Sunday, March 28, 2010
Lemuel Haynes on The Providence of God...
Sunday, March 21, 2010
The Deceitfulness of Sin.... by John Owen
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Thoughts on God's Daily Benefits to His People....Charles Spurgeon
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Some Thoughts on Total Depravity....
..."The Renaissance was too optimistic, and the Reformation too pessimistic. The former so concentrated on the goodness of man that it overlooked his capacity for evil; the latter so concentrated on the wickedness of man that it overlooked his capacity for goodness. While rightfully affirming the sinfulness of human nature and man's incapacity to save himself, the Reformation wrongly affirmed that the image of God had been completely erased from man. This led to the Calvinistic concept of the total depravity of man and to a resurrection of the terrible idea of infant damnation. So depraved is human nature, said the doctrinaire Calvinist, that if a baby dies without baptism he will burn forever in hell. Certainly this carries the idea of man's sinfulness to far. This lopsided Reformation theology has often emphasized a purely otherworldly religion, which stresses the utter hopelessness of this world and calls upon the individual to concentrate on preparing his soul for the world to come."
My response: I will firstly say that I do believe in the reformed doctrine of total depravity. I do not believe that infants are condemned to hell AT ALL, simply for accountability's sake.I believe that if God in His Sovereignty sees fit to allow the death of an infant, He has a Infinitely Glorious purpose in it, and that purpose should not be questioned and that life remains with Him because of the grace that He gives to it. He is not unjust for this.
I see where this quote is coming from, and to a certain degree,its right. To observe a mans sinfulness and say " He can't do anything good anyway, so he might as well just sit there and let God do it all - save the world and save his soul" is lazy, its totally ignorant of what Scripture teaches. Yes, man was created in the image of God - yes, everyman knows enough about God through His creation and through the light of his conscience that he has morality. He can help an old lady across the street; He can show mercy to his neighbor who owes him money, and He can be unjust and yet still be kind to the one who consistently asks for help. This is us. People build hospitals, start orphanages, shelter the homeless, end hunger in underprivileged countries, make protests against segregation, the abortion of babies, and cruelty to animals. These things are good and no one can deny that. As a matter of fact, it would be beneficial to you as a person created in the image of God to be involved in some of these things, because they are good....but good with a little g...and this is where I believe this quote missed it somewhat... The doctrine of total depravity is not to be taken as, "Man is as evil as he could be"...No, for we could ALL be murderers, drunks, slanderers, and the worst of humans...and then we could sit around and rely on God to save us,while we continue deliberately murdering, stealing and pushing our sinfulness to the limit. This is warped. The doctrine of total depravity tells me that sin effects every part of my nature: mind, soul and body, so that when I do good - help a friend in need - evil is always present with me (ten seconds later I lie to that friend about what time I must leave from helping him).And yet when I walk away from helping that friend, I reckon myself justified in the eyes of myself and in the eyes of God. "Hey God, look at me! I just helped a friend!" And I totally blew it in reality because right after I helped...I sinned. In the eyes of God I'm as wicked as Hitler, not because I helped a friend, but because I lied. My "righteousness" has been soiled and now has another filthy spot on it. I have committed a sin in the sight of a Purely Holy and Just God...whether it was killing 10 million people or telling a white lie...and I am worthy of an infinite hell because I committed a crime against an infinite ruler.
Total depravity is not debunking man's capacity for good works. It's debunking man's wicked and sinful heart that thinks that he is justified in doing those good works. Whatever is not of faith in Christ, relying on Him as the most worthy and Infinite Good, is sin. So, I applaud Oprah, Clooney ,and Brad Pitt when they give millions to help thousands of helpless people. But it was only the grace of God that enabled them to give and not say "No, we wont!"...because they are just as capable of saying that because they are sinful. But I will not applaud these people when they stand before the world or stand before God in judgment throwing their list of good works in God's face saying "This is why I should get in!!" They're lost....and for that reason we should pray for God to give grace....not so that they can do more horizontal good....but so that they will be part of the Vertical Good. This is total depravity: Although fallen persons are capable of externally good acts (acts that are good for society), they cannot do anything really good, i.e., pleasing to God (Rom. 8:8). God, however, looks on the heart. And from his ultimate standpoint, fallen man has no goodness, in thought, word, or deed. He is therefore incapable of contributing anything to his salvation. (John Frame)
Second: This is why many charities and Christian organizations miss it - because they give men an earthly good (rights, freedom, protection of life, protection of marriage, feeding of the hungry, clothing of the naked, shelter of the homeless) and they deny them the Greatest Good - Christ. We feed millions with bread from earth, and starve them with bread from heaven. We give thousands water from earthly wells, and dehydrate them of Living Water from the Well of Life. A watered-down gospel, or no gospel at all is going to leave millions of people standing on the left at judgment day fully clothed, educated, filled with food and drink, and lost...subject to damnation because they were never given the Gospel.
The context surrounding this quote is civil rights. I understand that this was a time filled with hatred, violence and many people just sat back and did nothing about it, or reacted the wrong way. But standing on the greener grass of liberation in 2010, I see that as a people, we were set free from racism and then handcuffed to culturalism, materialism, and post-modernism. We got an earthly good in being truly liberated from segregation and racism...but we missed the Greatest Good, Christ, because our theology and Christ-centeredness is at its worst. Many of our churches do GREAT things for the communities and for the nations, but on the flip-side, our pulpits are filled with false doctrines, prosperity gospels, and "bless me now" sermons. Millions of dollars are brought into our churches and ministers are sleeping around on their wives; homosexuality and lesbianism is tolerated as the new "civil rights" and leaders say nothing. I do not say this to judge; I say this as one who looks to partake of some fruit from their trees, yet when I approach, I see that its bad. My prayer is that God would draw us back to a knowledge of Him...not just a proper theology, but a riveting regenerating worship that will break the chains of post-modernism off.
Sunday, March 14, 2010
Tozer on The Tongues Movement of 1904...
"Why is it that we do not cast our lot in with the tongues movement because they believe this? Well now, I have known and studied these dear brethren. I've preached to them for a long, long time and I've studied them; and I know them pretty well, and I'm very sympathetic with them, and I love them in all love and charity,I'd like to say there are some good sweet Christians among them. And I happen to know some dear, beloved, sweet Christians that are in this movement. Also, there are some churches that are very sane, beautiful, godly and good, but a number of things that I want to name have characterized the movement itself.
I do not want to hurt anybody's feelings; and if you think this is not true, then you can call me up, come to see me, bring your proof. If it's true, and as Christians and members of the body of Christ, we've all got to smile and say thank God for the truth no matter whether it hurts or not. The movement itself has done this. It has magnified one single gift above all others and that one gift, as Paul said, was the least. Now, that does not cause me to have great confidence in the movement that would do that. Then there is an unscriptural exhibition of that gift, which incidentally began in the United States about 1904."
From A.W. Tozer's "Mystery of The Holy Spirit"
Saturday, March 13, 2010
Be Killing Sin or Sin Will be Killing You....by John Piper
A very blessed message on the mortification of sin by John Piper. Taken from Romans 8:13, this message encourages the believer to realize that God is on our side, and our war with sin should be evidence that we are saved, not an effort try to be saved. The only way that sin will be defeated in this life is through the power of the Holy Spirit in taking our minds and setting them upon the things of the Spirit. I pray that you will be blessed and encouraged by this message as I have been.
If you cannot see the video, you can look on the original post at the AdjustMyThoughts Blog
Friday, March 12, 2010
D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones on the Gifts of the Spirit
"My attitude to the question of Tongues and other gifts is this: I have never been able to accept the traditional teaching as stated particularly, perhaps, by Warfield, that all gifts came to an end at the Apostolic era. I cannot see any scriptural warrant for this teaching; indeed it seems to me to be a kind of dispensationalism which renders much of the epistles useless. For instance it implies that the teaching of 1 Thessalonians 5, verses 19 - 21 has no application today. All I say is, that while it is clear from the history of the Church that certain gifts seem to have been in abeyance over the centuries the Holy Spirit in His Lordship may give them at any time. Indeed there is clear teaching that towards the end of this age such gifts are likely to reappear in great power, and at the same time many counterfeits.The result of all this is that while I am very unhappy about this Charismatic Movement, and regard it as a real danger to the true Church and the Gospel, because it implies constantly that doctrine does not matter at all, I am equally concerned that we should not become guilty of "quenching the Spirit" and tying ourselves up in a dead orthodoxy."
Tuesday, March 9, 2010
The Cross - by Martyn Lloyd Jones
Friday, March 5, 2010
Jonathan Edwards on Justification by Faith Alone
Romans 4:5
And to the one who does not work but believes in him who justifies the ungodly, his faith is counted as righteousness,...
"It appears, that by him that worketh not, in this verse, is not meant one who merely does not comform to the ceremonial law; because he that worketh not and the ungodly, are evidently synonymous expressions, or what signify the same, as appears by the manner of their connexion; if not, to what purpose is the latter expression, the ungodly, brought in? The context gives no other occasion for it, but to show, that by the grace of the gospel, God in justification has no regard to any godliness of ours. The foregoing verse is, “Now to him that worketh, is the reward not reckoned of grace, but of debt.” In that verse, it is evident, gospel grace consists in the reward being given without works; and in this verse, which immediately follows it, and in sense is connected with it, gospel-grace consists in a man’s being justified as ungodly. By which it is most plain, that by him that worketh not, and him that is ungodly, are meant the same thing; and that therefore not only works of the ceremonial law are excluded in this business of justification, but works of morality and godliness."