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Chicago Cubs May 31, 2008

Posted by Jeremy in Cubs.
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Those of you that know me know I am a diehard Cubs fan.  I’ve been following the Cubs for a long time now.  I don’t normally post on my sports teams but I just couldn’t resist for this one.

The Cubs will start the month of June with the BEST record in ALL of baseball!!!  This is the piece of news that I wanted to impart to you.  The last time the Cubs started June with the best record in baseball was in 1908.  Those of you who know your sports trivia, know that the last time the Cubs won the World Series was in 1908.  Now I’m not saying they are going to win it this year.  But I will say it seems like things are lining up for them to have an amazing session.  This does speak volumes to how well they are playing as a team and the potential that exists with this team.  The season is a long way from being over but it’s a nice change for how sessions in the past have been.   I would love to be able to sit in my home in Boone North Carolina watching the Cubs playing in the World Series!!!

On a side note, the Cubs have won their last six games with some spectacular pitching and run support.  They are looking real hot right now!

Preaching Christ May 30, 2008

Posted by Jeremy in C.H. Spurgeon, Michael Horton, Phil Eveson, Thoughts and Theology.
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“When we preach Christ crucified, we have no reason to stammer, or stutter, or hesitate, or apologize; there is nothing in the gospel of which we have any cause to be ashamed.” (C.H. Spurgeon)

“Let this be to you the mark of true gospel preaching – where Christ is everything, and the creature is nothing; where it is salvation all of grace, through the work of the Holy Spirit applying to the soul the precious blood of Jesus.” (C.H. Spugeon)

“Reformation was obsessed with true worship, insisting that worshiping or serving God according to one’s own whim, imagination, or pleasure, was idolatry. We are sinners–even those of us who have been converted. We are still fallen and our hearts always revert to paganism unless we are constantly confronted with an external Word that tells us the truth about ourselves and God. We don’t really think that we’re totally depraved, so the Law comes to us and tells us how bad the bad news really is. But then we don’t really think that we can be declared righteous and fully acceptable before a holy God even though we still continue to sin, so the Gospel comes to tell us how good the good news really is. If we don’t hear these two words, the Law and the Gospel, as our regular diet, we are not hearing the Word of God, but are settling for the words of men.” (Michael Horton)

“Where are the preachers of the gospel in our land today? There are plenty of performers, but where are the proclaimers? There are books galore on preaching but where are the men called to preach, who will be persistent and faithful whether the time is favourable or not? Where are the Spirit-anointed spokesmen for God? Pray to the Lord of the harvest; ask him to send out more workers into his fields. Urge him to give the Holy Spirit in greater measure to his servants and to raise up a new generation of faithful workers who will pass on the glorious gospel with passion and power and a heart of love.” (Phil Eveson)

Hell by R.C. Sproul May 28, 2008

Posted by Jeremy in Hell, RC Sproul, Thoughts and Theology.
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RC SproulWe have often heard statements such as “War is hell” or “I went through hell.” These expressions are, of course, not taken literally. Rather, they reflect our tendency to use the word hell as a descriptive term for the most ghastly human experience possible. Yet no human experience in this world is actually comparable to hell. If we try to imagine the worst of all possible suffering in the here and now we have not yet stretched our imaginations to reach the dreadful reality of hell.

Hell is trivialized when it is used as a common curse word. To use the word lightly may be a halfhearted human attempt to take the concept lightly or to treat it in an amusing way. We tend to joke about things most frightening to us in a futile effort to declaw and defang them, reducing their threatening power.

There is no biblical concept more grim or terror-invoking than the idea of hell. It is so unpopular with us that few would give credence to it at all except that it comes to us from the teaching of Christ Himself.

Almost all the biblical teaching about hell comes from the lips of Jesus. It is this doctrine, perhaps more than any other, that strains even the Christian’s loyalty to the teaching of Christ. Modern Christians have pushed the limits of minimizing hell in an effort to sidestep or soften Jesus’ own teaching. The Bible describes hell as a place of outer darkness, a lake of fire, a place of weeping and gnashing of teeth, a place of eternal separation from the blessings of God, a prison, a place of torment where the worm doesn’t turn or die. These graphic images of eternal punishment provoke the question, should we take these descriptions literally or are they merely symbols?

I suspect they are symbols, but I find no relief in that. We must not think of them as being merely symbols. It is probable that the sinner in hell would prefer a literal lake of fire as his eternal abode to the reality of hell represented in the lake of fire image. If these images are indeed symbols, then we must conclude that the reality is worse than the symbol suggests. The function of symbols is to point beyond themselves to a higher or more intense state of actuality than the symbol itself can contain. That Jesus used the most awful symbols imaginable to describe hell is no comfort to those who see them simply as symbols.

A breath of relief is usually heard when someone declares, “Hell is a symbol for separation from God.” To be separated from God for eternity is no great threat to the impenitent person. The ungodly want nothing more than to be separated from God. Their problem in hell will not be separation from God, it will be the presence of God that will torment them. In hell, God will be present in the fullness of His divine wrath. He will be there to exercise His just punishment of the damned. They will know Him as an all-consuming fire.

No matter how we analyze the concept of hell it often sounds to us as a place of cruel and unusual punishment. If, however, we can take any comfort in the concept of hell, we can take it in the full assurance that there will be no cruelty there. It is impossible for God to be cruel. Cruelty involves inflicting a punishment that is more severe or harsh than the crime. Cruelty in this sense is unjust. God is incapable of inflicting an unjust punishment. The Judge of all the earth will surely do what is right. No innocent person will ever suffer at His hand.

Perhaps the most frightening aspect of hell is its eternality. People can endure the greatest agony if they know it will ultimately stop. In hell there is no such hope. The Bible clearly teaches that the punishment is eternal. The same word is used for both eternal life and eternal death. Punishment implies pain. Mere annihilation, which some have lobbied for, involves no pain. Jonathan Edwards, in preaching on Revelation 6:15-16 said, “Wicked men will hereafter earnestly wish to be turned to nothing and forever cease to be that they may escape the wrath of God.” (John H. Gerstner, Jonathan Edwards on Heaven and Hell[Orlando: Ligonier Ministries, 1991], 75.)

Hell, then, is an eternity before the righteous, ever-burning wrath of God, a suffering torment from which there is no escape and no relief. Understanding this is crucial to our drive to appreciate the work of Christ and to preach His gospel.

Summary

  1. The suffering of hell is beyond any experience of misery found in this world.
  2. Hell is clearly included in the teaching of Jesus.
  3. If the biblical descriptions of hell are symbols, then the reality will be worse than the symbols.
  4. Hell is the presence of God in His wrath and judgment.
  5. There is no cruelty in hell. Hell will be a place of perfect justice.
  6. Hell is eternal. There is no escape through either repentance or annihilation.

Biblical passages for reflection: Matthew 8:11-12Mark 9:42-48Luke 16:19-31Jude 1:3-13Revelation 20:11-15.

John Murray on the Sabbath May 26, 2008

Posted by Jeremy in John Murray, Sabbath, Thoughts and Theology.
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If we accept the witness of Scripture there can be no question that the weekly Sabbath finds its basis in and derives its sanction from the example of God himself. He created the heavens and the earth in six days and “on the seventh God ended his work which he had made; and he rested on the seventh day from all his work which he had made. And God blessed the seventh day, and sanctified it” (Gen. 2:2,3). The fourth commandment in the decalogue sets forth the obligation resting upon man and it makes express appeal to this sanction. “For in six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is, and rested the seventh day: wherefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day, and hallowed it” (Exod. 20:11).

Many regard this Sabbath institution as a shadow of things to come and, therefore, as an ordinance to be observed, has passed away because that of which it was a shadow has been realized in the full light of the new and better covenant. At this point suffice it to ask the question: has the pattern of God’s work and rest in creation ceased to be relevant? Is this pattern a shadow in the sense of those who espouse this position? The realm of our existence is that established by creation and maintained by God’s providence. The new covenant has in no respect abrogated creation nor has it diminished its relevance. Creation both as action and product is as significant for us as it was for Israel under the old covenant. The refrain of Scripture in both Testaments is that the God of creation is the God of redemption in all stages of covenantal disclosure and realization. This consideration is invested with greater significance when we bear in mind that the ultimate standard for us is likeness to God (cf. Matt. 5:48; 1 John 3:2,3). And it is this likeness, in the sphere of our behaviour, that undergirds the demand for Sabbath observance (Exod. 20:11; 31:17).

The Redemptive Pattern

It is noteworthy that the Sabbath commandment as given in Deuteronomy (Deut. 5:12-15) does not appeal to God’s rest in creation as the reason for keeping the Sabbath day. In this instance mention is made of something else. “And remember that thou wast a servant in the land of Egypt, and that the Lord thy God brought thee out thence through a mighty hand and an out-streched arm: therefore the Lord thy God commanded thee to keep the Sabbath day” (Deut. 5:15). This cannot be understood as in any way annulling the sanction of Exodus 20:11; 31:17. Deuteronomy comprises what was the reiteration of the covenant made at Sinai. When the Sabbath commandment is introduced Israel is reminded of the earlier promulgation: “Keep the Sabbath day to sanctify it, as the Lord thy God hath commanded thee” (Deut. 5:12). And we should observe that all the commandments have their redemptive sanction. The preface to all is: “I am the Lord thy God which have brought thee out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage” (Exod. 20:2; cf. Deut. 5:6). So what we find in Deut. 5;15 in connection with the Sabbath is but the application of the preface to the specific duty enunciated in the fourth command. It is supplement to Exodus 20:11, not suspension. We have now added reason for observing the Sabbath. This is full of meaning and we must linger to analyze and appreciate.

The deliverance from Egypt was redemption. “Thou in thy mercy hast led forth the people which thou hast redeemed” (Exod. 15:13). It is more than any other event the redemption of the old Testament. It is the analogue of the greater redemption accomplished by Christ. The Sabbath commandment derives its sanction not only from God’s rest in creation but also from redemption out of Egypt’s bondage. This fact that the Sabbath in Israel had a redemptive reference and sanction bears directly upon the question of its relevance in the New Testament. The redemption from Egypt cannot be properly viewed except as the anticipation of the greater redemption wrought in the fullness of time. Hence, if redemption from Egypt accorded sanction to the Sabbath institution and provided reason for its observance the same must apply to the greater redemption and apply in a way commensurate with the greater fullness and dimensions of the redemption secured by the death and resurrection of Christ. In other words, it is the fullness and richness of the new covenant that accord to the Sabbath ordinance increased relevance, sanction, and blessing.

This redemptive reference explains and confirms three features of the New Testament.

1. The Retrospective Reference

Jesus rose from the dead on the first day of the week (cf. Matt. 28:1; Mark 16:2,9; Luke 24:1; John 20:1). For our present interest the important feature of the New Testament witness is that the first day of the week continued to have _distinctive religious significance_ (cf. Acts 20:7; 1 Cor. 16:2). The only explanation of this fact is that the first day was the day of Jesus’ resurrection and for that reason John calls it “the Lord’s day” (Rev. 1:10). The first day took on a memorial significance appropriate to the place the resurrection of Christ occupies in the accomplishment of redemption and in Jesus’ _finished_ work (cf. John 17:4) as also appropriate to the seal imparted by the repeated appearance to his disciples on that day (cf. Matt. 28:9; Luke 24:15-31, 26; John 20:19,26). When Christ rose from the dead he was loosed from the pangs of death (cf. Acts 2:24), he entered upon life indestructible (cf. Rom. 5:10; 6:9,10), became a “life-giving Spirit” (1 Cor. 15:45), and brought “life and immortality to light” (2 Tim. 1:10). In a word, he entered upon the rest of his redeeming work. All of this and much more resides in the emphasis which falls upon the resurrection as a pivotal event in the accomplishment of redemption. The other pivot is the death upon the cross. The sanctity belonging to the first day of the week as the Lord’s day is the constant reminder of all that Jesus’ resurrection involves. It is the memorial of the resurrection as the Lord’s supper is the memorial of Jesus’ death upon the tree. Inescapable, therefore, is the conclusion that the resurrection in its redemptive character yields its sanction to the sacredness of the first day of the week just as deliverance from Egypt’s bondage accorded its sanction to the Sabbath institution of the old covenant. This is the rationale for regarding the Lord’s day as the Christian Sabbath. It follows the line of thought which the Old Testament itself prescribes for us when it appeals to redemption as the reason for Sabbath observance. The principle enunciated in Deuteronomy 5:15 receives its verification and application in the new covenant in the memorial of finalized redemption, the Lord’s day.

2. The Manward Reference

Under this caption we have in mind our Lord’s saying: “The Sabbath was made for man, and not man for the Sabbath: therefore the Son of man is Lord also of the Sabbath” (Mark 2:27,28).

The title our Lord uses to designate himself is one that belongs to him in his messianic identity, commission, and office. The lordship he claims is, therefore, redemptively conditioned; it is his lordship as Mediator and Saviour. As such, in accord with his own testimony, he is given all authority in heaven and earth (cf. John 3:36; Matt. 28:18). So every institution is brought within the scope of his lordship. Since he exercises this lordship in the interests of God’s redemptive purpose, it is particularly true that institutions given for the good of man are brought within the scope of his lordship and made to serve the interests of the supreme good which redemption designs and guarantees. It is this governing thought that is applied in the text to the institution of the Sabbath. The accent falls upon the beneficent design of the Sabbath – it was made for man. “Therefore the Son of man is Lord” of it.

When Jesus speaks of the Sabbath, he is specifying the institution defined by the fourth commandment, and he asserts his lordship over it in precisely this character. There is not the slightest intimation of abrogation. For it is the Sabbath in that identity over which he claims to be Lord. Too frequently this text is adduced in support of an alleged relaxation of the requirements set forth in the commandment as if Jesus on this ground were, in the exercise of his authority, defending his disciples for behaviour that went counter to Old Testament requirements. This totally misconstrues the situation in which the words were spoken. Jesus is defending his disciples against the charge of desecration brought by the Pharisees (cf. Mark 2:24). But in doing so he shows by appeal to the Old Testament itself (cf. Matt. 12:4,5; Mark 2:25,26) that the behaviour of his disciples was in accord with what the Old Testament sanctioned. It was not deviation from Old Testament requirements that our Lord was condoning but deviation from pharisaical distortion. He was condemning the tyranny by which the Sabbath institution had been made an instrument of oppression. And he did this by appeal to the true intent of the Sabbath as verified by Scripture itself. Of special interest is the relation of the redemptive sanction of the fourth commandment to the claim of Jesus on this occasion. The lordship over the Sabbath is, as observed, redemptively conditioned and thus only within a redemptive design can his lordship of the Sabbath be understood. This is to say that the Sabbath ordinance in its beneficent character comes to full expression within the realm of our Lord’s mediatorial lordship. The Sabbath is not alien to redemption at the zenith of its realization and blessing. As made for man it continues to serve its great purpose in that administration that achieves the acme of covenant grace. This Jesus’ word seals to us – “the Son of man is Lord also of the Sabbath”.

3. The Prospective Reference

“There remains therefore a Sabbath keeping for the people of God” (Heb. 4:9)

The context of this passage is all-important for its interpretation and for

appreciation of its implications. At verse 4 there is quotation of Genesis 2:2: “And God rested on the seventh day from all his works.” This, of course, refers to God’s _own_ rest. At verse 5 there is allusion to the rest of Canaan and quotation of Psalm 95:11 (cf. also vs. 3 and 3:11) in reference to the failure of too many to enter into it (cf. Psalm 95:10). The remarkable feature of verse 5 as of Psalm 95:11 is that this rest of Canaan is called God’s rest (“my rest”). Why this characterization? It is not sufficient to say that it was the rest God provided. The proximity of reference to God’s own rest in verse 4 requires more than the thoughts of mere provision by God. We cannot say less than that God calls it his rest because the rest of Canaan was patterned after God’s rest – it partook of the character of God’s rest. The same kind of identification appears in verse 10 with reference to the rest that remains for the people of God. “For he that has entered into his rest, he also has ceased from his own works, as God did from his.” So the rest of Canaan and the rest that remains for the people of God are called God’s rest because both partake of the character of God’s own rest in resting from his creative work on the seventh day. Here is something highly germane to the present topic.

It is clear that the rest of Canaan and the rest that remains for the people of God are redemptive in character. Since they are patterned after God’s rest in creation, this means that the redemptive takes on the character of that rest of God upon which the Sabbath institution for man originally rested and from which it derived its sanction. We cannot but discover in this again the close relation between the creative and the redemptive in the Sabbath ordinance and the coherence of Exodus 20:11 and Deuteronomy 5:15. We are reminded again that likeness to God governs man’s obligation and is brought to its realization in the provisions of redemption. In the consummation of redemption the Sabbath rest of God’s people achieves conformity to the fullest extent. “For he who has entered into his rest, he also has ceased from his own works, as God did from his” (cf. Rev. 14:13). The Sabbath institution in all its aspects and applications has this prospective reference; the whole movement of redemption will find its finale in the Sabbath rest that remains. The weekly Sabbath is the promise, token, and foretaste of the consummated rest; it is also the earnest. The biblical philosophy of the Sabbath is such that to deny its perpetuity is to deprive the movement of redemption of one of its most precious strands.

Redemption has a past, a present, and a future. In the Sabbath as “the Lord’s day” all three are focused. In retrospect it is the memorial of our Lord’s resurrection. In the present with resurrection joy it fulfils its beneficent design by the lordship of the Son of man. As prospect it is the promise of the inheritance of the saints. With varying degrees of understanding and application it is this perspective that dictated the observance of the Lord’s day in catholic, protestant and reformed tradition. Shall we forfeit in institution so embedded in redemptive revelation and recognized as such in the history of the church of Christ? In the faith and for the honour of the Sabbath’s Lord may we answer with a decisive, no! In devotion to him may we increasingly know the joy and blessing of the recurring day of rest and worship.

Lazarus – John 11:1-44 May 24, 2008

Posted by Jeremy in John, Lazarus, Thoughts and Theology.
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I encourage you to read John 11:1-44 before you read the rest of this post.  I’ve made several notes from this text that I have seen that I think are beneficial and not discussed much in reference to this passage (at least when I hear it referenced).

I just had a conversation with a good friend of mine concerning this passage and it got me real excited about it and I spent some time this morning meditating over John 11 and wanted to share what I saw and hopefully you are blessed as a result of my time with the Lord.

  • 2 promises are made by Jesus (vs. 4)
    • First Promise – This illness will not end in death
    • Second Promise – The Son of God will be glorified through it
    • This passage is all about the glory of Jesus Christ.  That is what John is saying here
  • connection between vs. 5 & 6
    • 5 “Now Jesus loved Martha and her sister and Lazarus. 6 So, when he heard that Lazarus was ill, he stayed two days longer in the place where he was.”
    • John says that Jesus delayed because he loved them. Wrap you mind around that!
  • The disciples think Jesus is going to be killed by going back to Bethany.  Thomas decides to go with Jesus thinking he too will be killed with him (vs. 8, to be stoned with Jesus)
  • What Jesus says to the disciples in vs. 15 goes back to the reason for this passage…vs. 4, so that the Son of God may be glorified!  This passage is not primarily to just show that him illness will not end in death.
  • The interaction between Martha and Jesus is interesting for several reasons.
    • “Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died.” Martha’s comments express a good amount of faith but a mix of weakness.  As if Jesus must be present for a cure to happen.  He demonstrated this with the Centurion & nobleman’s son (healing without presence)
      • She believed in the power of Christ but but limits to it.
    • I really feel that based on how Martha reacts to Jesus’ comments she really has no clue 
      • I don’t believe that Martha is trying to get Jesus to raise her brother from the dead.  To this point Jesus had never done this.  I think that is why she responds to him as she does.  
      • Jesus uses this as a teaching moment – vs. 25-26, he is saying that he rules the physical bodies just as much as the spiritual bodies.
      • Martha’s answers Jesus with facts – vs. 27, not her heart.  She thinks the gospel is about information.
  • Martha sends in Mary – she refers to Jesus as a teacher, not Messiah or anything else.  To me this implies that she views Jesus as the source of information and the the living truth.  Mary says the same things Martha does.
  • Jesus was deeply moved & troubled (vs. 33-35)….he was not sad but frustrated.  He was frustrated with the unbelief of his disciples, all the people in the village, and finally with his interactions with Martha, and Mary.  It is a result of this that Jesus wept.  He is alone!  No one, not even those closest to him (Martha & Mary, disciples) have an inkling of who he is!  Everyone failed to believe in him (disciple, Mary, Martha, Jews).  Remember back to the two promises.  Jesus isn’t even at the tomb yet…he was “moved” along the road to the tomb. Jesus wept.  This is not referring to him weeping over Lazarus’s death.  A better translation is a ‘deep groan’.  Matthew Henry says this “Being displeased at the unbelief of those who spoke doubtingly of his power, and blamed him for not preventing the death of Lazarus; he wasgrieved for the hardness of their hearts. He never groaned so much for his own pains and sufferings as for the sins and follies of men, particularly Jerusalem’s, Mt. 23:37.”
  •  I really feel that the Jews response in vs. 36-37 is sarcasm….something to the effect of “it took him 4 days to get here and he is getting upset at the funeral”
  • In vs. 39 Martha can’t fathom why Jesus would want to remove the stone…this confirms what I said earlier as to her never really thinking the Jesus could raise her brother let alone ask him to do so.  Jesus’ response to Martha points right back to the two promises…He will be glorified.
  • All of what Jesus is doing is to develop there belief
  • In vs. 44….the first promise is fulfilled in raising Lazarus from the dead.
  • In vs. 45…the second promise is fulfilled in there belief. [don't you just love poor heading breaks]

As I reflect on this passage I’m struck by the fact that they only person who responded to Jesus in this passage was Lazarus.  Jesus commanded him to come out and he did.  Jesus has the power to breathe life into rotting corpses.  I’m sad to say that I’m pretty sure my response would be right in line with Martha and Mary…how little faith we have in our Saviour!!  That hit me hard as I was reflecting on this passage.

Christianity & Liberalism May 15, 2008

Posted by Jeremy in Machen, Thoughts and Theology, books.
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I blogged a few days ago about an awesome book that I recommended you to check out.   I wanted to give you a taste of what is inside.  So here are a few snippet from the book.  It is ridiculously sweet book and has really blessed me.

…”the message of the resurrection was not isolated. It was connected with the death of Jesus, seen now to be not a failure but a triumphant act of divine grace; it was connected with the entire appearance of Jesus upon earth. The coming of Jesus was understood now as an act of God by which sinful men were saved. The primitive Church was concerned not merely with what Jesus had said, but also, and primarily, with what Jesus had done. The world was to be redeemed through the proclamation of an event. And with the event went the meaning of the event; and the setting forth of the event with the meaning of the event was doctrine. These two elements are always combined in the Christian message. The narration of the facts is history; the narration of the facts with the meaning of the facts is doctrine. “Suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, dead and buried”–that is history. “He loved me and gave Himself for me”–that is doctrine. Such was the Christianity of the primitive Church.” page 29 from the Doctrine chapter

“The fundamental fault of the modern Church is that she is busily engaged in an absolutely impossible task–she is busily engaged in calling the righteous to repentance. Modern preachers are trying to bring men into the Church without requiring them to relinquish their pride; they are trying to help men avoid the conviction of sin. The preacher gets up into the pulpit, opens the Bible, and addresses the congregation somewhat as follows: “You people are very good,” he says; “you respond to every appeal that looks toward the welfare of the community. Now we have in the Bible–especially in the life of Jesus–something so good that we believe it is good enough even for you good people.” Such is modern preaching. It is heard every Sunday in thousands of pulpits. But it is entirely futile”. page 63 from the God and Man chapter

Psalm 61 May 14, 2008

Posted by Jeremy in bible, psalm 61.
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I was just reading through this Psalm this morning and it just spoke to me so I figure I would throw it up here.  I was struck once again with how it is ALL about the Lord.  It is Him who leads us and sustains up, who provides for us and called us out of darkness into light!  I loved the distinction that David makes between his cry and his prayer in verse 1.  I don’t think I cry out to God much….

1 “Hear my cry, O God,
   listen to my prayer;
2 from the end of the earth I call to you
   when my heart is faint.
Lead me to the rock
   that is higher than I,
3 for you have been my refuge,
   a strong tower against the enemy.

 4 Let me dwell in your tent forever!
   Let me take refuge under the shelter of your wings! 
5 For you, O God, have heard my vows;
   you have given me the heritage of those who fear your name.

 6 Prolong the life of the king;
   may his years endure to all generations!
7 May he be enthroned forever before God;
   appoint steadfast love and faithfulness to watch over him!

 8 So will I ever sing praises to your name,
   as I perform my vows day after day.”

Christianity & Liberalism May 8, 2008

Posted by Jeremy in IV Staff Development, Machen, Thoughts and Theology.
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If you have not read this book I strongly recommend that you pick it up and read it.  It is a Machen classic.  If you are not familiar with Machen he was born in 1881 and died in 1937.  He was a Presbyterian theologian, born at Baltimore, Maryland, studied at John Hopkins, Princeton University, and the universities of Marburg and Gottingen, Germany…. Taught New Testament literature and exegesis in Princeton Theological Seminary (1906-1929)…. An outstanding conservative apologist and theologian at Princeton, he left the school because of Modernism. Offered the presidency of several schools; but refused each offer. In 1929 founded Westminster Theological Seminary and became president and professor of New Testament from 1929 to 1937. Protesting against the liberalism of the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions, established an independent mission board. Charged with insubordination, tried, found guilty, and suspended from the Presbyterian ministry. Group of sixteen other clergymen and laymen with Dr. Machen withdrew in 1936 to found the Orthodox Presbyterian Church.   This book, first published in 1923, is a classic treatment of the age old controversy between Orthodox Christianity and Liberalism. Machen contrasts the errors of liberalism with the basic foundational truths of Biblical Christianity such as: Doctrine, God and man, the Bible, Christ, Salvation, and the Church. Machen’s book is scriptural, thought-provoking, well-reasoned, and relevent today!!! Your faith in the Bible and its basic doctrines will be strengthened. It is worth your time to read this important book.

Summer Camp May 6, 2008

Posted by Jeremy in IV Staff Development, Rockbridge, discipleship.
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So all of you know, I will be at Rockbridge the next two weeks.  Rockbridge is the big summer camp for our region (North Carolina, Virginia, and South Carolina).  All the schools in the region are split into two weeks and there are about 750 students that will attend the camp over that time.  It’s a really awesome and amazing week for the students and also the staff.  Exams have finished, the school year is over, summer has officially started and the students get to spend a week in the mountains with a ton of other folks from different schools. 

 

In typical IV fashion there is a main speaker each day, tons of worship music, track time, and a mess of free time.  The students pick a track and stick with that one for the week.  A lot of the training for the next school year will happen at Rockbridge.  There is a small group vision track that is geared to help students learn what it mean to lead a small group and practically how to do it.  They get the opportunity to lead a small group through a passage of scripture and get to hear feed back from the group.  They also get tools for how to study scripture and prepare a bible study for a group of students.  There is also tracks geared solely for non Christian or really young Christians, called following Jesus.  It’s a great track that goes through one of the gospels and spends a lot of time examining Jesus’ life, death, and Resurrection and what that means for us.  There are several other tracks but I wont get into them all, just wanted to give you a brief taste of what I’ll be doing these next two weeks.  
All of the tracks are led by the various staff throughout the region, so be praying for us and it’s also a very full and exhausting time for us.   I’ll probably blog a few time while I’m here to share some of my thoughts, so don’t think I’m taking this time off from here :) .  I’m also reading Christianity & Liberalism by J. Gresham Machen and will assuredly have something to say about that book at some point while I am here.

Together For The Gospel 2008 May 1, 2008

Posted by Jeremy in IV Staff Development, Thoughts and Theology, t4g.
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If you were not able to go to the Together for the Gospel conference in Louisville KT in mid April I would stronger encourage you to check out the talk on MP3.  You can download them at the t4g.org website.  I’ve listened to them all a few times and they have greatly blessed me.  Here are the speakers that were there and the topic they spoke on.

  • Ligon Duncan - Sound Doctrine – Essential to Faithful Pastoral Ministry
  • Thabiti Anyabwile - Bearing the Image: Identity, the Work of Christ, and the Church
  • John MacArthur - The Sinner Neither Able Nor Willing: The Doctrine of Absolute Inability
  • Mark Dever - Improving the Gospel: Exercises in Unbiblical Theology
  • RC Sproul - The Curse Motif of the Atonement
  • Albert Mohler - Why Do They Hate It So? The Doctrine of Substitution
  • John Piper - How the Supremacy of Christ Creates Radical Christian Sacrifice
  • CJ Mahaney - Sustaining a Pastor’s Soul