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Archive for June 17th, 2012

Here’s one commentator’s description of the fear of God:

This fear is self-distrust; it is tenderness of conscience; it is vigilance against temptation; it is the fear which inspiration opposes to highmindedness in the admonition, ‘be not high-minded but fear.’ It is taking heed lest we fall; it is a constant apprehension of the deceitfulness of the heart, and of the insidiousness and power of inward corruption. It is the caution and circumspection which timidly shrinks from whatever would offend and dishonor God and the Saviour” (Marvin Vincent, quoting Wardlaw On Proverbs).

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that nobody tells you.  By Daniel Darling:

1) You are much less patient than you think you are.

2) Many times you’ll have no clue what to do.

3) You’ll realize that minivans are secretly awesome.

4) You’ll probably not get six continuous hours of good sleep ever again

5) There are singular moments of joy so indescribable they can only be experienced.

6) Your presence is more important than you know.

7) You need to repeat the same words over and over to your children.

8) You will watch less of your favorite games, play less video games, and will go out with your guy friends hardly at all.

9) You will embrace your cluelessness as a gift from God.

10) You will realize your ongoing need to repent, confess, apologize, and forgive.

Dan adds further explanation to each one.

 

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I recently preached from 1 Peter 1 on the clear and repeated command in Scripture from God:  ”You shall be holy as I am holy.”  I spoke to the issue of what holiness is and what it isn’t.  Later in mentioned the book Holiness by J.C. Ryle to someone. Then I found this post from Ryle’s book over at Challies.  Read 5 things holiness is and 5 things it is not.  

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Jonathan relates the compelling story of a couple in their twenties who recently lost their lives on the mission field.  This couple understood the realities of life and death. They did not waste their lives in vain. Their deaths left Jonathan (and should do the same to us) reflecting on his own life:

 I don’t want to spend my life collecting seashells or playing softball or wasting away on a boat. But do I really get it?

Do I really get that death is gain (Philippians 1:21), that Jesus really is worth the loss of all things (Philippians 3:8), that my citizenship really is in heaven (Philippians 3:20)?

Do I care that my life makes a difference, or do I just want to be liked? Is all I’m aiming for in this vapor of years just for me “to die easy and then no hell”? (See John Piper, “Boasting Only in the Cross.”)

Jay and Katrina’s witness is a wake-up call. It’s a call for us to ask these questions to ourselves again, no matter how much Piper we’ve read, or Platt we’ve heard, or Bonhoeffer we can tweet. Now I don’t mean we fixate our attention on how much we are compelled, or if it compares to this or that. Jay and Katrina’s death doesn’t leave us to marvel at how compelled they were, but to marvel at the One who compelled them.

Read more about Jay and Katrina and the lessons of their lives here.

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Randy Alcorn:

God tells us that suffering isn’t pointless. We are to rejoice in our sufferings because of the outcomes they will produce: perseverance, character, hope, and the certain expectation that God will make all things right and work all things for our good and his glory.

Some of the most meaningful victories in our lives come in the context of our most difficult, seemingly useless suffering.

Howard Hendricks tells of visiting a leprosy center in India. The morning he arrived, the residents were gathered for a praise service. One of the women with leprosy hobbled to the platform. Hendricks said that even though she was partially blind and badly disfigured, she was one of the most beautiful women he’d ever seen.

Raising both of her nearly fingerless hands toward Heaven, she said in a clear voice, “I want to praise God that I am a leper because it was through my leprosy that I came to know Jesus Christ as my Savior. And I would rather be a leper who knows Christ than be completely whole and a stranger to His grace.”

Seeing God’s hand in our adversities comes in many different forms.

After serving in a ministry for fifteen years,  a brother I know, named Dan, endured a ten-year spiritual drought. He told me, “I felt like God just wasn’t there. My spiritual life became pointless.”

LightFinally, Dan determined to draw near to God, hoping God would keep his promise to draw near to him (see James 4:8). Ten Saturdays in a row he took a chair into the woods and sat for hours at a time. He vowed he would keep coming until “God showed up.” He brought pen and paper to write reflections. For the first nine weeks he sensed no contact with God and so had little to write.

On the tenth Saturday, suddenly Dan started writing. He felt God’s presence like a gentle wave, for the first time in ten years. Beginning that day, his life changed. He told me, “As miserable as those years were, I would not trade it for anything, because God showed me that my earlier fifteen years of Christian life and ministry had really been about me, not him. I had lived on my terms, not his. At last I was seeing God.”

Dan said, “After it was all over, I thanked God for those ten years.” Yet during that dark time, Dan said he couldn’t have imagined ever being grateful for it.

Since detailed past, present, and future knowledge is unavailable to us, we sometimes see negative circumstances as random and pointless. We do not see that God has and will accomplish good purposes through them. Who but God is wise enough to know…or powerful enough to make it happen?

Read the whole article.

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