Godliness, self-judgment, self-control
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mjo015
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EN
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00:59:46
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1
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inconnu
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Godliness, self-judgment, self-control
Transcription automatique:
…
I'd like to read one or two passages of scripture to you.
The first one being in the book of Ezra, Ezra chapter 9.
Ezra chapter 9.
Ezra chapter 9 and verse 4.
Ezra 9 verse 4.
Then were assembled unto me every one that trembled at the words of the God of Israel
because of the transgression of those that had been carried away.
And I sat astonished until the evening sacrifice.
And at the evening sacrifice I arose up from my heaviness,
and having rent my garment and my mantle,
I fell upon my knees and spread out my hands unto the Lord my God,
and said, O my God, I am ashamed and blushed to lift up my face to Thee, my God,
for our iniquities are increased over our head,
and our trespass is grown up into the heavens.
Since the days of our fathers have we been in a great trespass unto this day,
and for our iniquities have we, our kings and our priests,
been delivered into the hand of the kings of the lands,
to the sword, to captivity, and to a spoil and to confusion of face as it is this day.
And now for a little space grace has been showed from the Lord our God
to leave us a remnant to escape and to give us a nail in his holy place,
that our God may lighten our eyes and give us a little reviving in our bondage.
For we were bondmen, yet our God hath not forsaken us in our bondage,
but hath extended mercy unto us in the sight of the kings of Persia,
to give us a reviving, to set up the house of our God and to repair the desolations thereof,
and to give us a wall in Judah and in Jerusalem.
And now, O our God, what shall we say after this?
For we have forsaken thy commandments.
And then in the New Testament, the 11th chapter of 1 Corinthians, 1 Corinthians 11.
1 Corinthians 11 and verse 26.
For as often as ye eat this bread and drink this cup, ye do show the Lord's death till he come.
Wherefore, whosoever shall eat this bread and drink this cup of the Lord unworthily
shall be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord.
But let a man examine himself, and so let him eat of that bread and drink of that cup.
For he that eateth and drinketh unworthily eateth and drinketh damnation to himself,
not discerning the Lord's body.
For this cause many are weak and sickly among you, and many sleep.
For if we would judge ourselves, we should not be judged.
But when we are judged, we are chastened of the Lord, that we should not be condemned with the world.
Wherefore, my brethren, when ye come together to eat, tarry for one another.
The second epistle of Peter, chapter 1 and verse 2.
2 Peter 1 and verse 2.
2 Peter 1 verse 2.
Grace and peace be multiplied unto you through the knowledge of God and of our Lord Jesus Christ,
according as his divine power hath given unto us things that pertain unto life and godliness
through the knowledge of him that hath called us to glory and virtue,
whereby are given unto us exceeding great and precious promises,
that by these ye might be partakers of the divine nature,
having escaped the corruption that is in the world through lust.
And beside this, giving all diligence, add to your faith virtue,
and to your virtue knowledge, and to knowledge temperance.
And then lastly, the book of the Revelation, chapter 2.
Revelation chapter 2 and verse 1.
Revelation 2 verse 1.
Unto the angel of the church of Ephesus write,
These things saith he that holdeth the seven stars in his right hand,
who walketh in the midst of the seven golden candlesticks,
I know thy works, and thy labour, and thy patience,
and how thou canst not bear them who are evil.
And thou hast tried them who say they are apostles and are not,
and hast found them liars, and hast borne, and hast patience,
and for my name's sake hast laboured, and hast not fainted.
Nevertheless, I have somewhat against thee,
because thou hast left thy first love.
Remember, therefore, from whence thou art fallen,
and repent, and do the first works,
or else I will come unto thee quickly,
and will remove thy candlestick out of his place,
except thou repent.
Chapter 3 verse 1.
And unto the angel of the church in Sardis write,
These things saith he that hath the seven spirits of God,
and the seven stars, I know thy works,
that thou hast a name that thou livest, and art dead.
Be watchful, and strengthen the things which remain that are ready to die,
for I have not found thy works perfect before God.
Remember, therefore, how thou hast received, and heard,
and hold fast, and repent.
Verse 14.
And unto the angel of the church of the Laodiceans write,
These things saith the Amen,
the faithful and true witness, the beginning of the creation of God,
I know thy works,
that thou art neither cold nor hot.
I would that thou wert cold or hot.
So then, because thou art lukewarm,
and neither cold nor hot,
I will spew thee out of my mouth,
because thou sayest,
I am rich and increased with goods,
and have need of nothing,
Show us not that thou art wretched and miserable,
and poor and blind and naked.
I counsel thee to buy of me gold tried in the fire,
that thou mayest be rich,
and white raiment, that thou mayest be clothed,
and that the shame of thy nakedness do not appear.
And anoint thine eyes with eye salve, that thou mayest see.
As many as I love, I rebuke and chasten,
be zealous therefore, and repent.
Now can we sing another hymn?
182.
O Lord, how blessed as day by day we pass along our pilgrim way,
to know that we are thine,
thine through redemption's precious blood,
which cleansed, which brought us nigh to God,
in righteousness divine.
O Lord, in meek and godly fear,
to follow and to serve thee here,
do thou our hearts incline.
182.
O Lord, how blessed as day by day we pass along our pilgrim way,
to know that we are thine,
thine through redemption's precious blood,
which cleansed, which brought us nigh to God,
in righteousness divine.
Thine ever, thine to be with thee,
for where thou art, thine alone must be.
Love will not be outlawed.
Love's resting place together share.
By the idols thou hast declared,
through grace to be thine alone.
O Lord, in meek and godly fear,
to follow and to serve thee here,
do thou our hearts incline
to be for thee where thou hast been
until we reach thee in that sea
where thou wilt own us thine.
Lord, may we always hold thy claim
and overcome thee in thy name.
From earthliness be free,
and by the daily love affair
in living strength that path we tread,
which leads us up to thee.
I suppose it must be a true thing of us all
that you read passages of scripture
and you say to yourself,
I don't really get any further than the surface there.
I don't really understand what the link is.
And I freely confess that for many years
I've had great difficulty in linking together
1 Timothy 3.16, the verse that begins
great is the mystery of godliness,
and what is said after that
with the matter of godliness itself.
How do the two link together?
Well, I've reached the stage
where I can't take any more books
without getting rid of some of the books that I have.
And it's very difficult to part with books
and inevitably when you're trying to sort out the ones
you would least miss,
you finish up by reading them.
And I happened about six or seven months ago
to pick up a copy of Words of Truth.
Don't see many of them about at all really.
I think it was a magazine of which F.J. Patterson
was the editor.
But I quickly looked through the index
and there was a heading,
great is the mystery of godliness.
So I turned it up
and what I read there was absolutely
worth its weight in gold.
And when I read it I thought, that's the link.
This is what the writer,
there's no writer actually given,
difficult to tell who it was.
What he said was this,
the truths which are given,
god was manifest in the flesh,
justified in the spirit,
are not specific truths
that relate to one thing.
The first one, god is manifest in the flesh,
it's dealing with his own person.
The second one is not talking
about one specific part of his pathway.
Very often that second statement
is linked with his baptism
and angels were attendant on it.
He said, it's talking about the whole of the pathway.
And I read it down and it was what came at the end,
which I think was worth its weight in gold.
He said, it is by these truths
that god is known
and it is from that knowledge
that all godliness flows.
That was great help to me, that was.
I could see the link as clear as a dye.
And as I sat thinking about it,
I remembered a statement that was made
from this platform by John Blackburn
nearly 20 years ago.
I don't know what it was he was speaking about,
but he happened to be speaking about dispensations.
The fact that god deals differently
with his people in various days.
Recently we had some readings about it here.
They're very necessary.
I was in somebody's house a few years ago
and I was in the bedroom where the library was
and one morning I started having a look at the books
and I tried the handle and it wouldn't open
so I couldn't get any of the books out.
I was looking at the books totally unaware
that the brother with whom I was staying
was watching me.
And after about five or six minutes
he said, are you surprised?
And I said, no, not really.
I'm not surprised at anything these days.
But I have noted there's a marked preponderance
of reform faith books.
He says, yes, I am not a believer in dispensations.
I think it is puerile.
John Blackburn was speaking about dispensations
and at one point he broke off and he said this,
there are some things that never ever change
in any day of God's dealing,
the principles of something never change
and one of those is godliness.
Godliness depends on matters like
giving Christ the first place,
absolute obedience to God's word
and then he said also a large helping
of the spirit of self-judgment.
And it's about that that I want to speak this evening.
What I want to do is look at some verses of scripture
which speak very plainly about the matter of self-judgment
and then an associated thing, the matter of self-control
and then against that background
to look at some of the issues that the Lord raises
with three of the seven assemblies in Asia Minor.
The actual word self-judgment does not appear
in the New Testament.
The nearest to it is in the verses that we read
from 1 Corinthians 11 where in verse 31 Paul writes,
if we would judge ourselves we should not be judged.
Clearly the matter of self-judgment
is one which is raised in that verse.
It's not only an Old Testament truth.
I don't know anything about the language of the Old Testament
but knowing a little bit about the language of the New Testament
you can look at the translation that was made.
They say two or three hundred years before the Lord came
and is in the language of the New Testament
and so far as I can find the word self-judgment
does not actually appear in the Old Testament.
But in those verses that I read to you in Ezra chapter 9
there's no doubt that a man like Ezra
and when he appears on the scene of the writing of Ezra
when he comes on what is said about him
Ezra prepared his heart to seek the law of God
to do it and to teach in Israel statutes and commandments.
That's an exemplary pattern.
Prepare your heart to learn to do and to teach
and there isn't any doubt when you read those words
it's very difficult sometimes to read those words
without being moved by the spirit of the man
who himself so open before God identifies with the nation
and I was reading to you words that were words of self-judgment.
He identified himself absolutely thoroughly
with what the nation had done
not only in the past but actually in the present
despite the fact that God had given them an opportunity
they had forsaken his law and his commandments.
There are three chapter 9's in the Old Testament
Ezra chapter 9, Nehemiah chapter 9 and Daniel chapter 9
and in each of them the spirit that comes out
in the person who is speaking is the spirit of self-judgment.
He doesn't speak about what his brethren have done only
he speaks about what he has done and he identifies with them.
The matter of self-judgment is a very clear one in the Old Testament
and it's equally clearly raised by the Lord Jesus in the New Testament.
You know sometimes I mean some of you may have misunderstood this
but for years and years until only about two years ago
and then when I was looking for something else
did I understand how wrong I had been on one of the verses of scripture.
The beginning of Matthew 7 the Lord speaks and he says
judge not that ye be not judged
and then he raises this matter of taking the beam out of your own eye
before you cast out the moat which is in your brother's eye.
Now I always thought because I suppose the first time I heard somebody speak about that
he said the moat is like the little speck of dust which is in the beam of the sun
and so I thought the beam there was a beam of light
and I was absolutely amazed when a couple of years ago
I discovered quite accidentally that the beam is actually a beam of wood
a plank of wood and it accentuates what the Lord is saying
before you try to take the little speck out of your brother's eye
take out that great plank of wood which is in your own
and they're very clear words
and it wasn't only using that kind of image that the Lord addressed the same subject
on another occasion right at the end of Mark's gospel
he said he was talking about salt and when the salt loses its savour
how is it going to be salted?
and then right at the end he says
have salt in yourselves and be at peace with others
we so easily turn that round the other way
we say about others they ought to be doing this
and a very critical spirit can come into our hearts
and sadly too often into our meetings rather than valuing one another
we criticise one another
but the Lord said have salt in yourselves
put the principle of righteousness very strongly in your own conscience
there isn't any doubt that the Lord spoke very plainly
about the matter of self-judgement
probably one of the clearest parts in the epistles
is the actual verses that I read to you
and I want to look at them for a few moments
it always appeals to me as one of the greatest favours
that ever we can have in this world
that is to respond very simply to the appeal of the Lord's love
expressed on the night of his betrayal
were a friend on his deathbed to ask you to undertake something
you would be at great pains to fulfil the dying wish
there cannot be anything that exercises a greater charm over our hearts
than that which was expressed on the night of his betrayal
when the Lord said this do in remembrance of me
but it's the later part I want to look at
because every favour from God brings with it a consequent responsibility
and it's also the clearest passage in the New Testament epistles
which speaks of this matter of self-judgement
I don't want to look at all the verses
but I think I ought to say this very plainly
because several times in past years
when visiting people who've drifted away
it's obvious that they misunderstand the words
verse 27
wherefore whosoever shall eat this bread
and drink this cup of the Lord unworthily
shall be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord
breaking the bread and drinking of the cup unworthily
is not because you're not worthy
it means doing it in an unworthy manner
the Corinthians some of them were going along to that sacred feast
they did it under the influence of alcohol
and Paul says that is doing it unworthily
and the person who does that unworthily
eats and drinks judgement to himself
it's nothing to do with our place
by the work of God we are altogether fitted to remember him
I'm not discounting the fact that it's important
that we constantly exercise self-judgement
and we constantly ask ourselves
whether our lives day by day
and the greater part of our lives by far
is spent out of the company of one another
whether in our lives day by day
we are living out those truths that we know
that's the matter of drinking, eating or drinking unworthily
it's not saying my life is not up to the standard
I'm not worthy it's nothing to do with that
it's talking about doing it in an unworthy manner
I will say this some years ago
I came out of a meeting breaking of bread
it had not been a very happy meeting
we don't have any vicars to blame
if meetings don't reach that sense of the Lord's presence
the responsibility is ours
therefore it's extremely important how we come together
we should always come together in living touch with the Son of God
I came out of a meeting
just ahead of me were a couple of older brothers
and I heard one say to the other
I caught ten boxes of fish in the morning meeting
and I thought to myself
well perhaps that's one reason why it wasn't the happiest of meetings
but I said to myself
I wonder whether I by my being in touch
or out of touch with the Lord
was a contributor to a meeting like that
but I particularly want to draw your attention to these words
verse 31 and verse 32
if we would judge ourselves we should not be judged
but when we are judged we are chastened of the Lord
that we should not be condemned with the world
anybody who looks at Young's Concordance
or anybody who has little knowledge of the New Testament
will know that as in English
but to a greater far degree
prefixes are put to words
I mean in English you have the word pose
and so you have purpose, depose, repose, suppose
the language of the New Testament does it in a much greater way
and in verse 31 it says
if we would judge ourselves
it uses the basic word to judge
but it uses a prefix
and therefore it has the meaning of scrutinizing
looking very closely
I wonder often when we listen to the word of God being ministered
do we go home and look at our lives and say
I wonder to what degree that truth I enjoy
and if I enjoy it do I live it in power
and does it make an impact where I move day by day
and then it goes on to say
if we scrutinized ourselves
we would not be judged
that's the plain word to judge
then when we are judged
we are disciplined of the Lord
and anyone who looks up a concordance will know
that discipline, the word discipline in the New Testament
is the training up of a child
what a great mercy
that if we move out of the path
and we need to be brought back
and sometimes it can be done in a severe way
it's always done in the light of the fact
that we are children of the Father
and we are disciplined as children are disciplined
with this in view
that we should not be condemned with the world
and the word condemned there
is the basic word for judge
with another prefix
and it has a very strong meaning
and then you get these very sobering words
that we read a little earlier up in verse 30
for this cause many among you are weak and sickly
and many sleep
clearly in the New Testament
the matter of self-judgment is raised
alongside that there is another word which is raised
and that is the word self-control
the word is never actually translated as self-control
it's always translated by the word temperate
when I was a lad my early schooling
was in a church school
a Church of England school
and certainly one of the mistresses
who left an impression upon me
was a believer
I was going down the M6 a few years ago
in my work and I found I had an hour spare
so I came off and I went to the church
which was by the side of the school
and the grounds of the churchyard were overgrown
and I thought I knew roughly where this lady was buried
I was totally unaware that there was a man watching me
and after a while he says what do you want
I said I'm just trying to find the gravestone
of a lady called Miss Ethel Buchan
oh he said come inside he said
and we'll find the interment record
and then he took me to it
and when he took the grass away
here it said Ethel Buchan
departed to be with Christ
and that woman left an impression on me
and from early days
impressions like that
they never really leave you
this matter of self-control
it's like a number of other words in the New Testament
which mean a particular thing
but are never translated that way
some of us recently were at the funeral of a brother
obviously was greatly respected
a huge number of people there
and in the meeting room
the brother who was taking that part of the service
read the verses from 2 Corinthians 5
absent from the body
present with the Lord
and I think it's verse 9 where Paul says
therefore we labor
that whether present or absent
we might be well-pleasing unto him
well the word therefore we labor
actually is a word which means to be ambitious
it occurs three times in the New Testament
is never translated that way
self-control appears four times in the New Testament
and I read one of the occasions to you
in the first chapter of 2 Peter
but it's always translated as temperate
I remember now why I referred to my school days
one of the things that we had in our school
was a man, they always used to call him alcoholic Joe
but it was a man who came round twice a year
and he talked to us all about the dangers of alcohol
very plainly
and certainly it weighed with me
and it has ever since
I don't think you can press from the scripture
being teetotal
but certainly the warning about excess drinking
is very plainly there
and you fail to heed it
and you'll see the sad spectacles that we see
in our land today
if you think of temperance
that's what I always think of
people not drinking
but that's not what it is
it's talking about self-control
the actual noun self-control
three times in the New Testament
the verb is used once
and if I can read it to you
in the interlinear
it's an excellent setting
because it tells you what self-control is
this is 1 Corinthians 9
and verse 25
and our authorised reads
and every man that striveth for the mastery
is temperate in all things
the interlinear reads
but everyone that strives in all things
controls himself
in Galatians chapter 5
it's spoken of as one of the fruits of the spirit
there isn't any doubt
that new birth gives life
and life from God
brings the ability to control ourselves
I've read the words to you in Peter
for this reason
that where it's introduced in the epistle of Peter
it follows the word knowledge
and this is 2 Peter 1
and verse 5
beside all this
giving all diligence
and to your faith virtue
and to virtue knowledge
and to knowledge temperance
clearly we have life from God
that's spoken about in verse 3
all things that partake
that pertain to life and godliness
verse 4
where it speaks
it uses the expression
partakers of the divine nature
but it's important
that there is diligence
in making sure
that the scriptures that we hear about
are reflected in the way in which we live our lives
it cannot be without note
that the word self-control
follows the word knowledge
knowledge we get from the scriptures of truth
self-control
is making sure
that those scriptures
are reflected in our lives
very plainly in scripture
it speaks of self-judgement
and it speaks of self-control
and it's against that background
that I'd very briefly like to look at the issues
which are raised in the second and third chapters
of the book of the revelation
I'm not sure how worthy
how trustworthy the chronology is
of our authorised version
Bishop Usher's chronology I think it's called
if it's right
the time lapse between
Paul writing the Ephesian epistle
and John writing the revelation
is from AD 62
to AD 96
34 years
you'd hardly credit it would you
that when Paul
wrote to an assembly
and he had nothing there
to complain of
he opened up his heart freely
with everything
that he'd received from the glory
the highest and the best
not just on an individual plane
I don't know whether any of you
get the magazine
The Bible Leave Quarterly
but the current issue
condemns Darby's view
of justification
and I've been writing to the editor
of the magazine pointing out
one or two things from scripture
and if you talk to reform faith people
and thank God for them
they're absolutely four square
on the essentials
but you probably know that they look on the law
as governing their life
a person
who tries to obey the law
will always be disappointed
Christianity is not looking at ourselves
Christianity is looking at Christ
and in Christ we're absolutely perfect
and so you read the words in Ephesians chapter 1
that we're accepted in the beloved
doesn't just say accepted in Christ
not even accepted in Christ Jesus
but accepted in the beloved
and you say what is the measure of that acceptance
you say it must be perfect
that's where we stand before God
where we are tonight
we're accepted in the beloved
but not only that
he opens up in the second chapter
what pertains to the Christian company
in a collective way
so we're spoken there as being
the habitation of God by the spirit
30 years
after opening his heart
with the highest and the best
he writes to that assembly
he commends things that are to be commended
but right at the very heart of it
he says these words
I have against thee
that thou hast left
by first love
it's rather a shame that our authorised
has put in italics
the word somewhat
because it tends to tone it down
but first love
and it may not be the first in time
if it's an unusual word
well not an unusual word
but a word for first
which really means the best kind
so for example it is used in Luke 15
as the best robe
Paul uses it in the first epistle of Timothy
as the chief of sinners
it's of the very best quality
that means Christ having undisputed sway
in every part of our lives
and our hearts are absolutely
taken up with him
you say that's normal Christianity
yes it is
but it would cease to be normal
to the assembly
where Paul had ministered
the highest and the best
and in verse 5
and these are the words
that I'd like to draw your attention to
because in these three assemblies
and you probably would notice
as I read the words
the issue of repentance is raised
in five of them
I don't know whether anybody would remember
but the late Jack Stoddart
must be going back 20 years ago
but in an issue of scripture truth
and he was the first one who drew it to my attention
he had an article on
the repentant saint
and he took it from the second and third chapter
of the book of the revelation
and the Lord says to that assembly
and it's like the mainspring of a watch
everything may seem to be perfect outside
all the things are still there
but the very power that makes it go
has gone
and once Christ is out
then it may be a while
before it becomes apparent
that there will be an ultimate drift away
and the Lord says
remember therefore
from whence thou art fallen
it's a wholesome thing really
you know to look back
and say where am I today
in relation to where I was before
remember therefore
from whence thou art fallen
and repent and do the first works
those works that the Lord commended
were not the best
first love and first works
go hand in hand
and he says
do the first works
or else I will come unto thee
not quickly I don't think the
the Lord deals hastily
some while ago I was
talking to a brother
about something that I felt
pretty strongly about
and
I said to him you know
God doesn't deal hastily
hastiness is not
a way of God's dealing
there's an example of it in Thyatira
I gave her space
to repent
hasty dealing is not
God's way, he's patient
the Lord says
remember from whence
thou art fallen and repent
and do the first works
or else I will come unto thee
and remove thy candlestick
out of his place
there's no Christian testimony
in Ephesus today
can't think of the
read Andrew
there's a brother who
serves the Lord in
Izmir
the old Smyrna
and he says no there is no
Christian testimony today
in Ephesus
seven times
the Lord uses the words
he that hath an ear
let him hear
what the spirit is saying
unto the assemblies
has the Lord's voice
a word to us today about
the matter of first love
in chapter
three I read to you
the words
to Sardis
just two
things I really want to
speak about
verse two
be watchful
and strengthen the things
that which remain
which are ready to die
I don't know
whether it's still
done but certainly
in the early years
in my connection with the meetings
I may have picked up a wrong
accentuation
but whether it was said openly
or not you got the impression that
Thyatira
that's the catholic church
Sardis
that's the protestant church
Philadelphia
that's the brethren
may not have been said that way but that was the impression
you get could you find
words that so
describe where we are
at the moment strengthen
the things that remain which
are ready to die
they're not words for
protestants they're words for
us today and the Lord says
for I have not found
thy words perfect
before God
I think the first person who drew
this to my attention
was John Blackburn
and he was
I think it was in a
series that was dealing with
the truth of the church
and he said
it must be noteworthy that the
word which is used here for perfect
is a word which means
complete and it's exactly
the same word which is used
in Colossians 1
verse 23 or thereabouts
where
the apostle says
to the assembly in Colossae
that to him
was given the dispensation
to complete
the word of God
what was it that completed
the word of God for Paul was not
the last writer
of the
last book in the
canon of the new testament
but what he did
what he did write about
was that which he received
from heaven about the truth
of the assembly
someone gave me
a few weeks ago
an interesting book of
George Muller
and George Muller was referring
to the
days when
to stand up for the truth of
God was very costly
I want to refer to that
in a moment
but in it it was talking about
the Bartholomew
massacre
that was when
it was absolutely appalling the way
that it was done
that was when the catholic church
in France
slaughtered one knight
and it was in the dead of night when it took
pass the large numbers
of the Protestants
I don't know whether you would remember this
but when the gulf war was taking place
the British general was called
general de la billiere
he can trace his
lineage right back
to the Huguenots
who came over
those that were able to escape came to Britain
and brought with them a tremendous
amount of skill
when nations deal hardly
with the saints of God
they lose a tremendous amount when they drive them
away, they drive them away
they drive away people who have ability
they drive away people who have
standards of integrity
they drive away people
who work hard
but when you were reading
all these things I said to myself
what a tremendous debt we owe
to the reformers
but with all the preparedness
to say that
they seem to have no light
at all about the true
calling and nature of
God's assembly
they don't believe in the
distinct calling of the assembly
they believe that all believers
right back as far as Adam
to the last one that will be gathered in
before the
at the point that the Lord
comes again for us
that's the whole assembly
mixes up Old Testament call
and that
but I want to raise the issue with us
tonight, how much do we
know about it, to what degree do we
treasure it
there isn't any doubt that
in the New Testament
it's expected that as Christians
we grow
you've only got to look at 1 John 2
where the apostle
speaks to babes, to young men
and fathers, it's expected
that there's some degree of maturing
the epistle to the Hebrews
Paul speaks about
wanting to be in a position
where he could give them
strong meat but
they were only in a position
where they should
where they were able to take
milk rather than strong meat
the New Testament plainly
expects as believers that
we grow and we
mature
and when you read these words
I have not found thy
works perfect before my God
isn't it a
thing that we ought to do a little bit of
heart searching about
how much do we know and treasure the truth
of God's assembly
to what degree does it colour
our attitude towards our fellow brethren
in fact to every other
believer because
if that assembly is precious to Christ
and there is no doubt that in the New Testament
it's plainly taught
then every part of it ought
to be precious to us
but it's very costly
the apostle goes on and uses
these words, he says
remember therefore
how thou hast received
and hold
fast and repent
it doesn't say
remember what thou hast received
but remember therefore
how thou hast received
having a bit more time to read
than I used to have, I took down recently
the book about William Farrell
and
he was misjudged
there isn't any doubt about that when you read the book about him
he was always thought
as being a person
who was too finickety
in fact when you read
the account of him, what he tried
to do was to bring
people back to the supremacy
of the scriptures, not ideas
that developed
but the pure plain word of God
and
ultimately
his
strenuous efforts
resulted in him
and many others losing their
lives
bringing it a little more up to date
two years
ago was it?
I don't know what it would be
1542
so we're talking about the 50th
the 450th
anniversary
of Tyndall
William Tyndall
very few people know about him
about 10 years
ago a book came out
the title is unfortunate
really because it puts people off
but it's a splendid book
absolutely
well worth reading
it's called God's Outlaw
and I think
it is in print again, it's gone through
a number of issues
recently a much more
detailed volume
was written
and was very expensive so I
borrowed one from a friend
the first volume
is by far the better
it's written by somebody
who obviously was not just a believer
but sympathized with a man
who had one
thing in front of him right from
the very beginning
he was a tutor
to some titled person's children
somewhere in Gloucester
and in those days
the Catholics held sway
Tyndall had been reading the scriptures
he obviously
had some contact with the reformers
at Oxford and one night
at a dinner there was a Roman Catholic
dignitary and
he said things and Tyndall
in a very restrained way pointed out
that was not what the scriptures
said and this
Catholic dignitary said
I would that God's word
gave way to the Pope's word
and Tyndall said
if God give me my desire
the day will come
when the boy who walks over the
leaf following the plough
will know more of God's word
than thou dost and that's how he spent his life
and every time
you pick up your New Testament
thank God because
90% of the New Testament
came from the pen of
William Tyndall
he coined new words the Passover
did not exist
it was his word that he introduced
and quite a number of other words as well
but his life
was always on the run
he realized that he couldn't
achieve what he
wanted to do in England
and so he fled to the
continent and
as soon as he fled to the continent
Henry the 8th
made sure that all
the ports in England
were patrolled
so that any of his testaments
that were coming in
were seized
in fact England had a couple
of hauling harvests
and so they needed corn
so badly that the
ports couldn't take it in
so what was said was wherever you can
get in bring corn
and in the smaller
creeks and crannies of the
south coast when the
bags of corn came in
inside was Tyndall's
New Testament
they burned them and for
everyone that they burned
because they had to buy them from the
people to burn them
another 10 could be printed
but that man when he was 42
was martyred
remember therefore how thou hast received
living out
the truth of God is not
an easy thing, it's costly
it's costly in terms of your job
it's costly in terms of your reputation
and the
Lord says to Sardis
remember therefore how thou hast
received and
hold fast and repent
in
bringing it to a close
in the third chapter of the
book of the revelation
the Lord speaks to the
assembly of Laodicea
I probably
ought to have said something about
the way in which the Lord
presents himself but
it's opportune just to make one comment here
it says these
He brings Seth the Amen
the faithful and true
witness and the beginning
of the creation of God
the Amen
I think is very plain isn't it
someone who says so be it
and that's what the Lord did
no matter what the cost was
he said Amen
and laid down his life
he was a faithful and true
witness he has a right
to address an assembly that wasn't
faithful and true
and he's also the beginning
of the creation of God
it's an interesting word the word beginning
it's a word
that doesn't necessarily
mean the thing that you start with
but it's the thing that you have
in mind the best illustration is
when you build a house
you don't start with a roof
that's what you want to do ultimately
you want to get a roof over you
but you start with sound
foundations
and then you build sturdy walls
and the last thing that goes
on is the roof
that goes over the top the roof over
your head that's what the word
means when it says the beginning
of the creation of God and I think what
it's simply saying is
what this creation always
had in mind from the beginning
was the fact that Christ
should come and one
day should reign supreme
and every Christian heart says
Lord haste that day
and he's the one who
says to
Laodicea because
thou art neither cold
nor hot I will
spew thee out of my mouth
there isn't any doubt
about the fact that
to be lukewarm is
absolutely
obnoxious
to the Lord
you could scarcely get
words with greater pathos
could you because thou art
neither cold nor hot
I will spew thee out of my mouth
but at the end
he says these words
as many as I love
I rebuke and discipline
be zealous therefore
and repent. Marvellous that
isn't it when he raises
with the first assembly
the love that gradually
was fading away
at the end he speaks of
a love that never changes
as many as I love
I rebuke
and discipline be zealous
therefore and repent
now there are some fairly
weighty issues raised
in those words to the assemblies
aren't there
and I think
we've established from scripture
that it is the matter of
self-judgement
and self-control
and whatever way
those things come to you
there isn't any shadow of doubt
as far as I'm concerned
that they're issues which are
addressed to each one of us
as individuals today
he that hath an ear
let him hear what the
spirit is saying
unto the assemblies
and may God grant
that the deep spirit of self-judgement
and self-control
might produce within us
a proper response
to what the Lord
has to say to us …