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Welcome to the Im4God.org
/ Songbook.ManuelAdam.com December 21st, 2005 Newsletter!
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Isaiah 9:6-7 - For to Us a Child Is Born
6For to us a child is born,
to us a son is given;
and the government shall be upon his shoulder,
and his name shall be called
Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God,
Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.
7Of the increase of his government and of
peace
there will be no end,
on the throne of David and over his kingdom,
to establish it and to uphold it
with justice and with righteousness
from this time forth and forevermore.
The zeal of the LORD of hosts will do this.
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Finding a Godly Wife...
by Pastor Dodds (Covenant
OPC, Grove City)
The title speaks for itself on this one!
Play
with Media Player
(35 minutes/4.15 MB) /
View the Bible Passages for this Sermon
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The Fear of God
by J. Gresham
Machen
‘And fear not them which kill the body, but
are not able to kill the soul; but rather fear him, which is able to
destroy both soul and body in hell’ [Matt 10.28].
These words were not spoken by Jonathan Edwards.
They were not spoken by Cotton Mather. They were not spoken by Calvin,
or Augustine, or by Paul. But these words were spoken by Jesus.
And when put together with the many other words
like them in the Gospels, they demonstrate the utter falsity of the
picture of Jesus which is being constructed in recent years. The other
day, in one of the most popular religious books of the day, The
Reconstruction of Religion, by Ellwood, I came upon the amazing
assertion that Jesus concerned Himself but little with the thought of
a life after death. In the presence of such assertions any student of
history may well stand aghast. It maybe that we do not make much of
the doctrine of a future life, but the question whether Jesus did so
is not a matter of taste but an historical question which can be
answered only on the basis of an examination of the sources of
historical information, which we call the Gospels. And if you want to
answer the question, I recommend that you do what I have done, and
simply go through a Gospel harmony, noting the passages where Jesus
speaks of blessedness and woe in the future life. You may be surprised
at the result; certainly you will be surprised if you have been
affected in the slightest degree by the misrepresentation of Jesus
which suffuses the religious literature of our time. You will discover
that the thought not only of heaven but also the thought of hell runs
all through the teaching of Jesus. It appears in all four of the
Gospels; it appears in the sources, supposed to underlie the Gospels,
which have been reconstructed, rightly or wrongly, by modem criticism.
It is not an element which can be removed by any critical process, but
simply suffuses the whole of Jesus’ teaching and Jesus’ life.
It runs through the most characteristic parables of
Jesus — the solemn parables of the rich man and Lazarus; the
unrighteous steward; the pounds; the talents; the wheat and the tares;
the evil servant; the marriage of the King’s Son; the ten virgins. It
is equally prominent in the rest of Jesus’ teaching. The judgment
scene of the twenty-fifth chapter of Matthew is only the culmination
of what is found everywhere in the Gospels. ‘These shall go away into
everlasting punishment: but the righteous into life eternal’. There is
absolutely nothing peculiar about this passage amid the sayings of
Jesus. If there ever was a religious teacher who could not be appealed
to in support of a religion of this world, if there ever was a teacher
who viewed the world under the aspect of eternity, it is Jesus of
Nazareth.
These passages and a great mass of other passages
like them are embedded everywhere in the Gospel tradition. So far as I
know, even the most radical criticism has not tried to remove this
element in Jesus’ teaching. But it is not merely the amount of Jesus’
teaching about the future life which is impressive; what is even more
impressive is the character of it. It does not appear as an
excrescence in the Gospels, as something which might be removed and
yet leave the rest of the teaching intact. If this element were
removed, what would be left? Certainly not the gospel itself,
certainly not the good news of Jesus’ saving work; for that is
concerned with these high issues of eternal life and death. But not
even the ethical teaching of Jesus would be left. There can be no
greater mistake than to suppose that Jesus ever separated theology
from ethics, or that if you remove His theology — His beliefs about
God and judgment, future woe for the wicked and future blessedness for
the good — you can leave His ethical teaching intact. On the contrary,
the stupendous earnestness of Jesus’ ethics is rooted in the constant
thought of the judgment seat of God. ‘If thy right eye offend thee,
pluck it out and cast it from thee; for it is profitable for thee to
enter into life having one eye rather than having two eyes to be cast
into the gehenna of fire’. These words are characteristic of all
Jesus’ teaching; the stupendous earnestness of His commands is
intimately connected with the alternative of eternal weal or woe.
That alternative is used by Jesus to rouse men to
fear. ‘And fear not them which kill the body, but are not able to kill
the soul: but rather fear him, which is able to destroy both soul and
body in hell’. Luke records a similar saying of Jesus: ‘And I say unto
you my friends, Be not afraid of them that kill the body, and after
that have no more that they can do. But I will forewarn you whom ye
shall fear. Fear him, which after he hath killed hath power to cast
into hell; yea, I say unto you, Fear him’. There are those who tell us
that fear ought to be banished from religion; we ought, it is said, no
more to hold before men’s eyes the fear of hell; fear, it is said, is
an ignoble thing. Those who speak in this way certainly have no right
to appeal to Jesus; for Jesus certainly did employ, and insistently,
the motive of fear. If you eschew altogether that motive in religion,
you are in striking contradiction to Jesus. Here, as at many other
points, a choice must be made between the real Jesus and much that
falsely bears His name today. But which is right? Is Jesus right, or
are those right who put out of their minds the fear of hell? Is fear
altogether an ignoble thing? Is a man necessarily degraded by being
afraid?
I think, my friends, that it depends altogether
upon that of which one is afraid. The words of our text, with the
solemn inculcation of fear, are also a ringing denunciation of fear:
the ‘Fear him’ is balanced by ‘Fear not’. The fear of God is here made
a way of overcoming the fear of man. And the heroic centuries of
Christian history have provided abundant testimony to its
efficaciousness. With the fear of God before their eyes, the heroes of
the faith have boldly stood before kings and governors and said, ‘Here
I stand, I cannot do otherwise, God help me, Amen.’
It is certainly an ignoble thing to be afraid of
bonds and death at the hands of men; it is certainly an ignoble thing
to fear those who use power to suppress the right. Even the fear of
God might be degrading. It all depends upon what manner of Being you
hold God to be. If you think that God is altogether such an one as
yourself, your fear of Him will be a degrading thing. If you think of
Him as a capricious tyrant, envious of the creatures He has made, you
will never rise above the grovelling fears of Caliban. But it is very
different when you stand in the presence of the source of all the
moral order of the universe; it is very different when God comes
walking in the garden and you are without excuse; it is very different
when you think of that dread day when puny deceptions will fall off
and you stand defenceless before the righteous judgment throne. It is
very different when not the sins of other people but your sins are
being judged. Can we really, my friends, come before the judgment seat
of God and stand fearlessly upon our rights? Can we really repeat,
with Henley, the well-known words: ‘Out of the night that covers me,
black as the pit from pole to pole, I thank whatever gods may be for
my unconquerable soul’, or this: ‘It matters not how strait the gate,
how charged with punishments the scroll, I am the master of my fate: I
am the captain of my soul.’
Is this the way to overcome fear? Surely not! We
can repeat such words only by the disguised cowardice of ignoring
facts. As a matter of fact, our soul is not unconquerable; we are not
masters of our fate or captains of our soul. Many a man has
contemplated some foul deed at first with horror, and said, ‘Am I a
dog that I should do this thing?’ And then has come the easy descent
into the pit, the gradual weakening of the moral fibre, so that what
seemed horrible yesterday seems excusable today; until at last, at
some sad hour, with the memory of one’s horror of sin still in the
mind, a man awakes to the realization that he is already wallowing in
the mire. Such is the dreadful hardening that comes from sin. Even in
this life we are not masters of our fate; we are of ourselves
certainly not captains of our bodies, and we are of ourselves, I fear,
not even captains of our souls.
It is pitiable cowardice to try to overcome fear by
ignoring facts. We do not become masters of our fate by saying that we
are. And such blatancy of pride, futile as it is, is not even noble in
its futility. It would be noble to rebel against a capricious tyrant,
but it is not noble to rebel against the moral law of God.
Are we then forever subject to fear? Is there
nought, for us sinners, but a certain fearful looking for of judgment
and fiery indignation? Jesus came to tell us No! He came to deliver us
from fear. He did not do so by concealing facts; He painted no false
picture of a complacent God who should make a compact with sin; He
encouraged no flattering illusions about the power of man. Jesus did
not leave the realm of divine justice as it was, and establish in
opposition to it a realm of love. But He introduced unity into the
world by His redeeming work. He died not to abolish but to satisfy
divine justice and reconcile us to God. In the days of His flesh He
pointed forward to that act; He invited the confidence of man by the
promise of what was to come. In our days we look back to what has
already been done; our joy is in salvation already attained; our
boasting is in the Cross.
Even the Christian must fear God. But it is another
kind of fear. It is a fear rather of what might have been than of what
is; it is a fear of what would come were we not in Christ. Without
such fear there can be no true love; for love of the Saviour is
proportioned to one’s horror of that from which man has been saved.
And how strong are the lives that are suffused with such a love! They
are lives brave, not because the realities of life have been ignored,
but because they have first been faced — lives that are founded upon
the solid foundation of God’s grace. May such lives be ours!
Perfect love casteth out fear. But if it be our
love which casteth out fear, our love is only a response to the loving
act of God. ‘Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that he loved
us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins’. There is the
culmination and the transformation of fear. ‘Whosoever therefore shall
confess me before men’, says Jesus, ‘him will I confess also before my
Father which is in heaven.’
[Article from
http://www.the-highway.com/articleSept00.html]
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