Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for August 17th, 2009

JT reminds us that today is the 284th birthday of the father of modern missions. (HT: David Reimer)

John Piper wrote several years ago:

For his first two years in India William Carey got no mail. During his first seven years he got no converts. The British Indian press said “papists” had arrived instead of “Baptists.” After nineteen years of labor a fire destroyed his precious manuscripts of a polyglot dictionary, a Sikh and Telugu grammar and ten versions of the Bible. He had an accident and was lame to the end. He lost two wives in death. And he never went home—for 41 years.

What kept him going? Incredible faith in the sovereign goodness of God.

When I left England, my hope of India’s conversion was very strong; but amongst so many obstacles, it would die, unless upheld by God. Well, I have God, and His Word is true. Though the superstitions of the heathen were a thousand times stronger than they are, the example of the Europeans a thousand times worse; though I were deserted by all and persecuted by all, yet my faith, fixed on that sure Word, would rise about all obstacles and overcome every trial. God’s cause will triumph.

When he saw the smoldering fire that destroyed his work, tears filled his eyes and he said,

In one short evening the labours of years are consumed. How unsearchable are the ways of God! . . . The Lord has laid me low that I may look more simply to him.

Read Full Post »

Was Jesus nice?

jyci2Read an excerpt here from John MacArthur’s latest book The Jesus You Can’t Ignore which answers this question.

Read Full Post »

I preached yesterday on “Losing to Gain” from Philippians 3.  Verses 8-10 speak of “the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord!”  This is a knowledge of Christ in whom are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge.  This is the knowledge we are to revel in!

F. B. Meyer, an older devotional commentator writes,

We may know Him personally intimately face to face. Christ does not live back in the centuries, nor amid the clouds of heaven: He is near us, with us, compassing our path in our lying down, and acquainted with all our ways. But we cannot know Him in this mortal life except through the illumination and teaching of the Holy Spirit.… And we must surely know Christ, not as a stranger who turns in to visit for the night, or as the exalted king of men—there must be the inner knowledge as of those whom He counts His own familiar friends, whom He trusts with His secrets, who eat with Him of His own bread.

To know Christ in the storm of battle; to know Him in the valley of shadow; to know Him when the solar light irradiates our faces, or when they are darkened with disappointment and sorrow; to know the sweetness of His dealing with bruised reeds and smoking flax; to know the tenderness of His sympathy and the strength of His right hand—all this involves many varieties of experience on our part, but each of them like the facets of a diamond will reflect the prismatic beauty of His glory from a new angle. (The Epistle to the Philippians, 162–63)

To know God is the most valuable knowledge.  But even underlying this is that God knows me.  J. I. Packer put it this way, “What matters supremely is not that I know God, but the larger fact underlying this: that God knows me!”  Such knowledge is beyond wonder!

Read Full Post »

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 362 other followers