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Welcome to the Im4God.org
/ Songbook.ManuelAdam.com May 7th, 2004 Newsletter!
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Psalm 119:97-105
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97 Oh, how I love your
law!
I meditate on it all day long.
98 Your commands make me wiser than my enemies,
for they are ever with me.
99 I have more insight than all my teachers,
for I meditate on your statutes.
100 I have more understanding than the elders,
for I obey your precepts.
101 I have kept my feet from every evil path
so that I might obey your word.
102 I have not departed from your laws,
for you yourself have taught me.
103 How sweet are your words to my taste,
sweeter than honey to my mouth!
104 I gain understanding from your precepts;
therefore I hate every wrong path.
105 Your word is a lamp to my feet
and a light for my path.
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Cravings and Conflict by C.J. Mahaney
We live in a fallen world.
Relational conflict is inevitable in this world for all- singles,
married people, and all ages. Listen as C.J. Mahaney helps us understand
the cause and resolution for conflict.
James 4:1-2 /
Download Application Questions
Stream at
http://www.covlife.org/audio/2004_03_21.html
Download at
http://www.covlife.org/audio/2004_03_21.mp3 (right click, save
as)
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A Godly Man is a Lover of the Word!
by Thomas Watson
"O how
love I your law." (Psa. 119:97)
Part A: A Godly Man Loves the Word Written
Chrysostom compares the Scripture to a garden set with ornaments and
flowers. A godly man delights to walk in this garden and sweetly
solace himself. He loves every branch and part of the Word:
1. He loves the counselling part of the Word, as it is a
directory and rule of life. The Word is the direction sign which
points us to our duty. It contains in it things to be believed and
practiced. A godly man loves the directions of the Word.
2. He loves the threatening part of the Word. The Scripture
is like the Garden of Eden: as it has a tree of life in it, so it
has a flaming sword at its gates. This is the threatening of the
Word. It flashes fire in the face of every person who goes on
obstinately in wickedness. "God will wound the head of His enemies,
the hairy scalp of the one who still goes on in his trespasses." (Psa.
68:21). The Word gives no indulgence to evil. It will not let a man
halt half-way between God and sin. The true mother would not let the
child be divided (I Kings 3:26), and God will not have the heart
divided. The Word thunders out threats against the very appearance
of evil. It is like that flying scroll full of curses (Zech. 5:1).
A godly man loves the menaces of the Word. He knows there is love in
every threat. God would not have us perish; he therefore mercifully
threatens us, so that he may scare us from sin. God's threats are
like the buoy, which shows the rocks in the sea and threatens death
to such as come near. The threat is a curbing bit to check us, so
that we may not run in full career to hell. There is mercy in every
threat.
3. He loves the consolatory part of the Word - the promises.
He goes feeding on these as Samson went on his way eating the
honeycomb (Judges 14:8,9). The promises are all marrow and
sweetness. They are reviving to us when we are fainting; they are
the conduits of the water of life. "In the multitude of my anxieties
within me, Your comforts delight my soul." (Psa. 94:19). The
promises were David's harp to drive away sad thoughts; they were the
breast which gave him the milk of divine consolation.
A godly man shows his love to the Word written:
(a) By diligently reading it. The noble Bereans "searched the
Scriptures daily" (Acts 17:11). Apollos was mighty in the Scriptures
(Acts 18:12). The Word is our Magna Carta for heaven; we should be
daily reading over this charter. The Word shows what is truth and
what is error. It is the field where the pearl of price is hidden.
How we should dig for this pearl! A godly man's heart is the library
to hold the Word of God; it dwells richly in him (Col. 3:16). It is
reported of Melanchthon that when he was young, he always carried
the Bible with him and read it greedily. The Word has a double work:
to teach us and to judge us. Those who will not be taught by the
Word shall be judged by the Word. Oh, let us make ourselves familiar
with the Scripture! What if it should be as in the times of
Diocletian, who commanded by proclamation that the Bible be burned?
Or as in Queen Mary's days, when it spelled death to have a Bible in
English? By diligent conversing with Scripture, we may carry a Bible
in our heads.
(b) By frequently meditating on it: "It is my meditation all
the day" (Psa. 119:97). A pious soul meditates on the truth and
holiness of the Word. He not only has a few transient thoughts, but
leaves his mind steeping in the Scripture. By meditation, he sucks
from this sweet flower and ruminates on holy truths in his mind.
(c) By delighting in it. It is his recreation: "Your words
were found, and I ate them, and Your word was to me the joy and
rejoicing of my heart." (Jer 15:16) Never did a man take such
delight in a dish that he loved as the prophet did in the Word. And
indeed, how can a saint choose but take great pleasure in the Word?
All that he ever hopes to be worth is contained in it. Does not a
son take pleasure in reading his father's will and testament, in
which he bequeaths his estate to him?
(d) By hiding it: "Your word I have hidden in my heart" (Psa
119:11) - as one hides a treasure so that it should not be stolen.
The Word is the jewel; the heart is the cabinet where it must be
locked up. Many hide the Word in their memory, but not in their
heart. And why would David enclose the Word in his heart? "That I
might not sin against you." As a man would carry an antidote about
him when he comes near an infected place, so a godly man carries the
Word in his heart as a spiritual antidote to preserve him from the
infection of sin. Why have so many been poisoned with error, others
with moral vice, but because they have not hidden the Word as a holy
antidote in their heart?
(e) By defending it. A wise man will not let his land be
taken from him but will defend his title. David looked upon the Word
as his land of inheritance: "Your testimonies I have taken as a
heritage forever, for they are the rejoicing of my heart." (Psa
119:111) And do you think he will let his inheritance be wrested out
of his hands? A godly man will not only dispute for the Word but die
for it: "I saw under the altar the souls of those who had been slain
for the word of God." (Rev 6:9)
(f) By preferring it above things most precious: (1) Above
food: "I have treasured the words of His mouth More than my
necessary food." (Job. 23:12). (2) Above riches: "The law of Your
mouth is better to me than thousands of coins of gold and silver." (Psa.
119:72). (3) Above worldly honour. Memorable is the story of King
Edward the Sixth. On the day of his coronation, when they presented
three swords before him, signifying to him that he was monarch of
three kingdoms, the king said, "There is still one sword missing."
On being asked what that was, he answered, "The Holy Bible, which is
the 'sword of the Spirit' and is to be preferred before these
ensigns of royalty."
(g) By talking about it: "My tongue shall speak of your
word." (Psa. 119:172). As a covetous man talks of his rich purchase,
so a godly man speaks of the Word. What a treasure it is, how full
of beauty and sweetness! Those whose mouths the devil has gagged,
who never speak of God's Word, indicate that they never reaped any
good from it.
(h) By conforming to it. The Word is his compass, by which he
sets his life, the balance in which he weighs his actions. He copies
out the Word in his daily walk: "I have kept the faith" (2 Tim.
4:7). St Paul kept the doctrine of faith, and lived the life of
faith.
Question: Why is a godly man a lover of the Word?
Answer: Because of the excellence of the Word.
1. The
Word written is our pillar of fire to guide us. It shows us what
rocks we are to avoid; it is the map by which we sail to the new
Jerusalem.
2. The
Word is a spiritual mirror through which we may see our own hearts.
The mirror of nature, which the heathen had, revealed spots in their
lives, but this mirror reveals spots in the imagination; that mirror
revealed the spots of their unrighteousness, this reveals the spots
of our righteousness. "When the commandment came, sin revived, and I
died" (Rom. 7:9). When the Word came like a mirror, all my opinion
of self-righteousness died.
3. The
Word of God is a sovereign comfort in distress. While we follow this
cloud, the rock follows us. "This is my comfort in my affliction,
For Your word has given me life." (Psa. 119:50). Christ is the
fountain of living water, the Word is the golden pipe through which
it runs. What can revive at the hour of death but the word of life
(Phil. 2:16)?
Part
B: A Godly Man Loves the Word, Because of the Efficacy it has had
upon Him
A godly man loves the Word preached, which is a commentary upon the
Word written. This day-star has risen in his heart, and ushered in
the Sun of righteousness. The Scriptures are the sovereign oils and
balsams; the preaching of the Word is the pouring of them out. The
Scriptures are the precious spices; the preaching of the Word is the
beating of these spices, which causes a wonderful fragrance and
delight. The Word preached is "the rod of God's strength" (Psa.
11O:2) and "the breath of his lips" (Isa. 11:4). What was once said
of the city of Thebes, that it was built by the sound of Amphius'
harp, is much more true of soul conversion. It is built by the sound
of the gospel harp. Therefore the preaching of the Word is called
"the power of God to salvation" (Rom 1:16). By this, Christ is said
(now) to speak to us from heaven (Heb. 12:25). This ministry of the
Word is to be preferred before the ministry of angels.
A godly man loves the Word preached, partly from the good he has
found by it - he has felt the dew fall with this manna - and partly
because of God's institution. The Lord has appointed this ordinance
to save him. The king's image makes the coin current. The stamp of
divine authority on the Word preached makes it an instrument
conducive to men's salvation.
Application: Let us test by this characteristic whether we are
godly: Are we lovers of the Word?
1. Do
we love the Word written?
What sums of money the martyrs gave for a few pages of the Bible! Do
we make the Word our bosom friend? As Moses often had 'the rod of
God' in his hand, so we should have 'the Book of God' in our hand.
When we want direction, do we consult this sacred oracle? When we
find corruptions strong, do we make use of this "sword of the
Spirit" to hew them down? When we are disconsolate, do we go to this
bottle of the water of life for comfort? Then we are lovers of the
Word! But alas, how can they who are seldom conversant with the
Scriptures say they love them? Their eyes begin to be sore when they
look at a Bible. The two testaments are hung up like rusty armour
which is seldom or never made use of. The Lord wrote the law with
his own finger, but though God took pains to write, men will not
take pains to read. They would rather look at a deck of cards than
at a Bible.
2. Do
we love the Word preached?
Do we prize it in our judgments? Do we receive it into our hearts?
Do we fear the loss of the Word preached more than the loss of peace
and trade? Is it the removal of the ark that troubles us?
Again, do we attend to the Word with reverential
devotion? When the judge is giving his charge from the bench, all
attend. When the Word is preached, the great God is giving us his
charge. Do we listen to it as to a matter of life and death? This is
a good sign that we love the Word.
Again, do we love the holiness of the Word (Psa. 119:140)? The Word
is preached to beat down sin and advance holiness. Do we love it for
its spirituality and purity? Many love the Word preached only for
its eloquence and notion. They come to a sermon as to a performance
(Ezek. 33:31,32) or as to a garden to pick flowers, but not to have
their lusts subdued or their hearts bettered. These are like a
foolish woman who paints her face but neglects her health.
Again, do we love the convictions of the Word? Do we love the Word
when it comes home to our conscience and shoots its arrows of
reproof at our sins? It is the minister's duty sometimes to reprove.
He who can speak smooth words in the pulpit, but does not know how
to reprove, is like a sword with a fine hilt but without an edge.
"Rebuke them sharply" (Titus 2:15). Dip the nail in oil, reprove in
love, but strike the nail home. Now Christian, when the Word touches
on your sin and says, "You are the man", do you love the reproof?
Can you bless God that "the sword of the Spirit" has divided between
you and your lusts? This is indeed a sign of grace and shows that
you are a lover of the Word.
A corrupt heart loves the comforts of the Word, but not the
reproofs: "They hate the one who rebukes in the gate." (Amos 5:1O).
"Their eyes flash with fire!" Like venomous creatures that at the
least touch spit poison, "When they heard these things they were cut
to the heart, and they gnashed at him with their teeth." (Acts
7:54). When Stephen touched them to the quick, they were mad and
could not endure it.
Question: How shall we know that we love the reproofs of the
Word?
Answer 1: When we desire to sit under a heart-searching ministry.
Who cares for medicines that will not work? A godly man does not
choose to sit under a ministry that will not work upon his
conscience.
Answer 2: When we pray that the Word may meet with our sins. If
there is any traitorous lust in our heart, we would have it found
out and executed. We do not want sin covered, but cured. We can open
our breast to the bullet of the Word and say, "Lord, smite this
sin."
Answer 3: When we are thankful for a reproof: "Let the righteous
strike me; It shall be a kindness. And let him rebuke me; It shall
be as excellent oil; Let my head not refuse it. For still my prayer
is against the deeds of the wicked." (Psa. 141:5). David was glad of
a reproof. Suppose a man were in the mouth of a lion, and another
should shoot the lion and save the man, would he not be thankful?
So, when we are in the mouth of sin, as of a lion, and the minister
by a reproof shoots this sin to death, shall we not be thankful? A
gracious soul rejoices when the sharp lance of the Word has pierced
his abscess. He wears a reproof like a jewel on his ear: "Like an
earring of gold and an ornament of fine gold is a wise reprover to
an obedient ear." (Prov. 25:12).
To conclude, it is convincing preaching which must do the soul good.
A nipping reproof prepares for comfort, as a nipping frost prepares
for the sweet flowers of spring.
[From The Godly Man's Picture by Thomas Watson, a Puritan Paperback
edition published by the Banner of Truth.]
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