of a believer, we're loved by him and he would draw us back to himself. He loved this
family. He saw in Martha one who loved to entertain him, loved to have him in her home.
And that's a wonderful example that Martha has for us. And we see in the next chapter,
she is serving. She's serving at table, no longer cumbered about. But here in the verses we've read,
we've seen that Martha, she needed to realize that belief isn't a theoretical thing.
It's a vital thing. Yes, she believed, as she said to the Lord Jesus. I believe,
she said in verse 27, that thou art the Christ, the son of God, which should come into the world.
But she hadn't really taken hold of the words that he had said in that previous verse for herself
right at that very moment. She hadn't made them her own. And that's why when the Lord Jesus said
in verse 39, take ye away the stone, Martha interposes, impetuous as ever, she says,
by this time he stinketh, Lord, for he's been dead four days. And indeed, four days was at the point
it was recognized a body would start to corrupt. But she hadn't taken on board those words of the
Lord Jesus, when he said, I am the resurrection and the life. These are beautiful words.
One of the several I am's we have in John's gospel, which bring before us the deity of the Lord Jesus.
He is God. The one who said I am in the Old Testament, still says I am in the New Testament.
Jesus is the Jehovah of the Old Testament. And here in these words, he showed that he was able
to deal with this situation which had arisen among them. This would mark him out, son of God,
as we're told by Paul in his first few verses of his letter to the Romans. Marked out son of God.
By the resurrection of dead persons. And the Lord Jesus, he is able to raise Lazarus from the dead.
These are beautiful words in verse 25. I am the resurrection and the life. Resurrection comes
first because if you're dead, you're in the grave. You need to be raised. But then you're given life.
He that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live. That's certainly true of those
who've believed on the Lord Jesus and who have passed through the article of death, they shall
live. And whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die. That is, we can say, each one of
us who've believed on the Lord Jesus, death has no power over us. Yes, we may die physically, but it
will be but a doorway into the presence of the Lord. But you know, there's another fulfillment
of these verses, which is going to happen very soon. At the rapture, when the Lord Jesus comes,
when he speaks the word and he names all his redeemed, then yes, those who have already
passed through the article of death, yes, their bodies will be raised because he is the resurrection.
And yes, those who are living at that time and are believers on him, they will hear their names
and they will never die. And this verse will then have its most wonderful fruition, its most
wonderful answer. You can check out what I'm saying by looking at 1 Thessalonians chapter 4
and 1 Corinthians chapter 15. Yes, the Lord Jesus showed and demonstrated his power.
Of course, it's been said, if he hadn't said, Lazarus, come forth, all the dead would have
come forth. But he says, Lazarus, come forth. Only one came forth. He had to. He couldn't resist.
At the command of the Lord, he came forth. But what a difference from the resurrection of the
Lord, as we shall see in a moment. What an answer to these sisters' grief and sorrow. The Lord loved
them. He met them in their need. He gave them what they couldn't have imagined possible.
We might say, well, why didn't he just go there and heal Lazarus? Because he was teaching them
a lesson. It was for the glory of God. It was that they would learn something from it. This comes out
in the words of this scripture. Very often, we do have to go through difficult experiences,
but the Lord is teaching us for our blessing and his glory. The difference between Mary and Martha
is very interested in these verses. You know, when Mary speaks to the Lord Jesus, she says exactly
what Martha said. There's no difference at all. But there is one difference in the way in which
she approached the Lord. She fell at his feet. And you know, this is a wonderful characteristic
of Mary. She's always at the feet of the Lord Jesus. She's listening to him in Luke chapter 10
at his feet. Here, when she says the same words as her sister Martha, she's fallen at his feet.
And in the next chapter, which we're now going to read, she's at his feet again.
And perhaps this is a lesson to us. Perhaps this is why Mary is so particularly a wonderful example
to the Christian. And where we fall so far short, why we don't put into practice what Paul was
speaking about this afternoon, is because we're not enough at the feet of the Lord Jesus. It's
good to be at his feet. If he's the head, we need to be at his feet. And sadly, so often we're not.
We're trying, reverently I say this, to do the thinking for him sometimes.
We're trying to plan things out so that they will occur in the way we think they should.
But if we were more at his feet, we would be more like Mary, committing everything into his hands
and resting on what he was going to do. Just let's read those first seven verses of chapter 12.
Then Jesus, six days before the Passover, came to Bethany, where Lazarus was, which had been dead,
whom he raised from the dead. There they made him a supper. And Martha served, but Lazarus was one
of them that sat at the table with him. Then took Mary a pound of ointment, very costly,
and anointed the feet of Jesus, wiped his feet with her hair. The house was filled with the
odor of the ointment. Then saith one of his disciples, Judas Iscariot, Simon's son, which
should betray him, why was not this ointment sold for 300 pence and given to the poor?
This he said, not that he cared for the poor, but because he was a thief and had the bag
and bear what was put therein. Then said Jesus, let her alone. Against the day of my burying
has she kept this. This is one of the most beautiful portrayals of worship we have in the scriptures.
We thought about worshipping the Father, that wonderful truth of Christianity, that we know
God as our Father, and we can respond to him in worship. And it's wonderful. It's a cardinal
truth of Christianity. Do we do it individually, as families, as gatherings of his people?
We've got plenty of hymns in our hymn book to the Father.
And of course, we can pray to the Father. But here we have a verse which illustrates the
importance, too, of worshipping the Lord Jesus, the Son. It's important to remember in John's
Gospel, chapter five, that we cannot honor the Father if we do not honor the Son. It's been said
by some that's only in the context of him as judge, but it's not. If you read the verse carefully,
you'll see it's there as a principle. Worship of the Son and worship of the Father. And here was
one who knew that right at this moment, the thing to do was to respond, to demonstrate, to express
her love for the Lord Jesus. And there in the presence of all, she did it. Quietly,
she didn't say anything. She took what was most precious to her and she broke it upon him.
In some Gospels, it says she anointed his head. In others, it says his ear. In this one, it says
she anointed his feet. As we've so often heard, we've learned, haven't we, that in Matthew and
Mark, she anoints his head because he is the king. He is the one who was the servant here,
but is really Lord of all. And he should be anointed upon his head. But when we contemplate
him as the Son of God, which we do in John's Gospel, we can only bow at his feet and anoint his feet.
Of course, she anointed him completely. She, as it were, bathed him, we could say, in this ointment.
She loved him so much, the whole house was filled with the odor of the ointment.
And she wiped his feet with her hair, expressing to us her submission to him. She,
in her life, would walk in service and subjection to him because this
is what the long hair of the woman represents.
And it's a glory to her. And it's a glory to Mary here.
Judas, the son of perdition, he couldn't see any value in what was done. He would use it to attack
the worship of the Lord Jesus. And people all around us will tell us that what we're doing
is of no value. Far better to do something good with it, to give to the poor. I expect today
someone would say we could have used it to reduce carbon emissions.
All sorts of things could be said today about the good we could do
with what we've got. But the first call on our lives is the one who loved us and gave himself for us.
And Mary, it seems, knew that he was going to do this. At Plumstead this week, at the Bible
reading, we were considering the sisters who went to the grave of the Lord Jesus on that resurrection
day. But Mary isn't named among them. She wasn't there. She had already anointed his body. When he
was alive, she had taken the opportunity to do so. She had sat at his feet. She had heard his word.
She had realized, perhaps not fully, perhaps only partly, but she had realized what he was going to
do. He was going to suffer and die for her. And so it was now, before he rose from the dead and
the opportunity was no longer there to do this, that she anointed his feet with this ointment
and wiped his feet with her hair. And he said, let her alone. He defended her. He'll defend us.
We don't have to defend ourselves. He'll defend us. He said, let her alone. The words of authority
put these accusations out of court against the day of my burying as she kept this.
Wonderful tribute to one whose heart was in line with the heart of the Lord Jesus himself.
Chapter 19.
Verse 25.
Now there stood by the cross of Jesus his mother and his mother's sister, Mary the wife of Cleophas
and Mary Magdalene. When Jesus therefore saw his mother and the disciples standing by whom he loved,
he saith unto his mother, Woman, behold thy son. Then saith he to the disciple, Behold thy mother.
Behold thy mother. And from that hour that disciple took her unto his own home.
When perhaps we're taken aback as we mentioned earlier on by his words to his mother at the
marriage at Cana, we perhaps should think about this verse here. He uses exactly the same address,
Woman, behold thy son. We wouldn't think it was disrespectful here, would we?
No, he's caring for his mother. He's making sure that there's someone to look after her.
Humanly speaking, he is the elder son. Of course, we know that
his brethren were the offspring of Joseph and Mary, but he was the first child of that family
and he takes up the responsibilities connected with that. We believe Joseph had probably passed
away already. Mary would now be bereft of him. It appeared. And so he shows us a wonderful example
of care. And this is why we were saying earlier on that when we become Christians, it doesn't
mean we can dispense with our natural relationships and just forget them. That's not right. We should
demonstrate the fact that we're believers by the fact that we honor such God-given relationships.
And therefore, he makes provision for his mother.
He makes them from the cross. This is the second cry from the cross
or the second set of words from the cross.
At this point, the hours of darkness have not descended. The Lord Jesus is still speaking
to those who were in this scene. In a short while, he would speak to the thief
who said to him, Lord, remember me when thou comest into thy kingdom.
The Lord Jesus said today, shalt thou be with me in paradise.
That thief left it to the last possible moment to be saved just before the three hours of darkness
began. Don't leave your salvation if you haven't trusted the Savior so long as that.
But he is not the subject. Mary is here, the mother of the Lord.
She seems to have
come back to the Lord as the one who had come to do the Father's will here because the Lord can
provide for her to be looked after by the disciple whom he loved.
John takes responsibility, not one of the other children of Mary.
And it's wonderful to see that the Lord had one to whom he could commit his mother.
And the disciple was one who could answer to these beautiful words from the Lord when he said
when he said to him, behold thy mother. From that hour, that disciple took her into his own home.
And we know that later on, Mary was found among the disciples gathered in the upper room in
Jerusalem. So although in that first instance, she had seemed to take the initiative and had to be
reproved for it, now she seems to be submitted to the will of the Lord for her life. And that's a
good practical lesson for us. What wonderful love and care is shown by the Lord. What human
sympathy is demonstrated by the Lord. We had it this afternoon when Paul was speaking about
the Lord Jesus as our high priest. He cares for us. He sympathizes for us.
Here from the cross, we see his care, his love for his mother and the way he provides for her.
He knows our frame. He knows our needs. He knows our concerns. Simeon of old had said, a sword will
pierce your heart. When the Lord Jesus had been presented as a little baby in the temple,
and it came true here, but that one who Simeon had held in his arms was holding Mary this time
in the arms of his disciple. And this is how the Lord works out his love today. It's through his
own here in this world. We as his body express his love, express his care to one another, but also to
others outside. John did this. I know the Holy Spirit hadn't yet come. The body hadn't yet been
formed. But here we see little aspects, little glimpses about what was to be worked out
in the heart and lives of the people of God when the Holy Spirit had come.
We close then with chapter 20.
I should perhaps just say something about Mary, the wife of Cleopas, just to say that she's only
mentioned very briefly. She's, if you like, a little footnote. But the fact she's mentioned
there shows that she was being faithful in being with the other women. And the Holy Spirit records
her name. Her name is forever recorded in the scriptures of God. Whenever the Lord saw his people
speaking about him and about his name, he made a book of remembrance and put their names in that
book. And we should always remember that the Lord knows that every little act of faith and obedience
for him is never forgotten. Chapter 20, verse 11.
Jesus saith unto her, Woman, why weepest thou? Whom seekest thou? She, supposing him to be the garter,
saith unto him, Sir, if thou have borne him hence, tell me where thou hast laid him,
and I will take him away. Jesus saith unto her, Mary. She turned herself and saith unto him,
which is to say, Master. Jesus saith unto her, Touch me not, for I'm not yet ascended to my
father, but go to my brethren and say unto them, I ascend unto my father and your father and to my
God and your God. Mary Magdalene came and told the disciples that she had seen the Lord. They had
spoken these things unto her. I can only really say a few words about this because of the time.
But Mary Magdalene had also been at the cross.
Now she was at the tomb. She was the first one there. While it was almost just still the night
time, she had come there. So much did she love the Lord. But unlike Mary of Bethany,
she hadn't understood that he was going to suffer and die and rise again.
But does the Lord hold that against her? Well, she has to learn a lesson,
but of course he doesn't hold it against her because he sees her heart. He sees her love
for him, her ardor for him. You know, in Paul's life, he's sometimes been criticized for insisting
on going to Jerusalem where he was told that he would suffer and be put in bonds. But does the
Lord hold that against the apostle? No, I don't think so. The Lord saw in the apostle's heart
the great love he had for the Jewish people. And the Lord turns what did happen in terms of
his imprisonment to our benefit because the epistle that we read this afternoon, Ephesians,
was written from prison, expanding to us all the wonderful things that God has accomplished
for us in Christ. And here the Lord saw in the heart of Mary, she saw his love.
But sometimes it's when we are tearful, when we're perhaps not thinking the way the Lord
wants us to think, that we don't see clearly. And Mary didn't see clearly here, she thought,
when the Lord spoke to her, he was the garden. But the Lord Jesus just had to say her name,
Mary. There was that link with him. She heard him say her name as he had said it so often in her
life, no doubt, to her. And she realized it was the Lord. Have we got that kind of link
with the Lord practically in our lives? She responded to him, Rabboni, which is to say master.
He had to show her that the relationship that they had had before, an earthly relationship,
was no longer to apply because she was going to ascend to his father. It was going to be a
spiritual relationship here. Takes us back to that verse we read in 2 Corinthians chapter 5
earlier on. But Mary here, we might say, well, she didn't show that intelligence she should have done
but she was given a wonderful intelligence to take back to the disciples.
And it's a wonderful intelligence. Go to my brethren, say unto them I ascend unto my father
and your father and to my God your God. And here begins the wonderful opportunity to worship the
father in spirit and in truth. Of course, the Holy Spirit was yet to be given. But here,
instead of the Lord speaking about the father or my father, he now says as well as my father,
your father. And we can now respond to God and say our father. Not in heaven. We don't have to say
heavenly father or our father in heaven. That denotes the distance that you read about in
Matthew's gospel. When often we read the expressions, the father which is in heaven,
your father which is in heaven, or your heavenly father, we don't have to say that anymore. We can
simply say father because we're no longer at a distance from him. We are brought nigh to him
in Christ. And we can simply call him father, or we can call him
Abba father, a term of endearment. This is what the Lord Jesus has accomplished for us. And this
truth he put in the possession of this sister, Mary of Magdala, to tell his disciples. His
disciples weren't there. They had forsaken him and fled. But these women have remained faithful to
him. They demonstrated their love. They were fearless for the Lord because they loved him so
much. And Mary in particular here in these verses is given the privilege of taking this wonderful
message, this wonderful bit of intelligence to the disciples and through the words of scripture to us
too. Go tell my brethren that I ascend unto my father and your father, my God and your God.
May we respond to those words that Mary gave and respond to our father in worship and praise
in our lives in this world. Can we close with hymn 418.
As I said, there's lots of good hymns to the father in this hymn book.
So we're particularly blessed to have a hymn book like this. Father, thine own unbounded love
has reached us through thy son. We now behold him crowned above, eternity's
begun. This hymn's a great hymn because it expresses the distance from which we've been
brought, the nearness which we've been brought into. 418.
of eternity's begun. Once far from thee, and dead in sin, in him who lives we live.
The spirit rise to bless thy name, and holy worship give.
The praises led by thy beloved, divine and holy name.
And with hearts divinely moved, rejoice that praise to share.
Father, thy love a portion gives, thou giv'st to thy son.
For thine own glory, and for his, made like the blessed one.
In that bright sea of cloudless light, where sons at home shall be.
With him we'll share thy glory bright, and all his beauty see. …
Transcripción automática:
…
Hello, it's nice to be with you again. Perhaps we could sing together hymn number 383.
383. Verse 2. Sweet bonds that unite all the children of peace with thee, blessed Saviour,
whose love cannot cease. Though oft amid trials and dangers we roam, with thine we're united
and hastening toward home. 383.
In times of confusion and critical need, how sweet to the soul is communion with Saint.
To find in the banquet of mercy there's room to feel in communion a foretaste of hope.
Sweet bonds that unite all the children of peace with thee, blessed Saviour,
whose love cannot cease. Though oft amid trials and dangers we roam,
with thine we're united and hastening toward home.
While here in the valley of God's wind we stay,
O give us submission and strength as the day.
Set free from the nations, to thee we shall come.
Forever we'll live in that glorious home.
We wake, blessed Lord, in thy beauties to shine.
To see thee in glory, the glory divine.
With hope I weep from the earth, from the tomb,
to join in thy praise, blessed Saviour, at home.
Precious and worthy name. Amen.
Could we turn to Psalm 133.
A song of degrees of David.
Behold how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in unity.
It is like the precious ointment upon the head that ran down upon the beard, even Aaron's beard.
That went down to the skirts of his garments.
As the Jew of Hermon, and as the Jew that descended upon the mountains of Zion,
for there the Lord commanded the blessing, even life evermore.
I'd like to talk about this unity that we have a lovely illustration of in this psalm.
A unity that we know will be seen in Israel as a nation in a future day.
But also morally we can apply this psalm to ourselves.
Because the Lord would see in us also a unity which is of himself.
A unity which we read of in Ephesians chapter 4 and is spoken of as the unity of the spirit.
God delights to see this unity in his people, a unity which is of himself.
How good, he says, how pleasant it is.
It delights his heart because it is a testimony of himself, of what he has done.
And it bears witness to him, of who he is, of his character, of his nature as God.
Because we find within the very Godhead itself, there is unity.
It's impossible for the created mind to know God or to fathom out.
If God is to be known, then it is because he reveals himself.
And he has revealed himself in the Lord Jesus.
We read in John chapter 1 verse 18.
I've written these scriptures down but feel free to turn to them because it's always good to see them in their context.
John 1 verse 18.
No man has seen God at any time.
The only begotten Son, which is in the bosom of the Father, he hath declared him.
And so if we are to know God, it is in Christ that we know him.
And in the scriptures we learn that within the Godhead there are three persons.
There is the Father, there is the Son, and there is the Holy Spirit.
Each person within the Godhead is aware of himself.
He can speak of himself as I.
And yet there are not three Gods.
There is only one God.
For they are united in their being.
They are one in being.
Three persons, one being.
And so when the Lord Jesus spoke of himself here upon earth,
he could speak of himself and the Father as being one.
If we turn to John chapter 10,
we read, I and my Father are one.
Then the Jews took up stones again to kill him.
Jesus answered them, many good works have I showed you from my Father.
For which of these works do you stone me?
The Jews answered him, saying, for a good work we stone thee not,
but for blasphemy, and because thou, being a man, makest thyself God.
And so the Jews well understood that when the Lord Jesus said these words,
I and my Father are one,
he wasn't simply saying that they were of one mind.
Because no doubt the Pharisees would have said that of themselves,
that they were of one mind with God.
No, they understood well what he was saying,
that he was one in being with his Father.
They were one God.
I and my Father are one.
And yet he could speak of himself personally,
a person within the Godhead.
So they are one in being.
There is unity in being within the Godhead.
But also from that flows unity of purpose,
and unity of action.
And again we see in the words of the Lord Jesus,
if we turn to John chapter 5.
But Jesus answered them,
my Father worketh hitherto, and I work.
Therefore the Jews sought the more to kill him,
because he had not only broken the Sabbath,
or unloosed the Sabbath,
set it aside, but said also that God was his Father,
making himself equal with God.
Then answered Jesus and said unto them,
verily, verily, I say unto you,
the Son can do nothing of himself,
but what he seeth the Father do.
For what things soever he doeth,
these also doeth the Son likewise.
And so we find here,
firstly, the Lord's claim to be equal with God,
in claiming to be his Son,
claiming that relationship with him.
But then he says,
the Son can do nothing of himself,
but what he seeth the Father do.
For what things soever he doeth,
these also doeth the Son likewise,
in like manner.
This is not an omission of inferiority.
The Son can do nothing of himself,
but what he seeth the Father do.
The Son can do nothing of himself,
but what he seeth the Father doeth.
But rather, a statement of truth,
that the persons within the Godhead
do not act independently of one another.
The Son cannot act independently of the Father.
He can do nothing of himself.
But then he says,
whatever the Father doeth, the Son doth likewise.
What mere man could claim to do things
in the same way as God does them?
No, only one who in himself is God
could make such a claim.
And so we see here unity of purpose
and unity of action.
And the Lord, in his prayer to his Father,
he says in John 17.11,
Now I am no more in the world,
but these are in the world.
Speaking of his disciples,
that little band of apostles,
And I come to thee, Holy Father,
keep through thine own name
those whom thou hast given me,
that they may be one.
As we.
And then John 17.20,
he speaks of those who will believe on him
through the testimony of the apostles.
Neither pray I for these alone,
but for them also which shall believe on me
through their word,
that they all may be one
as thou, Father, art in me,
and I in thee,
that they also may be one in us.
That the world may believe
that thou hast sent me
and the glory which thou gavest me,
I have given them,
that they may be one
even as we are one.
And so when the Lord Jesus
brings something into being,
it bears the character,
a divine character.
And he would see this divine unity
in his people.
A unity of purpose.
A unity of action.
A unity of mind.
A unity of soul and of heart.
This unity is a result
of what happened on the day of Pentecost.
On the day of Pentecost,
the Holy Spirit
was sent down
by the Lord himself.
And through that spirit,
the disciples,
his disciples, his own,
they were baptized
by that one spirit
into one body.
And they were
united with him,
their glorified head in heaven.
He had ascended up
and taken the place
which his God had appointed him
at his right hand
higher even than the heavens themselves.
And upon earth was formed
his body
by his spirit.
And
we are all baptized, we read,
in 1 Corinthians 12,
all those who have believed upon him,
who have put their trust in him,
we read in 1 Corinthians 12,
for as the body is one
and hath many members,
and all the members of that one body
being many are one body,
so also is the Christ.
For by one spirit
are we all baptized into one body,
whether we be Jews or Gentiles,
whether we be bond or free,
and have been all made
to drink into one spirit.
So this is true of every believer.
We can all say
who have trusted in the Lord
that we have been baptized
by one spirit
into that one body.
We are part, we are members
of the body of Christ.
And there is that unity
which has been brought about
through the Holy Spirit.
It is not the spirit
who is the baptizer.
It is the Lord himself
who is the one who baptized us
into his body.
He says in Acts chapter 1
to his disciples,
for John truly baptized with water,
but ye shall be baptized
with the Holy Spirit
not many days hence.
He uses a comparison
with John's baptism.
John was the baptizer.
He baptized with water.
And John said of the Lord, didn't he,
that one cometh who is mightier than I.
He says he shall baptize you
with the Holy Spirit.
Mark chapter 1 verse 7,
There cometh one mightier than I after me,
the lachet of whose shoe
I am not worthy to stoop down and unloose.
I indeed have baptized you with water,
but he shall baptize you
with the Holy Spirit.
And so the Lord is the baptizer
is the one who baptizes
and it's with the Holy Spirit,
it is by the Holy Spirit
that we are baptized
into one body.
And there is that union with him
in heaven, a union that was never
seen in this earth before.
And a unity
between every member of the body
united together
in one body.
Now that unity cannot be
affected
or touched in any way.
Nothing can spoil it or mar it.
It is something
which the Lord has brought about.
It is fact.
But the Lord
would have a testimony
of that unity in this world.
The world can't see
the unity within the body of Christ.
It is an invisible thing.
But what they can take account of
is
the unity that flows from that
and which is brought about
by the Spirit of God.
A unity
that we read of
in Ephesians chapter 4
verse 1.
I therefore the prisoner of the Lord
beseech you
that you walk worthy of the vocation
wherewith ye are called.
With all lowliness and meekness
with long suffering
forbearing one another in love
endeavoring to keep
the unity of the Spirit
in the bond of peace.
When the Lord prayed to his father
regarding this unity
that he desired so
he so longed for in his own
he would say
that because of that unity
the world may believe
that thou hast sent me.
There was
something which could be taken account of
by the world.
They would see something
which was not of the world.
They would see a unity
that was of God.
And this
wonderful unity would
be a
evidence
that the one to whom
these believers belonged to
was indeed
the sent one of God.
All that he said of himself was true.
And here was this testimony to him
this united
testimony to him
in this earth.
And so at the beginning of our psalm
we get that little word
behold.
It's something which can be seen
something which can be taken account of.
Behold.
How good and how pleasant
it is for brethren
to dwell together
in unity.
Now we might ask
how is this
unity brought about?
And the answer comes
in verse 2.
It is compared
to something.
It is like
the precious ointment
upon the head.
This is the first comparison
that is made.
The unity of the spirit
it is like
the precious ointment
upon the head.
This is how
the Holy Spirit
would bring about
this practical
unity
amongst the people of God.
It is of himself.
It is his unity.
He brings it about.
And
it is through
the anointing of the head
that the Holy Spirit
he has a ministry
and it is to glorify
the Lord Jesus.
We read of that
again in John
chapter 16
verse 13
when he
the spirit of truth
has come
he will guide you
into all truth
for he shall not speak
of himself
but whatsoever
he shall hear
that shall he speak
and he will show you
things to come.
He will glorify me
for he shall receive
of mine
and shall show it
unto you.
So the
Holy Spirit
would bring about
this unity
by
magnifying
the Lord Jesus
in the heart
of every believer
by
by
every believer
giving the Lord
that
rightful place
in his heart
that attraction
towards Christ
following him.
There's a
verse in the song of Solomon
it says draw me
and we
will run after thee.
Draw me
that's individual
in the heart of each one
but
when every heart
is attracted to Christ
when
every heart
has given the Lord
his rightful place
then
there is that unity
we will run after thee.
There is that one heart
that one soul
that one mind
that was seen in the early church
in the days of Acts
because
they had
given the Lord
his rightful place amongst them
and therefore
they
had their ordered place
in unity
bearing witness to him.
We're told to keep this unity
we need not
keep the unity of the body
because as we have said
it's something which cannot be
touched
or affected
but we can
we can move away
from this unity of the spirit
we can
embrace another kind of unity
perhaps a unity of our own making
we can
make
rules
and commandments
and say
or we can take commandments of scripture
and say we will obey these
and in obeying these
if we all agree to obey
a certain set of laws
then
there should be that unity amongst us
or if we elect
men
to
instruct us
what we should do
how we should serve the Lord
who should serve the Lord
and if we
obey them without question
then we will move forward
in unity
but this is not the unity of the spirit
the unity of the spirit
would set the eyes
upon the Lord
and in following him
in obedience to him
in giving him his rightful place
unity
his unity
is brought about
amongst the members of the body
in a practical way
if we turn to Acts
in chapter 13
we see this
unity in action
now there were
in the church
that was at Antioch
certain prophets
and teachers
as Barnabas
and Simeon
that was called Niger
and Lucius of Cyrene
and Menaion
which had been brought up
with Herod the Tetrarch
and Saul
as they ministered
to the Lord
and fasted
the Holy Spirit said
separate me
Barnabas and Saul
for the work
whereunto I have called them
and when they had fasted
and prayed
and laid their hands on them
they sent them away
or let them go
we have here
a unity of action
they hadn't
decided amongst themselves
who would do what
and what they would do
but their occupation was
in ministering upon the Lord
and fasting
we have there
self
set aside
and the Lord
given his rightful place
and them
subject to him
and then
it is then
that the Holy Spirit
can
bring about
this wonderful unity
amongst them
and
with one heart
and one soul
they
follow the Lord
and therefore
there is this
unity amongst them
this unity of purpose
and unity of action
we can't really read
Psalm 133
or enjoy the blessing
of Psalm 133
if we haven't first
been through the exercise
of Psalm 132
and here we read
of the longing
in the heart of David
he says in verse 3
surely
I will not come into
the tabernacle of my house
nor go up into my bed
I will not give sleep
to mine eyes
or slumber to mine eyelids
until I find out a place
for the Lord
and habitation for the mighty
God of Jacob
lo!
we heard of it
at Ephrata
we found it
in the fields
of the woods
we will go into
his tabernacles
we will worship
at his footstool
arise O Lord
into thy rest
thou
and the ark
of thy strength
let thy priests
be clothed
with righteousness
let thy saints
shout
for joy
there was
a longing
in the heart of David
a longing
that the Lord
should have his rightful
place in Israel
that he should have
his habitation
the place of his rest
Jehovah and the ark
of his strength
and
he would say
we heard of it
in Ephrata
that was where
he was brought up
with his father
and his mother
in that
godly family
in that godly home
it was there
that he heard
of these things
but
there was formed
in his own heart
a conviction of them
and so he sought
them out
we heard of it
in Ephrata
we found it
that's the ark
of God
we found it
in the field
of the wood
he sought out
that ark
he desired
that
the Lord
should have his rightful
place
in the midst of them
that was the
place he longed for
for his God
for Jehovah
and the ark of his strength
and for us too
we cannot
as it were
have the blessing of
Ephesians 4
this lovely unity
which is of the spirit
we cannot keep
that unity
unless
we have been through
the exercise of the
previous chapters
there
the Lord
has his place
his appointed place
the purpose of God
as it were
is revealed to our hearts
concerning him
he has his place
and therefore
like the priests
in Psalm 133
they have their place
they are clothed
with righteousness
they shout with joy
it's a united shout
one shout
there's a
unity there
because
the ark has its
place amongst them
and with us
if the Lord has his
rightful place
in our hearts
and therefore
as a result of that
in our homes
and as a result of that
in our gatherings
there will be that
unity seen
which is not
a unity of our making
a unity that the world
would recognize
if it was
and would approve of
a unity which
was seen in
Babel
go to
let us do this
let us do that
let us do the other
this was a unity
of their making
the world can understand this
no this is a divine unity
a unity which comes
through
the Lord himself
having the place of his rest
which is in the midst
of his own
and we
are falling in that place
and so let's move on
in our
psalm
the precious ointment
upon the head
that ran down
upon the beard
the anointing of
the Lord Jesus
our glorious head
in heaven
and the oil
now it
runs down
flows down
upon the beard
it flows down
to us
his people
and we
to us
his people
from the head
where
we read
don't we
in Colossians
that from him
every joint
is supplied
all our resources
are in him
and so it is
in his strength
that
we can
maintain
this testimony
it is in his strength
this unity
that we can keep
this unity
in the spirit
because the beard
it would
speak in scripture
of
the vitality
and power
the strength
of a man
man's strength
man's vitality
that's what it would speak of
and if we turn to
Isaiah
chapter 7 verse 20
we get
an illustration of that
with Israel
God will deal with Israel
he will bring them under judgment
and he will show them
that they
have nothing in themselves
of which they can boast
they will be brought low
their strength will be taken away
that which they
trusted in
that which they boasted in
it will go
it will be taken from them
by the
Assyrian
and the Lord says of the Assyrian
in that same day
shall the Lord
shave with a razor
that is hired
namely by them
beyond the river
by the king of Assyria
the head
and the hair of the feet
and it shall also
consume
the beard
it speaks of man's
vitality
his strength
but here
it is specific
in our psalm
it is
the beard
it's even
Aaron's beard
it is
speaking of the
strength
that we find
in this glorified
man
the Lord Jesus Christ
our Aaron
our great high priest
the one
in whom strength
we can stand
the early church
they knew
immediately
what it was
to be
is set on every side
with
hostility
and enmity
in
acts
I think it's chapter 4
yes Acts chapter 4
verse
26
the kings of the earth
stood up
and the rulers
were gathered together
against the Lord
and against his Christ
for of a truth
against thy holy child
against thy holy servant
Jesus
whom thou hast anointed
both Herod and Pontius
Pilate with the Gentiles
and the people of Israel
were gathered together
for to do
whatsoever thy hand
and thy counsel
determined before
to be done
and now Lord
behold their threatenings
and grant unto thy servants
that with all boldness
they may speak thy word
by stretching forth
thine hand to heal
and that signs
and wonders may be done
by the name of thy
holy servant Jesus
and when they prayed
the place was shaken
where they were
assembled together
and they were all
filled with the Holy Spirit
and they spake
the word of God
with boldness
and the multitude of them
that believed
were of one heart
and of one soul
neither said any of them
that ought
of the things
which he possessed
was his own
but they had all things
common
and with great power
gave the apostles witness
of the resurrection
of the Lord Jesus
and great grace
was upon them all
and so we see this power
given to them
from the risen Christ
by his spirit
to these
believers
his body upon earth
in order they might
testify of him
in this world
perhaps we could look at
two scriptures
in Hebrews
which speak of the
power of our
great high priest
to
maintain
and to keep us
in Hebrews chapter
2 and verse 17
we read
wherefore it behoved him
in all things
we made like unto his brethren
that he might be a merciful
and faithful high priest
in things pertaining to God
to make reconciliation
for the sins of the people
for in that he himself
has suffered
being tempted
he is able
to help them
that are tempted
these are wonderful words
aren't they
he is able
we find them
occurring throughout
the scriptures
concerning God
concerning Christ
that he is able
power and strength
lie with him
without him
we cannot do anything
but with him
we can do all things
in the strength
that he himself
gives
and here
he is able to
help
he is able to help
when
we are brought into
circumstances
where we would fail
whatever it might be
whether it's
an enemy
within
the flesh
or an enemy without
Satan
the world
we can find help
with
our great high priest
in heaven
he is able to
succor
he is able to help
because he knows
every
circumstance
that we could be in
he knows
what it was like
himself
to be
in that position
in manhood
and he overcame
and he sat down
at his father's right hand
having overcome
and therefore
he is able to help us
to overcome
that help
that resource is available in him
our great high priest
our Aaron
and too in Hebrews
we read in chapter 7
but this man
because he continues ever
has an unchangeable priesthood
where for he is able also
to save them to the uttermost
who come unto God
who come unto God
by him
seeing he ever liveth
to make intercession
for them
this
salvation
is
a salvation
which we experience
daily
we
we know what it is
to be saved
from our sins
through the death
of the Lord Jesus
because of that death
but here
the deliverance
is a daily deliverance
on account of his intercession
in heaven
as our great high priest
he is able to save us
to the uttermost
completely
there is no
circumstance
in which we cannot know deliverance
if we turn to him
and if we
lean upon him
and put our trust in him
he is our strength
and this strength
is given to us
through his spirit
and so the oil
flows down
it flows down
we read
even unto the hem
that went down
to the skirts of his garment
the hem of
the high priest garment
and
the high priest
would have been in the holy place
and
the hem of his garment
would have
brushed along the
earth
of the wilderness floor
and the hem of the garment
we read of it
in Exodus
chapter 28
verse
33
and beneath
upon the hem
of it
that's this
priestly
coat
this priestly tunic
thou shalt make
pomegranates
of blue
and of purple
and of scarlet
round about the hem thereof
and bells of gold
between them round about
and it shall be upon Aaron
to minister
and his sound
shall be heard
when he goeth in
unto the holy place
before the Lord
and when he cometh out
that he die not
the hem would speak of
testimony
in this earth
a testimony
which is
a result of this unity
a bell
speaking of
the divine
witness
the divine
sound
that goes out
and whose sound is it
we read of that in our verse
his sound
shall be heard
the sound
of the Lord himself
in his people
it's his voice
that is heard
in this world
through his body
that which
is of himself
that which is
so wonderfully
united with him
that
it can be spoken of
by the apostle Paul
when he compares
the assembly
to a human body
he will say
he will speak of the unity
of the human body
and he will say
so also
is the Christ
so also is the church
he's saying
so also is the assembly
but he says
so also is the Christ
because the assembly
presents
Christ
in this world
it is the
testimony of him
testimony of him
it is his sound
as it were
that goes out
and
as those bells
were heard
they said
those bells gave testimony
that he
dieth not
in other words
that he is alive
he does not die
he is alive
in that holy place
in his ministry
in his going in
in his coming out
in his ministry
toward God
in his ministry
toward men
the church
would bear witness
in this earth
of a living
and a glorified
saviour
and his ministry
would be known
in this world
and
every time
we read of a bell
we have a pomegranate
that which speaks
of fruitfulness
and the pomegranates
we read
they were
of blue
of purple
of scarlet
these colours
setting forth
the glories of Christ
every time
as it were
the testimony is
sounded out
it bears fruit
it bears fruit
in his people
all the glories of Christ
are brought out
this is another
this is part of the ministry
of the Holy Spirit
we read of that in
in 2nd Corinthians chapter 4
chapter 3
chapter 3
verse 18
but we all
with unveiled face
beholding as in a glass
the glory of the Lord
are changed into the same image
from glory to glory
even as by the spirit of the Lord
the golden bell
divine
the divine testimony
the voice of the Lord Jesus
sounding out
producing fruit
in his people
glorifying him
and this is what is seen in this world
and
in the last verse of our psalm
it is compared to the Jew of Hermon
as the Jew that descended upon the mountains of Zion
for there the Lord commanded a blessing
even life
forevermore
perhaps in this final verse we get
something of the
character of this testimony
it is compared to the Jew of Hermon
in numbers 11
we read of the Jew that it falls
during the night
but
it anticipates the day
it anticipates
a morning without clouds
and the Jew
it refreshes the soul
it refreshes the heart
the Jew perhaps will speak of
that
blessed hope
that we have
in Christ
that hope that we read of in
Titus
chapter 2
looking for that
blessed hope
and the glorious appearing
of the great God and our Saviour
Jesus Christ
and the testimony
that is a result of that hope
because
believing
and looking
for that
coming of the Lord for us
this will influence the way we live
if that hope
if that as it were that
day star has
arisen in our hearts
the hope of his return
to take us to be with himself
to be with him
and to be like him
if that hope is truly in our hearts
then
there will be a testimony to it
in our lives
our lives will be
commensurate with that hope
the hope of his coming
is true and a certain
hope, a reality
anticipation of something that has been
promised by the Lord himself
he has gone away, yes
but he says
if I go away
I shall come again
and receive you
unto myself
this is
the desire of his own heart
this is the longing
of his heart
and
it
delights him
to know
that this is the
hope
of those
whom he has died
to bring
to himself
those whom he has redeemed
with his own precious blood
so the Jew
would anticipate the day
the day of his appearing
the apostle Paul would speak
of
a crown of righteousness
that had been
reserved for him
and
the same he says
is true of all those
who love
his appearing
that
time
when he will be
glorified in this world
when he will have his
rightful place in this world
and everything will be ordered
after himself
when
that which is
spoken of in Ephesians
will be seen by every eye
verse 10
verse 9 of chapter 1 of Ephesians
having made known unto us the mystery of his will
according to his good pleasure
which he has purposed in himself
that in the dispensation of the fullness of times
he might gather together in one
all things in Christ
both which are in heaven
and which are in earth
even in him
and at the end of the day
all things in heaven
and which are in earth
even in him
and at the end of the chapter
we read of the Lord Jesus
in verse 21 being far above all
principality and power and might
and dominion every name that is named
not only in this world
but also in that which is to come
and hath put all things under his feet
and gave him
to be the head over all things
to the church
which is his body
the fullness of him that filleth all in all
that which will be true
that which will be seen by every eye
in the coming day
and every heart will be subject to him
in that day
but now
at this present time
as far as the church is concerned
already
he is owned as head
over all things
he is head over all things to the church
it may not be accepted
in the world
it is not accepted in the world
the world is still
at enmity against him
but to the church
he is head over all things
this wonderful truth is seen
in the lives
in the
corporate testimony
of his people upon earth
if we keep that
precious unity
of the spirit
and then
we read
of the Jew
descending upon the mountains
of Zion
well Zion does speak doesn't it
of that time when Israel
will come into that which has been promised her
when her Messiah
takes his place in the midst of them
as we have it
that he
thy God it says
is in the midst of thee
he rests in his love
he rejoices
over thee with singing
this is a
future day for Israel
but we read in Hebrews
that we are come
unto mount Zion
we are come unto mount Zion
unto the city of the living God
the heavenly Jerusalem
these things will have an earthly
fulfillment in Israel
but morally we are
brought to them now
not in an earthly way but in a heavenly
in heavenly things
the heavenly Jerusalem that's the church
mount Zion you are come unto
mount Zion
that is where the Lord
is given his rightful place
we are come to that now morally
and this should be
worked out
in our testimony
this should mark
the way we live
the purpose of God
God
has a purpose
both for the heaven
and for the earth
but it is one purpose
we don't read do we in the scriptures
of the purposes of God
we only ever read of one purpose
we only ever read of one purpose
we don't even read of
the councils of God
in the plural we read of one
council
and so
both that which is earthly
and that which is heavenly
it all has its place
in that one purpose
of God and we
we have our part
with Christ in heaven
all our hopes
all our inheritance
everything
is bound up with him in heaven
it's a heavenly hope
our portion is a heavenly one
Israel's is an earthly one
but it's all part
of that same glorious
purpose that we read of in Ephesians
when all things
will be headed up in Christ
in heaven
and upon earth
and then finally where the Lord
commandeth the blessing
even life evermore
eternal life
that which
again can be
seen
in the amongst the people of God
that life which we read of
in John
chapter 17 verse 3
and this is life
eternal
that they may know thee
the true God
and Jesus Christ
whom thou hast sent
this is what eternal life is
knowing the true God
and Jesus Christ whom he has sent
not just knowing of them
but knowing them to be brought
into a relationship with
the true God, the Father
and with Jesus Christ
his son
this is what eternal life is
but this is what
this is why eternal life was given
this
is life eternal
it doesn't say that you
do know, though that is true
it says that they might know
this is why eternal life is given
to bring us into this
blessed
relationship
with the Father and with the Son
to be brought
into that
that
for want of a better word
that circle of love
of divine love
to know the Father and the Son
to be brought near to them
to be
together
brought into that place
and so eternal life
is born witness to
in this earth
the world can take account of it
they may not understand it
no, but they can see it
in the lives of the people
of God
bearing that divine
witness and testimony to him
I think when we
consider these things
together, this unity of the spirit
no doubt
each one of us
would
within our own hearts
feel that we have
in many ways
failed in this
but the
only
answer that the Lord
gives in the scriptures to
departure
is to return
in Isaiah
chapter 30
Isaiah 30
Isaiah 30
verse 21
Thine ears shall hear
a word behind thee
saying this is the way
walk ye in it
when you turn to the right hand and when you turn to the left
if we have
in any
measure or degree
not kept
the unity of the spirit
and we are walking in another way
perhaps we have
set up another kind of unity
a unity of our own
making
then we will hear that
voice as it were behind us
and we will have to turn around
we will have to admit
that we have not been
obedient to the truth, we have not kept the unity
of the spirit and
we must obey that voice
and the way is there
this is the way, how clear it is
how plain it is in the scriptures
this is the way, there is not another
way that we can take
if we are to walk in faithfulness
then the Lord
would say to us, this is the way
and he would say
walk ye in it
and that voice will be heard
whenever we turn away
either to the right or to the left
and it will bring us back
to the truth if we are obedient
and it will bring us back
into that blessed way
and that unity
will be once more
marked by it
and we can walk in it
and that testimony can go out
because of it
perhaps we can
finish our meeting by singing
hymn number 17
May the grace of Christ
our Saviour and the Father's
boundless love with the Holy Spirit's
favour rest upon us
from above thus may we
abide in union with each other
and the Lord and possess
in sweet communion joys
which earth can ne'er afford
May the grace of Christ
our Saviour and the Father's
boundless love with the Holy Spirit's
favour rest upon us
from above thus may we
abide in union with each other
and the Lord and possess
in sweet communion joys
which earth can ne'er afford
May the grace of Christ
our Saviour and the Father's
boundless love
with the Holy Spirit's
favour rest upon us
from above thus may we
abide in union
with each other
and the Lord
and possess
in sweet
communion
joys
which earth
can ne'er
afford …
Transcripción automática:
…
Well, I'd like us to start with hymn number 423, 4-2-3.
God and Father, we thy children would in meekness hear thy voice, undistracted, hearts responsive
as thy spirit strikes the chord.
All thy mind we would be learning, as the desert path we trace.
Thine we are, and would be leaning ever on thy boundless grace.
4-2-3
God and Father, we thy children would in meekness hear thy word, undistracted, hearts responsive
as thy spirit strikes the chord.
All thy mind we would be learning, as the desert path we trace.
Thine we are, and would be leaning ever on thy boundless grace.
Till the Spirit's revealing lights the glory thou hast giv'n,
and our eyes, by faith, are seeing Christ at thy right hand in hand.
As on earth this Lamb was trodden, ever subject to thy will,
as the bed of all thy counsels, whom the universe will fill.
May our hearts this place accord him, when, as Isaac, he has come,
as the loam, spake out and grew in, as the Lord upon his throne.
May our hearts, Father, before him this world's glory worship thee,
every hindrance let not vanish, for we're subject unto thee.
God and Father, thee we worship, praise thee evermore,
for that thou leadest us in triumph telling, O thy boundless love be known.
May we therefore still be learning in thy word thy counsels trace,
till the day that thou display'st all the glory of thy grace.
Christ, Amen.
Well, to introduce what I want to talk about, I'd like us to read one verse.
Now, as we go on, I will point to other scriptures which we will read.
But at this point, I just want us to read the first verse of 1 Thessalonians 4.
1 Thessalonians 4, verse 1.
Furthermore then, we beseech you, brethren, and exhort you by the Lord Jesus,
that as ye have received of us how ye ought to walk and to please God,
so ye would abound more and more.
I'd like us to sing another hymn now.
I'd like us to sing number 200.
Number 200.
Father, how precious unto thee is thy beloved Son,
in whom there does perfection see, thy holy, blessed One.
When he in flesh the desert passed, he loved to do thy will.
His food it was, through to the last, thy pleasure to fulfil.
Number 200.
Father, how precious unto thee is thy beloved Son,
in whom there does perfection see, thy holy, blessed One.
When he in flesh the desert passed, he loved to do thy will.
His food it was, through to the last, thy pleasure to fulfil.
Only begotten he revealed thyself unto thy praise.
The Father, until then concealed, was seen in all his ways.
As in his life, so in his death, he was devoted still.
For us in love preside his breath, obedient to thy will.
He glorified thee on the earth, thy work by him was done.
And thou who knewest, for his worth is glorified thy Son.
Now crowned and seated on thy throne, he is thy joy and rest.
And we who are through grace thine own, in him are fully blessed.
Ye preciousness itself to thee, to us is precious too.
With every beauty in him see, thy light of glory view.
Amen.
It should always be true that those who speak from the platform should consider the application of their remarks to themselves.
I feel the Lord would have me speak on the particular subject that I'm about to speak about, but I have in mind that I'm very conscious that what I say has to apply to myself as well as those that are in the audience.
How do we please God? How do we please our Lord? Now that's a question that interests all of us, isn't it?
And I suppose there's some obvious answers to this. I'm sure if asked, one thing that we'd say would be that obedience pleases him.
And that's certainly true. Of course, it covers a multitude of practical matters.
But what I want to do this afternoon is not give an overview of the topic, really, but rather to note some of the things that are specifically stated in Scripture as pleasing him.
Now, at the time available, I certainly won't refer to every Scripture that mentions pleasing God.
This is not a complete overview of the topic, nothing like, but just some points that I've noted from Scripture, and I'm sure that you'll think of others that I haven't included and perhaps should have done.
It's interesting to consider why certain things are mentioned specifically as pleasing the Lord, whereas others aren't mentioned directly in this way.
And I think perhaps sometimes some of these are referred to as pleasing him because we might not naturally think of them as being that important, perhaps.
But clearly to the Lord they are. And for the Holy Spirit to note that such, specifically, please the Lord, leaves us in no doubt about the matter.
Now, I want to give this talk a structure, because lectures, I find, are easier to follow, and the content's more memorable if I have some idea of the structure.
So this is what I intend doing. First of all, I'm going to make some preliminary points about the Lord Jesus.
Then I want to mention children as a distinct and important group.
And then I want to mention, very briefly, some general principles.
And then I want to give some examples of specific behavior that are stated in the Scripture as pleasing God.
They may seem to be somewhat miscellaneous examples, but they're ones that I've noted and that I want to bring before us.
Again, I'd like to stress this isn't intended as a complete overview of the topic, but a description of some things that I notice in God's Word.
So firstly, the Lord Jesus himself. The Lord Jesus is our perfect example, of course.
If anyone was completely entitled to please himself, it was him.
But the Scriptures note that he pleased not himself. All he did pleased the Father.
He always pleased the Father.
And as we look at the Scriptures and think about this, we understand that it must be so, and that it's important.
For one thing, it proves who the Lord Jesus is.
That should be crystal clear to us all. A mere man could not always possibly please God.
It also proves the unity in the Godhead. The three persons in the Godhead are one.
The Lord Jesus pleased the Father. And it's interesting to see how the Scriptures record this.
Now, I've written down here some of the Scriptures, which I'll read to you. I'm not expecting you to turn to these.
Firstly, we find the Father himself testified that the Lord Jesus pleased him.
And all three of the Synoptic Gospels record the baptism of the Lord Jesus by John in the Jordan.
And we read from Matthew, it says,
And thou, a voice from heaven, saying, This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.
In Mark we read, And there came a voice from heaven, saying,
Thou art my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.
And in Luke 3 we read, And the Holy Spirit descended in a bodily shape like a dove upon him.
And a voice came from heaven, which said, Thou art my beloved Son, in thee I am well pleased.
At the Transfiguration, later on, the Father reaffirmed that the Lord Jesus pleased him.
As recorded in Matthew 17, we read,
Behold, a bright cloud overshadowed them, and a voice out of the cloud which said, This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.
Hear ye him.
The Lord Jesus himself confirmed it when speaking to the Jews about who he was, who he is, in John 8.
I'd just like us to read those. So if we turn over to John chapter 8 and verse 25.
John 8, 25. We'll start from 25 just to pick up the context.
Then said they unto him, Who art thou? And Jesus said unto them, Even the same that I said unto you from the beginning.
I have many things to say and to judge of you, but he that sent me is true, and I speak to the world those things which I've heard of him.
They understood not, but he spake to them of the Father.
Then said Jesus unto them, When ye have lifted up the Son of Man, then shall ye know that I am he, and that I do nothing of myself.
As my Father hath taught me, I speak these things.
And he that sent me is with me. The Father hath not left me alone, for I do always those things that please him.
I do always those things that please him.
Now this, of course, is what the prophets tell us. And I'd like us to turn over to Matthew 12.
In Matthew 12, the Holy Spirit records the words of God as noted in Isaiah chapter 42.
And tells us that they refer to the Lord Jesus.
Matthew chapter 12, we pick it up at verse 17.
That it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Isaiah the prophet, saying, Behold my servant whom I have chosen, my beloved in whom my soul is well pleased.
He is the one in whom my soul is well pleased.
And the Apostle Peter confirms it in his first letter when writing about transfiguration.
He writes, For he received from God the Father honour and glory, when there came such a voice to him from the excellent glory,
This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased.
The Apostle Paul confirms in Romans 15 that Christ pleased not himself, with the obvious implication as shown by the context, that he pleased the Father.
So the scriptures inspired by the Holy Spirit give confirmation from the words of God himself,
the words of the Lord Jesus, the words of the prophets, the words of the apostles, that the Lord Jesus pleased the Father.
More than ample testimony. It's so important it's repeated again and again.
So when we think about pleasing God, we have our perfect example.
I want to move on to children now.
When I was young, all those years ago, the speakers would often address their remarks to the young.
I want to address the young people this evening, they'd say, and look at my sisters and my brother and myself,
which make me wonder sometimes why they never address their remarks to the old.
I've got something to say to young, briefly, and then I'll address those who are older.
So those of you who are children, if you could concentrate just for a second on what I have to say.
Okay? Do you want to please the Lord? Well, I'm sure you do.
It's not difficult to understand what's needed.
There's a verse in Colossians which says,
Children, obey your parents in all things, for this is well pleasing in the Lord.
At least it isn't complicated. At least it's easy to understand.
And that's the standard that God has set for children.
This is what he's looking for from you.
Of course, there may be times when you don't like what you're told to do by your parents.
But unless there's an issue of being told to do something which goes against God,
obedience is what God expects and that's what will please him.
Just obedience to parents.
In practice, of course, this may not always be that easy.
You might consider that your parents run reasonable at times.
But always remember, this is what pleases God.
Obedience to your parents.
And God can be depended on to give strength when it's difficult.
Just ask him.
Right, now I'm going to address my remarks to the older ones.
But of course, you youngsters can listen in if you wish.
I want to consider now some underlying principles that scripture gives us.
Romans chapter 8 and verse 8 says,
They that are in the flesh cannot please God.
But ye are not in the flesh but in the spirit.
If so be that the spirit of God dwell in you.
Now if any man have not the spirit of Christ, he is none of his.
If any man have not the spirit of Christ, he is none of his.
So there's a clear distinction here between those in the flesh and those in the spirit.
The one who does not have God's spirit is none of him.
Now we know that all who trust in the Lord Jesus are given the spirit to live in them.
But sadly we can act as though we're still in the flesh.
Behaviour based on this cannot please God.
Okay, that's all I want to say on that.
Now I want to move on to a second principle.
And that's found at the beginning of Hebrews 11.
Hebrews 11 verse 5.
In Hebrews 11 verse 5 we read,
By faith Enoch was translated that he should not see death and was not found because God had translated him.
For before his translation he had this testimony that he pleased God.
But without faith it's impossible to please him.
He that cometh to God must believe that he is and he's a rewarder of them that diligently seek him.
Without faith it's impossible to please him.
The disciples said to the Lord on one occasion, increase our faith.
And the Lord refers to faith as small as a grain of mustard seed.
This is in Matthew 17.
A tiny object.
Yet though very small it has life in it.
And the Lord refers to what can be accomplished with faith even as small as that.
Clearly there are degrees of faith.
And clearly too the Lord honours even small faith.
And one thing these verses in Hebrews 11 are telling us is that if there's no faith,
then pleasing God is impossible.
Those who have no faith in him, those who refuse God's offer of mercy through our Lord Jesus Christ and do not put their trust in him,
such are not in a state to please him.
However pleasant they may be, however much charitable work they may do, however good they may look in the eyes of man,
what they do does not have the effect of pleasing God.
So I suggest we see two underlying principles here.
It's impossible for those in the flesh and it's impossible for those without faith to please God.
Now before we come to look at some specific examples,
I want to put out a couple of matters that could be classified perhaps as to do with attitude.
Okay? Attitude.
First one, Psalm 147.
Psalm 147 verse 10.
Let's read the following.
He delighteth not in the strength of the horse.
He taketh not pleasure in the legs of a man.
The Lord taketh pleasure in them that fear him.
In those that hope in his mercy.
God takes pleasure in, God is pleased with those who fear him.
Of course when we talk about fear, for those who are believers and who are walking close to him,
we're not talking about being frightened of God, but of thinking of him and speaking of him in the right way,
with reverence, with deep respect, remembering who he is, remembering the greatness and wonder of his person,
remembering that he is the almighty, all-powerful, all-knowing, all-seeing God.
The last two verses of Hebrews 12 refer to serving God acceptably.
The word actually means pleasingly. Serving God pleasingly.
Serving God in a way that pleases him.
And then it says with reverence and godly fear.
For our God is a consuming fire.
So God is pleased with an attitude of reverence and he specifically tells us this.
And our understanding of who God is and what he's done for us through our Lord Jesus Christ
leads us to praise and thanksgiving.
And that's the second matter that I'm considering here really as an attitude, if you like,
an attitude of praise and thanksgiving.
An attitude that's expressed in words, of course.
God looks for praise.
The grateful praise of our hearts pleases him.
Thinking of what he's done leads us to thanksgiving.
Let's read some verses from Psalm 69.
Psalm 69.
Psalm 69 verse 30 says,
Saul was told by Samuel to obey is better than sacrifice.
To hearken than the fat of rams.
Obedience is better than sacrifice.
And here in Psalm 69 we also learn that praise and thanksgiving
please the Lord more than sacrifice.
And I know from experience it's so easy to get caught up
with our own concerns that prayer times can become like a long list of requests.
Of course, we can and should tell God our needs.
And we can and should tell God our concerns for others.
But let's be sure that we focus on him and praise him and thank him.
Praising God's name and magnifying him with thanksgiving please him.
So we've seen our perfect example in the Lord Jesus Christ.
We've seen how children may please the Lord.
We've seen a couple of general principles
that those in the flesh can't please God.
And without faith, it's impossible to please God.
And we've also seen attitudes, as I've called them, that please God.
Firstly, reverence and godly fear.
And secondly, praise and thanksgiving.
Now I want to turn to some particular behaviors
that are specifically mentioned in Scripture as pleasing God.
And I want us to turn back to 1 Thessalonians chapter 4 where we started.
1 Thessalonians chapter 4.
Furthermore then, we beseech you, brethren, and exhort you by the Lord Jesus
that as you have received of us how you ought to walk and to please God,
so you would abound more and more.
For ye know what commandments we gave you by the Lord Jesus.
This is the will of God, even your sanctification,
that you should abstain from fornication,
that every one of you should know how to possess his vessel in sanctification and honor,
not in the lust of concupiscence, even as the Gentiles which know not God.
That no man go beyond and defraud his brother in any matter,
because that the Lord is the avenger of all such,
as we also have forewarned you and testified.
For God hath not called us unto uncleanness, but unto holiness.
He therefore that despiseth, despiseth not man but God,
which hath also given us his Holy Spirit.
But as touching brotherly love, ye need not that I write unto you.
For ye yourselves have taught of God to love one another,
and indeed ye do it toward all the brethren which are in all Macedonia.
But we beseech you, brethren, that ye increase more and more,
and that ye study to be quiet, and to do your own business,
and to work with your own hands as we commanded you,
that ye may walk honestly toward them that are without,
and that ye may have lack of nothing.
Paul and his companions had taught the Thessalonians
how they ought to walk and to please God, the first verse says.
And he wants them to abound more and more.
Now I take these next verses as expounding on this.
And he's telling us, I think, particular behaviors that please God.
And I'd split what he says into three.
The first primarily concerns our relationship with God.
The second, our relationship with each other.
And the third, our relationship with outsiders.
So first of all, we have sanctification.
And then secondly, we have brotherly love.
Verses 9 and 10.
And finally, there are two verses on leading a quiet, orderly life.
So let's just look at these briefly.
Sanctification.
This issue primarily concerns our relationship with the Lord.
Being holy.
This message comes through time and again in scripture.
Be holy as I am holy, he says.
To be holy is to be separate from wrongdoing.
Another scripture in Hebrews tells us that without holiness,
it's impossible to see the Lord.
Now the particular issue mentioned here in these verses is sexual sins.
God didn't call us to uncleanness, but to holiness.
And we should note what Paul writes here, that if we sin in this matter,
we're not just sinning against our fellow man, but against God.
That's why I say this issue primarily concerns our relationship with the Lord.
And we must all remember that as far as the Lord Jesus is concerned,
holiness applies to our thoughts as well as our actions.
Secondly then, we see in verse 9, brotherly love.
As Paul writes, the Thessalonians themselves didn't need to be exhorted to exercise brotherly love.
But these two verses are included in scripture.
And I think the history of the church shows why it's necessary that brotherly love be stressed.
In both John 13 and John 15, the Lord tells his disciples that they should love one another.
As I have loved you, he says.
This is the highest possible standard, of course.
As I have loved you, as the Lord Jesus has loved us.
It's difficult for us to understand the depth of the love of the Lord Jesus for us.
We think about it, don't we? We meditate on it.
It forms a key thought in our times together of remembering the Lord,
but we can never get to the depth of it.
And yet the Lord's standards for our love for each other is his love for us.
A selfless, self-sacrificing, giving love. Such love pleases him.
And finally here, verses 10 and 11.
Leading a quiet, orderly life.
This concerns how we are seen by outsiders.
Verse 12 says that you may walk honestly toward them that are without.
How we're seen by outsiders is very important.
It's part of our witness to the world.
So what behavior is noted by Paul as pleasing the Lord here?
Well, first of all, we have study to be quiet.
We're not in this world to make a fuss.
We need to get on with what we're responsible to do,
without hullabaloo, without a fanfare of trumpets.
And then we get that we are to do your own business or mind your own affairs.
It's not our responsibility to know other people's affairs,
whether I'm believers, and that's the emphasis of this passage, I think,
or even other Christians.
And there are other scriptures that warn us against being busybodies and gossips.
Of course, as far as other Christians are concerned, being members of the same body,
we're not isolated, we're not independent of each other,
and we should bear one another's burdens,
as well as taking a prayer for interest in each other.
But let's make sure this doesn't go beyond this exhortation.
And then to work with your own hands.
As Christians, laziness is not an option.
These issues of leading a quiet life, minding one's own affairs,
and working do seem to have been a problem for some at Thessalonica,
which is presumably why he mentions them.
It's interesting to note that in spite of what he writes here,
the problem remains.
And it has to be addressed again in his second letter.
In 2 Thessalonians 3 he writes,
For even when we were with you, we commanded you this,
that if anyone would not work, neither should he eat.
For we hear that there are some who walk disorderly among you,
not working at all, but being busybodies.
Now we command and exhort those who are such by our Lord Jesus Christ
that they work with quietness and eat their own bread.
So we see what the Thessalonians are told that would please the Lord.
Sanctification, brotherly love, and being quiet,
minding one's own affairs, and working.
I want to move on to something else that pleases God.
The Christians in Jerusalem were in great need.
Paul had spent a long time in Corinth,
and the believers at Corinth had agreed to send a gift
to support their brothers and sisters in Jerusalem.
And if we look at the end of 1 Corinthians,
we see how Paul advises the Corinthians to collect the gifts.
Now earlier, Paul had presented the Gospel in Macedonia
at Philippi and Thessalonica.
And those who met together as Christians in Macedonia
were as far as human wealth goes poor.
In contrast, those who formed the assembly at Corinth
seemed to have been comparatively well off.
Yet by the time Paul comes to write his second letters to the Corinthians,
those at Corinth still hadn't got their gift together,
whereas those in Macedonia already had.
They'd given.
So in 2 Corinthians 8, Paul writes of the generosity
of the Macedonian believers,
and he has to use them as an example
to persuade the Corinthians to give
as they had previously promised to do.
He writes of the Macedonians.
Let's just read it from 2 Corinthians 8.
2 Corinthians 8, verse 1.
Moreover, brethren, we do you to wit of the grace of God
bestowed on the churches of Macedonia,
how that in a great trial of affliction,
the abundance of their joy and their deep poverty
abounded unto the riches of their liberality.
For to their power I bear record, yea,
and beyond their power they were willing of themselves,
praying us with much entreaty that we would receive the gift
and take upon us the fellowship of the ministering to the saints.
This was a real sacrifice for them.
They had little, but they gave freely and willingly.
I assume the Corinthians did give
because Romans 15 refers to the gift from Macedonia and Achaia,
the region including Corinth, for the poor in Jerusalem.
But the Philippians didn't leave it at that.
This is what Paul writes to them.
If we turn over to Philippians chapter 4.
He wrote Philippians chapter 4.
Philippians 4 and verse 15, he writes,
Now ye Philippians know also that in the beginning of the gospel
when I departed from Macedonia,
no church communicated with me as concerning giving and receiving,
but ye only.
For even in Thessalonica ye sent once and again unto my necessity,
not because I desire a gift,
but I desire fruit that may abound to your account.
For I have all and abound.
I am full having received of Epaphroditus the things which were sent from you,
an odour of a sweet smell, a sacrifice acceptable, well-pleasing to God.
But my God shall supply all your need according to his riches in glory by Christ Jesus.
Their sacrifice pleased God.
Verse 18, a sacrifice acceptable, well-pleasing to God.
It's noted by Paul as pleasing God,
and linked with this is the comment in verse 19,
that my God shall supply all your need according to his riches in glory by Christ Jesus.
They wouldn't go short.
That this pleases God is also emphasized in Hebrews 13,
where it says, to do good and to communicate, forget not.
For with such sacrifices God is well-pleased.
Let's take one more example.
Let's turn over to 2 Timothy.
2 Timothy chapter 2.
2 Timothy 2 verse 3.
Thou therefore endure hardness as a good soldier of Jesus Christ.
No man that warreth entangleth himself with the affairs of this life,
that he may please him who has chosen him to be a soldier.
A soldier on active duty shouldn't be meddling in affairs that are not his own.
Another translation refers to civilian pursuits here.
It's the soldier's responsibility to be focused on the job he's been given.
And to me the military picture emphasizes both the fact that we're fighting an enemy
and the importance of unquestioning obedience.
A soldier doesn't question his officer.
He just does what he's ordered to do, whatever the risk, whatever the consequences.
And the 11 and Stephen and Paul, Paul's companions,
each standing up under great opposition to speak for the Lord Jesus,
provide us with examples here.
And other scriptures show that we are servants.
But it's not just that we're servants.
True though that is, we're soldiers.
And in fighting the enemy, complete obedience to our commanding officer is vital.
And the avoidance of hindering irrelevancies, shall we say, is essential.
This is sometimes used as an argument for Christians not to be involved in politics.
And undoubtedly its application is wider.
Anything that would divert us from our objective of serving him,
anything that would get in the way of pleasing our commanding officer, should be avoided.
Now, of course, we can find other thoughts from scripture on this topic of pleasing him.
And I hope that some of those that we've noted here are good reminders to us as we seek to please the Lord.
I think repetition is often helpful.
So let's just remind ourselves of what we talked about.
We saw how the Father, the Lord Jesus himself, the Holy Spirit through the words of scripture,
the apostles and the prophets, all note that the Lord Jesus pleased the Father.
We saw him as our perfect example.
We saw how children can please the Lord.
We noted that those in the flesh and those without faith cannot please God.
We saw that an attitude of reverence pleases God, as do praise and thanksgiving.
We looked at some particular issues as expressed by Paul to the Thessalonians,
sanctification in relation to God, brotherly love in relation to each other,
minding one's own affairs in relation to those outside, how these please him.
We noted that giving pleases him.
Now, I want to turn over to Colossians chapter 1.
We have Paul's prayer for the Colossians.
Colossians chapter 1, verse 9.
He writes,
For this cause we also, since the day we heard it, do not cease to pray for you
and to desire that she might be filled with the knowledge of his will
in all wisdom and spiritual understanding,
that she might walk worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing,
being fruitful in every good work and increasing in the knowledge of God.
Unto all pleasing, that they would please the Lord.
Something that Paul specifically mentions here in his prayer for the Colossians,
that they would please the Lord.
And it's so important that our lives are pleasing the Lord
that let's remember to pray for each other in this way too.
One final scripture in Hebrews 13.
Hebrews 13, verse 20.
By the God of peace that brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus,
that great shepherd of the sheep,
through the blood of the everlasting covenant,
make you perfect in every good work to do his will,
working in you that which is well pleasing in his sight,
through Jesus Christ, to whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen.
Now, I find this verse very encouraging.
It would be impossible to do it on our own, wouldn't it?
We just couldn't do it. We couldn't please him.
But he works in us. He works in us.
Let's be encouraged by this.
When we see failure in our lives, we need to get back to him
and allow him to work in us.
I'd like us to close with hymn number 207,
which is based on these verses we just read.
Hymn number 207.
Now, may the God of peace and love, who from the silent grave
brought back the shepherd of the sheep, omnipotent to save.
Verse three.
Perfect our souls in every grace to do his blessed will
for all that's pleasing in his sight, inspire us to fulfil.
207.
O may the God of peace and love, who from the silent grave
brought back the shepherd of the sheep, omnipotent to save.
Through the rich merits of our blood, which he uncountably spent,
to make a gracious work secure on which our hopes are built.
Perfect our souls in every grace to do his blessed will
for all that's pleasing in his sight, inspire us to fulfil.
For his the risen shepherd save, we every blessing pray.
With glory let his name be crowned through heaven's eternal play. …
Transcripción automática:
…
Well, good evening. I wonder if we could begin by singing the hymn number 252, 2-5-2.
Sweet the moments, rich in blessing, Musing o'er the cross we spend,
Life and health and peace possessing, From the dying sinner's friend.
Here we rest in wonder viewing, All our guilt, all our chastisement bearing,
Here we rest in wonder viewing, All our guilt, all our chastisement bearing,
And the full redemption flowing, From the sacrifice he made.
Here we find the dawn of heaven, While on earth the heav'nly days,
See our trespasses forgiven, And the songs of high embrace.
All that's strong in faith abiding, We make to our Saviour pleading,
Not with Him our hearts dividing, All for Him content to be.
May we stand on high listening, To the word for which the Lord,
The new wonders daily learning, All the dance of mercy Lord.
In Jesus' worthy name, Amen.
I wonder if we could sing another short hymn, two verses, number 62.
Number 62.
In the Lord we have redemption, Full remission in His blood,
From the curse, entire exemption, From the curse pronounced by God.
What a Saviour Jesus is, O what grace, What love is His.
Number 62.
In the Lord we have redemption, Full remission in His blood,
From the curse, entire exemption, From the curse pronounced by God.
What a Saviour Jesus is, O what grace, What love is His.
Sweet His name, a claim transcending, Every name on earth in heaven.
Grace through ages never ending, To the Son of God be given.
In our Lord the Saviour is, Everlasting praise be His.
Anyone passing the door think the carol services have begun?
First I've ever heard it sung to that tune, but very nice.
It's in the book.
I want first of all to read from the epistle to the Galatians in chapter 6.
I just want to read or concentrate on one verse in this little portion,
but we'll read from verse 1 just to get the connection.
Galatians 6 and verse 1.
Brethren, if a man be overtaken in a fault, ye which are spiritual,
restore such an one in the spirit of meekness,
considering thyself, lest thou also be tempted.
Bear ye one another's burdens, and so fulfil the law of Christ.
But if a man think himself to be something, when he is nothing,
he deceiveth himself.
But let every man prove his own work,
and then shall he have rejoicing in himself alone, and not in another.
For every man shall bear his own burden.
Let him that is taught in the word communicate unto him that teaches in all good things.
Be not deceived, God is not mocked.
For whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.
For he that soweth to his flesh shall of the flesh reap corruption.
But he that soweth to the spirit shall of the spirit reap life everlasting.
And let us not be weary in well-doing, for in due season we shall reap if we faint not.
As we have therefore opportunity, let us do good unto all men,
especially unto them who are of the household of faith.
Ye see how large a letter I have written unto you with mine own hand.
As many as desire to make a fair show in the flesh,
they constrain you to be circumcised,
only lest they should suffer persecution for the cross of Christ.
For neither they themselves who are circumcised keep the law,
but desire to have you circumcised, that they may glory in your flesh.
But God forbid that I should glory,
saving the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ,
by whom the world is crucified unto me,
and I unto the world.
Now some verses in 1 Corinthians chapter 1.
And we'll read from verse 20.
Where is the wise? Where is the scribe?
Where is the disputer of this world?
Hath not God made foolish the wisdom of this world?
For after that, in the wisdom of God, the world by wisdom knew not God.
It pleased God by the foolishness of preaching, to save them that believe.
For the Jews require a sign, and the Greeks seek after wisdom.
But we preach Christ crucified, unto the Jews a stumbling block,
and unto the Greeks foolishness.
But unto them which are called both Jews and Greeks,
Christ, the power of God, and the wisdom of God.
Because the foolishness of God is wiser than men,
and the weakness of God is stronger than men.
For you see your calling, brethren,
how that not many wise men after the flesh,
not many mighty, not many noble are called.
But God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise.
And God hath chosen the weak things of the world
to confound the things which are mighty.
And base things of the world, and things which are despised,
hath God chosen, yea, and the things which are not,
to bring to naught things that are,
that no flesh should glory in his presence.
But of him are ye in Christ Jesus,
who of God is made unto us wisdom, and righteousness,
and sanctification, and redemption,
that according as it is written,
he that glorieth, let him glory in the Lord.
And last of all, in Romans chapter 5.
First of all, we'll read the last verse of chapter 4.
And it's obviously speaking about the Lord Jesus.
So chapter 4 and verse 25.
Now verse 1 of chapter 5.
And glory in tribulations also,
knowing that tribulation worketh patience,
and patience experience, and experience hope.
And hope maketh not a shame,
because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts
by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us.
For when we were yet without strength,
in due time Christ died for the ungodly.
For scarcely for a righteous man will one die,
yet peradventure for a good man some would even dare to die.
But God commendeth his love toward us,
and that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.
Much more then, being now justified by his blood,
we shall be saved from wrath through him.
For if when we were enemies we were reconciled to God,
by the death of his Son,
much more being reconciled we shall be saved by his life.
And not only so, but we also join God
through our Lord Jesus Christ,
by whom we have now received the atonement,
or the reconciliation it may be.
That should be enough.
If you were to read through all Paul's epistles,
I'm sure you would be taken up with the thought
what a thankful person the Apostle Paul is.
He thanks God for the saints.
He thanks God for the prayers of the saints.
And he thanks God and he mentioned of the saints.
Whether it's individuals or companies,
Paul was very thankful.
And you'll read this through his epistles.
Yet, in the epistle to the Galatians,
there's no mention of thanksgiving.
There's another epistle,
I'll let you find out for yourself,
maybe another two if we take Hebrews
as one of Paul's epistles.
But Hebrews would be a different thing
because there the Apostle starts off
by the greatness of Christ.
So in the light of that,
thanksgiving about us may be out of place.
But, that's only my thoughts on it,
but in the epistle to the Galatians,
there's no mention from the Apostle
of any thanksgiving.
And I've often wondered why.
And I've come to the conclusion
it is because of the state
that the Galatians found themselves in.
A company that did run well,
but were obviously hindered by others.
A company that the Apostle said
that he marveled that ye are so soon
removed from him that called you
into the grace of Christ and to another gospel,
which is not another gospel,
but some that trouble you
and would pervert the gospel of Christ.
And so they were in such a state
that the work of Christ and the cross
was diminished, the effects of it in their lives.
And Paul was rather saddened by this.
And I feel, and it's my own thoughts on it,
is because of that state they were in,
where Christ and his finished work
was set aside for the ideas of men
that Paul had to remonstrate with them
and found no cause of any thanksgiving.
And as I say, that's my thoughts on the matter.
But what I want to concentrate on tonight,
our brother this afternoon
was speaking about pleasing the Lord.
I want to concentrate on the thought of boasting.
Now if it was boasting in ourselves
and in our achievements
and what we plan to do,
then that's pride.
And we know what God thinks of pride.
But when we speak about the boasting
that the apostle refers to in chapter 6
and verse 14 where he says,
but God forbid that I should glory,
save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Well, that glory could be translated boasting.
And I believe in the new translation,
the Darby translation,
he mentions boasting.
Paul would boast in the cross of Christ
because that puts emphasis
on the greatness of the person.
And that's the one that we should
really seek to promote in our lives
and never, ever water down
the gospel and the cross of Christ.
And so Paul says, well,
no matter what others are saying,
and these evil men that were obviously
leading the Galatians astray,
no matter what they're saying or doing,
this is what my boast is.
And he said, God forbid that I should glory
or boast, save in the cross
of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Now, from being a young brother,
and again, the gray hair tells you
that's a long time ago,
but we're really instructed by older brethren.
And they would say, when preaching the cross
or preaching the gospel,
never wander from the cross
because it's the work of the cross
that will land men and women in glory.
It's not man's idea.
It's not what men think.
It's what the scripture says.
And the effect of the cross is the only thing
that will make a man and woman
or boy and girl fit for heaven.
And Paul says, well, despite what others are saying,
I'll glory in the cross.
I'll boast in the cross.
And so the three portions that we've read,
we have the same word mentioned in different ways
in our authorized version.
But it's the same word,
and it can be translated boasting.
It can be translated, as we have it here,
in glorying.
And it can also be translated in rejoicing.
But we'll go on to these if the Lord will.
But how it must have affected the apostle
to have to write this letter to these people
and say of them they were foolish.
You did run well.
You started off right.
You begun in the spirit,
but now are you being made perfect in the flesh?
Has the cross of Christ become so diminished in your sight
that you're easily led by others?
And you know it's a challenge to us all
never to wander from the cross.
Keep the cross ever before us.
And in looking at the three portions,
we might say that in relation to the cross,
in a sense it's something that's in the past.
The work is complete.
And never again will Christ have to suffer
on account of our sins.
He did it once and for all.
When we come to 1 Corinthians 1,
it's an ongoing work
going on in the Lord today
of the Father being made unto us these various things.
It's ongoing in the sense
it should be seen in a practical response
to what puts us into a very blessed position.
1 Corinthians 1, verse 30.
It's what we have in mind.
And of course, when we come to Romans 5,
it speaks about rejoicing in hope
of the glory of God.
And that's yet to be the hope to be realized,
but we'll go on to these things.
Paul to the Galatians.
Saddened by what had happened.
Influenced by those
who had absolutely no love for Christ.
And the danger in,
as we see it in Christendom today,
the danger is mixing things up.
Mixing up the cross with the law.
And in this case,
they were bringing in circumcision.
But it could be other things today.
I remember going back many years now,
speaking to a young girl
who told us that she was going to be baptized
in two weeks time.
Because she says,
you need to be baptized to get to heaven.
And I said, no.
One work will get you to heaven.
Baptism will never take anyone to heaven.
Because that would be diminishing
the work of the cross.
These men were bringing in false doctrine
and saying you must be circumcised.
Paul said, no, that's the law.
You're free from that.
Hang on to the cross.
But they allowed these things to come in,
come to a point where Paul says, foolish.
Foolish.
Who's bewitched you?
Who's done it?
Don't listen to these men.
View the cross of Christ.
And today we need definite statements
as to these things.
Not to be mixed up with other things.
We used to sing in a hymn.
It's an evangelist hymnal.
What think ye of Christ is the test.
To try both your state and your scheme.
You cannot be right in the rest
unless you think rightly of Him.
As Jesus appears in your view,
as He is beloved or not,
then God is disposed to you
and mercy or wrath is your lot.
And that's obviously to the sinner.
But you know, Christendom today
has gone in the way of,
we may say what happened in the Old Testament
when the Ark was being brought back.
Instead of following the instructions of Scripture,
they put it on a new cart.
Totally wrong.
God gave instructions how the Ark was to be carried.
On the shoulder.
Using the staves.
Presenting the Ark the way God wants it presented.
And to present Christ,
it's not in the ideas of men,
but we're living in the days of new cart Christianity.
Where the fleshly mind goes any way it wants.
Mixing up everything.
Especially the work of the cross.
And mixing it with baptism.
Paul differentiates.
Baptism for a believer is necessary.
And it is in a way a salvation.
But it only saves if we live true to it
for down here.
But baptism will never take you to heaven.
Because Paul says to these people,
that if righteousness comes by law,
Christ died for nothing.
I would add, if righteousness comes by baptism,
or life comes by baptism,
life in heaven, eternal life in heaven,
then again the Lord has died for nothing.
Therefore we have to preserve the work of the cross.
And point to the cross.
And say this, as the hymn writer again said,
this made my peace with God.
This set me on the right course.
And no doubt there were many of these Galatians
on the right course.
But then they were influenced by that which was
contrary to the gospel.
But Paul says, foolish to go that way.
Foolish to go that way.
As there was the right instructions as to the ark,
according to the Jew order.
Now David should have known it.
The priests should have known it.
You could imagine them arguing.
David saying to the priests,
you should have known this,
we're doing it the wrong way.
They could have turned around and said to David,
you should have known it.
And so when they did,
eventually carried the ark in the way God had instructed,
there was blessing.
There was blessing.
And if we have wandered from the cross,
if we have mixed everything up,
there is a way back.
There's restoration.
But it's only when we realize the value
of the finished work of Christ
and to think of how he has suffered.
Looking at the cross in one way,
we can see the effects of the hatred of man.
And we can understand these things in a way
because we know what's in our own heart
and what maybe we were capable of.
And so we can understand the sufferings
at the hands of sinful men.
But you know, when it came to the hours of darkness,
that was sufferings that we dare not enter into
with a haphazard sort of way of thinking.
We cannot speculate in these things.
But the Lord Jesus Christ suffered so much
at the hands of a holy God.
Think of it.
I was speaking to a brother just on Thursday night.
And we were speaking about the sufferings of the Lord.
And we both agreed that the sufferings
in the hours of darkness is something
that we cannot enter into.
We'll never understand how the one who could cry
when he was here,
thou hearest me always.
And yet from the cross, he cried,
why art thou so very far from the words of my roaring?
Ever in contact with heaven.
And yet, my God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?
The darkness, the distance, the abandonment,
the Lord passed through.
We dare not wander from the cross
to realize the depth of suffering that Christ passed through
in order that you and I should be brought into blessing.
And again we rejoice, and I'm sure we all rejoice
in the fact that the Lord Jesus Christ has suffered.
He's once suffered for sins, the just for the unjust
to bring us to God.
Propitiation, God's righteous claims met.
Substitution, Christ for us.
Reconciliation, brought back to God.
These are the effects of the cross.
Anyone who wanders and mixes it with other things
is on dangerous ground.
Keep near the cross.
And if you're a preacher,
if you have the opportunity in preaching,
and I suppose this can be for sisters as well,
if you're preaching to a friend or whatever,
stay with the cross.
You start mixing things up,
and there's dangers.
And Paul, in 1 Corinthians, he says
he wasn't going to preach the gospel with wisdom of words.
He wasn't going to confuse the issue.
He'll give them the straight gospel.
Christ died for our sins.
He suffered so much for our sins.
And again, that's why we say,
and that's why the brethren used to say years ago,
keep ever near the cross.
And so Paul boasted in the work of the cross.
They said if we boast in our own selves,
then well, it's just pride.
Again, we used to hear when we were younger
that sometimes we've got very humble ways
of exalting ourselves
by telling others what we're doing
and so on and going on.
It's better to tell others what Christ has done.
Ours is not a gospel of do.
It's a gospel of done.
The work is finished.
We have blessings of it now.
Many are coming to know Christ as Savior.
I've had to think that in this country,
so-called Christian country,
so-called the land of Bibles,
and yet it seems to be set aside
as just something that's, well, foolish.
But Paul says,
saving the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ
by whom the world is crucified unto me.
Paul was concerned the world was dead.
Crucified.
Again, we used to hear that
way back in the Roman times
if you saw someone was seen bearing a cross,
no doubt the word would go out,
well, that man or woman is finished for this life.
And Paul says, well, as far as this world is concerned,
it's crucified to me.
But I think he's also saying it,
I to the world,
by whom the world is crucified unto me,
and I unto the world.
So as far as Paul was concerned,
the world was dead to him.
And as far as the world was concerned,
Paul was dead to it.
They were finished with Paul.
And how many give up the teachings of Paul.
Paul's doctrine.
Paul's teachings.
But Paul here as a man
was determined that despite
what others were saying about the cross,
he would maintain it himself.
And it's striking,
as we go into 1 Corinthians,
but it's striking that Paul
eventually in Galatians,
he spoke in a personal way.
Now, when writing to companies,
he would bring in others.
Being in the same ground,
in the same blessing.
But then, in chapter 2 he speaks,
the Son of God,
who loved me,
and gave himself for me.
And again, in Galatians 6 where we read,
he says that God forbid,
that I should boast,
I should glory,
saving the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ,
by which the world is crucified to me,
and I to the world.
It was a personal thing he was taking up.
So again, despite what others are doing and saying,
this is my ground.
This is what I'm doing.
And I'll continue on.
And the Apostle indeed was a mighty servant
for the Lord.
As we all know.
As we all know.
We read in 1 Corinthians 1,
and again it's just really the end of the chapter
that came before me.
But of Him are ye in Christ Jesus,
who of God is made unto us wisdom,
and righteousness, and sanctification,
we had it this afternoon,
and redemption.
And again, this is the verse,
that according as it is written,
he that glorieth,
let him glory in the Lord.
And it's the same word as we have in Galatians 6.
Again, it could be translated,
I believe the Darby says it as well,
he that boasts,
let him boast in the Lord.
And that again is a quotation from the Old Testament
from Isaiah 45, I think it is,
in Jeremiah chapter 9.
Quotation there.
We have enough to be boasting about
when we think about the Lord.
Don't boast in ourselves,
we shouldn't boast in ourselves.
We have enough to be going on with
when we have Christ before us.
Begin now in contemplation of what He's done,
and it should affect our response to Him.
We spoke about thankfulness,
we should really be thankful to the Lord
for what He's accomplished.
And we should never cease thanking Him.
Because if our thanksgiving, or praise, or worship,
whatever it might be, ceases,
if it stops, as individuals,
it might be that we grow cold in heart,
it might be the effects of our salvation
is maybe lost,
not the salvation itself.
Once saved, saved forever.
But the joy of it
might diminish through various things,
things coming in life.
But we should always be found in a spirit of thanksgiving.
The Apostle writing to Timothy in 2 Timothy,
he reminds us of the last days,
and one of the things that stands out,
the spirit of the last days
will be a spirit of unthankfulness.
We're living in the midst of an unthankful world.
We see floods, earthquakes, whatever.
The minute it happens, God's blamed.
But when it comes to the love of God supplying,
or giving His well-beloved Son to die on our account,
then it's just foolishness as far as the world's concerned.
Just foolishness.
But I think I've learned enough
in my years amongst believers
to say that
thankfulness is a necessary part
of a Christian's makeup
to be ever thankful
to what has been done for us.
And here we have it says,
but of Him that's of God
are ye in Christ Jesus,
who of God is made unto us
righteousness, sanctification, and redemption.
Well, we think the wisdom has come about
because of what has been said earlier.
The Jews require a sign,
the Greeks seek after wisdom.
And when that which has come from God
in relation to our Lord Jesus Christ,
then it's just set aside as foolish.
Foolish.
But you know, these are blessings that
we can say it brings us into a wonderful position.
But that which is true of us positionally
should be also true of us practically.
And a brother this afternoon spoke about sanctification.
The practical implications of it.
Now we have again in Thessalonians,
in the practical sense it says,
sanctify the Lord God in your heart.
So that's a practical outcome
of being in a position
where we've been blessed in such a way.
Christ has been made unto us these things.
And just simply that the recognition
of these different things,
like wisdom,
will keep us from being over-occupied
with the so-called wisdom of men.
With the Dawkins of this world,
who would set aside anything regarding God.
Who would put into people's minds,
whether it's adverts or whatever it is,
no God.
Do what you like, do what you please,
nothing to give account for.
But Dawkins, along with Hawkins,
and others who take the line of
the Darwinian theory, evolution,
they'll have their day.
Their day will come.
One thing that Dawkins has never experienced,
Dawkins has never experienced a deathbed.
Because men who boasted of their atheism,
when it came to their deathbed,
they were gibbering wrecks.
And one man was Voltaire,
French novelist, writer,
and a hater of God.
A hater of the Lord Jesus Christ.
But on his deathbed,
it's reported that he cried out in prayer
and cursing the name of Jesus.
Jesus Christ, oh Jesus Christ.
But he passed from this scene
into eternity, not knowing the Savior.
He not knowing the Savior.
He found no place of repentance.
He may have sought it,
but it didn't come to him.
And as far as the testimony goes,
he died as he lived, an unbeliever.
But their day will come,
and don't be taken up with the wisdom of men.
Think of Christ as our wisdom.
Righteousness, well, we've been set right
by that finished work upon the cross,
and we'll never be more right than what we are
under the righteousness that has come to us
through our Lord Jesus Christ.
Sanctification, we had it this afternoon,
but there's a positional sanctification,
but it should also be seen in that practical sense,
because Christ has been made unto us
sanctification.
And recognizing this,
it might affect our associations,
or what we're involved with,
or what we may be inclined to be involved with,
just to realize what Christ has been made unto us.
But also in his prayer to the Father,
John 17, he says,
and I sanctify myself.
In other words, I'm going back to the glory.
But these are left here
to be guided by the Spirit,
the Holy Spirit,
and to be guided by the truth.
That was his desire for him.
But before the Spirit could come down,
he had to go up.
And so he would sanctify and separate himself
and be presented in the glory above.
And redemption, well,
we've been purchased at such a price.
But the full aspect of redemption
is still to be
redemption of the body,
and that will take place
when the Lord Jesus Christ comes.
And we're presented above
his church, his bride,
there because of what Christ has suffered.
No wonder we have no desire
to wander from the cross.
And because of this,
Paul is saying, well,
according to what is written,
he that glorieth,
and surely we boast in these different things,
because it's come from God through Christ,
let him glory in the Lord.
Let him boast in the Lord.
Because this is what he has done.
And this is what we are to him.
We're connected with a man in the glory
because it tells us,
but of him are ye in Christ Jesus.
Only used of the Lord
after he went back to heaven.
It's a Pauline expression.
Peter uses it twice if you read the Authorized,
once if you read the Derby.
This expression, Christ Jesus.
But again, it was only used ever of the Lord
when he went back to the glory.
And that's where he is.
And that's where we're going to be
because of what he has done
at the cross.
No wonder Paul says, well,
this is what you should be occupied with.
Never mind the wisdom of men.
Think of the wisdom of God.
Even the foolishness of God, it says,
is wiser than men.
We're under the power of a greater effect,
a greater power,
the Lord Jesus Christ.
A power to live right here for God.
A power to please him.
To be a pleasure to him.
Take on the features of Christ.
We know he was a unique man.
But then there is that
which can be seen in our own lives.
It can bring pleasure to the Father.
The more we present Christ,
the more we live Christ,
and the more we speak about Christ,
I'm sure must bring much pleasure to the Father.
He's the one, as we heard this afternoon,
who could say, and the only one who could ever say,
I do always those things that please him.
Everything brought pleasure to the Father.
Last of all, again we have the word
in our authorized verse 2 of chapter 5,
it speaks about,
by whom also we have access by faith into this grace
wherein we stand and rejoice in hope.
And again it can be translated,
we boast in hope.
Or we glory in hope.
We rejoice in hope.
This is what the Apostle has brought to us.
And the best is yet to be.
We're waiting that summoning shout.
Surely it cannot be far off.
The signs of the time tell us
that the coming of the Lord is drawing nigh.
How many times have we heard that?
How many times have we heard men saying to us,
you've been preaching this for years,
it's never happened.
An old sister and I were just talking about
the coming of the Lord.
I was telling her about the heavy traffic
that we came through last night,
stuck out an hour on a bridge
trying to cross the Thames.
And she says, never mind, when we go up to glory,
there'll be no traffic jams.
And that's something to realize.
Wonderful.
Be no hindrance in that day to the outflow of praise.
For that would be found praising today.
For what he has accomplished, what he's done,
and what he is to us now in this present world.
But the hope is still there before us
when again, when I was a lot younger,
first time I came amongst brethren,
I used to hear a saying,
it was attributed to a man called James McBroom.
Maybe I've heard of him.
And he used to say,
what have you got
that death cannot touch?
And if you sat down and say, well,
I think death touches everything.
Anything that I've accomplished,
when I die, it's history, isn't it?
What have I got?
Well, you know, Christians are distinct.
Christians are distinct from the
man and woman of the world.
They might say, I've got nothing.
But for a Christian, the scripture says,
he that hath the son hath life,
something we possess,
that death cannot touch.
It says here, Romans chapter 5,
therefore being justified by faith,
we have peace with God.
The thought of death cannot rob us of that peace.
That's something else that we possess.
And if we read in relation to the hope,
Hebrews 6, which hope we have
as an anchor of the soul.
Now if death should come along,
and we should pass through the article of death,
the hope that we have in life
won't be needed when we're with the Lord,
because we're with the Lord.
The hope is in anticipation of being with the Lord.
But the fear of death cannot rob us
of the anticipation of the coming of the Lord.
And so there are three things,
there may be more that you can think of,
it's a good gospel line,
you can borrow it if you like,
because I borrowed it from Mr. McBroom,
although he died five years before I was saved.
And I've spoken of it a few times.
But it's something that death cannot touch.
And so this blessed peace we have with God
through our Lord Jesus Christ,
everything points back to Him
and to the work of His cross.
And the cross has been mentioned,
or the work of the cross,
the cross has been spoken about
when we speak about God's commendation,
about Christ dying for us,
about His precious blood being shed
and about being justified, reconciled.
But you know there are so many other things
that these things should be seen in our lives,
and there's a little list of them
about tribulation and patience and so on.
And we're living in the time
when these things should be worked into our lives.
Again, the old brethren were always good at telling stories.
And they told us about a brother
who was so concerned because he was very impatient.
And he asked the brother if he would pray for him
that he might show more patience.
And so when they bent their knees in prayer,
the brother asked the Lord to give him more tribulation.
And when they got off their knees, he says,
more or less, whose side are you on?
He says, well, tribulation works patience.
So he asked for some tribulation for the brother.
He didn't have to ask it for someone else.
But these things should have an effect in our lives.
The tribulation might come along,
but it's to work patience.
And now we're in the day of the patience of Christ.
He is patiently waiting
to have that summoning shout cried out.
And we are patiently waiting for Him to come.
And so we have this wonderful hope,
this boast that we have in hope
and boast in hope of the glory of God.
And that's what we're going on to.
So despite what others may say,
despite what others may think about what we believe,
it doesn't really matter.
We accept what the scripture says
and we cling closely to the cross
because that's the pivot on which all turns.
The cross of Christ.
And that's what will land us in the glory.
And in the very last verse in Romans 5 where we read,
and not only so, but we joy in God
through our Lord Jesus Christ
by whom we have now received the reconciliation.
Joy in God.
And again that word joy can be translated boast.
We boast in God through our Lord Jesus Christ.
Or rejoice in God.
Or glory in God.
It's all the same word in the Greek.
But that's a boasting that we can be engaged with.
And it's a boasting that has the permissive,
if that's the word, the permission from God to boast in.
Not boast in our own selves.
To boast in what Christ has done
and what we are to God in Christ
and what Christ is to us as down here
the day of testimony and opportunity
to be marked by these things we read in 1 Corinthians 15
and also to rejoice in the blessed hope
of the glory of God
because that's what we're going on to.
Now we have these things in our hearts
and in our lives
no matter who comes along
or with what they might try and confound us with.
They cannot rob us of these wonderful things.
And very soon I'm sure
we're going to hear that shout.
The very voice that could cry,
it is finished,
will be the voice that will be heard
when the Lord descends from heaven with a shout.
And that's what we're going on to.
May we keep looking to Him
and may we ever be a testimony
to what He has done
because we're going to spend eternity
praising Him again for the value of the cross.
May ways well start today
and found in the spirit of thankfulness
to our Lord Jesus Christ.
I wonder if we could close by singing
Time's away there.
283
When I survey the wondrous cross
on which the Prince of Glory died,
my riches gain I count but loss
and poor content
and all my pride.
Verse 2 says,
Forbid it, Lord, that I should boast
saving the cross of Christ my God.
All the vain things that charm me most
I sacrifice them to His blood.
At very searching words,
with trust in the power of the Spirit,
I could do it.
283
When I survey the wondrous cross
on which the Prince of Glory died,
my riches gain I count but loss
and poor content
and all my pride.
Forbid it, Lord, that I should boast
saving the cross of Christ my God.
All the vain things that charm me most
I sacrifice them to His blood.
See from His head, His hands, His feet,
sorrow and love flowing out.
In exultation and sorrow me
all thoughts compose
so rich a crown.
Well done, O realm of nature,
that thou, my hope, bring far to us all.
Love so amazing, so holy, Lord,
beyond thy soul my life, my hope. …
Transcripción automática:
…
Could we start this evening, please, by singing a hymn together, number 256.
Hail to the Lord's anointed, Great David's greatest son.
When to the time appointed, the rolling years have run,
he comes to break oppression, to set the captive free,
to take away transgression and rule in equity.
Kings shall fall down before him, and gold and incense bring.
All nations shall adore him, his praise all people sing.
The whole hymn, 256.
Hail to the Lord's anointed, Great David's greatest son.
When to the time appointed, the rolling years have run,
he comes to break oppression, to set the captive free,
to take away transgression and rule in equity.
The heavens which shall conceal him, in clouds shall speak and white.
In glory shall reveal him to our rejoicing eyes.
He who with hands uplifted, went from this earth below,
shall come again, O gifted, his blessing to bestow.
We shall come down like showers upon the hillock grass,
and joy and hope like flowers, spring up where he loves us.
Before him on the mountains shall feast the fable through.
And gloriousness in fountains from hill to valley flow.
Kings shall fall down before him, and gold and incense bring.
All nations shall adore him, his praise all people sing.
Outstretched is thy dominion, O river, sea, and shore.
Around thee, Lord, we go, all earth, life, wind, and soul.
We ask it in his name, Amen.
Perhaps we could sing another hymn, it's only a short one, 108.
We'll sing just the first and last verses, 108, King of Kings and Lord of Lords.
King of kings and Lord of lords, O how rich this glorious wealth!
Titus, high and honest fame, now in us the Savior's name.
Soon will he appear again, then his saints with hymns shall ring.
Echo for the glorious rest, King of kings and Lord of lords.
Would you turn please, first of all, to the prophecy of Isaiah.
I'm going to read a verse from chapter 33 and it's verse 17.
Isaiah 33, verse 17.
Thine eyes shall see the King in his beauty.
They shall behold the land that is very far off.
The King in his beauty.
That is the thought that I have this evening and which I want to share with you.
And we'll turn to various scriptures, mostly in the Psalms or in Isaiah,
with perhaps one or two in the New Testament,
which we've had a hint of, more than a hint, this afternoon.
The King in his beauty.
And you may say, why are you taking up this subject?
We shan't see the King in this way that's indicated here.
This is a word to the upright, the person who walks uprightly in Israel.
It's a promise to them.
So you say, why are you occupying us with that this evening?
Well, the answer is that we still can get a glimpse of the King in his beauty.
Think of that scene upon the mountain of Transfiguration
when the Lord appeared in the presence of Moses and Elijah
and also in the presence of Peter, James, and John.
You'll all be familiar, I trust, with the fact that that scene
on the mountain of Transfiguration is a kind of a foretaste.
It's a glimpse ahead of time of the millennium
when the Lord Jesus shall be supreme and he will reign
and there'll be a heavenly company and there'll be an earthly company.
And we see Moses and Elijah as typifying the heavenly company
and Peter, James, and John as typifying the earthly company,
in fact, Israel, who will behold his glory and his beauty
from the perspective of this earth.
And as we heard again this afternoon,
we shall, when the Lord Jesus comes, we shall come with him
and we shall see his glory from a different perspective.
So there is no conflict between this afternoon's message, I trust,
and this evening's.
It's just we're looking from different angles.
You see a friend coming towards you, you see him going away.
The two views you get are completely different,
but they're both of one person.
We're going to look at the Lord Jesus this evening
as the king in all his beauty.
And we shall see him.
You know, there's one of the hymns that Mr. Darby wrote I'm very fond of,
With thee in garments white, Lord Jesus, we shall walk.
And spotless in that heavenly light of all thy sufferings talk.
And we shall get a wonderful appreciation of the fullness,
of the glories and the beauties of his person.
And the more we can lay hold of these things now,
the more our affections will be drawn out towards him.
I was touched this afternoon in the prayer meeting upstairs
the number of brothers who prayed
that our hearts might be drawn to the Lord Jesus.
I'm sure they already have been by the contemplation of him
coming for his own and that wonderful promise
that he himself is going to descend from heaven.
He's not going to send an angel.
He's not going to send anybody else.
He himself is coming to take his own, his beloved,
to be forever with himself.
Well, the eternal ages will show to us
something of the glories of the Lord Jesus
and these things that will be increasingly precious to us,
I'm sure, in eternity.
But they should already be precious to us now.
And this is our starting point.
And from here we must look into the Psalms first
before we come back to the prophets.
But here it is, this wonderful promise
that he that walketh righteously and speaketh uprightly
he that despiseth the gain of oppression
thine eyes shall see the king in his beauty
they shall behold the land that is very far off
and I would just add before we leave this verse
that it's not that the land is far off
but in that land we shall behold
or the Israelite will behold that which is far off.
And so it is to the eye of faith.
Now, for a glimpse of the king in his beauty
we should turn, I think, first to Psalm 45.
I'll read verses 1 to 11.
The other scriptures we're going to read are much shorter.
This is the longest.
And I'm going to read the superscription
which I firmly believe is part of the text.
Psalm 45.
To the chief musician upon Shoshanim
for the sons of Korah, Maskil, a song of loves.
My heart is bubbling over with a good matter.
I speak of the things which I have made, touching the king.
My tongue is the pen of a ready writer.
Thou art fairer than the children of men.
Grace is poured into thy lips.
Therefore God hath blessed thee forever.
Gird thy sword upon thy thigh, O most mighty,
with thy glory and thy majesty.
And in thy majesty ride prosperously because of truth
and meekness and righteousness.
Thy right hand shall teach thee terrible things.
Thine arrows are sharp in the heart of the king's enemies,
whereby the people fall under them.
Thy throne, O God, is for ever and ever.
The scepter of thy kingdom is a right scepter.
Thou lovest righteousness and hatest wickedness.
Therefore God, thy God, hath anointed thee
with the oil of gladness above thy fellows.
All thy garments smell of myrrh and aloes and cassia,
out of the ivory palaces whereby they have made thee glad.
King's daughters were among thy honorable women.
Upon thy right hand did stand the queen in gold of Ophir.
Hearken, O daughter, and consider and incline thine ear.
Forget also thine own people and thy father's house.
So shall the king greatly desire thy beauty,
for he is thy lord, and worship thou him.
Recently at home, we've been making a little bit of a study
of the psalms that are for the sons of Korah.
There are 12 of them.
If you count Psalm 43 as a psalm in itself,
which I firmly believe it is,
although it follows on from Psalm 42,
there are 12 of them, of which all but two
are addressed to the chief musician.
The two that are not are Psalms 48 and 87,
which are concerned with Zion.
That is their subject, Zion, the city of God.
But the others are all addressed to the chief musician.
And it's not just the psalms.
They're all addressed to the chief musician.
And it's not too much of a stretch
of our spiritual judgment, is it,
to see in that musician the one whom we know now
as the Lord Jesus Christ,
the one who the Israelite would know as the Messiah.
And these psalms that are written for the sons of Korah,
they have a variety of themes.
There is a great longing for the Lord's house.
There is a sense of the wilderness pathway.
There is a sense of Zion ahead.
And there is a sense of the sufferings of the Messiah.
Now, that is not so apparent.
But there is a verse in the first of the psalms
for the sons of Korah, Psalm 42, verse 7,
which speaks of the deep calleth unto deep
that the noise of thy water spouts.
All thy waves and thy billows are gone over me.
And that thought you won't find, I think,
in the intervening psalms until you come to the very last one,
Psalm 88, which is like a great opening up
of that one verse,
speaking of the suffering of the Messiah.
It's a psalm of unrelieved suffering.
And it ends with,
Lover and friend, far from me.
And these psalms,
undoubtedly indicted by spiritual men,
are there for our learning and for our profit.
They don't present to us the fullness
that we get in the New Testament.
But if you want to understand
something of the sufferings of Christ,
sufferings to bring about redemption,
something to make a reconciliation
for sinful men and women with God,
then study the psalms.
Make a study of Psalm 88.
I know that sometimes we shy away from these things,
but Psalms 22, 69, 88, 102
will help us to understand the sufferings of Christ.
They bring to us the thoughts that he may have had
as he made his way to the cross.
In a way that the Gospels do not,
because they concentrate mainly
on presenting to us what happened.
But these men, the sons of Korah,
they were only men,
and they were objects of grace.
And they seem to have been particularly impressed
with the grace that had been shown to them.
They were servants in the tabernacle
and later in the temple,
servants concerned with dealing with the holy things,
the holy things of the temple.
They were not destroyed when their father Korah was destroyed.
It says specifically in Numbers,
the sons of Korah perish not.
When those who had rebelled against God
went down into the pit,
the sons of Korah perish not.
And these here have these psalms addressed.
They are psalms for them,
and they are spiritual expressions
of something of the ways of God
and help us to a better understanding
of the Lord Jesus Christ.
And this Psalm 45 that we've read together
perhaps strikes a high note
among the psalms for the sons of Korah
because it deals with the things touching the king.
Not only so, not only does it set these things out
in an objective way,
but it sets them out in a poetic way.
But it sets them out as an expression
of something that the writer had taken in
and was in the good of.
Speak of the things which I have made touching the king.
The writer had made these precious things their own.
And can I impress on you
from the youngest to the oldest,
please, don't think it presumptuous,
make these things your own.
You see, it's the easiest thing in the world, isn't it,
to present things that others have dug out
as objective truth,
and it may be completely true,
but we need to take it down into the heart
and really to feel it
before we can be used to give these things out
and help others to share in them.
I speak of the things which I have made touching the king.
My tongue is the pen of a ready writer.
It took a spiritual man to write that.
It took a man who had really taken into his soul
something of the glories and the beauties
of the one of whom he was writing.
Of course it was inspired.
Of course it was inspired.
The Holy Spirit caused it to be written,
but he used the pen of a man to write it,
and that is what we have here.
If we look at the verses,
the first one introduces the subject,
bubbling over with a good matter.
Do you bubble over when you praise the Lord?
When you gather around him,
you've remembered him in his death,
and you go on to worship the Lord and the Father.
Do you bubble over with the good matter?
Does it pour out of you?
Or are you sometimes forcing it a bit?
We need to be so impressed with these things
that we cannot refrain from uttering
what is in our hearts.
Bubbling over with a good matter,
I speak of the things which I have made touching the king.
My tongue is the pen of a ready writer.
And verse 2 mentions how the one of whom he is writing
is quite beyond compare.
And then he goes in the verses below
to detail some of the attributes of this one.
He speaks of, in verse 4,
In thy majesty rise prosperously because of truth
and meekness and righteousness.
These three things, characteristic of the Messiah,
characteristic of the king.
His title is this righteousness.
Do you see those three things?
Truth, meekness, righteousness.
We'll come back to the meekness in a later scripture.
But righteousness, again in verse 6,
Thy throne, O God, is forever and ever.
The scepter of thy kingdom is a right scepter.
The title of the one who occupies that throne
is righteousness.
His own personal righteousness.
Take note of that because there's a contrast
lower down the verses we read.
Thou lovest righteousness and hatest wickedness.
Therefore God thy God hath anointed thee
with the oil of gladness above thy fellows.
The glimpses we have of the life of the Lord Jesus
as man here below bear out these verses, do they not,
to each one of us.
His love of righteousness, his hatred of wickedness,
his abhorrence of all that detracted from the glory
of God's house.
His righteousness and wickedness cannot exist side by side.
In the mixture in the world in which we live, they do.
But that is not according to God's order.
Righteousness and wickedness, I say again,
cannot exist side by side.
That is why for us as Christians,
there are things from which we must separate.
For Christ it ever is so.
It's unthinkable that the two should ever come together.
Thy throne, thou lovest righteousness
and hatest wickedness.
Therefore God thy God hath anointed thee
with the oil of gladness above thy fellows.
We have evidences, don't we, in the life of the Lord Jesus
here below of the Father's delight in the Son.
This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased.
Twice those words are used.
Once as he came up out of the waters of baptism
and again upon the mountain of transfiguration
of which we have been speaking.
This is my beloved Son anointed with the oil of gladness
above thy fellows.
Anointed.
Christ, of course, means the anointed.
And here it is, confirmation of his position and place.
And it speaks of his garments.
Now what do we understand by garments?
Well garments, I think we may call them
his personal excellences.
But garments really are what are seen, aren't they?
You perhaps recognize a friend by the kind of clothes he wears, perhaps.
But whether you do or not, his garments or her garments
are what you actually see.
And I believe that very often they form a large part
in your impression of somebody.
And certainly here, the garments of the king
are what appear before men and what can be appreciated.
Obviously the odor of those garments,
you have to get quite close to pick it up.
So the closer you are to the Lord Jesus,
the more you will appreciate these things.
But there are three things here mentioned specifically.
Myrrh, aloes, and cassia.
I think we ought to talk about those for a minute.
Now I am no botanical expert.
I'll be the first to admit it.
And I'm indebted very much to Mr. Tom Ratcliffe
who in times past I believe has spoken from this platform
for his book, for these thoughts on these particular plants.
The myrrh is first.
And I expect we would all agree that that must refer to suffering.
You see, the captain of our salvation
and the one who's going to appear as king of kings
and lord of lords in a coming day,
he's been made perfect through sufferings.
And in this picture which depicts his glory,
we cannot leave out the suffering.
And this is, I believe, that of which the myrrh speaks.
And the aloes, now I had a bit more trouble with that.
I believe that it's death, burial, and resurrection,
that which he went through as man.
I'm encouraged to say that by the very fact
that to get the best aloes, I understand,
when you cut the branches of the tree that you get aloe from,
I understand that if you put different branches into water,
the dross will float,
and that which is impregnated with the good resin
will sink to the bottom.
And then what you do, you bring out the heavy branches
that are impregnated with resin, and you bury them.
And the action of the earth on the surrounding wood
causes the wood to fall away
until only the valuable resin is left.
If that is so, I believe that that can clearly describe to us
the process of death, burial, and resurrection.
Certainly, of course, if we speak of the Lord,
certainly, of course, we must say at once
there was no dross to be removed.
But for ourselves, it is a different matter.
But I believe that figuratively,
the myrrh speaks of his suffering,
the aloe of the fact that he went through
death, burial, and resurrection,
and now he's a risen Lord.
And what of the cassia?
The cassia must be different.
You remember in John's Gospel
where Nicodemus and Joseph of Arimathea
came to take down the body of the Lord.
They wrapped it in myrrh and aloes.
But there it says nothing about cassia.
Why?
I believe the cassia was then finished.
And I believe that the cassia speaks of humility
because the cassia, the name, means shriveled,
and so it's used to indicate a bowing in submission,
a stripping away, and a bowing of the head.
And we can see that in the Lord Jesus in his life
in submission to the Father's will.
It was ever the Father's will, not what men might do.
It was to the Father's will.
But when we come to the putting away of the body in the grave,
the submission is over.
But the memory of the suffering
and the memory of the death, burial, and resurrection
must always remain.
To the hearts of his own in every age and dispensation,
those things must be precious.
And I believe that they are some of the beauties of the king
which we have listed here.
Then before we leave this passage,
we have mention of the queen.
So he has a queen.
He has a companion fitted to himself.
Now we must say and be quite clear on this
that this is Jerusalem.
It's not the assembly.
It's the bride of Revelation 19.
It is the Jewish bride.
But she is here fitted for him.
But what a difference.
What's her title to be there?
We said just now, didn't we,
that the Lord's title to the position that he has
is his righteousness.
Here, her title is not her righteousness.
She may have righteousness given her,
these garments that she's brought in,
but her title to be there,
if you read verses 10 and 11, it's pure grace.
She's there through grace.
And we see her, Jerusalem, coming back
as from a distant country.
And that's how it's going to be
when the kingdom is set up
and God's ancient people, Israel,
are taken up into their place once again.
We heard this afternoon, did we not,
and don't let us forget it,
that all Israel shall be saved.
Why is that?
Well, the remnant will become the nation
and all Israel will be saved.
And there's another verse there too
in that chapter in Romans that says,
the gifts and calling of God are without repentance.
And what God has said, he will carry out.
And so that's another reason,
on top of what we had explained to us this afternoon,
and I'm very thankful we did,
because it makes my job this evening very much easier,
the gifts and calling of God are without repentance.
If God has said something, he will do it.
And we cannot imagine, as was explained to us,
that these things concerning Israel
are going to be sort of taken away from Israel
and given to the church.
That impoverishes both and leaves nothing behind.
The gifts and calling of God are without repentance.
So here is this one, this companion for the king,
but she's brought back through sheer grace.
The language makes it quite clear.
She has been away and she's brought back in grace.
The language is reminiscent of Deuteronomy 21,
and that is quite surprising
when you consider that we're speaking of Jerusalem,
where it speaks in Deuteronomy 21
of when you go to war against your enemy
and you see a beautiful woman
and have a desire unto her that thou wouldst have her to thy wife,
and thou shalt bring her home to thine house, and so on.
And she shall put the raiment of her captivity from off her,
and shall remain in thine house,
and bewail her father and her mother a full month.
And after that thou shalt go in unto her and be her husband,
and she shall be thy wife.
And here it is, you see,
and also thine own people and thy father's house.
Don't let's spoil these things
by trying to interpret them as referring to ourselves.
This is God in Christ receiving back to himself Jerusalem,
which has gone so desperately astray.
She's going to be received back in full grace
and she's going to set aside the things that were hers before.
And the king will greatly desire her beauty,
for he is thy Lord and worship thou him.
And he will have worship from Israel in that coming day.
Let us go back now to the prophecy of Isaiah.
Chapter 32.
Behold, a king shall reign in righteousness,
and princes shall rule in judgment.
A man shall be as a hiding place from the wind
and a covet from the tempest,
as rivers of water in a dry place,
as the shadow of a great rock in a weary land.
A king shall reign in righteousness.
We've already said that his title to reign
is indeed his righteousness,
so we don't need to spend too much time on this chapter
except to point out that it comes after
a most mixed series of messages
in the earlier chapters of Isaiah.
If you read Isaiah through, you may, if you're like me,
be a little bit bewildered by the changes of direction.
But if you think about it and pray about it,
you can see a pattern beginning to emerge.
A sign is given in chapter 7, verse 14.
Again in chapter 9, verses 6 to 7,
that a child is going to be born,
a son is going to be given,
and the zeal of the Lord of hosts will perform it.
In chapter 26, there is an invitation to the faithful
to hide while God punishes the inhabitants of the earth.
Now, those verses there at the end of chapter 26,
they will mean a great deal
to the suffering remnant in a coming day.
I'm not going to go into them in detail at this moment,
but they are, I commend them to you
because although you can't interpret them
as referring to yourself, you can apply them.
There may be times when you want to take advantage of this.
Come, my people, enter thou into thy chambers
and shut thy doors about thee.
Hide thyself, as it were, for a little moment
until the indignation be overpassed.
For behold, the Lord cometh out of his place
to punish the inhabitants of the earth for their iniquity.
The earth also shall disclose her blood
and shall no more cover her slain.
There is the indication of God's love for his people
and his provision for them in the time of Jacob's trouble.
There are also in these earlier chapters
nine or ten burdens and five or six woes.
And after tracing the course of man's failure
and the absolute futility in chapter 31
of relying on Egypt, in other words,
of relying on man and man's strength,
then God here in 32 verse 1 reveals his man,
the king who's going to reign in righteousness.
And the book will go on.
We can't go through it all, obviously,
but the book will go on to make more and more
of this king who's going to reign in righteousness.
And in contrast to man
in whose hands rule has been placed
or may yet be placed,
here is one who's going to reign
whose title and whose claim is based on righteousness.
And perhaps the princes who shall rule in judgment,
perhaps they are the twelve who will sit on thrones with him,
the twelve tribes of Israel.
Now let's go to chapter 40.
Sorry, before we go there, let's go to Zechariah.
Zechariah.
Chapter 9 and verse 9.
Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Zion.
Shout, O daughter of Jerusalem.
Behold, thy king cometh unto thee.
He is just and having salvation,
lowly and riding upon an ass,
and upon a colt, the foal of an ass.
Here's our king.
Here's the king of Israel.
He's not coming with pomp and ceremony.
This verse, of course, I suppose,
was fulfilled already in his lifetime.
And this was the manner of his entering into Jerusalem
when he commanded for a mount,
he commanded a colt, the foal of an ass.
He is just and having salvation,
lowly and riding upon an ass.
This was a sign given here by Zechariah
that should surely have appealed to the hearts
of those who saw it fulfilled in Jerusalem that day.
That has been fulfilled.
But when he comes again, the scene will be different.
He will not, when he comes again,
ride upon the foal of an ass.
His feet will stand upon the Mount of Olives.
The mount itself will divide.
But the meek and gentle character,
the one of whom it speaks here, will never leave him.
Prophecy is without perspective.
And we're coming now to Isaiah 40,
but I mention it here first in connection with Zechariah 9-9
because the two things are connected.
If you turn to Isaiah 40, please,
you will see there things that have been fulfilled
and things that are yet to be fulfilled.
And we're just going to read the first few verses.
But why is prophecy without perspective?
Well, one reason, of course,
is the fact that God only reveals
what man is able to bear at each new revelation.
So his revelation never gets ahead of itself.
And that is why, as we have heard already today,
the church is not named in the Old Testament.
There may be shadows.
There may be things that now we know about the church.
We can look back and say, yes, that illustrates it.
That gives me a picture.
But prophecy never anticipates
that which is not yet to be revealed.
That's one reason.
The other reason is that
the prophecy sets out God's plan.
Now, if you look at a plan,
if an architect shows you a plan of a building,
you'll see it all laid out there
and everything's there, isn't it?
But the plan won't tell you
whether you have to build the foundation
before you put on the superstructure,
whether you have to have the walls up
before you put in the electrics.
That's detail which follows in a different form.
But the plan enables you to see and to understand
what the finished house is going to be like.
And I think if we think of prophecy like that,
it may help us.
The other thing, the third thing, of course,
is, and this is something we may all have experienced,
if you look at a range of mountains or hills
in the distance.
I can certainly remember doing this,
but I can't remember where it was now.
It doesn't matter.
You see two or three mountains
and they look quite close together
and they all look about the same.
But as you get near to the first one,
you see that it's actually not very big
and the one that you thought was just next to it
is a long way away.
And it's huge.
And it's all quite different when you get there.
So although what you saw was what was really so,
the closer you get, the better your understanding becomes.
That may be another reason
that prophecy to us appears to have no perspective.
Let's read the first five verses.
"'Comfort ye my people, saith your God.
"'Speak ye comfortably to Jerusalem and cry unto her
"'that her warfare is accomplished,
"'that her iniquity is pardoned.
"'For she hath received of the Lord's hand
"'double for all her sins.'
"'The voice of him that crieth in the wilderness,
"'Prepare ye the way of the Lord.
"'Make straight in the desert a highway for our guard.
"'Every valley shall be exalted,
"'and every mountain and hill shall be made low,
"'and the crooked shall be made straight,
"'and the rough places plain.
"'And the glory of the Lord shall be revealed,
"'and all flesh shall see it together.
"'For the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it.'"
What a wonderful panorama those verses are, aren't they?
Verse 3, of course, has already been fulfilled.
The other verses are yet to be fulfilled.
But here is comfort coming to the nation of Israel.
At this point, we're looking at it from the perspective
that the Assyrian and the Babylonian have been set aside.
They've been dealt with.
The present times, the times of the Gentiles, are over.
And Messiah is coming now to comfort his people.
And he will do that once the times of the Gentiles are over.
He's coming to comfort his people, to speak to them
and tell them that her iniquity is pardoned,
for she has received of the Lord's hand double for all her sins.
That is a touching expression of God's love and concern
for his people, isn't it?
They've received double at her hand for all their sins.
I believe it must include those things that not only God has done himself
but that he has permitted to happen to his people Israel and the Jews.
When you think how they have been persecuted,
thrown out of countries, made homeless,
and treated like the offscourings of the earth for centuries.
Well, God, the righteous judge, is going to say one day,
he's going to say enough is enough.
You've received double for all your sins.
Now I'm coming in, in comfort.
And he's going to send this one of whom we're reading.
First of all, he has a forerunner.
And that forerunner has already been seen in this world, hasn't he?
It's obviously John the Baptist, isn't it?
The voice of him that crieth in the wilderness,
prepare ye the way of the Lord,
make straight in the desert a highway for our God.
John the Baptist himself used those words to describe himself
and to explain his mission.
That's already gone forth.
And the rest is waiting its moment
when God is going to come back and comfort his people.
But things have got to be changed.
The mystery of iniquity is working.
And the man of sin is going to be revealed
as we've heard this afternoon.
What a trail of devastation is going to be left behind.
And things have got to be made straight by the one who is coming.
Every valley exalted and every mountain and hill made low.
Are we talking about geographical things, do you suppose?
There may be an element of that,
but I'm sure it means what is regarded as high
and what is regarded as low in this world.
And there are those powers and authorities
that have got to be made low.
And there are lowly ones to be brought out into the light.
And the crooked shall be made straight.
We heard about Jacob, didn't we, this afternoon?
All the Jacob-like ways have got to be given away.
We've been going through the story of Jacob recently
in our Bible readings in Hounslow.
And we've seen something of what was said to us this afternoon
of Jacob's constant striving on his own behalf,
almost as though he didn't trust that God would do for him
what God had promised.
Even after God had appeared to him at Bethel
at the end of Chapter 28 of Genesis
and made specific promises to him
to keep him in all the ways that he went
and to bring him back safely to this place again.
What do we see?
We see he spends 20 years in Haran
and he's arguing and bargaining with Laban.
It's hard to tell one from t'other at times, isn't it?
But all the time, God's hand was over him
and God's eye was upon him.
And Jacob, the name means supplanted, isn't it?
Those ways of Jacob have got to be given up
and they will be given up.
He's brought back, of course, at last to Bethel.
God asks him more than once to come back to Bethel,
the house of God, and he does.
And that story, the story of Jacob,
it has its own moral meaning
but it's also a wonderful illustration, if you like,
of God's ways with Israel
and how he's going to bring it back to himself.
And Jacob's ways are going to be given up
and they'll be lost in Israel
as it gathers itself together at Bethel, the house of God.
The glory of the Lord is going to be revealed.
It's going to be seen.
All flesh shall see it together
for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it.
What a change from what goes on,
what has gone on in this world so far.
What was the cry when he was here before?
We have no king but Caesar.
And in a parable that the Lord Jesus told himself,
which doubtless expresses the thought of the people,
we will not have this man to reign over us.
Well, we know that eternity is coming
when God will be all in all.
But before that, here in this world,
in this very place where the Lord Jesus
was rejected and cast out,
no place found for him, his glory is going to be seen.
Aren't you thankful that it is so?
This is part of the plan of God
that before this world is burned up,
as Peter tells us,
that all flesh is going to see his glory
and they're all going to have to bow before it.
Every knee shall bow
and every tongue confess him, Lord,
to the glory of God the Father.
There is a commentary, too, if we go back to Zechariah.
The time's gone. Wait a minute. I'll try and be quick.
Zechariah chapter 8, verses 21 to 23.
And the inhabitants of the city shall go to one another,
saying, Let us go speedily to pray before the Lord
and to seek the Lord of hosts.
I will go also.
Yes, many people and strong nations
shall come to seek the Lord of hosts in Jerusalem
and to pray before the Lord.
Thus saith the Lord of hosts,
In those days it shall come to pass
that ten men shall take hold
out of all the languages of the nations,
even shall take hold of the skirt of him that is a Jew,
saying, We will go with you,
for we have heard that God is with you.
What a change from present attitudes and circumstances.
The Lord is going to have his place even here on this world.
We could go on.
Chapter 6 speaks of him reigning as king and priest
upon his throne, the true Melchizedek.
Psalm 72.
We will end with this because time has gone away.
Psalm 72.
I am just going to read a few verses
and indicate some characteristics of the coming kingdom.
Give the king thy judgment, so God,
and thy righteousness unto the king's son.
He shall judge thy people with righteousness
and thy poor with judgment.
The king is going to rule.
There will be an end to this thing
that men are so proud of called democracy.
It may be something that works under present circumstances
but I think it's going to come to an end
with the times of the Gentiles.
And the king is going to rule in righteousness.
Verse 16.
There shall be a handful of corn in the earth
upon the tops of the mountains.
The fruit thereof shall shake like Lebanon
and they of the city shall flourish like grass of the earth.
Men talk today about ending poverty.
For some years we've had a slogan,
Make Poverty History,
and I think I've said from this platform before
but I'm going to say it again, that is nonsense.
The Lord will achieve what he will achieve in his own time.
While we are here in this present dispensation,
the poor are always with us, and they will be.
But here we see a reign of plenty,
complete prosperity, and an end to poverty.
And finally, verses 17 to 20.
His name shall endure forever.
His name shall be continued as long as the sun
and men shall be blessed in him.
All nations shall call him blessed.
Blessed be the Lord God, the God of Israel,
who only doeth wondrous things.
And blessed be his glorious name forever.
And let the whole earth be filled with his glory.
Amen and amen.
Yes, one name only.
An end to the gods that men set up,
an end to their striving and objectives.
The Lord God is going to be adored
and his name is going to continue as long as the sun
and his name is going to be blessed forever.
And this concludes the prayers of David.
This is as far as David goes.
We know that we have spiritual blessings
and a heavenly future to look forward to,
and we must never confuse the two things.
But while we rightly dwell, and we love to dwell,
on the mystery of the assembly of Christ and his church,
and I wouldn't have it any other way,
don't let us forget while we enjoy our own blessings
that the Lord does have a portion and he does have a place,
both with Israel and in this world,
and that is going to be displayed in a coming day
when we shall see him reign as King of kings
and Lord of lords.
Could we sing in closing?
134.
Lord of glory, we adore thee.
Christ of God, ascended high.
Heart and soul, we love thee fully.
Glorious is thy name.
Christ of God, ascended high.
Heart and soul, we love thee fully.
Glorious now beyond the sky.
Here we worship thee always.
Excellency of thine is.
Mighty King with glory crowned.
Rightful heir and Lord of all.
Once rejected, stood disheartened.
In idols and caves to go.
Here we all have thee adored.
Glorious now and evermore.
Lord of life, to them exalted.
Lesser yet a curse was made.
All thy fathers loved thee, O death.
Yet in death's calm anguished lay.
Live with peace now, live with hope.
Ne'er in fear of sorrow told.
Royal oaths shall soon embed thee.
Royal spandrels crown thy brow.
Christ of God, our souls confess thee.
King and sovereign, even now.
Here we reverence thee always.
Only Lord and Christ always. …
Transcripción automática:
…
May we sing together the hymn 160.
160. O bright and blessed hope, when shall it be that we his face, long loved, revealed
shall see, O when without a cloud his features trace, whose faithful love so long we've known
in grace. The whole hymn 160.
O bright and blessed hope, when shall it be that we his face, long loved, revealed shall
see, O when without a cloud his features trace, whose faithful love so long we've known in
grace. That love itself enjoy, which ever true,
did in the fable of Bethlehem assume. O Jesus, not unknown, thy self shall build,
the heart in which thou dwells, and shall dwell still. Still, Lord, to see thy face,
thy voice to hear, to know thy present love forever live, to gaze upon thy self, so faithful
love, love proved in secret held with thee alone. To see that love content on us flow
forth, forever thy delight glow with thy reward. Know what is next thy heart can we forget,
thy saints, O Lord, with thee in glory met. Perfect in comeliness before thy face,
the eternal witness all of thine own grace. Together their songs of endless praise,
with one harmonious voice in joy they'll raise.
In the name of our Lord Jesus, amen. I'd like us to read together just three very small portions.
There'll be others to look at as we go through, but by way of introduction, may we first turn to
first epistle of Corinthians and chapter 15. 1 Corinthians chapter 15 and verse 51.
Behold, I show you a mystery. We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed. In a moment,
in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump, for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be
raised incorruptible, and we shall be changed. Behold, I show you a mystery. And then over in
verse 25, as Christ also loved the church and gave himself for her. Verse 30, for we are members of
his body, of his flesh, and of his bones. For this cause shall a man leave his father and mother, and
shall be joined unto his wife, and they too shall be one flesh. This is a great mystery, but I speak
concerning Christ and the church. And then in Genesis chapter 2, Genesis chapter 2 and verse 21.
And the Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall upon Adam, and he slept. And he took one of his ribs and
closed up the flesh instead thereof. And the rib which the Lord God had taken from man, made he a
woman, and brought her unto the man. And Adam said, this is now bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh.
She shall be called woman, because she was taken out of man. Therefore shall a man leave his father and
his mother, and shall cleave unto his wife, and they shall be one flesh.
I've had on my heart over these last few months a very real impression that I should take up a subject
which is not unknown to us. Indeed, it's a subject with which we're very familiar. It's a subject that's
often taken up, often referred to. But I feel, especially for the younger ones, especially in view of the fact
that nowadays one can so readily find opinions and views expressed, particularly on the internet, but also
in printed literature. Many opinions and views are available, and I feel it's a very good thing to be
thoroughly grounded in what is true. And so I make no apologies for taking up something with which we're
familiar, because all the while there are different views promulgated, all the while the error is still spoken of,
it's vital that we rehearse together the truth. And I propose in some introductory remarks to show why I feel
the truth of our subject, and I'll state now that of course it relates to the coming of the Lord Jesus for his own,
and in particular the importance of looking for him. That's the truth that I want to speak about.
About 180 years ago or so, some Christians were able to come together and were exercised to look into the Scriptures
to discuss between themselves, to help one another as to their understanding of prophecy. And as they did so,
as they devoted themselves to the study of the Scriptures, there began to emerge a very clear understanding of what the Bible taught.
And it was something which perhaps had been lost sight of for many hundreds of years previously.
Of course, many today use this historical fact as an argument against the truth. They say, well of course these things are relatively new.
They say these teachings didn't exist before this one or that one wrote about them.
They refer to certain brothers as having been the source of new teaching, which they say is not true because historically the church never believed these things.
Well, the reason I read together the verse in Corinthians and in Ephesians is to draw our attention to this idea of a mystery.
And I should like to say at the outset that what I believe our subject this afternoon is not something that's a novelty.
It's not something that's new, but that it was something that the Scriptures have taught from the very beginning.
I'm persuaded that the first believers, the early church, they spoke about, they understood and they lived in the good of the truth that the Lord Jesus is coming at any moment for his own.
I believe also that this is a truth that was very early on lost sight of, very early on.
I think if we turn to the writings of John, if we turn to the later epistles, we can see already that the Spirit of God of necessity has had to speak of error that's come in, of things being given up, being lost sight of.
And so we can see how quickly in the hands of man, when anything is given to man in responsibility, how quickly failure sets in.
And I believe that the truth that the Scriptures taught was very, very early lost sight of in the church's history.
And that alone is the reason why you find nothing of it in the church fathers and in the very early writings.
Now, many church historians, they approach it from another angle.
They say, well, if we want to know what the early church taught, let's look back in the church fathers and see what their writings contain.
And they look there in vain for these things.
And then they say, well, these truths, they weren't taught by the fathers and therefore the truth that was brought out in the early 1800s is a novelty and not to be trusted.
And I believe this is a very dangerous way of looking at it.
The reason these things are not found in the earliest writings is that they had already been lost sight of.
And I believe there's a good reason why that's the case.
But firstly, to go back to our scene in the early 1800s.
Here, believers on the Lord Jesus, they, because of the circumstances around them, the darkness of the day, the activities of Napoleon and others,
they began to ask themselves, was Napoleon the fulfillment of biblical prophecy?
And so the circumstances caused men to inquire into these things.
And as they did so, I believe the work of the spirit was that their eyes were opened and they began to see things.
Not that they were a novelty.
They had always been there, but simply they had been lost sight of.
And the reason they had been lost sight of is that they relate to the person of the Lord Jesus.
And Satan first attacks that which is most precious to God.
He attacks that which is most vital first.
And if he's successful in getting believers to lose sight of the most important truth, then other truths can wait.
And sure enough, they did wait.
There was decline and there was departure throughout the years.
To the extent that the very nature of salvation was lost sight of.
And it required the reformation for the truth of, the simple truth of the gospel to be recovered.
Now, no well-taught Christian questions the truth of what was brought out in the reformation,
simply because it had been unheard of prior to that.
They accept readily that biblical truth had been forgotten, lost sight of, had been replaced with works,
with the Catholic church system, and with many things of man's origin.
But the grace of God, the work of the Holy Spirit, in the time of the reformation, these truths were recovered.
But they fell short of going back to all that the scriptures had.
And it was left to men later on for the Holy Spirit to work in their hearts.
Now, the thing about these early conferences, the first in Albury and Surrey and later in Powerscourt in Ireland,
was that as men looked at the scriptures, there were various things that they were enlightened as to.
It wasn't one subject only, it wasn't the emphasis of only one thing, but many things became apparent.
And it's as if when they saw the importance of these things that everything else fell into place.
And I've put it to you that when we see the distinct place that the Lord Jesus has,
and we put him in his rightful place, then everything else falls in line.
And so it was that as they began to have a clearer understanding of the truth of the Lord's coming for his saints,
they began to realise that there was a distinction between the church and Israel.
They began to see exactly what it was that the church was, what its hopes were, what its purpose was, how it should function.
Everything began to fall in line.
And, dear brethren, we are the beneficiaries, the recipients of a very rich heritage of truth.
And we should be very grateful that we are able, like I think it was Sir Isaac Newton said,
he stood on the shoulders of giants.
Now none of these things which we take up today, they're not new to us, we've not discovered them for ourselves.
We have the benefit of godly brothers who've gone before, who've brought these things out, and they're readily available.
And it's a very good thing if we rehearse them, if we remind ourselves of them, if we go over them again and again,
so that we're grounded and rooted in these vital truths.
So the movement of the Spirit, as I believe it was, brought things into a proper perspective.
Believers, they realized that the Lord Jesus had given himself for the church, in those verses we read in Ephesians.
They realized that what the church was, was a company of those for whom the Lord died to be united to himself.
It wasn't an organization, it wasn't anything that should be linked with the state,
it wasn't something one should go into for a career.
These things had been practiced for hundreds of years, but they realized that it had a unique place in God's mind.
And more than that, they realized that actually it was distinct from Israel, and that Israel had its own purpose and future.
And as they realized these things, over time they found that everything else settled into place.
And the Holy Spirit was given liberty.
They realized that the practice of having a distinction between clergy and laity,
the practice of giving all responsibility in the hands of one man, wasn't according to Scripture.
And so they began to open their Bibles and to find their instruction for their path and for their practice.
And I trust we've learned something of these things.
But what I want to be occupied with, with the remainder of our time together,
is to say something about what the Bible teaches us about the Lord coming for his own.
About the truth that the Church does not go through the tribulation.
That we have a hope that is based on the coming of the Lord Jesus.
That it's he that we look for, not for anything else.
And I believe that if we're occupied with the Lord Jesus, everything else will fall into place.
There are other opportunities to speak about various other truths and we're often occupied with them.
But first and foremost, let's get the truth of those things which relate to the Lord Jesus.
We get that right and everything will fall into place.
The Bible opens with pictures and types which with, we might say, with the benefit of spiritual hindsight,
we can see that they very clearly teach us things which we only learn of in the New Testament.
And we read two verses that speak of a mystery.
Behold, I show you a mystery.
I hope we're all clear what a mystery is when we read it in the Bible.
In the world, we speak about a mystery. It's something that's unknown. Nobody knows about it.
It's hidden. But when the Bible speaks about a mystery, it's trying to convey a completely different picture.
When the Bible uses the word mystery, it's not to us any longer a mystery.
It was once, and that's the point, it was once unknown. It was once hidden, but is now revealed.
And when the Apostle Paul says, behold, I show you a mystery, we can say to ourselves, it's no longer hidden.
He's shown it to us, and the mystery is to us a mystery no longer.
And so, the Apostle, he spoke of two mysteries in the verses that we've looked at.
The first mystery is this wonderful matter of Christ and the Assembly, Christ and the Church.
If we read our Old Testaments, we find nothing explicitly about the Church.
It wasn't taught. It wasn't known. It wasn't understood. It was hidden.
And it's not until the Apostle Paul comes on the scene as speaking the word of the Lord,
the Holy Spirit inspired him to reveal these wonderful truths, and he is able to show us the mystery of Christ and the Assembly.
And so, if we want to learn objective truth about these things, we can only turn to the New Testament.
If we look in the Old Testament, we won't find direct objective truth relating to the Church.
But, on the other hand, the truth of the Church, of Christ and the Church, is not an afterthought.
It's not something that God thought up when everything else was going wrong. No.
In fact, we're told that we were chosen before the foundation of the world.
And we learn that actually the Church was ever in the mind of God.
And so, we're not surprised when we open our Bibles and the very first book, in the very earliest chapters,
we find not teaching about the Church, but we find a picture of it. We find it in time.
And we find that in regard to Adam and Eve.
Adam was put into a sleep, and this is a picture of the Lord Jesus having to go into death.
One of Adam's ribs, Eve, was formed.
And the scriptures we read in Genesis 2.
Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother, and shall cleave unto his wife, and they shall be one flesh.
And the Apostle quotes those very verses in Ephesians.
He quotes them as being relevant to this mystery, this wonderful truth of Christ and his Church.
Christ, who loved the Church and gave himself for her.
And so, I use this to establish the principle that what God had ever in his heart,
though for many centuries it was hidden, until in his own time it was revealed,
he has put in his word types, pictures, that with the benefit of spiritual hindsight, we might say,
we can read it and profit by it.
Another mystery of which Paul spoke, we shall not all sleep.
And in Corinthians and elsewhere, Paul was bringing out truths which, by virtue of the fact that he describes them as a mystery,
we do not, we will not find them in the Old Testament.
And I suggest to each one of you that unless we grasp this, unless we fully realise
the way in which God has inspired the writers of his Holy Word,
we're never going to fully understand the truth that he desires to unfold to us.
If you read writers on various subjects, you find that they go into the Old Testament and the New,
and without realising this distinction that the Spirit has placed in his word,
they go off on a tangent and they seek to establish their own ideas on the basis of what they find,
not dividing, not rightly dividing the Word of God.
If we stay in Genesis, chapter 5 of Genesis, we have a genealogy starting from Adam.
I believe that this is a true history. It's not intended to be a myth.
It's a true record of the creatorial order that God established,
and we have a full account of the first characters.
And chapter 5 of Genesis, in verse 21, we're introduced to a character called Enoch.
And we're told there, Enoch lived 65 years and begat Methuselah.
And Enoch walked with God after he begat Methuselah 300 years and begat sons and daughters.
And all the days of Enoch were 300, 60, and 5 years.
And Enoch walked with God, and he was not, for God took him.
Now, it's a very interesting little chapter.
And if you, for a bit of homework, you go home and you write out the ages that are given,
and if you add them up in your head, or if you have to use a calculator, you'll find that
we start with Adam, and after so many years, we're told 130 years, he begat a son called Seth.
And then after that, we're told how much further, how much more Adam lived.
And in all, we're told that Adam lived for 930 years.
But if you follow the sequence through and compare the years given,
you'll discover that when Enoch lived, Adam was still alive, still very much alive.
And you'll discover that when Methuselah was born, I think if my math is correct,
Adam was about 622 years old.
In other words, he had over 300 years more to live.
And I find that very instructive.
And I find it so for this reason.
We're all familiar, I trust, with the account of the fall, when sin came in.
And as a result of Adam and Eve's disobedience, a curse was pronounced.
One of the consequences of the fall of Adam and Eve was that God said to Adam,
you shall die.
Now, of course, the first murder, Cain and Abel, the account of that is brought in.
But putting that for a moment aside, I want us to think of the effect of Adam's death on Enoch and Methuselah.
Now, it's a very interesting thing, the meaning of the name Methuselah.
It means something along the lines of, it shall come when he dies.
It shall come when he dies.
And I suggest that that was an intelligent name given by Enoch.
I believe that Enoch named his son Methuselah intelligently.
In other words, he named it in view of what he had learned.
Can you imagine Enoch growing up in the lifetime of Adam, in the presence of Adam,
and not learning something of God's ways?
Can you imagine that there was no communication between Adam and these other characters?
I'm persuaded that Enoch learned many truths from Adam and from others.
Adam, he had a relationship with God.
God provided Adam and Eve with skins.
And again, we have another picture of truth that wasn't revealed until later on,
but there already, in picture form, God is teaching us something.
The covering of Adam and Eve was brought about by the provision of skins.
An animal had to die in order to provide skins, and the truth of substitution.
A covering for what is offensive before God can only be provided by the death of another.
Without the shedding of blood, there is no remission of sins.
And we get this, we might say, New Testament teaching given to us very early on in type, right at the beginning.
And so, I'm sure Enoch, he grew up in the good of certain wonderful godly truth.
And he called his son Methuselah, it shall come when he dies.
And he called him that because he understood something of the truth of God.
Now, you don't need to take my word for it, because we can turn to Jude,
and we can read there, in Jude 14,
And Enoch also, the seventh from Adam, prophesied of these, saying,
Behold, the Lord cometh with ten thousands of his saints to execute judgment upon all.
Enoch prophesied about the coming of the Lord,
of the coming of the Lord with myriads of his own to execute judgment.
Where do we read in the early chapters of Genesis about the Lord's coming?
We don't.
But the very fact that by inspiration, in Jude, we read that Enoch prophesied,
it shows that Enoch was intelligent as to these wonderful truths of God.
So, Enoch, he obviously knew many, many godly truths.
And he named his son intelligently.
And there was Adam.
And we read, Enoch walked with God after he begat Methuselah 300 years.
And that 300 years is more or less, though not exactly,
coincides with the last 300 years of Adam's life.
Then Adam died.
Can you imagine what an effect that had on those that lived at that time?
Here, indisputably, was the judgment of God in regard to sin.
God had said, you shall die.
And there came a moment, there came a day when Adam did die.
And so, it must have had a tremendous effect on Enoch and those around him, particularly Enoch.
Here was proof positive that when God said something, he meant it.
Judgment was brought in.
But then, you know, God came in in wonderful grace.
As if to say, yes, the judgment in regard to sin has taken place.
As if to say, yes, in this scene of judgment, in this scene of sin,
and all the sorrows and consequences of it.
In amidst such a scene, God comes in in grace.
And we read, and Enoch was not, for God took him.
Wonderful grace.
God came in.
And Enoch was translated.
He lived, at that time, he'd only lived 365 years.
Relatively short time compared to those of the others.
And God took him.
And then, Methuselah lived on.
And if you go on to read the rest of Genesis 5 and Genesis 6,
and you look at the timing of it,
you will notice that the very year in which Methuselah died, the flood came.
The very year.
It will come when he dies.
Enoch, he understood the truth about the flood.
The judgment that God would execute upon this earth.
Before then, Enoch was taken up to be with God.
And I believe we have in this scene a type, a picture of the truth,
which remained hidden for hundreds and hundreds of years,
all through the Old Testament,
and it wasn't until Paul could say, behold, I show you a mystery.
Then, and only then, was the truth brought out.
But it was ever in God's mind.
It was ever in God's heart.
And I believe that Enoch is a picture of the truth,
that the church, before the tribulation comes, will be caught up,
taken up to be with Christ.
Further, we can read on Noah and the ark, eight souls.
And I think it's in Peter, it says, a few, that is eight.
And I believe that Noah is a picture of the godly remnants of Israel
that will be saved through the tribulation period.
Just a few, just eight, a remnant representative of those of Israel
that God will preserve through all that time of sorrow.
Well, we must move on because I desire just to take up a few scriptures,
and we need to turn to 1 Thessalonians.
1 Thessalonians 4, verse 13.
I would not have you to be ignorant, brethren,
concerning them which are asleep that ye sorrow not,
even as others which have no hope.
For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again,
even so them also which sleep in Jesus will God bring with him.
For this we say unto you by the word of the Lord,
that we which are alive and remain unto the coming of the Lord
shall not precede them which are asleep.
For the Lord himself shall descend from heaven with a shout,
with the voice of the archangel, with the trump of God,
and the dead in Christ shall rise first.
Then we which are alive and remain
shall be caught up together with them in the clouds
to meet the Lord in the air, and so shall we ever be with the Lord.
Therefore comfort one another with these words.
But of the times and of the seasons, brethren,
ye have no need that I write unto you.
For yourselves know perfectly the day of the Lord
so cometh as a thief in the night.
For when they say peace and safety,
then sudden destruction cometh upon them
as travel upon a woman with child, and they shall not escape.
But ye, brethren, are not in darkness,
that that day should overtake you as a thief.
Ye are all the children of light and the children of the day.
We are not of the night nor of darkness.
Therefore let us not sleep as do others,
but let us watch and be sober.
Turn over to 2 Thessalonians 2.
Now we beseech you, brethren,
by the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ
and by our gathering together unto him,
that ye be not soon shaken in mind or be troubled,
neither by spirit nor by word nor by letter as from us,
as that the day of Christ is present,
which is what it should read,
not at hand as in the authorized,
but that the day of Christ is present.
Let no man deceive you by any means,
for that day shall not come
except there come a falling away first,
and that man of sin be revealed the son of perdition,
who opposeth and exalteth himself above all that is called God,
or that is worshipped,
so that he as God sitteth in the temple of God,
showing himself in the temple of God,
or that is worshipped,
so that he as God sitteth in the temple of God,
showing himself that he is God.
Remember ye not that when I was yet with you
I told you these things?
And now ye know what withholdeth
that he might be revealed in his time.
For the mystery of iniquity doth already work,
only he who now letteth will let,
until he be taken out of the way.
And then shall that wicked be revealed,
whom the Lord shall consume with the spirit of his mouth
and shall destroy with the brightness of his coming.
Here, the apostle is taking up truth
which had not previously been revealed.
He says, as from the Lord.
He's speaking as an apostle.
Now, notice a few key points in these verses.
We must get a firm grasp of these things
if we are to remain unshaken
by the contrary views and opinions
that are often too readily available.
Firstly, Paul says,
he doesn't want us to be ignorant.
And then he says,
we, and twice he says,
we, the living who remain.
Now, when Paul says we,
he includes himself.
He says, effectively,
when the Lord comes,
I shall be here,
I and you, the living who remain when the Lord comes.
In other words, he had in view
the possibility or the reality
that he would be alive when the Lord came for his own.
Now, many have used this against him and said,
you see, Paul was wrong to teach
that the Lord could come at any moment
because Paul's died and the Lord hasn't yet come.
But I say to you, no.
It doesn't show that Paul was wrong,
but it shows that Paul
was putting forward the truth
that we should live in the expectation
that the Lord will come at any moment.
And we should say, we, the living who remain.
If Paul had said,
those who are alive at the coming of the Lord,
it would have, of necessity, put it back.
But no, he keeps it in the present.
He keeps it in his own lifetime.
And he says twice, we, the living who remain.
And that teaches us that we, like Paul,
should have this in our hearts,
the prospect, the bright and bested hope
that the Lord will come at any moment.
Having spoken to the Thessalonians
of the Lord coming for his own,
being caught up with him,
he says, let's comfort one another,
therefore comfort one another with these words.
And I suggest that if it were true
that before the Lord comes,
we must pass through the great tribulation,
how could we possibly have the coming of the Lord
as a means of comfort?
How could it be a comfort to know
that before we go to be with the Lord,
we have to pass through the great tribulation?
Impossible.
No, the coming of the Lord is before the tribulation.
Therefore, comfort one another with these words.
And then he goes on, chapter five,
there's no chapter distinctions in the original.
He goes on and says,
but at the times and seasons, brethren,
you have no need that I write unto you,
for you yourselves know perfectly
that the day of the Lord cometh as a thief.
The day of the Lord and the coming of the Lord
for his own are different occasions.
Get a grasp of that, dear young believer.
Get a grasp of the fact that the day of the Lord
and the rapture are two distinct occasions.
And if you have that clear, you won't be led astray.
Because the day of the Lord,
when he comes as he not prophesied,
he comes in judgment.
He comes with his saints.
And for those who are not his own,
it will come as a surprise.
And not something to be looked forward to either.
And so, he then had to write to the Thessalonians.
They had evidently had some letter purporting
to be from the apostles to say that
the day of the Lord was already here,
and they had missed out, therefore, on the rapture.
And he had to write this corrective letter
in 2 Thessalonians.
He says, don't take any notice of it,
even if it purports to have come from us.
Because until the day of the Lord,
before the day of the Lord comes,
the man of sin must be revealed.
Before the man of sin can be revealed,
something and someone must be removed.
And he says, there's something
that's withholding this tide of evil.
And there's someone that's withholding
the tide of evil.
And when that which withholds is removed,
then the enemy will come in like a flood.
The man of sin will be revealed,
and then the period of judgment,
of tribulation will be brought in.
And very briefly, because we haven't got
any time to go into detail,
the thing that restrains, I believe,
is the church.
Its presence here, indwelt as it is
by the Holy Spirit, has a restraining effect
on the wickedness,
a tide of wickedness that's waiting.
And secondly, the he who restrains
is the Holy Spirit himself.
Now, when the Lord comes for his own,
for the whole church,
and the whole church is taken up
to be with Christ,
no more it, the church is gone,
the it that restrains is removed,
and the Holy Spirit dwelling
every true believer is also gone.
If there's a true believer in the church
left here, then it's not true
to say that the Holy Spirit has been removed.
So, 2 Thessalonians 2 teaches us
very clearly that the church
and the Holy Spirit must be removed
before the man of sin can be revealed
and before the time of tribulation
is brought in.
Very briefly then, Matthew 24,
and verse 21,
verse 20,
Pray ye that your flight
be not in the winter,
neither on the Sabbath day,
for then shall be great tribulation,
such as was not since the beginning of the world
to this time,
no, nor ever shall be.
Notice it says,
pray that your flight be not
on the Sabbath day.
Quite clearly, the context of that
is Jewish.
The context of Matthew 24
with its reference to the Sabbath day
is to Israel.
The Sabbath day is of no relevance
to the believer in the church.
Jeremiah
chapter 30
and verse 7
Alas, for that day is great,
so that none is like it.
It is even the time of Jacob's trouble,
but he shall be saved
out of it.
Very briefly,
those two verses are
all we have time for to establish
that the great tribulation
applies to Israel.
It's Jewish in character.
It's not for the church to go through.
It has nothing to do with the church.
It's the time of Jacob's trouble.
It relates to those
for whom the Sabbath
is a matter of importance
in Matthew 24.
Indeed, the whole of Matthew's gospel,
when we read it,
we can see it's Jewish in character.
Not that it's irrelevant
for the believer to read.
I'm not saying that.
I'm not saying there's nothing in Matthew
for the Christian.
Of course, it would be a very wrong thing to say.
But in character,
it's entirely Jewish.
Jacob, you know,
that deceiver,
what was he characterized by
for most of his life?
He tried to do everything his own way.
He was the beneficiary,
the recipient of God's promise.
Like Abraham,
God promised Abraham.
And Abraham is spoken of, really,
as representing the life of faith.
And I suggest that when it comes to Jacob,
rather than his name
that he was given later of Israel,
Jacob is characteristic
of one who's been promised certain things by God,
but seeks to bring them out,
bring them about in his own strength
by way of the flesh.
And I think it's significant
when Jeremiah 30 says
the time of Jacob's trouble,
it relates to Israel,
but in its character as Jacob.
Israel in the flesh.
And Israel,
insofar as they've rejected their Messiah,
they're seeking to obtain their blessing
in the flesh.
And the stipulation, I believe,
these verses show us
that it relates to Israel
in its disobedience to God.
One last comment before we close.
There may be, there are many,
and I trust there aren't any here tonight,
but there may be some today
that have this view that, well,
doesn't the church just simply replace Israel
in prophecy?
So before we decide
whether or not these prophecies relate to Israel or not,
we need to dispense with this,
we need to deal with this idea
of whether the church has replaced
Israel in the mind of God.
And for that, we need only to turn to Romans 11,
where in verse 1,
the apostle says,
has God cast away his people?
Has God cast away his people?
Verse 25.
I would not brethren that ye should be ignorant of this mystery,
lest ye should be wise in your own conceits,
that blindness in part is happened to Israel,
until the fullness of the Gentiles be come in.
And so all Israel shall be saved.
So clearly Romans teaches us that no,
God hasn't finished with Israel,
but their disobedience is an opportunity
for God to come out in grace to the Gentiles.
And when the fullness of the Gentiles be come in,
verse 25,
God is able once again to take up Israel.
For many years,
the majority of Christians believed
that the church had replaced Israel.
And in many ways,
they would have had nothing to dispel them of that notion.
But I believe there was one event,
a very significant event,
that must surely put paid to that view,
and that was in 1948.
1948, when Israel once again became a nation.
Prior to that,
one can well understand how people thought,
well, the nation of the Jews is finished.
But for decades,
believers were predicting,
because they understood what the word of God taught,
that Israel would return to its land.
And it would return to its land in unbelief.
And in 1897 or thereabouts,
Mr. Savage,
he wrote a very helpful book,
Signs of the Watchman,
I think it was called.
And he asked this question,
how will it be possible for Turkey,
who then occupied Palestine,
how will Turkey be persuaded
to give up control of Palestine
in order that Israel will be restored to its own land?
He didn't know.
Nobody knew in 1897 how it would be possible.
But God knew.
And it was within 20 years,
after the First World War,
Turkey, it backed the wrong side.
It backed those who lost the war.
And as a result,
its stranglehold on that area was broken up.
And so it was not a question of
who will persuade Turkey to give up Palestine.
It had no choice.
God was in control.
And in 1948,
the scriptures were fulfilled.
So we have evidence in our own history
that no, God has not given up his earthly people, Israel.
But my desire this evening, this afternoon,
was to, I know it's been a very feeble attempt,
but I trust we may be exercised
to dig further into the scriptures.
Because as Paul said to the Thessalonians,
we, the living, who remain.
I want us to finish on this note,
that the exercise of Paul,
as inspired by the Holy Spirit,
was to impress upon his readers
that there was an expectation
that the Lord would come in their lifetime.
And that's what we, as believers, should be looking for.
We should be looking for the Lord Jesus,
not looking at the signs around us,
at politics, at the world news,
to see whether or not
we're about to enter a period of tribulation.
That's not what the Spirit would have us be occupied with.
Sure, there are signs these things are happening.
Things are moving towards these things.
But it goes to show, only the more clearly,
that the Lord Jesus is coming very soon.
Maybe tonight.
Maybe our dear brother Hugh
will never get up on this platform,
because the Lord may have come in the interval.
It's a truth, I believe, the Bible teaches very clearly.
And it's a truth that's designed
to give us in our hearts
a longing and a looking for the person of the Lord Jesus.
He is preeminent.
He gave himself. He loved us.
He gave himself for his church.
And I believe we should be,
at the beginning of another year,
encouraged and exercised
to have before us the Lord Jesus.
And then everything else will fall into place.
Church order, prophecy,
all these things, they take second place.
But they'll fall into their rightful place if,
and only if, we put the Lord Jesus
and give him the preeminence.
Perhaps we can close with a hymn
which speaks of this wonderful expectation.
208.
Dear Mr. Deck, one of the early brethren,
he had a grasp of this truth,
and it worked out in a practical way.
He was able to write these lines.
May we sing together 208 in hope.
We lift our wishful longing eyes,
to see the morning star arise.
Verse 4.
If here on earth the thoughts of Jesus' love
lift our poor hearts, this weary world above,
if even here the taste of heavenly spring
so cheers the spirit that the pilgrim sings,
what will the sunshine of his glory prove?
What the unmingled fullness of his love?
What hallelujahs will his presence raise?
What but one loud, eternal burst of praise.
The whole hymn 208.
In hope we lift our wishful longing eyes,
waiting to see the morning star arise.
How bright, how gladsome will his advent be
before the sunshine, forth in majesty.
How will our eyes to see his face delight?
Whose love has cheered us through the darks of night?
How will our ears drink in his well-known voice?
Whose faintest whisper make our soul rejoice?
No stain within, no falseness around,
no jarring note shall let his golden sound.
Hope you without, hope you within the breast,
no thorns to burn, no toil tomorrow rest.
If here on earth the thoughts of Jesus' love
Lift up, all hearts, their weary world above,
If ever, never, taste all heav'nly springs,
Suggest the spirit that the pilgrim sings,
On will the sunshine of his glory prove.
All the unnamed God, the mess of his love,
All hallelujah, will his presence raise.
O come, O come, eternal birth of grace. …
Transcripción automática:
…
It would be good if we could commence our time this evening by singing the words of
hymn 415, 4-1-5.
Father, spring and source of blessing, grateful praise to Thee we bring, objects
of Thy sovereign favour, gladly of Thy love we sing, might rise to sing the whole hymn.
Objects of Thy sovereign favour, gladly of Thy love we sing, love that found its full
expression, in Thy gift unspeakable, in whom dwelling in Thy bosom, whom Thou
with secrets tell, by eternal gracious pass, now to us in Christ be shown, ever strong
with gracious blessing, for the sons Thou hast foreknown, brought to rest within the
circle, where God's treasures are displayed, where we drink the living water, taste the
joys that never came, brought to know Thy well-beloved, drawn to Him in boundless grace,
Thy effulgence, love and glory, shining in His blessed face, we adore Thee, God and
Father, may Thy name exalted be, praise and worship we would render, now as in eternity.
His precious name, Amen. Those who have Bibles with them, and I do trust that we seek to bring
our Bibles to the meetings, even the boys and girls, because how can we learn? How can we learn
anything? We can learn to do many things, and I'm not going to mention some of the things that people
sometimes do in meetings, but if we want to learn about God, and surely everyone here would desire
to learn about God, we must turn to the Bible. So, if you have your Bible, turn please to Matthew
chapter 28, and if you do not have your Bible, please bring it next time. In fact, please take
it with you tomorrow on the Lord's Day. Matthew 28 and verse 19. And it was the Lord's word to
the eleven disciples. And just for the connection, we could read verse 18. And Jesus came and spake
unto them, saying, All power is given unto me in heaven and in earth. Go ye therefore and teach, or make
disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the
Holy Ghost. I wonder how many here have enjoyed a nice cup of tea. Tea connoisseurs will know that
there's a delightful, refreshing blend of tea called Darjeeling. I want you to come with me to a place that I have
been, the district of Darjeeling in West Bengal in Northeast India. Sometimes I fly into an airport there called
Baghdadra. And from Baghdadra, then, often we make the journey west into Eastern Nepal, where there are Christian
believers and Christian assemblies in refugee camps. And we need to pray for them, and to pray and visit the refugees who
now are dispersed throughout the world in the USA, in Canada, in New Zealand, and in Denmark, if not in other places. But on
more than one occasion, as we've been driving along the road, and the driving there is a bit special, I can tell you, I've
seen a sign. And it says, Trinity. Trinity English Language Medium School. Now, what does that tell you? What does that
tell you? Trinity English Language Medium School. Well, I think it tells you it's very important to learn English. In today's
world, English medium. It's good if you can speak Polish, or Spanish, or German, or French, or any of these other languages, we don't
discount that in the slightest. But English is useful in today's world. And that's what that sign is saying to the people, it's good to be
able to pursue educational advantages in English. But that sign, Trinity English Language Medium School, tells us something else. It
tells us that it is a Christian school. Because Trinity is the Christian name for the Christian God. We speak about the Holy
Trinity. We speak about persons in the Godhead, persons who are God, but they are a Trinity. And that, for us, and for Christianity, is a most
important statement. It comes from a Latin word, Trinitas. And that simply means, threeness. Threeness. God is as truly three as he is
one. And he is as truly one as he is three. The converse also being true as to the being of God. And essentially, that was my starting point
tonight. What's important about Christian baptism? Some of you have been baptised. Well, I would submit to you that it's not the amount of the water that's
important. And it's not whether it's being done in the baptistry in this hall, which is very convenient and with the fellowship of the Brethren, or whether it's
done in a lake, or by whatever mode or in private. Christian baptism is the baptism in water, no doubt. But surely the important thing is that the name of the
Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit is called over a person. And thereby, that person is associated with God. And we know in another aspect, he's
associated with the death of Christ, planted together in the likeness of his
death. But in this verse, in Matthew 28, it's in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. There you have the three, and there you have the one. And that's very important. And it's profound, and perhaps
sometimes difficult to grasp, and is not believed, I need say, by everybody. Some
years ago, I had a lady from the Jehovah Witnesses came to my door. Knock, knock,
knock. And she told me, you know, this idea, the Trinity, when people start saying that something is
an idea, you're going to be pretty sure that they're discounting it. And she said, this idea of the Trinity, you know, it was invented by a church council in the
fourth century, that is in the year 300 and something. And I said, well, that's very strange. I'm not saying, I'm not giving you my exact words, nor her exact words. I'm giving you the substance of the
conversation. I said, well, that's very strange, because it's in my Bible. And I took her to the
baptism formula, and I pointed out, it's the name, singular, of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, plural, and Trinity,
threeness, three, one in three, or three in one. The name, but of the three. I can still see her as she walked down our driveway. She didn't stay very long after that,
because evidently that was a scripture that someone had not pointed out to her before. And of course,
generally in false systems like Jehovah Witnesses, you're not learning from the Bible, from the whole
truth, like we seek to do here. You've got a handbook, and there are proof texts, and they're
taken out of their context, and you're blinkered in your approach, and you're only showed and taught
certain things. And you're on a certain, shall we say, railway track. And of course, I managed to
get her off that track and onto another track, and then she didn't know where she was. So there it is,
the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. The Old Testament gives more a
witness to the unity of God, in contrast to the idolatry of the nations around with their gods
many and lords many. Jehovah our God is one Jehovah, and throughout the Old Testament it's
more the thought of unity of the divine being of God in his absoluteness. But there are suggestions
here and there scattered through the Scriptures that God is more than solitary. And I think we
have it perhaps in Genesis chapter 1. You remember what it says there, Genesis chapter 1, someone?
In the beginning, God created the heaven and the earth. God is singular. Even in the Hebrew word,
it's singular. And then it says, God said, he speaks, he spoke the world into creation. He
can be thankful for that. He speaks life into us, he speaks into our hearts, and we can be
thankful for that. But God singular said, let us. There's an us, that's a plurality. And I believe
in the Hebrew, it's more than two. Hebrew has a word for singular, dual, and plural. Let us,
plurality, more than two. And there you have it. God said, let us. So let's think about this a
little bit more. God is love. Who does he love? We're not talking about creation now,
because God always existed. Who does he love? God is love, has no real meaning unless God
contains at least two persons. Isn't that right? I think so. It's not my words, it's C.S. Lewis,
in Mere Christianity. Some of you study the English language and English literature,
there's a book, Mere Christianity. Perhaps I should go and read it myself. But anyway,
this is the words of an apologist for the Christian faith. God is love, has no real
meaning unless God contains at least two persons. Because if you love, you have to have someone to
love. Love is something that one person has for another person. If God was a single person,
then before the world was made, he was not love. That seems simple. If he was a single person and
before the world was made, before there was anybody else, how could he be love? That's a
simple statement that we think of. We say God is love, but think of the significance, think of the
deduction, the conclusion that we can bring from it. That in God, in the nature of God, in the
Godhead, what we've said so far is that there were and are at least two persons. Now come with
me to John's Gospel, chapter one. When I was relatively young, younger than some of those
here, if I can just approximate your age, I was taught by my Sunday school teacher to learn John's
Gospel, chapter one. Well worth doing. If you're in the meeting and you're not really bothered or
interested in what the preacher has to say, and you're casting about in your mind and your
imagination for something to occupy yourself with, why not learn a few verses of scripture? John 1,
verse 1 says, much better of course, much prefer if you were to listen to me, but John 1, chapter
1 says, in the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God. That's two persons. The Word
was with God. We have God and we have the Word whom we know from what is subsequently told to
us is the Lord Jesus Christ, the only begotten Son. And we know from the subsequent scriptures
that God is the Father. So when we are thinking of the Word being with God, and it goes on to say
the Word was God. So there is God, there's the Father, and there is the person who is described
as the Word, whom we know as the Son, who was with God, and yet he was God. And you might say to me,
if God is God, how can the person that was with him be also God? And he never was anything else,
because verse 2 goes on to say the same was in the beginning with God, and that's the same person
unchanged and unchangeable. That's two persons already in the infinite Godhead. God and the Word,
the Father and the Son. So God is love now has a meaning because the Godhead, the Trinity,
contains two persons, but we say that there are three. Well, we say that the Holy Spirit is God.
Young man, how do you know that? How do you know that the Holy Spirit is God? You say,
the Holy Spirit, we've heard, we sing about the Holy Spirit, and we know he indwells believers
and things like that. And we know he moved upon the face of the waters at the creation. Now,
there's an indication before anything was created, God said, God created the world. We know from
other scriptures that it was through the Son by whom also he made the worlds. But at that same
time, the Spirit of God was moving upon the face of the waters. That's an indication, is it not?
That the Spirit of God is God. Are there any others? I wonder, have you seized the force of
Acts chapter 5? You young sisters know what Acts 5 is all about, don't you? Older ones too,
otherwise you'd be turning to the passage, wouldn't you? Acts chapter 5 is where Ananias
and Sapphira cheat it a little bit. It's easy to cheat. It's easy to cheat at school. It's easy
to cheat mommy and daddy. It's easy to cheat on brothers and sisters. Some of us older ones know
how easy it is to cheat in life. And we may be very thankful that God doesn't deal with us today,
the way in which he dealt with Ananias and Sapphira. Because they sold their possessions
and they brought it and they said, here, this is what we've got. Please take it. We're going
to give a good offering. It's going to be a good collection today. We've given everything. Here it
is. But they kept back something. Maybe we are keeping something back from God. Maybe there's
some little compartment of our life and we've turned the key and we've locked the door and
we've said, no God, you're not going to have that. I want to keep that. God would work in
your heart. He would work in my heart in order that we might be open and complete and devoted
and fully committed and consecrated. But that's the subject for another message. They kept something
back. And you've turned to the passage, haven't you? And Peter says, you've lied to the Holy
Ghost or to the Holy Spirit in verse three. And then he describes their action again in the
following verse. And he says that has not lied onto men, but onto God. Now, some of you younger
ones will be able to see the connection. Maybe the older people, their minds won't quite move so fast,
but at least you younger ones will be able to make the connection that if someone lies to the Holy
Ghost or Geist, it's an old world word for Holy Spirit. If someone lies to the Holy Spirit and in
the very next verse, it says you've lied to God. Surely there is only one deduction and one
conclusion that we can draw from that. And that is that the Holy Spirit is also God. So we could
spend a very considerable time to give scripture facts and scripture proofs that the Father is God,
which is fairly obvious. And that the Lord Jesus Christ is God, because Thomas fell down to worship
him and said, my Lord and my God. And even God addressed him. In Hebrews chapter one, where the
language is quoted, it says, thy throne, O God, speaking to the son, he says, thy throne, O God,
is forever and ever. He's spoken of in Romans as God over all blessed forever. He's our God and
Jesus Christ. He's no less God than the Father and no less God than the Holy Spirit. The divinity
of Christ, the deity of Christ, his Godhead is shown in many passages of scripture. And we could
do the same for the Holy Spirit. And we could fill up quite a bit of time. But I take it tonight
that you have accepted what I've said so far. That God is a spirit, but that God is also Father. God
the Father and God the Son and God the Holy Spirit. And that is something which is beyond
our comprehension. That there should be three persons in one God. And here, human language
is inadequate. I'm trying to explain and make simple that which is profound and that which is
infinitely beyond us. Man's thoughts are finite. They are limited. God's thoughts, the concept,
the idea of God, particularly in this way in which we desire to present him, is infinite.
So it's impossible in the nature of things that I or anyone else can give a just expression of
what God is or use adequate language. But we're trying to point out these certain things that
there is a Trinity. That God is as truly three. There is a threeness and he is as truly three as
he is one. The Athanasian Creed, so-called Athanasian Creed. It takes, I think, about five
minutes to recite, but on certain occasions in the Anglican Church, at least in the Church of
England, it used to be recited. And one part of it says, the Father incomprehensible and the Son
incomprehensible and the Holy Spirit incomprehensible. And one of the choristers that
was sitting in the choir, he's whispered to someone and he said, and the whole thing
incomprehensible. The whole thing to our finite minds is incomprehensible and it's beyond us,
but nevertheless, we have to try to apply our minds to it and understand something of what is
involved. That God in the unity of his being is tri-personal. Three persons. That the Father and
the Son and the Holy Spirit are co-equal. They are co-eternal. They are uncreated. They are
inseparable. They are undivided. The Lord Jesus said, I'm in the Father. The Father's in me. So
they're undivided and they're inseparable and yet they're distinct. So there is a distinction of
personality, but there is a oneness of being. Co-equal, co-eternal, uncreated, inseparable,
undivided, but distinguishable. And I know you'll say the word Trinity is not in the Bible, so why
use it? But sometimes there are concepts for which we need to use extra biblical language and that
are many terms that we use to seek to explain things that are not found in the Bible. We speak
about substitution and the substitutionary death of Christ and that's not a word. That's found in
the Bible. We often speak about the eternal sonship of Christ. So much so, sometimes that
almost becomes a hackneyed expression and a meaningless expression. We talk about dispensationalism
and you don't find that word in the Bible. We talk about divine persons and we don't have that phrase,
person, divine person. We don't have that word used in the Bible. But nevertheless, the reality
and the substance of these things are found in the Bible and sometimes we need to go behind the Bible
words, particularly when they've been attacked. And we need to explain what the concepts mean.
And in order to explain the truth of the scripture, sometimes we find that we use words which are not
actually found in the Bible because the deepest questions which face Christianity, they cannot
sometimes be answered by purely biblical language because the questions are about the meaning of the
biblical language itself. Now, I'll seek to explain that. You know, you speak to a Jehovah
Witness, you say, do you believe the Bible? They say, yes, we believe the Bible. You say to them,
do you believe Jesus is the son of God? And they will say, yes, we believe Jesus is the son of God.
They're using the same language, but they're attaching a different meaning completely and
entirely to it, to that which we mean. And therefore we have to go behind and we have to
explain and we have to define and we have to safeguard the meaning of the word. And in doing
so, we're reduced to using words that are not found in the Bible. And one that is used to speak
of the distinction of persons in the Godhead is the Trinity, the triunity, the threeness. Others
have used this expression and I would suggest that if you cannot find a better one, well then,
don't hesitate to use it. I certainly do not know of another expression that conveys the
meaning in such a full way. So we have this unity and diversity and this threeness and oneness.
And very important consequences follow in terms of relationships. I've already spoken of one,
that God is love, that there's love between the persons, that there's a relationship between the
persons, that there is a diversity, a plurality. I think that's seen in the creation. I do. We're
told that in what God has created in Romans 1, we're told that it's an expression that we see
his eternal power and divinity. The creation takes character from God. The creation mirrors
the creator. And so as there is this diversity in God, so there's this diversity in the creation.
If God was just a God in himself, this would be something that's very different and it's
something really which is seen particularly in Islam, where there's absolutely, where everything
is, there's a sameness, a lack of diversity. And as I said, Trinity is the Christian name for the
God because it is a concept, a biblical concept or a biblical reality that's not found in any
other religion. In pantheism, they talked about a triad. God's in a triad. But for instance,
in the way in which it's explained, it's something entirely different. For instance,
in Hinduism, you've got Brahm, that's undeveloped primal being. You go back to
primal being, whatever that might be. And then in Vishnu, you have the unfolding of it. It comes in
this primal, whatever it is, comes into expression in the actual physical world.
And then with Shiva, you return into the abyss of unconscious being, the whole circle of
incarnation and reincarnation, and you're seeking to reach nirvana, you're seeking to reach oblivion.
And that's, you've come from primeval nothingness into that which finds expression in the actual
world, and then you're lost in nothingness again. That's their triad, and that's what you find in
Platonism and Neoplatonism and in pantheism. What I'm saying is out there
in the world with all these various conceptions of God, there is nothing that answers
to the name and the being of God in three persons, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
This is distinctive, and this is characteristic of Christianity. Why do we not think about it more?
And about the relationships in the Godhead?
Because I don't think it's a subject that's taken up very often in ministry or in Bible readings.
I can't think of someone giving an address in the Trinity.
Perhaps people might be wise to steer clear of such an exalted, such a wonderful, such an exhilarating
topic, of that which is so infinite. But the fact that we don't necessarily take it up
doesn't mean that we refuse it, doesn't mean that we reject it, doesn't mean that we're
indifferent to it, because actually it underpins everything. It underpins salvation, it underpins
revelation. It's there. Underpinning the whole of the world,
it's there. Underpinning the whole of divine revelation. For instance, in John's Gospel chapter 3,
with God, except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God.
And further down, we have God's love to the world,
finding its expression in the gift of his only begotten Son.
But we've also got the Holy Spirit. It speaks about being born of God, and it speaks about
being born of water and of the Spirit. To be born of God is to be born of the Spirit. To be born of
the Spirit is to be born of God. And that's something we cannot do of ourselves. We're not
called upon to born ourselves again. We can't. In a spiritual birth, we can do no more when it
comes to the question of spiritual birth than we can do when it comes to the question of our natural
birth. It's God's work in the soul. It's something which he does. It's divine workmanship. We are
called to believe. There's no question that we're called to believe in the Son of Man lifted up,
and in the only begotten Son, and in believing we have everlasting life. And we can deduce,
if we have done that, that we've also been born again. But born of the Spirit is God's work.
So here we have the Trinity at work.
There's a certain order there. There's God's gift of his Son.
There's the Son of Man lifted up like the serpent in the wilderness, who is also the only begotten
Son of God. That's the work done outside of ourselves. And then there's the work of the
Holy Spirit of God, and that's the work which is done in us. So we have the gracious activities of
God, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. And there are many scriptures that we could turn to.
I turn now to 1 Corinthians chapter 8, where in verse 6 it says to us,
there is one God the Father. Here we see God as the source. One God the Father, of whom are all
things, and we in him. And one Lord Jesus Christ, by whom are all things, and we by him. And we know,
of course, from other scriptures, there's the Holy Spirit also. And there is a
subordination of order here. We speak of the first person, and of the second person,
and of the third person of the Trinity. It's not mere enumeration, because there is an order.
There's the Father, and his activities. And there's the Son, and his activities. And there's
the gracious activities of the Holy Spirit. And I think something of this came out in the hymn we
sang at the start of our meeting, where the Father is the source of all. Father, source,
springing source of blessing. Ephesians chapter 1, it's the foreknowledge of God. It's the God,
it's the Father who plans and counsels. And then it's the Son who brings these counsels into effect.
And the hymn that we sang then spoke about Christ accomplishing the work.
And then when it speaks about brought to know thy well-beloved, that's the gracious activity
of the Holy Spirit in opening out and making these things known to us. So there is a certain
order there. And it's reflected in this verse 6 of chapter 8. There's one God, the Father,
the Father of whom are all things. And then one Lord Jesus Christ by whom are all things.
And we know that this subordination of order, it's something that's predated the incarnation,
because the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the world.
Some have questions about the Lord's Sonship. When did it begin?
Well, I think it's, I think it's, these truths are profound, but I think in another sense,
they're simple. I have a son in Her Majesty's forces in Afghanistan at the present time. He
was sent there, but he was sent from Cyprus where he was based to Afghanistan. If he had not been
in Cyprus, he could not have been sent to somewhere else. And if it says the Father
sent the Son to be the Savior of the world, the Son had to be there in order to have been sent.
That's natural enough. But if I send my son, if my son's in Belfast and I send him across
to Liverpool or London, he has to be in Belfast before I send him.
When the fullness of the time, God sent forth his Son, he sent him from Godhead,
he sent him from glory. And the Lord Jesus, in coming and being found in this world,
he speaks of himself. He says, I came forth from the Father. In fact, it means I came forth from
alongside the Father and I came into the world. Again, I leave the world and I go onto the Father.
So the sending there, and he dates the incarnation, the sending of the Son,
he dates the incarnation. The sending was not as a man on earth. The sending was already
he was sent when he was in the form of God. So it's important to see these distinctions.
It would not be feasible that the Son would send the Father
or that the Spirit would send the Son. It's not according to revelation. It's not according to
the relationships in which these persons in the Godhead, these divine persons in the
Augustus Trinity stand to each other. Each has a certain place in the Godhead. And traditionally,
the traditional formulation of it has been, and we're not going to have time to go into it tonight,
but the traditional formulation has been that the Son is begotten and that the Spirit proceeds
from the Father. And wrapped up in that, there are many, many important truths.
And I'll just, in wrapping up, to underline the importance of it for us,
to underline the importance of the truth of the Trinity
in the divine revelation, in God's scheme of things.
Think of the upper room discourse.
Think of the Lord Jesus with his disciples on the night of his betrayal.
And what was he seeking to bring before them?
God and his majesty.
God and his tri-unity. God and the relationships. God and his essential being in essence.
It's just all about the Father, the Son, the Father's house.
But the Father being in the Son and the Son being in the Father. About life eternal and knowingly,
the only true God in Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent. And about the Holy Spirit.
And here's the remarkable thing. It says,
talks about the Holy Spirit proceeding in those chapters,
in John chapter 14 through to chapter 17, particularly 14 to 16.
Says that the Father would send him.
We can understand that. But then the Lord Jesus says of him, whom I will send.
The Father sends the Holy Spirit. The Lord Jesus, the Son, sends the Holy Spirit.
But in a sense, he comes himself. Because it also says, when he,
the Spirit of truth, has come, he will do certain things.
One sense he's sent of the Father. In another sense, he's sent of the Son.
In another sense, he comes of himself. So that the action of one person in the Trinity
is the action of the other. And yet they have a separate identity.
It's true in other respects too.
Destroy this temple and in three days I will raise it again. The Lord spoke about raising himself.
We're told that he was raised again by the glory of the Father.
We're told that he was put to death in the flesh, but quickened by the Spirit.
So the action of the Father, the action of the Son, and the action of the Holy Spirit.
It's an action, it's an activity that is postulated to each of them and to all of them,
showing their unity in essence and eminence and interaction.
And the same, my Father worketh hitherto and I work, working as the Father raises up the dead
and quickens them, even so the Son of Man quickens whom he will. And yet in regard to the believer,
it's said that we are quickened by the Holy Spirit, made alive by the Father,
made alive by the Son, made alive by the Holy Spirit. So there are mysteries here.
And it's well that we should worship and adore and learn how finite our thoughts are,
and yet wonder at the majesty of God, seen in creation. Diversity and unity,
and unity in diverseness, that's why everybody's different fingerprints,
different DNA, and the iris is different. When you go for these security measures,
or each snowflake, the particular under the microscope, the particular
makeup of each is different. One star differs from another in glory. There's no sameness.
Our God is a God of infinite variety because he's a God while existing in unity is in a plurality of
persons. And I'll just say this in closing. I've been closing a few times now, so I better just
get to the end, hadn't I? In the very last verse of 2 Corinthians, it says,
it says, the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God,
and the communion of the Holy Spirit be with you all. Three persons again,
and there's the thought of communion, and it says this communion be with you all.
God is never lonely, or isolated, because there are personalities.
There's communion in the Godhead. It speaks about communion between the Father and the Son. It's
that we might enjoy it. The Son speaking to the Father says, thou lovest me before the foundation
of the world. There's this security of love, and security, and intimacy, and relationship.
And it says that we can be brought to enjoy this. If we know God as he's been revealed in this way,
we'll never be lonely. Maybe some widows here. There may be some widowers going home
to an empty house. There may be some young people, or older ones, who are not enjoying singlehood.
There may be some who are in stable relationships, and yet they feel terribly isolated,
and terribly alone. If you come to know God, and what he is, in his triunity, in the personality,
in the personality, in his communications,
you cannot be alone. You're brought into this wonderful communion. Love.
That's something in Islam that Allah is not.
Muhammad condemned. He said Allah has no son.
The Quran teaches that the trinity is a blasphemy. They don't understand it.
But there's no concept of love.
So many names for Allah, the merciful. I don't know them all, but the one that is missing is love.
Because that presentation of God is as a monad, as solitary, as a figure in itself.
But we're introduced into the wonder of a God of love, and of a God of
relationships, and relational characteristics.
And that is seen also in human relationships, and in human personality.
Now, when God said to Abraham, take now thy son, thine only son, Isaac, whom thou lovest,
we can think of what it must have felt like to that father's heart.
And yet, surely that is a faint representation of what is true of God the Father.
When it says, God sent forth his own son.
God spared not his own son, but freely delivered him up for us all.
Man is made in the image of God.
And the manner in which we've been put together,
the fact that the stamp of God is upon us, the fact that we're made in the image of God,
gives us an insight into what God is in these relationships, Father, Son.
There's a difference in measure.
There's an infinite distance in measure, but surely the thing is there.
So, this is our God.
Our God.
This is the Christian God.
So, next time you remember about Trinity, English language medium school,
each time you remember that story, just think, Trinity, the Christian name of the Christian God.
And I trust that as you meditate on these things, as we meditate on these things,
we might have an enhanced appreciation of God in his infiniteness, and in his greatness,
and in his glory.
And as we think of these things, we find that these are most exhilarating
and most exalting thoughts of God.
We can't, Jeff talked about the Holy of Holies as illustrating the Trinity 20 by 20 by 20,
but it falls far short.
St. Patrick in Ireland, he used the shamrock leaf with three leaves on the one stem.
When he converted to Ireland, he sought to teach the Trinity by using that.
Some use a sugar cube and set six sides, three sides, three aspects of God,
and then the other three sides, the way in which God reveals himself in these aspects.
Some of the older divines, I think it was Augustine said, well, it's like,
it's like the sunbeam.
It's like the sun and the sunbeam and the energy of the sun.
And we have a picture of some, you know, if we think, if we have a thought,
a mental picture comes into our mind.
But all these so-called illustrations fall far short of the reality of our Trinitarian God,
the love of God, the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God,
and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all.
Could we sing 401?
Thou art the everlasting word, the father's only son.
Take time to sing the whole hymn 401, 401.
Thou art the everlasting word, the father's only son.
Lord, where'er ye live, from sea and land,
to earth, to heav'n and home,
in the earth's heav'nliest rest,
where'er comest thou shine,
fullest of love, yet true comest,
eternally divine,
with thee behold the Father's face,
we celebrate his boundless grace,
we celebrate his boundless grace.
In each of thee I find and see
good, mean, kind, and low,
brightness of light, though I can't see,
God's love revealed below,
where light of love has shone in thee,
and in the cross our souls are free,
and in that love our souls are free.
The higher mysteries of thy fame
the preacher's cross transcends,
the Father's only heart blest name
all son can comprehend,
blest in their song the name of God,
the Father gives thus now to prove,
the Father gives thus now to prove,
yet loving thee on whom his love
in e'er cold outpressed,
our hearts are led to him above,
and thee with thee are blest,
the Father's name thou hast declared,
the Father's love with thee is shared,
the Father's love with thee is shared,
Over vast universes of bliss,
blest enter thou and son,
the eternal theme of praise his name,
gracious beloved son,
his own resting where God alone,
in his own rest his holy glory,
in his own rest his holy glory.
Lord Jesus …
Transcripción automática:
…
Good afternoon, shall we begin by singing hymn number 136, the veil is rent, our souls
draw near unto the throne of grace, the merits of the Lord appear, they fill the holy place,
his precious blood avails us there as we approach the throne and his own wounds in heaven declare,
the atoning work is done.
Hymn number 136.
The merits of the Lord appear, they fill the holy place, his precious blood avails us
there as we approach the throne and his own wounds in heaven declare, the atoning work
is done.
Sacrifice appraised with us within the veil.
Within the holiest throne, entwined his precious blood,
before the throne we prostrate fall and worship him, O God.
Boldly the heart and voice we raise, his voice, his name, our plea,
have shown our breast as arms of grace, ascend by Christ to thee.
Amen.
Could we turn to the scriptures and read from the second book of Chronicles chapter three.
My thoughts this afternoon have been largely constrained by the thoughts of Solomon's temple
and by looking at some of the intricacies of that temple that Solomon built
and to compare Solomon's temple with the previous tabernacle and to look in practical ways
at how that encourages and enlightens us while living today.
So obviously a number of scriptures pertain to this point but if we can just read from
chapter three and we'll go into chapter four as well.
Then Solomon began to build the house of the Lord at Jerusalem in Mount Moriah where the Lord
appeared unto David his father in the place that David had prepared in the threshing floor of Ornan
the Jebusite and he began to build in the second day of the second month in the fourth year of his
reign. Now these are the things wherein Solomon was instructed for the building of the house of
God. The length by cubits after the first measure was three score cubits and the breadth 20 cubits
and the porch that was in the front of the house the length of it was according to the breadth of
the house 20 cubits and the height was 120 and he overlaid it within with pure gold
and the greater house he sealed with the fir tree which he overlaid with fine gold and set thereon
palm trees and chains and he garnished the house with precious stones for beauty
and the gold was gold of parvium he overlaid all to the house the beams the posts and the
walls thereof and the doors thereof with gold and grave cherubims on the walls
and he made the most holy house the length whereof was according to the breadth of the house
20 cubits and the breadth thereof 20 cubits and he overlaid it with fine gold amounting to 600
talents and the weight of the nails was 50 shekels of gold and he overlaid the upper chambers with
gold and in the most holy house he made two cherubims of image work and overlaid them with
gold and the wings of the cherubims were 20 cubits long one wing of one cherub was five cubits
reaching to the wall of the house and the other wing was likewise five cubits reaching to the
wing of the other cherub and one wing of the other cherub was five cubits reaching to the
wall of the house and the other wing was five cubits also joining to the wing of the other
cherub the wings of these cherubims themselves spread forth 20 cubits and they stood on their
feet and their faces were inward and he made the veil of blue and purple and crimson and fine linen
and wrought cherubims thereon also he made before the house two pillars of 30 and five cubits high
and the chapter that was on the top of each of them was five cubits and he made chains as in
the oracle and he put them on the heads of the pillars and made 100 pomegranates and put them
on the chains and he reared up the pillars before the temple one on the right hand and the other on
the left and called the name of that on the right hand jakin and the name of the one on the left
boaz moreover he made an altar of brass 20 cubits the length thereof and 20 cubits the breadth
thereof and 10 cubits the height thereof also he made a molten sea of 10 cubits from brim to brim
round in compass and five cubits the height thereof and a line of 30 cubits did compass it around
about and under it was the similitude of oxen which did compass it round about 10 in a cubit
composed compassing the sea round about two rows of oxen were cast when it was cast
it stood upon 12 oxen three looking toward the north and three looking toward the west and three
looking toward the south and three looking toward the east and the sea was set above upon them
and all their hinder parts were inward and the thickness of it was an hand breath and the brim
of it like the work of the brim of a cup with flowers of lilies and it received and held
3 000 baths he made also 10 lavers and put five on the right hand and five on the left
to wash in them such things as if they offered for the burnt offering they washed in them but the
sea was for the priests to wash in and he made 10 candlesticks of gold according to their form
and set them in the temple five on the right and five on the left he made also 10 tables
and placed them in the temple five on the right side and five on the left and he made
100 basins of gold furthermore he made the court of the priests and the great court and doors for
the court and overlaid the doors of them with brass and he set the sea on the right side of
the east end over against the south and hurum made the pots and the shovels and the basins
and hurum finished the work that he was to make for king solomon for the house of god
as we read through that passage there's obviously there
a great deal of detail and i wonder it was to ask the sort of question and say
how much do you know and appreciate of this great temple that was built by solomon
do you know how large it was do you know how it compares with the tabernacle
what was in the tabernacle what was in the temple what was the difference in between
the significance of one of the most important buildings that has ever been built in the
history of this earth is obviously great and the lessons for us are indeed many
because we remember that the main purpose of this temple was that god wanted to dwell
in the midst of his people now that surely is a wonderful thought god the creator god
wanted to dwell in the midst of his people but god delights to dwell with mankind
truly a wonderful thought in exodus chapter 25 he said let them make me a sanctuary that i may
dwell among them and why i think in particular that it's necessary for us to look at solomon's
temple because it is a picture of the father's house in heaven it's a picture it tells us
something of what the father's house is going to be like in heaven we're obviously going to spend
eternity there but if we view and think about the father's house surely that will encourage us
surely that will help us in the times in which we walk here upon this earth
i'd be interested in other people's thoughts but i seem to remember that has been a number
of times that i have listened to lectures and accounts and been to bible readings
and looked at the tabernacle many many times i hardly remember spending much time
looking at solomon's temple i'm not sure where why that is we know that certainly most of the
furnishings were taken from the tabernacle and were put into the temple when it was dedicated
by solomon so we have all the many lessons that were found in the tabernacle
that they are incorporated into the teachings of the temple we've got all the lessons of the
tabernacle and we've got added extra because of what the temple also teaches us we know that the
temple was the dwelling place of god in the midst of his people it was the center of worship and
could only be approached through sacrifices made by the priests we thought that the temple also
represents the father's house the dwelling place which we will spend eternity in
that the temple as a whole is a figure of the christian assembly the church
and no doubt we can recollect that verse that tells us when the lord jesus was here upon this
earth that the lord jesus could say destroy this temple and in three days i will raise it up
that he was the temple the temple really portrays for us four important features
features of grace of truth of fruitfulness
and of beauty and as we go through and look at some of the features that we find in the temple
we can see that these features come to the fore solomon's temple was not one of the greatest
buildings that was ever around at that particular time it certainly wasn't one of the biggest
but they obviously it's not the size but the holiness the order the glory
and the righteousness that characterizes that house there was nothing like it on earth
the glory of this temple as it was built and god dwelling in it
the design of the house was from god himself directly from god and the temple couldn't be built
until peace had been established and at the end of david's reign we know solomon was on the throne
and peace was established and the temple was built and of course
in our day peace has been proclaimed peace because of what our lord jesus christ has accomplished on
the cross and so the temple so to speak can be built in the lives of individual believers
the presence of god on the earth in solomon's time was conditional a covenant was entered into
the children of israel had to obey the law if they didn't obey then god would depart and of course
we know that that is what happened that the temple was ultimately destroyed but today there is the
contrast that the church of god has been established as a habitation in the spirit
ephesians 2 tells us and it's based on the permanent value of the work of christ a difference
the temple disappeared but a permanent habitation because of what christ has done if we briefly trace
how god dwelt with men throughout history we can see can't we write at the very beginning
that in the garden of eden that it was god's desire to dwell with adam and eve that is what
is desired to walk with them in the cool of the garden we know that the tabernacle was built
in the desert that as the children of israel wandered around for those 40 years
god wanted to dwell with them he wanted to be in the midst of them despite their sins despite
their disobedience and rebellion he wanted to dwell in the midst of them that as the tabernacle
uh finished and the temple that we've briefly thought about already was built
that that tabernacle system lasted for about a thousand years it was nearly a thousand years
after the tabernacle was built that solomon's temple was built and solomon's temple of course
was a permanent place where god could dwell in the midst of his people
in jerusalem the ark and the cherubim were brought from the tabernacle and placed in that
temple with much rejoicing at that time we know that the temple the solomon's temple was destroyed
by the babylonians the chaldeans and that it was rebuilt in the time of ezra and nehemiah
that that temple sometimes called zerubbabel's temple lasted for 500 years no doubt it had to
be repaired but that it was replaced by herod's temple herod of course lived at the time the
lord jesus was built in 20 bc we believe and herod was a usurper to the throne the lord
jesus never went into the temple itself of herod's temple he referred to it as your temple
when speaking to the jews but that temple of herod herod's temple was destroyed in 70 a.d
and in fact we were thinking just this week looking at hebrews chapter 2 in the bible
reading on on thursday evening and struck again with the importance of that time when the lord
jesus had come down into this world he'd lived in this world he'd shown himself to be a perfect man
he'd done the wonderful miracles god had shown by signs and wonders that here was the messiah
and the nation of jews collectively rejected him they stoned stephen the lord jesus was still
standing at the right hand of god ready to come ready to return but the jews rejected him
and a few years later in a.d 70 then the judgment upon the jews was acted out and their temple was
destroyed proving that there were no more sacrifices that the sacrifice the death of
the lord jesus christ has paid the penalty for our sins it must have been a terrible time for the
jews living in that land at that time we know it was we know that the destruction and the annihilation
uh of the people was absolutely it was almost total there was very few left we also get some
hints that many of the christians had left before that had happened and moved away before
the romans sieged that city and we know the temple has never been rebuilt since
but we get indications that the temple will be built in unbelief before the messiah's return
that mustn't be confused with ezekiel's temple which we're told will be built at the millennium
and when the 12 tribes return to the land we know that it's similar to solomon's temple
with perhaps additional rooms on the side that it will cover that area of 25 000 square cubits
and then of course we get that future time when we're told about the new jerusalem is a great
most holy place where god can dwell for the lord god almighty and the lamb are the temple of it
that god sanctuaries the church in glory that the city had no need for sun for the glory of god did
lighten it and the lamb revelation 21 and also it tells us that the tabernacle of god is with men
so as we see god's thoughts for dwelling with mankind we can see how important it is for god
to dwell in the midst of his people and as we look more particularly at the differences
between the tabernacle and the temple we realize that it was under the same dispensation of law
that the law was still active and the children of israel had to obey the law but the religious and
civil system that was enacted by david was different from that of moses that the priests
the levi's the singers the doorkeepers the army were all organized differently
the first chronicles tells us that the priests served the lord himself that was the role of the
priests serving the lord himself we know that we are priests today that the role that the priests
had in these economies is the role that is ours today of approaching and worshiping god himself
so we can learn there that any service that we offer must be to the lord himself
that as we seek to serve the lord jesus then we should be serving him and him alone
the priests were divided by a lot and when we read of dividing by a lot we know that it was
god's direct direction it was god telling them what to do and the priests when they were divided up
were directly told and commanded from the lord himself so our service as priests must be directed
by the lord we can go hither and thither we can do all sorts of things and seek to for the lord
but we know that to be fruitful we must be directed by the lord himself
there were in fact 24 classes of these priests and we read of 24 elders in revelation chapter 5
there's a number of points that is reading around about this topic that i must admit puzzled me
and i'd be glad of any thoughts from anybody here but one interesting point just a little aside
really was that when moses ordered the levites they began their role from when they were age 30
we have that in numbers chapter 4 but in one chronicles chapter 23 david numbered them from 30
age 30 but later on in the chapter it was from 20 years old why that changed from 30 to 20
the only help i managed to get upon the subject was that as the levites were carrying the
tabernacle throughout the desert that it was obviously a heavy burdensome job they had to be
strong men so to speak and the suggestion i read was that when the levites didn't have to do
basically all this carrying that the age was reduced to 20. now i don't know whether we've
got any young men aged 20 to 30 who feel that they're perhaps not as strong until they get to
30 but that was the only thoughts that i gleaned upon that topic but we know that
moses saw this model that was given to him directly from the lord on the mount david we're
told received his plans by inspiration from god directly from god and king solomon established
everything by lot so divine communications telling us and telling them what should be in these two
different buildings the vessels were different in the buildings most were generally the same
but many were different in number and weight new vessels were added and new musical instruments
were added the ark of the covenant which is so important precious that we read and hear a lot
about today was the same it contained the law and the law didn't change but perhaps the most
dominant feature of this new temple were the two cherubims that were in the holy of holies
try to do a little bit of a calculation and i hope that i'm right but in fact here the the
hall at catford is quite similar i think to the size of the temple the temple was 60 cubits long
which i think if you think of a cubit has been 18 inches approximately then that would be about 90
feet the temple was probably just a little bit longer than the whole of this building to the
wall behind me the holy of holies was 20 cubits by 20 cubits by 20 cubits it was a cube the width
of the temple was 20 cubits wide 30 feet i think this is probably about 30 feet wide
so as we think of the temple we can think of this building here
with the holy of holies at the the front as that cube at the back of the temple and the place which
was indeed most holy and as we move on and think about how the temple was built we know that day it
was very very precious and important to david that david gave of his own brass his silver and his
gold he gave of the booty that he'd won from his enemies and out of his own affection david gave
his own riches to the building of this temple after he died and we also know don't we that
christ indeed loved the church and gave himself for it that our lord jesus christ
gave him his very self for the building of the church we know that there was many riches came
voluntarily from the nations that the cedars came from lebanon that iron came from canaan
and that other materials were brought in from afar and we know that during the millennium
when christ reigns over this earth that there would be the gentile nations voluntarily giving
of their tributes and their gifts to the lord himself so we have david in his time of affliction
when he was uh around running about from saul when he was being persecuted by saul and others
that the booty the precious minerals metals that he'd gained he was keeping for the lord
and he prepares materials for the time when his son solomon was going to build the temple
and we know likewise that the lord jesus that as the suffering lord jesus prepares for the rights
to the kingdom that david and solemn are almost seen as a continuum and almost as one thing
that david in his affliction prepared the materials for the building of the temple in the
millennium the lord jesus suffered in this world and went all the way to calvary's cross
so that he has the right to reign during the millennium psalm 132 speaks of that temple and
the earthly throne found on the afflictions of david we have revelation five where we uh brought
to the center of the heavenly throne and what is at the center there but the slain lamb so we get
that uh juxtaposition of the sufferings of christ and the glory that will come
up david commanded all the princes of the people to help his son and the lord associates us with
his kingdom and the administration of his house and how that should weigh heavily upon us the
disciples that were acquired by the lord jesus during his rejection we're told we'll sit on the
12 thrones judging the tribes of israel solomon added more riches to the house
and christ will add more glories to his millennial temple when he reigns we know that when the temple
was dedicated that there was 22 000 bulls and 120 000 sheep which were offered which clearly reflect
and show us the value of the sacrifice of the lord jesus and when the temple was dedicated
then god's glory filled the house but it was in a thick cloud it was in darkness
israel was still under the law god dwelt in darkness but in the new testament times
we're told in one john that he is light and that god was revealed by none other than his son
so if we look at the temple itself and try and picture perhaps using this room to help us
what the temple would be like there are a number of pictures i even found in fact on
i very rarely go on youtube but i thought i'd give it a whirl and put in solomon's temple
and there was uh i thought anyway right quite an interesting little video graphically designed
showing you what somebody had produced inside the temple and moving through and showing you
their idea of what the temple is like and there are many other pictures and models i remember being
fortunate enough many years ago now to go to jerusalem and in the new part of jerusalem it
was next to a hotel incredibly we found it incredibly difficult to find there is a model
of solomon's temple and jerusalem at that time interesting to have a look at but if we think of
the temple itself and think the difference between the floor of the tabernacle and the floor of the
temple when we think of the floor of the tabernacle there was nothing there it was built
upon the sand because the people were journeying round about and the tabernacle obviously could be
put up and brought down and you could be carried about with the children of israel during their
wanderings the floor of the temple was made of cypress wood and we told that the that particular
wood was hard and durable as we would expect but it emitted that fragrant smell and in the temple
tabernacle also we read of the the smells the fragrance that were emitted with the lord
the foundations and the construction solomon's temple the stones were constructed before they
arrived they were carried out from near jerusalem we believe and that there were great costly hewn
stones and that they were fashioned to be fitted in exactly in the building of the temple that
there was no noise allowed there was no talking allowed where the temple was being constructed
and that clearly tells us doesn't it that the church's foundation is christ he's the chief
cornerstone in ephesians 2 and that the church is formed of living stones you and me that the new
testament tells us in whom all the building fitly framed together grows into a holy temple in the
lord that you and i are these stones being brought together to form this spiritual building we've said
of the holy of holies being 20 cubits cube someone suggested that that symbolizes the trinity
father son and holy ghost in perfect measurement one of the questions for you to think about and
decide that in this cube that was 20 by 20 by 20 the height of the tabernacle was 30 cubits high
so there's a discrepancy of 10 cubits was the holy of holies lifted up or was there some other
construction any thoughts but the floor was and the was wainscoted with cedar one king six tells
us that the walls and floor were overlaid with gold and we know that gold speaks to us of the
divinity of the lord jesus we know don't we that the lord jesus by his own blood has entered once
for all into the holy of holies and most importantly these cherubim as we read through the verses
you'll notice that there were a number of references to cherubim what a cherubim speak of
they speak of the government of god the judicial power and intelligence of god himself we know that
there was cherubim on the mercy seat looking at the blood overshadowing it but here in the holy
of holies at this end of the temple there were two huge cherubim two side by side really touching
each other in the middle touching the wall huge golden cherubims made of olive wood that spoke
of the lord jesus 10 cubits high and wide here we obviously indicated that the justice and grace
of god in equal importance we have in the holy of holies the ark of the covenant
that's wooden box made out of the acacia wood covered with gold the mercy seat on the top
two and a half cubits by one and a half cubits with the gold and smaller golden cherubim sitting
on the top of it in the tabernacle that arbok of the covenant contained the law
aaron's rod that budded and the golden pot of manna when we read of solomon's temple
the ark being brought into that holy of holies then we no longer read of the golden pot of manna
we no longer read of aaron's rod that's budded but importantly the law was still there the people
were still under the law and we know that all the law was kept by the lord jesus we know that the
throne of god and judgment has become a throne of grace as hebrew 4 tells us and then perhaps
surprisingly as the ark was brought into the holy of holies then the staves the poles that
were used to carry the ark so the ark itself wasn't touched you perhaps expect that they
should be taken away but the staves were left in so that they could be seen and no doubt they
reminded the children of israel of their desert wanderings as the staves were left in
so as we move away from the holy of holies and look at the holy place sometimes referred to
as the the greater house what marked off the holy of holies from that holy place
we know that the veil was there but in the in the tabernacle but in the temple it seems to be
that the there were doors doors and door posts of olive woods that there was also there
golden chains marking it off from the holy of holies why these extra parts
the doors were made of this of olive wood and they seem to fold certainly to some degree
in the walls of the temple then they were made in the tabernacle of acacia wood which was a wood
hardwood found in the desert but in the temple it was of cedar wood and cedar wood as we know
is very strong it endures as a wood and that wood which was overlaid with gold
and on the the paneling the wood itself was the palms and the cherubims and the half
open flowers so there would be these most like engravings down the side of the hall and all
around the hall in fact and these would reflect the glory of christ for eternity we've said that
the temple speaks to us of the father's house and as we think of spending eternity in the father's
house then the we can think of believers clothed with gold reflecting the glory of christ for
eternity the palms that were engraved would speak of peace we think of the lord jesus coming into
jerusalem speaking of peace the half open flowers would speak of life perpetual flowering
representing the renewal and beauty of the rest with god in the eternal state that
these walls overlaid with gold would obviously speak of christ to us
as we think of one corinthians 2 it tells us that god hath revealed these things unto us
by his spirit and the temple would speak to us and show us something of god's thoughts and god's ways
so in the temple itself in that holy place we know in the tabernacle that there was
one candlestick famous candlestick forged out of gold from one piece of gold one talent of gold
and the seven uh branches from that candlestick in the temple there were in fact 10 candlesticks
five on the left and five on the right again everything in this temple speaks of christ
speaking of the fact that god is light christ is the light of the world and perhaps we can
think of these 10 in the temple that light has been multiplied and we understand the ways of god
we know christ he's been revealed to us the golden altar of incense is there burning the sweet
smelling savor speaking of christ to the father the table of showbread christ is the sustainer
of communion with his people there were it was a gold table in the tabernacle with 12 loaves
representing the 12 tribes of israel in the temple there was again 10 of them 10 speaks of
responsibility five again on the left five on the right and we know that christ fulfilled all
the demands of the law we know also don't we that the table of showbread remind us that christ is
carrying the people of god today that he's carrying us through that he's helping us in our
daily issues and that that table is seen in the light of the candlestick
if we move out of the the main part of the temple we find this extra feature
i always think the entrance to catford fall here's quite grand compared to some of the meeting rooms
that we frequent but here we had a porch on the front of the building it was 20 cubits wide the
width of the temple and 10 cubits from front to back the access to the temple was big was wide
they obviously speaks to us of the fact that christ has opened up the access into god's presence
i am the door by me if any man enter in he shall be saved and then from the outside perhaps the two
most dominant features that could be seen from the front from the east side there were two
huge pillars two pillars that were 18 cubits high so we're talking there about 27 30 feet high
two huge pillars made of copper or bronze and they were given particular names one was called
jakin and the other was called boaz now we're told that jakin will means he will establish
so there in that time solomon's time that pillar spoke to the jews that he will establish
referring perhaps to the millennial kingdom and then boaz boaz means in him is strength
that the strength of the lord jesus was able to carry his work through and on these two pillars
there were was a capital each and that was crowned with lily work and the lilies would speak
of the beauty of christ and the beauty of the rain though there were brazen pomegranates there
and pomegranates as we know would always speak of fruit there are many many seeds in a pomegranate
speaking of the fruit that was born for god in particular we're told that these two pillars
were broken up by the calended chaldeans in jeremiah chapter 52 and then we we're told of
the chambers and the priest's rooms a little bit of a difference opinion exactly what was
meant here but on the sides of the temples there were rooms built storage rooms and rooms for the
priests and some have suggested it mentions five cubits and six cubits and seven cubits
something they refer to the width of the stories some to the width of these rooms as you move
towards the back of the temple but there was obviously room for the priests in solomon's
temple that was different from the tabernacle and how that could wonderfully speak to us
of the fact that the lord jesus himself told us that in my father's house there are many
mansions that there is place for the priests there's places for us there is and he's going
to prepare that place for us and then in the court of the priests outside we have the brazen altar
that place which was used for the sacrifice of the animals that were brought to god himself
the old brazen altar was five cubits by five and three cubits high it was made of acacia wood
and covered with brass and we know brass would typify a power that could withstand judgment
and everything in this outer court was made of brass or bronze copy of exact mixture was
but the brazen altar in the temple was much bigger that was 20 cubits by 20 cubits
and 10 cubits high that it was made by hero and it's likewise stood before the temple it
obviously speaks to us of the atoning work of christ but it was much bigger and could obviously
cope with the sacrifice of far more animals we're told of the brazen laver and here
can get a little confused because in the temple it speaks of these 10 lavers and that they were
on carts with wheels again five on the left and five on the right and these 10 lavers were used
for the washing of the animal sacrifices clearly they needed to be washed because we know that the
lord jesus is perfect that he is righteous and these 10 lavers would be used for the washing
of the animals we don't seem to have got that mentioned in the tabernacle it seems to be
uh an extra and as we move on we can think of the brazen sea the brazen sea
was again one of the more remarkable objects in the front of the temple there that
it was where the priests would wash their hands and their feet before they offered sacrifices
to god that that would speak of the laver as it's mentioned in the tabernacle but in the
tabernacle no size was given for the laver we know that that laver was made of the women who
were humbled who gave of their um ornaments and mirrors so they could no longer look at themselves
and it was used to make the laver but here we have the front of solomon's temple this huge brazen
sea it was about five cubits high seven and a half feet high taller than any one of us
10 cubits in diameter around was 30 cubits and it had these 12 oxen underneath three
facing each side it says again but it could fill the 200 baths was the unit that was used and
3 000 baths i think if my memory serves me correctly somebody suggested that was about
12 and a half thousand gallons of water i think i remember even reading a suggestion that obviously
so much water was involved in this huge object that they might even have cut aqueducts uh bringing
water continually to feed into this brazen sea and it's speaking isn't it of the priests
having to wash their hands and feet before they offered the sacrifice speaking of our walk
the laver here as we know as christians is the word of god which searches us tells us
smites our conscience when we're doing things wrong there's certainly we know that the disciples
could have no part with christ unless their feet were washed and as we walk and live here as
christians we know that as reading the word of god will bring things to our attention will strike us
will stop us perhaps from doing things that we shouldn't and cause us to be faithful and serve
him we know the animals that were represented here with the ox representing the firmness and
patience of god so we come to the great court around the outside surrounding the whole temple
three rows of hewn stones and a row of cedar beams and it was there that the people worshipped god
so we can see that there are certainly many similarities between the temple and the tabernacle
but there are differences and we can learn things from those differences that the temple
gives us some idea and some thoughts as to what it will be like in eternity living in the father's
house but the temple represented the glory of god and there it showed out the grace of god
the huge porch that meant that there was access only when sin had been dealt with truth that god
obviously deals with truth and it's important that we're not swayed by other opinions that we
do search out the things of god and that we do listen to what god has to say for us that there
was fruitfulness fruitfulness for god in the worship that happened in that temple and there
was obviously that beauty that beauty that we can see there in the lord jesus christ who gave himself
for us and in all the objects that were in the temple as goals speaks of the divinity of god
and speaks of our lord jesus christ and the wonder of who he is and the work that he has
accomplished for us so may it be that as we think about these things we get a greater idea of how
god delights to dwell amongst his people and that how we as christians as the holiness of that temple
was so important that we remain holy and so that we can serve him so perhaps we can close by singing
hymn number 439 how blessed a home the father's house their love divine doth rest what else
could satisfy the hearts of those in jesus blessed his home made ours his father's love
our hearts full portion given the portion of the firstborn son the full delight of heaven 439
which
is
ah
oh
oh
and brings
out
dwells
us
is
flow
slow
is
to fill with joy the heart.
No cloud is there to dim the sea,
nor shadows to impart.
O what a home of such is love
that he must bring us there
to fill that home, to be with him
and in his glory shine.
The Father's house, the Father's house,
all that the Son is given,
made us the objects of his love
and he our joy in heaven. …
Transcripción automática:
…
Good evening, everyone. Perhaps we could begin with singing the hymn number nine.
Father, we, thy children, bless thee for thy love on us bestowed. As our Father,
we address thee, called to be the sons of God. Wondrous was thy loving giving,
Jesus for our sins to die. Wondrous was his grace in leaving for our sakes the heavens on high.
Hymn number nine.
As our Father, we, thy children, bless thee for thy love on us bestowed. As our Father,
we, thy children, bless thee for thy love on us bestowed. As our Father,
we, thy children, bless thee for thy love on us bestowed. As our Father, we, thy children,
favor bless, by thy fruit and spirit guiding, earnestly on wars to come. And with daily
strength providing, round us lead thy children home. Though our pilgrimage be dreary, this
is not our resting place. Shall we of the way be weary when we see the monster's face?
Knowing no anticipation, when this hope of souls rejoiced, and his promise hath been
waited, soon shall hear his welcome voice.
In the precious name of the Lord Jesus, amen.
Shall we just sing another hymn to 462?
O gracious God, our Father, we thank thee for thy word. To every saint so precious that speaks of Christ the Lord,
we thank thee for thy spirit that moved those men of old, who in the holy record thy truth and love unfold.
462.
O gracious God, our Father, we thank thee for thy word. To every saint so precious that speaks of Christ thy word,
we thank thee for thy spirit that moved those men of old, who in the holy record thy truth and love unfold.
For thy name, Lord, we thank thee, the earth and the sea, who doth to thine own children thy judgment will reveal.
As none of thee who knew it, thy truth could ever import, so none but those who eat it should receive it in the heart.
O may we then, blessed Father, thy gracious word believe,
that we may by thy Spirit the truth in love receive.
For we would thus be good to serve our faithful Lord, and in this day of conflict,
cleave to his name and word.
A brother who spoke here beginning of this year or the beginning of this season said to me,
make sure they've all got their Bibles. Tell them to open their Bibles and to follow the passage.
And so I'm glad to see that everyone who I can see have got their Bibles and it's good to follow along.
And I would like to read, to begin with, a verse in the first letter to Timothy, chapter 6 and verse 11.
But thou, chapter 6, verse 11, but thou, O man of God, follow these things and follow after righteousness, godliness, faith, love, patience, meekness, fight the good fight of faith, lay hold on eternal life.
If we turn over into the second letter to Timothy, to Timothy chapter 3, and we read in verse 14.
But continue thou in the things which thou hast learned and has been assured of, knowing of whom thou hast learned them, that from a child thou hast known the Holy Scriptures, which are able to make thee wise unto salvation through faith in which is in Christ Jesus.
All Scripture is given by inspiration of God and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness, that the man of God may be perfect, throughly furnished unto good works.
I'm going to refer to other Scriptures in a moment.
But I would like to speak a little bit tonight about men of God.
Where we've read together in the New Testament is the two occasions in which the words are in our English language, where we read about men of God.
And it is, of course, Timothy, the person who was called a man of God.
There's another reference that you might look up in 2 Peter, where the Apostle is speaking about the Old Testament Scriptures, and he could say, men of God wrote those Old Testament Scriptures.
But here we find that Timothy is designated as a man of God.
And when we speak of men of God, we are not just speaking of a gender, just the males amongst us.
This is a possibility for every one of us to be in this scene as men of God, as women of God, to be here for God.
Because when we come to the epistle written to Timothy, we find that we're in difficult days.
Indeed, in the second epistle, we read the expression, in the last days.
And there are certain conditions that were relevant when the Apostle Paul wrote to Timothy, which are relevant today.
When the Apostle wrote, in chapter 1 verse 15 of this second epistle, he could say, all they that are in Asia have turned away from me.
They had given up the teaching that the Apostle Paul brought.
And when we come to the last chapter, chapter 4, he could say, they have turned their ears away from the truth.
And so there is a direct connection between the ministry that the Apostle Paul brought and the truth.
And we know, as we were reminded this afternoon, that the truth of the church came through the pen of the Apostle Paul.
And in a day when men were turning away from the teaching of Paul, there was a need for men of God.
There is a need for individuals who are going to stand up for God.
And the day in which we live in, I'm sure that we can each associate with it, that we're living in a day when the teaching of the Apostle Paul is thrown overboard.
When the teachings of the Holy Scriptures, as being the complete Word of God, is being thrown overboard.
Where the teachings concerning the person and the work of the Lord Jesus is being done away with.
And in a day like that, that we're living in, we need people who are going to stand for God.
We need to have men of God. We need to have women of God.
It is not an optional extra, I may add, before we go any further.
There may be some who says, well, that's all very well, but I'm not really fitted to be a man of God.
I'm young, and I have my life before me, and I would like to enjoy something that this world has to offer.
We will see in a moment. This world has nothing good to offer.
But you know, if you're a Christian, and I trust that everybody here is a believer that knows the Lord Jesus as their own Saviour.
Because if you don't, you'll be lost for all eternity.
If you're a believer, you are duty-bound to live here for the Lord Jesus.
You are duty-bound to be a man of God, or a woman of God.
And the reason is given in 2 Corinthians. We have many reasons, but I'll go to this one.
This one is in 1 Corinthians 6. The Scripture says, you're bought with a price.
You don't belong to yourself. You can't do as you like.
Before you were converted, before you became a Christian, you could do what you like.
But now the Lord Jesus has bought you. He's redeemed you. He's bought you to himself.
And we can't do as we like. We are here to serve Him.
Now when we look at this subject of the men of God,
and one of the wonderful things in our present day is that we can find out how many times it's mentioned by looking in a concordance.
I'm not as modern as some of the people here that would go to their laptops or their iPhones.
I have to go to a concordance, and I have to count one by one through all the references to men in the Scriptures.
And I find that in the Old Testament, there are about 75 references to men of God.
The first one is Moses. I want to speak a little bit about Moses.
The second one is Samuel.
Shemaniah.
Two very familiar men come next.
Elijah and Elisha.
And then David.
And finally, and an obscure one, Agdala.
Or Igdala.
And each of these men, as I've read through them and as I've thought about them and indeed prayed about them,
I've found one thing that seems to stand out in their lives.
And I want to suggest very simply that this thing that I've picked out ought to be true of every one of us here tonight.
Because I'm taking that all of us here desire to be here for the Lord and to be men of God.
In relation to Moses, the subject that I picked out from him was separation.
In relation to Samuel, I want to talk about worship.
Shemaniah, obedience.
Elijah, prayer.
Elisha, grace.
David, order.
And Agdala, we've got nothing to say about him because the scripture says very little about him.
But what a wonderful thing it is that you can be a man of God without anything to write up about.
Just simply be in you. We will see that when we come to him.
He is, of course, mentioned in the book of Jeremiah.
So we come to the man Moses.
And the reference for Moses is in the book of Deuteronomy in chapter 33.
Deuteronomy 33 verse 1.
And this is the first mention of men of God in scriptures.
And this is the blessing wherewith Moses, the man of God, blessed the children of Israel before his death.
If I was to ask you here to write a short essay on the life of Moses, a few words that would sum up his life.
Where would you start? Where would you go?
Perhaps some of you here would mention the fact that he was placed in the bulrushes.
And that would be, as far as you are concerned, the important thing about Moses.
Perhaps you would look at him as the one who led the children of Israel through the rivers of the Red Sea.
Perhaps you would look at him as the one who received the Ten Commandments.
Indeed, there are many things about Moses that we could talk about.
And there is a great deal that the person Moses did.
When the Spirit of God draws the Hebrew believers' attention to this man Moses,
he could say, by faith Moses, I'm reading from chapter 11,
when he was come to years, refused to be called the son of Pharaoh's daughter.
And that's where I get the idea of separation.
And I want to suggest that if we are going to be men of God or women of God,
if we're going to live in this scene, we have to be separated.
Separated from the evil that is all around us.
And Moses here, there came a time in his life, and I want you to notice this, particularly the young ones.
I'm reading from Hebrews 11, 24.
By faith Moses, when he was come to years.
There come a time in your life when you're going to have to stand on your own two feet.
Up to now, perhaps Moses had been able to go along with the crowd.
And perhaps you have always had the privilege and a great privilege it is to have Christian parents
that has brought you along to the meetings.
But there will come a time in your life when you've got to stand on your own two feet.
When you have to make your own decisions.
When the Apostle Paul wrote to the Philippians, he could say,
As you obeyed when I'm with you, work out your own salvation with fear and trembling.
Philippians chapter 2.
And so young people, there will come a time in your life when you will have to make decisions.
You have to make a decision, is am I going to be here to serve the Lord?
Or am I going to please myself?
Particularly as you get to college or to university.
Away from your parents, perhaps for the first time.
The decisions have to be made and you have to make those decisions.
Am I going to be here for Christ?
Am I going to live for the one who is coming again and he's going to reign?
Or am I going to live for myself and try and please myself?
Well, Moses here, he looked at things and there are four things that Moses did.
In Hebrews 11, the first thing he refused, he choose, he esteemed and he forsook.
And I want to suggest that each one of us have got to look intelligently at what this world has to offer.
And we have to look and see what there is outside.
What is there that we can enjoy?
What pleasures are there?
And we've got to be prepared to refuse because we have something far greater.
Moses could refuse all the riches in Egypt.
Why?
Because he looked beyond them and he saw that riches which were in the Lord Jesus Christ.
And if we get a glimpse at the greatness of the person of the Lord Jesus,
a greatness of that which is his and that we are going to be part of that,
we will be able to refuse what this world has to offer.
And so the challenge is to each one of us here.
Are we prepared to say no to this world and to refuse as Moses did the people of God?
Now, some of you may look round and you may say to yourself,
it's all very well for old people, but as young ones, we like life.
What life is there at the little assembly that we go to?
There's no life.
Moses choose the people of God.
And dear friends, it's far better to be associated with God's people,
the people that love the Lord Jesus, than it is to be associated with a world
which is fast coming under the judgment of God.
And so Moses, he chose, he esteemed and he forsook Egypt.
It was a very difficult thing as we look at Egypt, as we see all that which Egypt had for Moses to forsake.
But you know, dear friends, if he didn't forsook Egypt, he would never have been a man of God.
And if we don't say no to this world and all that it is showing to us,
we don't need to go far outside of these two walls, four walls,
and we will see the world pulling us, seeking us to go with them and to do what they do.
But Moses refused it because he looked and he saw Christ.
And you know, when we come to, if we were to have read further on in the chapter in Deuteronomy,
God speaks of Israel and he says, Israel shall dwell alone.
It is ever God's intention that Israel as a nation should be completely separated from all the other nations around him.
And indeed, when Balaam in Numbers 23 could look down at Israel, he could say, the people shall dwell alone.
This was God's order for the children of Israel.
And we see that this, too, is God's order for you and me, that we are separated from a world which stands guilty of the death of his beloved son.
Now, there may be somebody who says.
If I'm separated from the world, if I don't go where they go, if I don't do what they do,
I won't be able to witness to them.
A very popular suggestion. And I have a good answer.
I want to ask you the question, who had the greatest witness?
Was it Abraham or was it Lot?
Can you think of it? Abraham was the old man up in the mountains.
The old man that had no doubt herds and cattle, the old man that looked after his household.
Lot, on the other hand, he had moved away and he was right down amongst the people in Sodom.
Who had the greatest witness?
Abraham was able, according to the 14th chapter of Genesis, to rescue Lot and all those in Sodom.
And what a witness Abraham had, because he was a separated man.
But as far as Lot, he not only pitched his tent towards Sodom, the next time we read of him, he was living in Sodom.
And the next time we read of him, he was seeking to judge Sodom and to make it a better place to live in.
What witness did he give? When he went and told his own family that judgment was coming, they laughed at him.
There is no witness if there is not separation.
The world will laugh at people that tell them that God is going to judge the world and still seek to enjoy what this world has to offer.
And so I would suggest that firstly, we see in Moses a man who was separated from the evil that was going on in the world.
Now we come to Samuel, and again we would read that verse which mentions him.
It's in 1 Samuel chapter 9.
In 1 Samuel chapter 9, we could read verse 6.
And he, that Saul's servant, said unto him, that is Saul,
Behold, now there is in this city a man of God.
He is an honourable man, and all that he says surely comes to pass.
Let us now go thither, perhaps he can show us our way that we should go.
Then said Saul unto his servants, But behold, if we go, what shall we bring the man?
For bread is spent in our vessels, and there is not a present to bring to the man of God, what have we?
Here we have that this man Samuel is called a man of God.
And my suggestion, having looked at Samuel and having thought about him, is that the thing which seems to come out very forcibly to me,
and no doubt to others there are other points that will come out forcibly when you read the story of Samuel, is worship.
If we go right the way back to the very beginning of the life of Samuel, to the last verse of chapter 2,
it says, And he worshipped the Lord there.
Now I'm not suggesting that that was Samuel, because if you look at the context,
you will find that it could have been Eli, Hannah and Elkanah were together.
And I want to suggest very simply that perhaps in amongst them, on that day when they took Samuel to the temple,
to give him to the Lord, as they were about to leave the temple,
there was mum, there was dad, and there was Samuel, and there was Eli, and together they could worship the Lord.
And Samuel was in the atmosphere where there were those that were worshipping God, giving God the correct place.
And you know, when we think of the condition that prevailed when Samuel comes onto the scene, it is a very dark day.
At the end of the book of Judges, we read, Every man did that which was right in his own eyes.
They weren't acting according to the word of God.
We find that the very priests that were there, Hothnai and Phinehas, were sons of Belial.
That means they were wicked, that God designated them as being evil.
And we can read some of the wicked things that they'd done, not only in relation to the offering,
but also morally in the way in which they lived.
And it was in a day like that, that God was going to raise up a priest that could turn the people back to him.
And you know, we live in the same sort of day.
If the day that we saw in the end of the 1st Timothy and 2nd Timothy was a day of departure from the teaching of the Apostle Paul,
I'm sure that we can all identify with the day in which Samuel was living in.
A day when there is a wholesale giving up of God's rights in this world, where there is a moral decline in the standards in which we live.
And in that day, we find that we are introduced to a priest, Samuel.
What a grand thing it is as we come out of the book of Judges.
A book where several occasions we read, every man did that which was right in his own eyes.
We come into the book of Ruth and we find there that God has a man.
And God has a man in the book of Ruth.
The last word in the book of Ruth is David, God is a king.
And in the book of Samuel, God has a priest and that priest is here as Samuel.
But what I want to draw attention to is in chapter 7.
Chapter 7 and verse 9.
And Samuel took a suckling lamb and offered it for a burnt offering, holy unto the Lord.
And Samuel cried unto the Lord for Israel, and the Lord heard him.
And the last verse.
And his return was to Ramah.
We should have said he went from year to year in a circle.
And his return was to Ramah, for there was his house, and there he judged Israel, and there he built an altar unto the Lord.
You see what is absolutely vital in the life of Samuel is that here was a man who was the leader of worship for the nation of Israel.
Here was a man who brought that which typically would speak of the Lord Jesus Christ.
And he offered it, and he offered it for the nation of Israel.
And that is absolutely vital that we as a company of the Lord's people get together where we can worship God.
And perhaps we should ask ourselves the question, what is worship?
What does it mean when we say we've been to a worship meeting?
We all know, I think, what a prayer meeting is.
When we go to a prayer meeting, we ask God for things that we need.
But when we go to a praise meeting, we thank God for what he's given us.
But when we go to a worship meeting, do we not thank God for what he is?
And the wonderful thing, and if we want a definition of worship, I think that we can see it in one of our hymns, hymn number 53.
The glories of his work we bring, the glorified we see, his deep perfections gladly sing, and tell them forth to thee.
And so not only do we see that Samuel was the leader of worship for the company of the children of Israel,
but when we come to the last verse, we find that when he went back to his house, he there built an altar unto the Lord.
And I believe that one of the sad things is that when we get together as saints of God,
and particularly when we gather on the morrow to remember the Lord in our death,
there is a great opportunity that we can worship, we can give him, give the Lord Jesus and give God that which is due to him.
We can worship him. Yes, we can praise him for what he has done.
But you know, do we also in our private home lives, do we have that opportunity when we as individuals can give God the right place?
And do we just leave worship for the older brothers in the morning meeting?
Or is it something that each one of us, sisters and young people alike, that we can get a time, we often used to hear,
of the quiet time when we get before the Lord and when we can pour out our hearts to him in prayer,
but also when we can thank him and worship him for what he is.
And I think we see that in Samuel, a person who put God first.
The next one is in 1 Kings 12.22.
And verse 1 Kings 12.22.
When we speak of this man, and this is the only reference that we get apart from the corresponding verses in Chronicles.
The point that I want to emphasize here is that he was a man who was obedient to the word of God.
In the next chapter, we read of a man of God, and it could indeed be the same person, but he's not named.
And he went, and he disobeyed the word of God, and we have the sorrowful state of his death.
But here, he is in total obedience to what the word of God says.
The scriptures tells us in relation to Saul, to obey is better than sacrifice, and to hearken than the fat of rams.
And if we had time, we could go back into 1 Samuel 15.
And there we see that God told Saul.
So Saul, the king, the one that he had been raised up.
He said, I want you to go, and I want you to smite the Amaleks.
I want you to get rid of them as a nation.
Because what they did to the children of Israel, and Saul goes along.
And when he went there, he smote some, but the good, the king, and all the best sheep, and all the best cattle, he kept.
And to him, Samuel could say, to obey is better than sacrifice, and to hearken than the fat of rams.
And I want to stress that if we are going to be men of God, and women of God in this day, we have to be obedient to the word of God.
And the word of God has to be the prime thing in our lives.
Now, how can you obey something if you've never read it?
How many people here are drivers and have never read the highway code?
Certainly, I would be amongst those that in the last 10 years have never read the highway code.
For some reason, we haven't got time and we think we know.
How many of us here are seeking to serve the Lord and seeking to do what he wants us to do, and have never read the scriptures through in the last 10 years?
This is a challenge to each one of us.
I don't want you to go home tonight and say, well, what he said was all very good and nice.
I want you to go home tonight and say, I'm going to have to do something about it.
Because if I'm going to be obedient to the word of God, I'm going to have to read it.
I'm going to have to get to know what the word of God is all about.
And we need to read the Bible.
We need not only to read it in our Bible readings and in our meetings, that's not sufficient.
We need to read it in our homes.
We need to read it more than any other piece of literature that we have.
And it always saddens me when I see people with books, novels that are about that thick and their Bible is never read.
If we are Christians at all, and if we want to stand for God, we have to put the reading of the word of God, the number one thing in our lives.
Because there are many things in the Bible that we know.
But sad to say, we don't keep them.
I could tell you things that we all know and we all like to obey.
And the first one that I'm sure that we're pretty, pretty acquainted with is the New Testament teaching in relation to marriage, where it says, don't be unequally yoked.
And how often do you hear the preachers stand up here and we can preach that very clearly because it's scriptural.
And we can say you shouldn't be unequally yoked with an unbeliever.
And then we can turn and very often the brothers can turn and we can say the sisters shouldn't speak in the assembly because we have New Testament scriptures,
which says, let your women keep silent in the assemblies and we can press that.
But, you know, when we were reading through Ephesians here not so long ago at the Bible basics in chapter three,
we read there things which start to hit and start to affect us,
because when we read in the word of God and in Ephesians chapter four, it says, let no lying.
Scripture says we shouldn't lie. Do we obey what the scripture says?
Or do we say it doesn't really matter because it's only a small lie?
Scripture says in 28 of the same chapter, we shouldn't steal.
Do we take something from our employer because we think he doesn't see us?
Scripture says, let no corrupt communication proceed out of our mouth.
Do we say things which are wrong, which are evil?
Are we being obedient to the word of God?
And the scripture says we should love one another.
And I think this is perhaps the greatest challenge, that do we obey the word of God and love one another?
Those people that we don't like, those people that naturally we don't get on with,
but the scriptures tell us that we should love them.
And I believe if we're going to be men of God for the Lord down here,
well, then we have to be those that love one another.
We have to be those that know the scriptures and obey them.
Good thing it is to be obedient to God's word.
In 1 Kings 17 verse 18.
And she said unto Elijah, what have I to do with thee, O thou man of God?
Art thou come unto me to call my sins to remembrance and to slay my son?
Again, when we are thinking of Elijah, what is the topic that comes to one's mind as we read about him?
The thing that always comes to my mind when we talk about Elijah is the words from the Apostle James in the New Testament.
You could speak about Elijah as a man of like passions as we.
In other words, Elijah was just like you and me.
He had the same feelings. He had the same thoughts.
He liked the same things as we did, but he said he prayed.
What a great thing it was that Elijah could pray.
And it's the greatest privilege or one of the greatest privileges that we have as Christians is that we can pray.
In Hebrews 4 we read there of three things that are left for us in this wilderness journey.
First of all, there is the word of God.
Then there is the high priest.
And then in the last verse, we have the throne of grace.
We have that place where we can go to to receive mercy and to receive help as we pass through this scene.
And in the story of Elijah, we see a man who was prepared to pray.
And what a good thing it is and what a vital thing it is for us as a Lord's people, for us as men of God, for women of God, to be marked by prayer.
And very opening words that we have in chapter 17, we are immediately introduced to Elijah.
But before we come to him in 1 Kings 17, we find that he had already been praying.
And he had been praying that it might not rain.
And you know, why did he pray that it might not rain?
Because he had already read the word of God.
He had already read what it says in Deuteronomy.
And there it says, if the nation turns away from me, God says, if the nation turns away from me, I'll stop the rain.
I'll stop the weather.
And here we find that Elijah, having read those Old Testament scriptures, is praying according to the word of God.
And it is absolutely vital that we know the scriptures as we've already said.
And that we obey them and we pray according to the word of God.
You know, there are men in the Bible who made prayers which were never answered.
This very man that we're talking about, he prayed that his life may depart from him.
He said, I'm no better than my father's. Take my life from me.
But you know, God never answered his prayer.
And as a matter of fact, Elijah never died.
Chapter 2 of the 2nd Kings, he goes straight to heaven.
And there's another man who prayed.
And that prayer wasn't answered. I'm thinking of Peter, Luke 5.
When he saw the Lord and the multitude of fishes that he had got, he fell down at Jesus' knee and he says, depart from me.
But the Lord never departed from him.
And I believe that Peter was eternally thankful that he didn't depart from him.
And it says in the book of James, again, we ask for things, but we ask amiss that we might consume it on our own lusts.
And you know, dear friends, prayer is absolutely vital, but it's got to be according to the mind and the will of God.
What a wonderful example we see of this in the life of the Lord Jesus.
That when he was here, he was a man that was marked by prayer.
If you read in Luke's gospel, seven times we read of the Lord actually praying.
It actually says the word in the text.
But there are perhaps other times, 14 times when he is seen speaking to his father.
What a testimony. The Lord Jesus is seen in Luke as the son of man.
And if it was needed, we can say reverently for the Lord Jesus to speak to his father.
How much more for us in this day in which we live to be marked by prayer.
So Elijah is a man that is marked by prayer.
And now in 2 Kings 4, 7.
2 Kings 4, 7 says, Then she came and told the man of God, and he said, Go sell the oil and pay the debt.
As for Elijah, all our commentaries will tell us that Elijah is the prophet of grace.
And I believe, you know, they are absolutely true.
And as we read through the story of Elijah, we see a man that brought something different to Elijah.
Elijah came on the scene as we've seen him with judgment.
And Elijah goes off the scene, well off what we have recorded in the second Kings chapter 1.
He brings down fire from heaven. He goes off with judgment.
But Elijah, Elisha, he begins with blessing.
What a wonderful thing it is that as men of God and as women of God, we should bring that grace,
that wonderful blessing that the Lord Jesus brought when he was here.
And, you know, as I read through this, and we've just got time just to look at one in 2 Kings 2 and verse 19.
Elijah, in the beginning of 2 Kings 2, he has gone across the river Jordan.
He has gone up to heaven and Elisha is left.
And Elisha crosses over the Jordan and the first place that he comes to, as did Joshua, was the city of Jericho.
And in verse 19, the men of the city said unto Elisha,
Behold, I pray thee, the situation of this city is pleasant, but the water is nought and the ground is barren.
And he said, Bring me a new cause and put salt therein.
And he went forth unto the spring of water and cast the salt therein and said, Thus saith the Lord, I have healed these waters.
Here we see the first act of Elisha, an act of absolute blessing.
Jericho, as we know, was the city of the curse.
It was in Joshua's day that they said, He that buildeth the city, there was a curse put upon it.
And it wasn't until in the days of Ahab that that city was built.
And here it is still a city where the waters were barren.
It was a city which was pleasant to look around.
And, you know, here is a picture of this world, a world when God created it in Genesis 1 was very good.
A world in which there are wonderful sights and pleasure to look to our eyes in relation to nature.
But what had happened? Sin had entered into this world.
And as far as this world was concerned, it was barren.
There was nothing there. And along comes Elisha.
And what is he going to do and what are we going to do in a world which is marred by sin?
What can we do?
He brought this new curse and he put salt therein and he cast it into the water.
What a wonderful picture this is of that new life which the Lord Jesus has brought.
The old days, the old idea and the law, keeping of the law, didn't satisfy.
It didn't meet anybody's need.
When the Lord Jesus came, he could meet men's need.
And I believe one of the things that should mark us as men of God is that we have a desire.
And that we have a concern for those that are lost.
And that we want to speak the gospel.
And we want to tell them about the Lord Jesus Christ.
And using every opportunity to speak about him.
I was only hearing yesterday of a young man.
I say he's young because he's younger than me.
And he knows he's dying with cancer.
And he's a doctor.
And he knows all about what's going to happen to him.
But he's full of Christ.
And he wants to tell others about him.
What a grand thing it is to have that grace.
To be wanting to bless other people.
And if we're going to be men of God, we need to tell others of the gospel.
Not only in the gospel meetings.
But in our private lives with our family and with our friends and with those that we mix with.
Let us be those that will speak about the gospel.
Well, I want to finish on time.
And as we come to the last two.
Simply in relation to David.
There's so much that could be said of David.
But I'll read the verse in 2 Chronicles 8.14.
2 Chronicles 8.14
And he appointed, according to the order of David his father, the courses of the priests to their service,
and the Levites to their charges, to praise and to minister before the priests.
As the duty of every day required, the porters also by their course at every gate.
For so had David, the man of God, commanded.
The reference to David as the man of God occurs in three places.
Here is the first time we read about David as a man of God.
And the next two are in the book of Nehemiah chapter 12.
And if you read those verses, it is always in connection with order.
And you know what I like about this?
Is that David told the people what to do.
And it was according to what God had already said.
When we think of Moses in the tabernacle, how many times is it recorded that it was according to the pattern shown him in the mount?
And we know that Moses, when he built that tabernacle, it wasn't something haphazard.
It wasn't something that he dreamed up.
It was something that God gave him.
And God told him exactly what to do and how to build it.
And Moses was faithful in all his house, Hebrews 3.
And he built the tabernacle according to what God showed him in the mount.
And here we find that David, he's the man of God.
And he's sticking to the order that God had told him.
He's sticking to that particular way in which God had said there should be this actions in the temple.
You know, when we bring it up to the present day, we don't have to wonder how are we going to run?
How are we going to run our assemblies?
How are we going to act in our meetings?
Because we have it in the Word of God.
It is there. It is clearly laid down.
We mentioned this afternoon the truth, what the Apostle Paul brought out in 1 Corinthians 12.
And you know, if we want to know the order that we should act in relation to the remembrance of the Lord and the supper,
we know exactly where to look.
It's in 1 Corinthians 11.
There we have laid down the facts of the supper.
And as we read through Paul's letters to those churches, do we not see there is a definite order given?
And if we are to be men of God, and if we are to be here for him in a scene of his rejection,
I would like to suggest that there should be order in the way in which we gather,
in the way in which we meet together as Christians.
That order has to come from the Word of God.
How sad it is when we look around us and we see many of the established churches
and their order doesn't come from the Word of God, but it comes from the prayer book,
which they have, some men, maybe godly men in the past, have written.
And yet the Word of God is laid to one aside.
If we are going to be here in this scene of his rejection for him,
as men of God, we need to take heed to the order that is given to us
in the New Testament epistles in relation to the church.
And then I come to our final character.
He is in Jeremiah 35.
I'm sure he's one that we wouldn't have turned to.
An immediately thinking of men of God.
Indeed, I had to look up the reference that I had written to find it, to read it today.
And it is in 35 verse 4.
And there we read, I brought them into the house of the Lord,
into the chamber of the son of Hanun, the son of Agdala, a man of God.
That's all that we read about him.
But, you know, I like that because here was somebody
who was simply doing what he could do for God.
You know, that is what we want to happen today.
We want you as individuals to simply be here,
doing what you're doing for God.
Simply to live a life of Christianity.
To live as Christ lived down here.
And so, I finished what I was going to say.
My time is up, but I trust that each one of us,
as we think about these men of God,
I trust that each one of us here will realise
that it is our responsibility to be here for the Lord Jesus.
To live for him.
And I want to suggest that these seven features
should be true of each one of us.
First of all, we should be separated from this world,
which is coming under judgement.
Secondly, we should have that spirit of worship,
of giving God what is his due.
From our hearts, we should give him praise.
Thirdly, we should be those that are obedient to the word of God.
That we read the word of God, and we know it.
That we spend time in prayer.
And that as a result of that, there will be the going out of the gospel,
the grace that will go out to others, in a saving grace.
There will also be an order, not only in our lives as individuals,
but in the assemblies to which we gather.
And finally, we will just be there as Christians,
as those that are living for the Lord.
We're going to close with singing that hymn that we quoted,
number 53.
Bless God and Father in thy sight.
We bow and own thy grace.
We worship in thy glorious light, which shines in Jesus' face.
The glories of his work we bring,
thee glorified we see,
his deep perfections gladly sing,
and tell them forth to thee.
Number 53.
Bless God and Father in thy sight.
We bow and own thy grace.
We worship in thy glorious light,
which shines in Jesus' face.
The glories of his work we bring,
thee glorified we see,
his deep perfections gladly sing,
and tell them forth to thee.
He fills thy presence,
fully known to thee,
alone his worth.
But in our hearts
thy light has shone
as suns of heavenly birth.
Lord Jesus Christ,
we praise thy name,
in God the Father's name,
and worship thee,
the Holy Lamb,
whose blood has brought us near. …
Transcripción automática:
…
Good afternoon, everyone. It's good to see so many of you here.
Could we start with hymn number 275, please?
Our God is light, and though we go across a trackless wild,
Our Saviour's footsteps ever show the path for every child.
The whole hymn, please, number 275.
Our God is light, and though we go across a trackless wild,
Our Saviour's footsteps ever show the path for every child.
At ev'ry step, how freshly blue,
The shore of heav'n we guide,
The faithful and forbearing Lamb,
That never turns aside.
Thou weariest not, most gracious Lord,
Thou quivering, weary crow,
And seizing the sustaining word,
Thou giv'st our hearts to love.
This bitter water's meadow first
Thy cross has laid ensleep,
When all our glad and visionless
Lost shade could retreat.
The manna canter's springing well
Suffice for every need.
And nature's grace, her stories tell
How well thy path does lead.
In the name of the Lord Jesus, amen.
We also sing hymn number 101, please.
It is not with uncertain step we tread our desert way.
A well-known voice has called us up to everlasting day.
The whole hymn, please, number 101.
It is not with uncertain step we tread our desert way.
A well-known voice has called us up to everlasting day.
The voice of him who here has trod
Along the trackless way
And on the road which leads to God
Where once we've lost its way.
He leads us not alone to trace
A path across the ways
But leads us still with living grace
Homeward bound to emace.
See how fast stands the heavenly door
When glory shines below.
To light the way he's gone before
The coming bliss to show.
In patience then we tread the road
Of faith and courage tried.
And just the law which bears its load
Thou must draw with due piety.
Could we turn, please, to Peter's first epistle
and read the last chapter.
First epistle of Peter, chapter 5, from verse 1.
1 Peter 5, verse 1.
The elders which are among you I exhort,
who am also an elder and a witness of the suffering of Christ
and also a partaker of the glory that shall be revealed.
Feed the flock of God which is among you,
taking the oversight thereof not by constraint but willingly,
nor for filthy lucre but of a ready mind,
neither as being lords over God's heritage
but being ensembles to the flock.
And when the chief shepherd shall appear,
he shall receive a crown of glory that fadeth not away.
Likewise, ye younger, submit yourselves unto the elder.
Yea, all of you, be subject one to another
and be clothed with humility,
for God resisteth the proud and giveth grace to the humble.
Humble yourselves, therefore, under the mighty hand of God,
that he may exalt you in due time,
casting all your care upon him, for he cares for you.
Be sober, be vigilant, because your adversary, the devil,
as a roaring lion walketh about seeking whom he might devour,
whom resist steadfast in the faith,
knowing that the same afflictions are accomplished
in your brethren that are in the world.
But the God of all grace,
who has called us to his eternal glory by Christ Jesus,
after that ye have suffered a while,
make you perfect, establish, strengthen, settle you.
To him be the glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen.
By Silvanus, a faithful brother, unto you,
as I suppose I have written briefly,
exhorting and testifying that this is the true grace of God
wherein ye stand.
To the church that is at Babylon,
elect together with you, saluteth you,
and so does Marcus my son.
Greet ye one another with a kiss of charity.
Peace be with you all that are in Christ Jesus. Amen.
Peter, of course, is much remembered for the fact
that although he loved the Lord much, he also failed.
And yet the Lord was able to give him a task,
and he was able to say to him even before Peter had fallen,
and once thou art returned, strengthen thy brethren.
And I suppose this epistle here is part of that work
which the Lord had confided to Peter.
He writes to his brethren.
Now, primarily, of course, these were Christians
who were Jews before,
and therefore they were in the care of Peter especially.
But I dare say Peter also wrote this epistle to strengthen us.
And there is a good deal of very practical guidance
in this epistle and also in this chapter we have read.
Now, in the first verse, Peter addresses himself
to the elders which are among you,
and he gives them an exhortation which we will come to,
I hope, in verse 2, which is, feed the flock of God.
But first of all, the question arises,
who exactly was Peter addressing here?
And there are two ways of understanding this
because the word elder is used in two different ways.
The obvious meaning is that it refers to elder persons,
elder men in particular.
But secondly, the word is also used for those brothers
who had the office of an elder.
Now, this raises a little question here
right in the beginning.
Well, what actually is meant?
Is it experience or is it office?
Now, when we say office,
not talking about an office with a desk and a computer
where you go to do your work.
We are talking about a charge
which is not exactly the same thing as a gift.
It is something that is exercised in a locality,
in a town.
And you read in the Acts of the Apostles already
that the apostles appointed men
who had certain qualifications as elders.
There is one verse that is very important there
which we might just read in Acts 14
because sadly it is sometimes misrepresented a little bit.
But this is Acts 14.23
where it speaks about Paul and those with him
and it says,
And when they, that's Paul and his companions,
had ordained them elders in every church.
Now, some have tried to make this verse mean
that the believers in those assemblies
voted in order to choose elders.
But this is not what it says.
It says the apostles chose for them elders in every church.
And that's what they did,
especially in newly formed assemblies
where you had Christians who had been converted
out of Hesonism, Gentiles.
And in order to make sure that there was oversight,
the apostles appointed such elders.
And by the way, it was only apostles
and those who had received a specific command and authority
from the apostles who could do this.
You all know that Titus is one example.
Now, when I just a minute ago used the word oversight,
it might just be good to explain this as well briefly.
There are two words that are used for the same people.
One is elders.
The other is overseers.
The first talks about the, you might say,
the experience and the dignity.
The second talks more about the actual work they had to do.
And you find that both words are used of the same people in Acts 20
where it says Paul called the elders from Ephesus
and then he speaks to them and he says,
take heed of yourselves and of the flock
in whom the Lord has set you as overseers.
So he tells the elders that they are overseers.
Now, that's what we mean by official elders.
Now, in this verse here,
there are several reasons why it might not actually be
the official elders that are meant.
In the first place, there is no article before the word,
so it just means elder ones,
not a specific group of the elders.
You also find that in verse 5 it says,
likewise ye younger.
So it seems that there is a correspondence.
There is something for the elder ones.
Nobody needs to be disappointed.
There will also be something for the younger ones.
But it just is another argument for showing that
it might not be the office in view here.
Also that Peter calls himself a fellow elder
as opposed to an apostle as he might have done
if it was a matter of authority.
However, Peter does use the word oversight in verse 2
and he tells them how they should not go about
having this oversight.
Peter, as I mentioned, writes to Christians
who were Jews before and official elders,
and that's another argument,
were normally appointed in assemblies
where you had predominantly heathens
that had been converted.
Now, given that that is the case,
you might actually argue
that it doesn't make such a big difference
because as in the assemblies in heathen territory
you had at the time appointed elders,
so you had in the assemblies
where there were predominantly those who had been Jews before,
you had elder brothers who also took responsibility.
And in one sense, this is very much like our situation today
where we haven't got apostles,
we haven't got apostolic delegates,
and we cannot appoint elders.
But we do hope that there are,
and we give thanks for those that are there,
that there are brothers who meet the qualifications
that are outlined in 1 Timothy 3 and in Titus 1.
And in this passage, then,
we have an exhortation to such who are privileged in this way
to look after something that is very precious to God,
namely his flock.
But before Peter comes to this,
he gives three titles,
or he mentions three characteristics of himself,
and these three are important for this particular exhortation.
He says, first of all,
I am writing to you as a fellow elder.
I know something about the challenges of your position.
I know something about the difficulties
and the possible frustrations connected with this work.
But, he says, I am secondly a witness
of the sufferings of Christ.
Now, there are witnesses and witnesses.
You can either, I would call this witness passively,
like, for example, the women in the Gospels.
They witnessed how the Lord was crucified,
and then they witnessed how he was put into the grave.
That means they observed.
But then you also have active witness,
and this is what is meant here,
which is really the same word as martyr.
It is somebody who testifies,
somebody who speaks publicly
and who bears witness to a certain thing.
Now, that's important here because Peter says,
I am bearing testimony to the sufferings of Christ.
And, you know, that's a good basis
for exhorting someone in a difficult position.
He says, part of my ministry
is to speak about how much Christ suffers.
And if you have that before you,
you won't be that disappointed if you bear some sufferings
in your responsibility as elders.
But, thirdly, and that's beautiful as well,
he says, I'm also a partaker of the glory
that shall be revealed.
You may find things difficult.
You may find that, you know,
the sheep are running all over the place.
It's really not easy to look after that flock.
You may find it's a real challenge.
But he says, you know what?
I am already a partaker of the glory.
Now, you've got something that's of typical Peter here.
Peter is very down-to-earth.
It's kind of, you might say, the wilderness perspective.
He doesn't see the believers like Paul
as joined together in one body,
united to Christ, their head in heaven.
He doesn't talk about the mystery.
With Peter, it's very basic.
He says, you are individuals.
You are in the wilderness.
You are on a journey.
But at the end of that journey, there is the glory.
And here, in order to encourage those he writes to,
he says, I'm already a partaker of that glory
that shall be revealed.
It's beautiful how Peter presents this.
If you just look at Chapter 1,
and these are four references now in this epistle.
In Chapter 1, it says, in verse 5,
he speaks about the salvation
ready to be revealed in the last time.
Then, the next thing that is being revealed,
in verse 13, he says,
and hope to the end for the grace that is brought unto you
at the revelation of Jesus Christ.
Now, thirdly, in Chapter 4 and verse 13,
but rejoice in so much as you are partakers of Christ's sufferings
that when his glory shall be revealed,
he may be glad also with exceeding joy.
Did you get that?
Four items that are being revealed at that great revelation.
Number one, their salvation.
And when Peter talks about salvation,
with one exception, which is 1 verse 9,
where it says salvation of your souls,
he talks of full salvation of body, soul, and spirit.
And he points us to the moment when Christ will be revealed in glory,
and he says, at that moment in time,
your salvation will be revealed.
Second point was the grace.
When Christ appears in glory, and we appear with him,
then something that we appreciate now already will then be revealed,
and that is his grace.
And the third aspect was this unspeakable joy.
The revelation of Christ will be an occasion of joy for us.
And here in 5 verse 1, we have the fourth point.
It is the revelation of the glory of Christ.
And for Peter, this was so real.
He says, you know, I'm a partaker of this now.
And if I write these practical things to you, some exhortations,
I really do this as a partaker of that future glory.
Now, then the exhortation itself is feed the flock of God.
Now, feeding is perhaps not exactly right or enough.
You may find a literal translation that uses the word shepherd.
Shepherd the flock of God.
Now, feeding is certainly part of this.
If the shepherd wants to keep a flock together in one place,
and if the flock is in a barren place where there is no food, no pasture,
he will have a lot of trouble keeping the sheep there.
So the first thing is feeding.
But then shepherding comprises more.
It also means to have an eye on the flock.
It means to be observant when a sheep distances itself from the flock.
That's normally a sign of danger.
There may be a sheep that doesn't walk like the other sheep walk,
and that is a sign where the shepherd would say, look what is going on here.
So shepherding would be caring, observing, and looking after this flock.
Now, when I say this flock, it says here, and that's very important, the flock of God.
You ever heard people talking about their flock?
Somebody who says, I'm a pastor.
I'm looking after a flock of 200.
My flock is 250.
Well, it shouldn't be his flock at all.
It is the flock of God.
And that is exactly the point made a little later here in the next verse.
We should not regard those who are Christ's as our possession.
They are the possession of Christ.
They are the flock of God.
And whatever we can do for their benefit, we should do in this perspective
that actually we want to help along those who belong to that flock of God.
Now, sometimes we learn best by negatives.
And if we're told how not to do it, it sheds some light on how it should be done.
Taking the oversight thereof, not by constraint, but willingly,
not for filthy lucre, but of a ready mind.
There are two dangers here.
One danger is that somebody wants to do a spiritual work.
He wants to be involved with the flock of God, but it is for the wrong incentives.
It is for financial gain.
And that is, again, sadly, it is a principle that has become very widespread in Christendom
where Christian service is carried out for financial benefit.
And Peter says very clearly this is not how it should be done,
but nor should it be done by constraint.
This would be someone who feels a responsibility, who says,
I've got to do it, but I really don't like it very much.
And he says neither of these would be the right perspective.
The right perspective would be willingly and of a ready mind.
Neither, verse 3, as being the Lord's, I just say here over God's heritage,
but in my Bible and probably in yours, God is in italics.
And that means it's not there in the original.
And generally it's a good idea when it's not there in the original then not to put it there.
Now, I read another translation for you where it says,
not as lording over your possessions.
Now, that is the point.
Those who have a responsibility in relation to believers should not regard them as their possession.
They should not regard themselves as lords, but they should do this as a service.
Well, you might say, how can they do it then?
If they don't act as lords, if they don't command,
how can they then make the flock move in a certain direction?
How can they make sure that the sheep go the right way and that they get the right food?
Well, just read on.
It says, but being ensembles to the flock, being models for the flock.
Sometimes we're not conscious of this, but being a model or giving an example is a very powerful thing indeed.
Just remember our youngest son a few days ago.
He came downstairs in the morning.
He was wearing my shoes.
He also had found himself a tie and put it on.
He had a bag in his hand.
He looked at us, showed us his bag, and he said, computer, computer.
Then he looked and said, I'm dead.
I'm going to work.
He was already with the big shoes and the tie in the bag.
Now, I never particularly tried to teach him how you would go about going to work, but he must have been looking.
I suppose that's how it works with this matter of being models.
Sometimes we may not be conscious of this.
Peter says, I go fishing, and then the others say, well, we go fishing as well.
Another occasion is a child comes running.
Mom, mom, my little brother or sister, whatever, has done a really stupid thing, something really bad.
The mother says, well, what have you done?
Well, I did the same.
I did it first.
Well, that's the power of imitation.
Peter says, if we want to give positive guidance, and one almost feels reluctant to speak about this,
because one feels that one has done so many things which one rather wouldn't be imitated.
It's just so much more important to think about this, being examples to the flock.
Whatever we do, we must be ready for it to be imitated by others.
And when the chief shepherd, verse 4, shall appear, ye shall receive a crown of glory that fadeth not away.
Sheep are not well known for being particularly grateful.
Sheep wouldn't run after the shepherd and give him a reward.
And perhaps some of the elders might say, well, it's a real burden, Peter, what you're asking of us here.
It's quite hard work.
And sometimes, you know, when you tell someone you're not really going the right way, they don't really like it.
And it's not a rewarding thing.
And Peter says it is a rewarding thing.
Just look in the right direction, the chief shepherd.
Now, first of all, you know, even those who have some responsibility, Peter says we are only under shepherds.
And we need to look at the chief shepherd, the Lord Jesus.
And it's a very beautiful title.
We know him well as the good shepherd.
The character of the good shepherd, based on John 10, is that he lays down his life for the sheep.
At the cross, on the cross, you see the good shepherd.
But Hebrews 13 talks about the great shepherd.
And the great shepherd is the one whom God brought again from among the dead.
So in resurrection, you see the Lord as the great shepherd.
But you can also see the Lord as the chief, the first or highest shepherd.
And this is where?
This is again at his appearing, when the chief shepherd shall appear.
So death, resurrection, appearing, good, great, and chief shepherd.
And Peter says, if you have your eye on that, which, by the way, is a good perspective to be encouraged,
to think of the day which is no longer the day of small things, but a day when, as it says,
Christ will come in glory with might and power.
And then it says, you shall receive a crown of glory that fadeth not away.
You know the martyrs, they get the crown of life.
Paul, at the end of his life, having lived righteously, having fought the good fight,
he says, what I get is the crown of righteousness and those who love his appearing.
But here, for the shepherds who do this, or elders who do this sometimes not so glorious work,
Peter says, at the appearing, you will receive the crown of glory.
And that is one that lasts.
It's not like one of those crowns made of twigs for somebody who's won the race, the Olympic game,
which shortly afterwards would be fading away, but it will be lasting.
Likewise, verse 5, ye younger.
Now, I know that we always have trouble fitting ourselves into categories.
And I'm sure many have been thinking about, well, who actually in this room here,
who is this, the younger, and who are the elders?
Well, perhaps I can make a simple suggestion.
I would suggest that most of us are younger than some others.
And most of us are older than some others.
And that makes it very easy.
We then have guidance as to how we should act, what our attitude should be towards those who are younger,
where we should be trying to help them along in their Christian pathway.
And then secondly, what should our attitude be towards those who are older?
And that's what we come to here.
And the attitude should be, submit yourselves to those who are elder.
Now, you might say that's not something I like.
It's not something I was taught at school either.
I was told I need to use my elbows and I need to get to the top and I need to do this and that, but not submit.
Well, that's the divine guidance.
And I believe it's something very healthy.
It's something that would do away with a great deal of difficulties
we have locally if we were better at submitting.
First of all, towards those who are elder, and then to one another.
I remember a time, actually, where I was quite worked up about something that, in my view, was just going completely wrong.
And I went to some brothers' meetings and I tried to make it so plain how wrong it all was.
And I told an older brother about it at one time, and he said to me,
look, your responsibility is to give your view.
Tell your brethren what you believe and tell them why you believe it,
and then why don't you leave the decision for them?
And just say, look, I've told you what my conviction is, and now I would like to leave you to decide.
This first sounded very strange to me.
And then I thought, well, actually, I'll try that out.
And today I do think it was a very good piece of advice.
And it's actually very much in line with what we find here.
Submit yourselves to the elder and all of you be subject to one another.
I actually find that if something is presented in a way, in the spirit of this verse,
that you find more open ears and others will listen better to what is being suggested.
Now, it says here, clothed with humility.
It's the picture of a garment that you are clothed with.
It surrounds you and it's almost inseparably connected with yourself.
You take it with you where you go.
And this is how humility should accompany us on our way.
And then a reason is given, for God resists the proud.
We don't want that, do we?
We don't want to be in a position where God actually has to actively resist us and be against us.
You remember that this happened to some people, and sometimes people who made a good start.
My first example is Nebuchadnezzar, and he had been given a high position by God,
but then the moment came when he exhorted himself in his pride,
and then God had to resist him, and he had to say,
Nebuchadnezzar, you will become like the animals in the field.
There's another example that comes to mind, which is Uzziah.
Uzziah was 16 when he became king.
He reigned 51 years.
His career was as steep as it can be.
If you read 2 Chronicles 26, you find what he did, how he built towers.
He strengthened the cities.
He went to war.
He overcame the enemies.
He made them tributaries.
He had engineers employed in order to do research and develop machines that could be used for various purposes,
and he just did such a good job as a king.
And then the tragic verse comes,
and when he had become great, his heart became exalted, or exalted himself.
And then it says that God had to resist him.
You know, when he exalted himself, he then said, I want to be more than a king.
I want to be more than God has given me.
I want to burn incense in the temple.
And then the priest came and withstood him, and he became angry.
And that's another sign of pride.
If one is on the wrong way, and somebody tells me I get angry, that's really the attitude of pride.
And then God had to slay him with leprosy on his forehead.
That was the end of this king who had gone such a good way for such a long time.
God resisted the proud, but he gives grace to the humble.
And that's a real encouragement.
If we are able, with the Lord's help and by his grace, to say, all right, I feel differently,
but I now submit to this, and I listen to what my brother says,
and if we go this way of humility, we have the Lord on our side.
And the Lord says he will give grace for this attitude.
Humble yourselves, therefore, under the mighty hand of God.
Again, humbling ourselves is not something that comes naturally, but just think of the mighty hand of God.
What has the mighty hand of God done?
The mighty hand of God executed judgment on Christ on the cross.
It pleased Jehovah to bruise him, and Christ endured this.
Now, if Christ took that place, and if the mighty hand of God did this and was still right,
should we not take that place?
I'm not speaking about atoning sufferings, but I'm speaking about just humbling ourselves under the mighty hand of God
and saying, actually, what this mighty hand does right now, it hurts me,
but the mighty hand of God is always right.
That he may exalt you in due time.
Now, that's always the order in God's ways.
If somebody exalts himself, God has to discipline him.
But if somebody humbles himself under the mighty hand of God, God will exalt him.
And the best example is Christ.
Philippians 2, he humbled himself.
And he went down step by step, even to the death of the cross.
And then it says, and therefore, God has highly exalted him,
has given him a name that is above every name.
And this is a principle in the kingdom of God.
The principle in the world is exalt yourself and try to get ahead of your neighbor.
The principle in the kingdom of God is humble yourself,
and God, leave the exaltation, leave the exalting bit to God.
He will do this in due time.
Casting all your care upon him, for he cares for you.
Now, we do find this difficult sometimes, casting our care upon him.
We quite like to keep it on.
You all know this story of the old lady with a big rucksack
who was offered a lift by a farmer on a truck,
and she accepted, gratefully accepted that lift,
but she did keep her rucksack on.
And when the farmer asked, look, why are you doing this?
She says, well, I'm so grateful you give me a lift on your truck,
but I want to help a little bit as well, and I keep my rucksack on my back.
Now, that is like praying and getting up and being just as worried as before.
Now, why do we find it so difficult to leave the rucksack there?
May I suggest we find verse 7 difficult because we haven't gone through verse 6?
If we humble ourselves under the mighty hand of God,
and we say, what is happening to me right now?
Actually, God is right.
Then I'm in a good position to actually cast my care upon him and leave it there.
Be sober, be vigilant, because your adversary, the devil,
is a roaring lion, walketh about, seeking whom he may devour.
Being sober means free from influences that would cloud our perception.
Being vigilant means we have to watch, we have to be alert.
Now, the reason given is that actually the flock is in danger.
Just connect this with the first verse.
You've got to look after the flock, but there is a lion walking around.
Now, any good shepherd who cares for his flock, he would be very much alert
if he was told actually there is a lion walking around,
and he only wants to do one thing.
He wants to devour sheep from your flock.
And this is the warning here.
This adversary is there, presented here as the roaring lion.
A roaring lion is actually one of the most frightening things
you can ever experience in your life.
Just before it goes for the prey, you have this loud, roaring sound.
This is how Satan acts.
He frightens through persecution.
Now, that fits very well into Peter, and it's very interesting
how this same adversary is presented in different scriptures.
Before I come to this, we should remember that we have a very powerful enemy,
but this enemy is a creature.
God created him.
He is far more intelligent and powerful than we are,
but he is not omnipotent, he is not omniscious, and he is not omnipresent.
He is presented in Ezekiel 28 as a cherub
who lifted himself up in pride, who wanted to be as God,
and therefore God had to cast him down.
And this is actually confirmed in the New Testament in 1 Timothy 3,
where it speaks of the snare of the devil,
and it's talked there about a novice who may become proud
if you give a novice the job of an elder.
And it says this is actually how Satan fell through pride.
But in the New Testament epistles, it's very interesting
how the same enemy is presented in different ways in different epistles.
And we're in danger that we'll run out of time a little bit.
I'll be short, but just very briefly.
In Romans, Paul had taught that the believers had died with Christ,
that there was no good in them, and that their old man was crucified.
And to the Romans, Paul can say it's not going to be long,
and Satan will be trodden under your feet.
Now, in 1 Corinthians, you had a case of grave immorality,
and Paul had to say such one needs to be delivered unto Satan
for the destruction of the flesh, for discipline, for sufferings.
Now, the Corinthians were carnal, and that's why in 2 Corinthians,
Paul has to warn them and has to say,
actually, Satan comes like an angel of light.
And if you are carnal, if you aren't careful, you will be deceived by Satan.
In Ephesians, Paul introduces us to the wonderful inheritance in the land.
And there he says in the end, but watch out, you'll have warfare.
And there you need the whole armor of God to stand against the wiles of the devil
who wants to rob you of the enjoyment of that inheritance.
Now, in Colossians, it is a matter of the person of Christ and his work,
the preeminence of his person and his work.
And there it says that Christ held a triumph over him.
He defeated him through his work.
In 1 Thessalonians, the devil is mentioned again.
In 2 Thessalonians, you have a description of the time of the end,
where Antichrist comes, and you find that the devil is presented in that context.
Now, then there are more references.
We mentioned 1 Timothy, where it's the question of the elder
and the initial sin of the enemy is mentioned.
Then in Hebrews, you find that this enemy is actually the one who had the power of death.
But then the better one, Christ, overcame him in death.
In James 4, he is a defeated enemy, and it says,
Resist him, and he will flee from you.
Now, here in Peter, as we said earlier, the believers are on their way through the wilderness,
and there they have this persecution, this terror from the side of Satan,
and that's how he's presented here.
But let's not look at this without Revelation.
In Revelation, you find that he will actually be cast from heaven, where he has still access now.
He will be bound for 1,000 years in the abyss, in the pit,
and then in the end, he will be thrown into the lake of fire.
Now, that was just a little footnote to show that this enemy we have before us,
we don't want to sort of minister on this very much.
I don't think I ever heard an address on this, but nor should we be ignorant about him.
It's much better to be occupied with Christ, but we should know what is presented.
And here he is presented as the opposing, as it says here, adversary.
But it says, verse 9, Resist.
God is on our side. God is stronger.
Therefore, we can resist steadfast in the faith.
And we know that the same afflictions are accomplished in your brethren that are in the world.
That's again Peter's perspective.
He doesn't see us like Paul in the heavenly places.
He doesn't see us as one body.
He sees us as individuals who are still in the world facing these struggles,
but also experiencing the help of God.
And that's verse 10.
The God of all grace.
You know, there may be struggles, but on our side, we have the God of all grace.
And it says, He has called us to his eternal glory.
Now, here in the end of the epistle, Peter converges to Paul's line.
You might have thought that Peter had a different, well, and he does have a different emphasis in his ministry,
but he does not contradict Paul.
He talks about the grace, and in this verse, he actually speaks about the eternal glory.
Normally, it's always the glory at the end of the pathway when Christ appears.
Now, he talks about the eternal glory to which we have been called in Christ.
Now, if it's in Christ that we've been called to that eternal glory, we can be sure we will get there.
His desire is that they might be perfected, established, strengthened, and settled.
And the conclusion, you might say, is in verse 11, to him be glory and dominion forever and ever.
He's the one whose grace we need in every step, from conversion, through instruction, through restoration,
through working for him, everything is his grace.
And therefore, if he brings us through to the end, our wish even now is to him be the glory and dominion forever.
Now, last thing is a footnote.
In verse 12, he links himself with Silvanus, again, one who had worked with Paul.
It's another connection with Paul.
And he says, actually, what I've been saying to you is I've been testifying that this is the true grace of God wherein ye stand.
Initially, Peter had a little difficulty with this concept of grace.
Actually, we all had, because it first means you have failed.
Otherwise, you don't need grace.
But here, Peter says, actually, I'm not contradicting Paul.
What I've been testifying to you is perfectly in line.
I've been speaking about the true grace of God wherein you stand.
Now, verse 13, the church that is is really the church that isn't.
It's in italics again.
There is no church in that verse.
And it just says she that is.
And we can be certain that this is Peter's wife and that Peter ministered in Babylon where there were many Jews because his command was to strengthen his brethren.
And therefore, he would have looked after Jewish believers, Jewish Christians in other places as well.
And also, there are greetings then from Marcus, the restored once failing servant.
Greet one another with a kiss of charity.
Fortunately, we haven't got time to speak about this now.
Paul speaks about a holy kiss.
Peter speaks about the kiss of love.
And just say so much, it's good if our relationships are characterized by both of these, by holiness and by love.
Peace be to you all that are in Christ Jesus.
Amen.
Could we sing hymn number 202?
About the eternal glory.
What will it be to dwell above?
202.
Is love so bright and full?
This dreary pain.
No heart can think.
No tongue can tell.
What joy it will be with Christ to dwell.
No heart can think.
No tongue can tell.
What joy it will be with Christ to dwell.
When sin no more obstructs the sight.
And flesh and scent deceive no more.
When we shall see the Prince of Light.
And all his works of grace expound.
What heights and depths of love divine.
Will death through endless ages shine.
What heights and depths of love divine.
Will death through endless ages shine.
And God has fixed the happy day.
When the world's tears shall demise.
When he will wipe these tears away.
And fill our hearts with glad surprise.
To hear his voice and see his face.
And know the fullness of his grace.
To hear his voice and see his face.
And know the fullness of his grace.
Amen. …
Transcripción automática:
…
As to the hymn books, in the medieval churches they used to chain the Bibles. Perhaps there was a reason.
Shall we begin our meeting this evening by singing hymn 178.
Our great High Priest is sitting at God's right hand above, for us his hands uplifting in sympathy and love.
Whilst here below in weakness we onward speed our way, in sorrow oft and sickness we sigh and groan and pray.
Hymn 178.
Our great High Priest is sitting at God's right hand above, for us his hands uplifting in sympathy and love.
Whilst here below in weakness we onward speed our way, in sorrow oft and sickness we sigh and groan and pray.
Through manly contemptation my soul falls on her course.
Christ's mighty intercession upon his hungry souls.
My gracious High Priest, greet him, who from the cross did bleed.
Remember us, praise him, bless him, help him each hour of need.
O Jesus, blessed Saviour, we hope to see thee soon.
Who once called earth its Saviour, who soon for us will come.
God's most gracious labour made thee his Son to guide.
To be thou his processor, to be for us a guide.
Lord Jesus Christ, Amen.
I'd like to read some scriptures from the Epistle to the Hebrews.
We begin in chapter 3 with the first part of the chapter.
Wherefore, holy brethren, partakers of the heavenly calling, consider the Apostle and High Priest of our profession, Christ Jesus, who was faithful to him that appointed him.
Chapter 4, verse 14.
Seeing then that we have a great High Priest that is passed into the heavens, Jesus the Son of God, let us hold fast our profession.
For we have not an High Priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities, but was in all points tempted like as we are yet without sin.
Let us therefore come boldly unto the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of need.
And from chapter 7, verse 24.
This man, because he continueth ever, hath an unchangeable priesthood.
Wherefore, he is able also to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by him, seeing he ever liveth to make intercession for them.
For such an High Priest became us, who is holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners, and made higher than the heavens.
Who needeth not daily as those High Priests to offer up sacrifice, first for his own sins and then for the people's?
For this he did once, when he offered up himself.
For the law maketh men High Priests which have infirmity, but the word of the oath which was since the law maketh the Son, who is consecrated for ever.
Now of the things which we have spoken, this is the sum.
We have such an High Priest, who is set on the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in the heavens, a minister of the sanctuary, and of the true tabernacle which the Lord pitched, and not man.
And then from the book of Exodus, chapter 28.
We read verse 2 and then verses 4 and 5.
And thou shalt make holy garments for Aaron thy brother, for glory and for beauty.
And thou shalt speak unto all that are wise-hearted, whom I have filled with the spirit of wisdom, that they may make Aaron's garments to consecrate him, that he may minister unto me in the priest's office.
And these are the garments which they shall make, a breastplate, and an ephod, and a robe, and a broided coat, a mitre, and a girdle.
And they shall make holy garments for Aaron thy brother, and his sons, that he may minister unto me in the priest's office.
And they shall take gold, and blue, and purple, and scarlet, and fine linen.
How grateful we ought to be that we have in heaven a great High Priest.
When the Lord Jesus was on earth, he was not a High Priest. He couldn't be. He was not a descendant of Aaron. He was not even of the tribe of Levi, but of Judah.
So he had no earthly right to be a priest.
But the first verse that we read together told us to consider the Apostle and High Priest of our calling, Jesus Christ, who was faithful.
And that is what we are going to do with the Lord's help this evening.
The Lord Jesus came from heaven as the Apostle in order to bring God his Father before mankind.
And having completed his work here on earth, he then ascended to heaven to take the place of a great High Priest on his Father's throne, ever to make intercession for us.
Now, when the epistle to the Hebrews speaks of him as a great High Priest, that is typical of that epistle, where things of the old covenant are contrasted with all that is of the new covenant.
And we see that the Lord Jesus is always described as being greater, better, more excellent, and in one instance even more perfect than that which was of the old covenant.
But isn't that to be expected of the man, Christ Jesus, who came down from heaven?
Why do we need a High Priest?
Well, we have read that he was acquainted with our infirmities.
And this is typical of our character as we go through this world.
We are far from perfect.
We have our weaknesses of various kinds.
We have, for example, physical weaknesses.
They may trouble us so much that we tend to become self-centered.
We forget things that are more useful to us, spiritually useful.
We may be mentally weak, and that is a condition which very often makes us even more self-centered.
We are unable to think about spiritual things.
But you know, the weakness that we have most is something that comes from the flesh.
We have heard this afternoon of the work of Satan.
And he knows just how to manipulate our flesh, which, as we know so well, is not going to help us on our way through this world.
The Apostle Paul wrote in his epistle to the Galatians,
Walk in the Spirit and ye shall not commit the lusts of the flesh.
What a good thing it was that we had the Lord Jesus as an example.
He was a man here on earth, and yet he was without sin.
Defilement in any form never touched him.
He was surrounded by it, and yet he lived a life of righteousness,
a life that was sinless and pleasing to God in every respect.
Wasn't he the one who truly, as we read in the epistle to the Hebrews in chapter 7, became us?
That doesn't mean, for the younger ones here, that he became one of us, he became one like us.
It means he was absolutely suited to our need as our high priest in heaven.
And when we think of our weaknesses, we may well become disgusted with ourselves,
because when we find ourselves tempted by Satan, who dangles the attractions of the world
and the urges in our flesh before us to try to make us give way to them
so that we are distracted from the person and the glory of Christ,
then we probably realise how we have dishonoured the Lord.
And that may be a very good thing. It may make us begin to exercise self-judgement.
But there is another difficulty.
We often despair when we are realising how weak we are, and that is just what we should not do.
That is the very reason why we have in heaven a great high priest.
He brings our weaknesses before his God and Father, and our God and Father,
and he does it, as we heard this afternoon, even before anything has happened.
This afternoon we heard of Peter, and although the Lord Jesus wasn't a high priest on earth,
do you remember that occasion when he said to Peter,
Satan has desired to have you, that he may sift you as wheat, but I have prayed for you.
He had prayed not only before Peter committed that ghastly deed of denying the Lord,
but he had even prayed for him before he told Peter about it.
And that is just what he does for you and for me.
So we should take encouragement from that.
But there is another aspect that we need to consider,
and that is we must never attempt to go on in our own strength.
Ephesians 6, verse 10,
Finally, my brethren, be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might.
Whatever we try in our own strength is going to fail.
But if we follow the Lord and are able to act in his strength,
then we have the power to overcome Satan.
Now we read in the book of Exodus that the high priests of old had certain garments,
and we are going to look at these garments in the course of this lecture with this chapter in mind
to see how the character and the work of the Lord Jesus are reflected in the various items of this chapter.
We shan't take them in the order in which they come,
we shall take them in the order in which they had to be put on the high priest.
So we shall begin then later in the chapter with the coat.
Verse 39.
Thou shalt embroider the coat of fine linen.
The coat was white throughout.
Now, in the beginning of the chapter, we have these different materials and the colors,
and they all have spiritual significance.
So let's look at those first.
Verse 5.
They shall take gold and blue and purple and scarlet and fine linen.
Gold speaks of Christ in his divine righteousness.
His deity comes to the fore in the gold.
We probably have often looked at the items in the tabernacle
and seen that so many of them were made of pure gold, reflecting the deity of Christ.
Now, what do they do with this gold?
Well, let's look at chapter 39.
Verse 3.
They did beat the gold into thin plates and cut it into wires
to work it in the blue and in the purple and in the scarlet and in the fine linen with cunning work.
So the garments that the high priest wore before he went into the holy place,
not the holiest of all, were all intertwined with gold.
Doesn't that show us that the Lord Jesus was God manifest in the flesh in every aspect of his character?
Then we have the blue.
Well, we all know that blue is the color of the sky, and that speaks of his heavenly origin.
The Lord Jesus himself had said,
No man hath ascended into heaven, but he that came down from heaven, even the Son of Man.
He came from the glory of the Father to this earth in order to present the Father to the people,
but they wouldn't have him.
You know, there were high priests of many different characters.
Some were very bad, when we think of Caiaphas and Annas,
or the high priest that the Apostle Paul called a whited wall,
or they could never have been called a great high priest,
but our high priest is indeed a great high priest.
He was the one who came from heaven.
He was God manifest in the flesh.
If we think of the opening of John's Gospel, in the beginning was the Word,
and the Word was with God,
doesn't that show us that he must have come from heaven,
and the Word was God.
There is his deity.
Purple is the royal color.
It's remained so in this country to the present day.
Someday, if the Lord hasn't come before, there is going to be another coronation here,
and the young people here will be able to witness when the royal dukes appear in purple robes.
Purple was this color which Mordecai was granted to wear by the king.
It was the color that Daniel was granted to wear by the king.
We see the royalty, and Christ is a king.
When he stood before Pilate, Pilate asked him,
Art thou a king?
And the Lord Jesus said, Thou sayest it.
Then we have the scarlet.
Scarlet is a color of earthly grandeur.
You know, if we look at the book of Revelation,
we shall find there in chapter 19,
in a worldly sense,
that scarlet is such a color.
In chapter 19, we have
verse 13,
where we have the Lord Jesus himself.
He was clothed with a vesture dipped in blood,
and his name is called the Word of God.
Verse 16.
He hath on his vesture and on his thigh a name written,
King of kings and Lord of lords.
That at a time when he is again on this earth,
truly as the ruler over the whole earth.
These are the materials,
and then came the fine linen,
that which spoke of absolute purity.
So when we have the coat,
which is made of fine linen,
that is what is closest to the body.
The Lord Jesus was himself absolutely pure,
and that made it so clear.
Above this coat came the next one,
which was the ephod,
the robe of the ephod, sorry,
that was completely of blue.
Now here we have the heavenly character
coming into view.
But this robe of blue had a hem.
The hem is there in order that the garment
doesn't come into contact with the earth
and pick up anything from the earth.
It's a mark of separation,
and that becomes also so clear,
I think it's in chapter 39 again.
Sorry, it's in Numbers 15,
where the children of Israel are given instructions.
Numbers 15 verse 38.
Speak unto the children of Israel
and bid them that they make them fringes
in the borders of their garments
throughout their generations.
Here, the fringe is then that
which marks their separation.
We should see this in a moment.
And that they put upon the fringe of the borders
a ribbon of blue.
This is an indication of the heavenly character
of the people of God,
separate from this world.
As Paul wrote to the Philippians,
our conversation, or better,
our citizenship is in heaven.
How often we forget that.
How often we are attached to this earth,
if not to this world.
And yet, we are called upon to look above.
If ye then be risen with Christ,
seek those things which are above,
where Christ sitteth, at the right hand of God.
Then it says about this,
And it shall be unto you for a fringe,
that ye may look upon it,
and remember all the commandments of the Lord,
and do them.
And that ye seek not after your own heart,
and your own eyes,
after which ye used to go a-whoring,
that ye may remember and do all my commandments,
and be holy unto your God.
I am the Lord your God,
which brought you out of the land of Egypt
to be your God.
I am the Lord your God.
When the people of Israel then wore their garments
with this hem,
with this ribbon of blue on it,
they remembered that they had been released from Egypt,
taken from the power of Pharaoh,
guided through the Red Sea into the wilderness,
on the way to the Promised Land.
Isn't this our experience?
We have been taken from this world.
We no longer belong to it.
We belong to Christ.
We belong to the heavenly country.
We have been taken from Satan's power.
What a privilege that is.
How sad it is for anyone to be still enslaved by Satan,
that he can turn them in what direction he wishes,
that he is able to make them sin,
and they are his servants.
And we have a loving Saviour who died
in order to break Satan's power
and to free us from servitude under him.
We were brought through his death,
through the Red Sea,
into the wilderness scene,
where we are now walking on our way to our home in heaven.
Now we know, of course, that we already have a place there,
and that in spirit we are seated in the heavenlies in Christ.
But it is in this wilderness scene that we notice our infirmity,
and what a help our Lord is,
because there he ever liveth to make intercession for us.
Then the next item is the ephod.
We go back to verse 6.
The ephod contained every colour and every material that had been provided.
It was the top garment, so obviously the most visible,
and it must have been a most impressive sight to see Aaron
when he walked from his tent in order to go into the court of the tabernacle
and eventually into the first part, the holy place,
in order to present sacrifices at the brazen altar
and then into the first part of the tabernacle itself.
This ephod showed forth all the qualities and all the characters of Christ,
all in one, his deity, his heavenly origin,
his royalty and majesty, his grandeur and his purity.
But there were two parts to the ephod, the front part and the rear part,
and they were joined at the shoulders, held together with chains,
we'll come to the point of the chains in a moment,
and two settings out of gold for two precious stones.
And on one precious stone, six names were recorded
of the first six sons of Jacob.
On the other one, the next six sons of Jacob.
So the whole people of Israel had their names recorded
on the shoulders of the high priest.
When he went into the holy place, he bore their names.
On this place of strength, and isn't that just what our great high priest does for us,
he bears us before his God and Father.
Our names are written there.
They were written, they were engraved with the engraving of a signet.
Now, we probably all know what a signet ring is.
It has a mark on it which identifies the person wearing the ring,
and he used to seal things and put his ring on it
so that that marking was seen on the document.
It was a mark of authority.
And that is how we are represented before God in Christ.
What a wonderful privilege that is too.
Then, hanging from the chains was the breastplate.
The breastplate was a kind of pocket, a fairly large one,
and here again it had two purposes.
There were 12 different precious stones on the front of the breastplate,
and each stone was engraved again with the name of one of Aaron's, one of Jacob's sons.
The 12 tribes were not only represented then on the shoulders, the place of strength,
but also nearest to the heart.
This is another precious aspect, that our names are on his heart.
The one who died for us, as the Apostle Paul said,
Christ loved me and gave himself for me.
His name, our name, is planted on his heart.
So he, before God, carries the names of all those he has redeemed
that must make us grateful that we have a high priest there in the heavens.
So, we see then how precious we are to the one who gave himself for us.
But there was another purpose to this breastplate.
Because it was a pocket, there had to be something inside,
and there were the Urim and the Thummim.
In many words, they mean lights and perfections.
We do not know what they were, we do not know what they were made of,
but the only thing we know about them is that they had to do with judgment or assessment.
I wonder if you remember when the children of Israel returned from the Babylonian captivity,
they were assembled and the priests were numbered,
and there were some who claimed to be of the priesthood,
but they had no identification, they had no record of their belonging to the priesthood.
And what did they do with them?
Well, they had to wait until a priest, a high priest arose with Urim and Thummim,
who had the power to decide in God's name whether they were truly priests or not.
Now, we too are a holy priesthood and a royal priesthood.
And we also have the means of making judgments and assessments.
The Holy Spirit within us gives us the mind of Christ.
What a privilege that is too.
A holy person dwelling within us, leading us into all truth,
leading us into God's mind as to how things should be done,
or would we pay more attention to that as assemblies?
If only Christianity had paid more attention to that in the course of its history,
Wildfell Hall wouldn't be sparsely populated now, it would be crammed,
and so would every other so-called place of worship.
We see how weak we are.
We are even unable to put into practice the things that God has in mind for us.
Well, we have our great high priest there in heaven,
and we have read various things about him in the Epistle to the Hebrews.
Let's return to that.
Chapter 4, verse 14.
Seeing then that we have a great high priest that is passed into the heavens,
Jesus, the Son of God, let us hold fast our profession.
We have professed that we belong to the Lord Jesus Christ.
We have professed that we wish to follow him.
Now, do we do it?
Let us hold fast our profession.
How easily it is to let things slip.
Items of the truth which perhaps don't appeal to us,
irritate us perhaps, and yet it is the word of God,
it is the truth, how we need to be aware of what the Lord would have done in his church.
Let us hold firm our profession.
For we have not a high priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities.
When he was here, he saw suffering on every side,
and that suffering made him feel it too.
He felt, especially when Lazarus died, he wept.
Or when he looked down on Jerusalem,
O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, how would I have gathered you,
as a hen gathereth its hens under her wings, but ye would not.
Therefore, he knew what human infirmity was,
and so he knows what your situation is.
He knows what your position is.
He knows where you need his intercession,
and he makes intercession for you.
And then it says,
Let us therefore come boldly unto the throne of grace,
that we may obtain mercy and find grace in time of need.
Do we do that?
We probably fail to do it all too often.
When temptation looms up before us,
is our first reaction, turn to the Lord,
bring the matter before him,
remember he has already made intercession for us.
Do you remember that well-known hymn,
What a Friend We Have in Jesus?
O, what joy we often forfeit!
O, what needless pain we bear!
All because we do not carry everything to God in prayer.
Beloved brethren, we ought to be much more aware
that our great High Priest is simply waiting for us
to turn to him in all our needs.
Chapter 7, we have a wonderful description
or characterization of the Lord Jesus Christ.
Verse 24 tells us,
This man, because he continueth ever,
hath an unchangeable priesthood.
He has been speaking, the writer of this epistle,
has been speaking about the Aaronic Priesthood
and there was a great difference.
The priests of the Aaronic Priesthood, they died.
They had to be replaced.
Not only that, when they brought sacrifices,
they had to bring sacrifices for themselves
and for the people.
These sacrifices were repeated time and time again.
But as we read later in chapter 10,
It is not possible for the blood of bulls and goats
to put away sin.
But by one offering he hath perfected for ever
them who are sanctified.
What a privileged position we are in as believers,
as those redeemed by his precious blood.
One offering, sanctified for ever.
And after he had made this one offering,
he sat down for ever
in the right hand of the Majesty on high.
That is our High Priest.
Well here it says,
Such an High Priest became us,
who is holy.
Corresponding to God in every single aspect,
he is holy.
Where there can be no thought of sin,
where judgment must be passed upon sin.
That is the character of holiness.
He was harmless.
The meaning here of harmless is he was absolutely true.
There was no thought of deception or guile in him.
When they asked him who he was,
he said,
Just what I've been telling you right from the beginning,
nothing else.
The Son of God who came down from heaven,
undefiled,
in spite of the sin all round him.
Yet he was not affected by that apart from in his heart,
what he saw,
and separate from sinners.
So he is characterized for his life on earth,
and then made higher than the heavens.
He has taken that supreme place in heaven,
entering it as the firstborn of every creature,
the one who in rank is above all.
And so he had no need,
as the other High Priests had had,
to sacrifice every day for his own sins,
and then for the people.
This he did once,
when he offered up himself.
And then we have in chapter 8,
We have such an High Priest,
who is set on the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in the heavens,
a minister of the sanctuary and of the true tabernacle,
which the Lord pitched, and not man.
When the Apostle Peter wrote in chapter 2
that we are a holy priesthood,
then he said,
in that office, if we can call it an office,
we offer up spiritual sacrifices
acceptable to God by Jesus Christ.
There we see again that there in heaven
he is acting just as the priests did here on earth,
bringing our sacrifices of worship and praise and thanksgiving
to his God and Father.
And you know, even when we are no longer here on this earth,
there will be those who will be worshipping God in that way.
Don't we read in Revelation of another angel
who brought the prayers,
the worship of the saints then on earth
in the censer so that the odour rose up to God.
I think that is probably what inspired
a certain Mrs. Bowlby in the first half of the 19th century
to write a hymn which we have in our hymn book,
which we shall sing shortly,
And to all our prayers and praises
Christ adds his sweet perfume
and he the censer raises
these odours to consume.
Do we bring the worship of our hearts
as priests, as holy priests?
The other members of the priesthood,
they had to wear simply white.
They had no glorious clothing like the high priest.
But there was one occasion in the year
when the high priest himself did not wear
this beautiful clothing.
That was on the Day of Atonement
when he went into the holiest of all
in order to sprinkle the blood on the ark,
on the seat, the mercy seat.
Then he himself was dressed entirely in white,
in fine white linen.
He even had breeches on.
Normally the high priest did not have breeches.
The scripture doesn't tell us that he had.
But on this occasion,
when the earthly high priest went in,
it was necessary.
His flesh had to be completely covered
and it had to be covered in purity,
in that which was pure,
that which spoke of the Lord Jesus Christ
in all his purity.
Is that what characterises us
when we come together to worship?
Have we exercised self-judgement,
put all aside that could be displeasing to our Lord,
that could dishonour him,
so that when our worship as an assembly rises up,
it does so in this character,
that Christ adds his sweet perfume to it
and God can be well pleased.
Then we have the other occasion in the same chapter
where we are called a royal priesthood.
Why?
That we should show forth the praises of him
who hath called you out of darkness
into his marvellous light.
The word should not be praises,
it should be virtues.
Do we, as royal priests,
present the person of the Lord Jesus Christ
in all his wonderful virtues here on earth?
We heard about humility.
No one was ever as humble as the Lord Jesus.
That's a characteristic that is really foreign to us.
And yet, how humble he was.
He humbled himself and became obedient unto death,
even the death of the cross.
Oh, what an example for us
to show humility in all things.
I'd like to close this address
also with reference to some verses
from the Epistle to the Hebrews.
Chapter 10 and verse 19.
Having therefore, brethren,
boldness to enter into the holiest
by the blood of Jesus,
by a new and living way
which he hath consecrated for us
through the veil,
that is to say, his flesh,
and having an high priest over the house of God,
and having an high priest over the house of God,
let us draw near with a true heart
in full assurance of faith,
having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience
and our bodies washed with pure water.
Let us hold fast the profession of our faith
without wavering,
for he is faithful that promised,
and let us consider one another
to provoke unto love and to good works,
not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together.
I'll stop there.
Is that true of our practice?
We need to look at those verses again
and see exactly what it says
to see whether that measures up
with our walk as children of God.
When the Apostle Paul wrote to the Galatians,
he finished the epistle,
or almost finished it, with words saying,
God forbid that I should glory,
save in the cross of Christ my Lord,
by whom the world is crucified to me,
and I to the world.
Can we really say that?
Is there that separation?
Is the hem of our garment really marked
by this blue ribbon
showing that we are citizens of heaven?
The work of the Lord Jesus Christ
separated us from the world,
but have we separated ourselves from the world?
May the Lord grant that it be so.
Let us close by singing Hymn 114.
The holiest we enter in perfect peace with God,
through whom we found our centre in Jesus and his blood.
Though great may be our dullness in thought,
though great may be our dullness in thought and word and deed,
we glory in the fullness of him that meets our need.
114.
The holiest we enter in perfect peace with God,
through whom we found our centre in Jesus and his blood.
Though great may be our dullness in thought and word and deed,
we glory in the fullness of him that meets our need.
Much incense is ascending before the eternal throne,
God graciously is bending to heal each feeble one.
To all our pleasant praises Christ adds his sweet perfume,
and he that sends the praises his orders to consume.
O God, we come with singing because thy great high priest
our name sturdy is bringing, nor e'er forgets the least.
For us he wears the miter, where holiness shines bright.
For us his robes are whiter than hems of solid light. …