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Welcome to the Im4God.org
/ Songbook.ManuelAdam.com August 12th, 2004 Newsletter!
You can email Webservant Peter J. Louie by replying to this message.
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1 Timothy 6:3-10 -
3If anyone teaches false doctrines and does not agree
to the sound instruction of our Lord Jesus Christ and to godly
teaching, 4he is conceited and understands nothing. He
has an unhealthy interest in controversies and quarrels about words
that result in envy, strife, malicious talk, evil suspicions 5and
constant friction between men of corrupt mind, who have been robbed
of the truth and who think that godliness is a means to financial
gain.
6But godliness with contentment is great gain. 7For
we brought nothing into the world, and we can take nothing out of
it. 8But if we have food and clothing, we will be content
with that. 9People who want to get rich fall into
temptation and a trap and into many foolish and harmful desires that
plunge men into ruin and destruction. 10For the love of
money is a root of all kinds of evil. Some people, eager for money,
have wandered from the faith and pierced themselves with many griefs.
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True Beauty by Carolyn Mahaney
You may have heard it said that one of the differences between a
man and a woman is that when a man looks at himself in the mirror,
he admires the one physical feature about himself that's attractive,
while a woman only sees the features she considers unattractive. I
can't verify that this is true of men, but it certainly seems true
of women. Whether real or imagined, our eyes hone in on our
"imperfections." We see the blemish. We compare ourselves to the
world's current ideal of beauty, and always come up short.
... Continued at
http://www.sovereigngraceministries.org/sgo/v20no1/prt_beauty.html
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Visit
ChristianVotes.com to register to vote, rally others to vote, or
learn about America's Christian heritage!
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To Know Joy (Excerpts from Spiritual Depression:
Its Causes and Cure)
by D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones
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Here is some very wise counsel from an English
pastor who, though no longer with us, still speaks.
His name is Dr. Martyn Lloyd-Jones. Spiritual
Depression is an excellent book. It contains the
finest chapter on feelings I have encountered in my
reading experience.
– C.J. Mahaney
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Perhaps there is nothing so frequently encountered as a cause of
spiritual depression and unhappiness in the Christian life as this
very problem of feelings. Where do they come in, and what should
they be? People are constantly troubled about the matter, and I am
sure that all who have ever been engaged in pastoral work will agree
that there is no particular subject that brings people so often to
the pastor as this very problem of feelings.
I regard it as a great part of my calling in the ministry to
emphasize the priority of the mind and the intellect in connection
with the faith; but though I maintain that, I am equally ready to
assert that the feelings, the emotions, the sensibilities obviously
are of very vital importance. We have been made in such a way that
they play a dominant part in our make-up. Indeed, I suppose that one
of the greatest problems in our life in this world, not only for
Christians, but for all people, is the right handling of our
feelings and emotions. Oh, the havoc that is wrought and the
tragedy, the misery and the wretchedness that are to be found in the
world simply because people do not know how to handle their own
feelings! Man is so constituted that the feelings are in this very
prominent position, and indeed, there is a very good case for saying
that perhaps the final thing which regeneration and the new birth do
for us is just to put the mind and the emotions and the will in
their right positions.

Where do feelings come in, what is their place, what should be
their position in the Christian experience? I would put to you a
number of general statements in this connection. First and foremost,
obviously, in a truly Christian experience, the feelings must be
engaged. They are meant to be involved. We saw that when we
considered that great statement ["that you who were once slaves of
sin have become obedient from the heart to the standard of teaching
to which you were committed." (Ro 6:17)] The whole emphasis there is
that the gospel of Jesus Christ is so great and glorious that it
takes up the whole man and not merely a part of man.

You cannot read through your New Testament without seeing at a
glance that joy is meant to be an essential part of the Christian
experience. One of the most striking things that conversion does is
to take us out of some horrible pit, some miry clay and establish
our feet upon a rock, and establish our goings and to put a new song
in our mouth. Feelings are meant to be engaged, and when the gospel
comes to us it does involve the whole man. It moves his mind and he
sees its glorious truths, it moves his heart in the same way, and it
moves his will.

There is nothing that is quite so variable about us as our
feelings. We are very variable creatures, and our feelings are, of
everything that belongs to us, the most variable of all.... We must
have been amazed at ourselves many times that, on waking up in the
morning, we find ourselves in a mood or condition quite different
from the day before. Nothing you know of accounts for it. Yesterday
you may have been perfectly happy and you went to sleep anticipating
another great and glorious day, but you find yourself in the morning
waking up depressed and in a wrong mood. Suddenly, without any
explanation, you just find yourself like that. Now that is the
essence of the problem. In other words, our feelings are variable,
and I would emphasize the danger of being controlled by them.

Our feelings are always seeking to control us, and unless we
realize this, they will undoubtedly do so. That is what we mean when
we talk about moods and moodiness. The mood seems to descend upon
us. We do not want it, but there it is. Now the danger is to allow
it to control and grip us. We wake up in a bad mood in the morning,
and the tendency is to go on like this throughout the day and to
remain like that until something happens to put us right. There is a
great instance of that in the Old Testament in the case of Saul,
king of Israel. Our danger is to submit ourselves to our feelings
and to allow them to dictate to us, to govern and to master us and
to control the whole of our lives.

If you are at all depressed at this moment you should make
certain that there is no obvious cause for the absence of joyous
feelings. For instance, if you are guilty of sin, you are going to
be miserable. "The way of the transgressor is hard." If you break
God's laws and violate his rules you will not be happy. If you think
that you can be a Christian and exert your own will and follow your
own likes and dislikes, your Christian life is going to be a
miserable one. There is no need to argue about it, it follows as the
night the day, that if you are harbouring some favourite sin, if you
are holding on to something that the Holy Spirit is condemning
through your conscience, you will not be happy. And there is only
one thing to do, confess it, acknowledge it, repent, go to God at
once and confess your sin, open your heart, bare your soul, tell him
all about it, hold nothing back and then believe that because you
have done so, he forgives you. "If we confess our sins, he is
faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all
unrighteousness." If unconfessed sin is the cause of your
unhappiness I should be wasting my time and yours by going on with
my list of other causes.

Avoid the mistake of concentrating overmuch upon your feelings.
Above all, avoid the terrible error of making them central. Now I am
never tired of repeating this because I find so frequently that this
is a cause of stumbling. Feelings are never meant to take the first
place, they are never meant to be central. If you put them there you
are of necessity doomed to be unhappy, because you are not following
the order that God himself has ordained. Feelings are always the
result of something else, and how anyone who has ever read the Bible
can fall into that particular error passes my comprehension. The
Psalmist has put it in the 34th Psalm. He says: "Taste and see that
the Lord is good." You will never see until you have tasted; you
will not know it, you will not feel it until you have tasted; you
will not know it, you will not feel it until you have tried it.
"Taste and see", it follows as the night the day. Seeing before
tasting is impossible. That is something that is constantly
emphasized everywhere in Scriptures. After all, what we have in the
Bible is Truth; it is not an emotional stimulus, it is not something
primarily concerned to give us a joyful experience. It is primarily
Truth, and Truth is addressed to the mind, God's supreme gift to
man; and it is as we apprehend and submit ourselves to the truth
that the feelings follow. I must never ask myself in the first
instance: What do I feel about this? The first question is, Do I
believe it? Do I accept it, has it gripped me? Very well, that is
what I regard as perhaps the most important rule of all, that we
must not concentrate overmuch upon our feelings. Do not spend too
much time feeling your own pulse, taking your own spiritual
temperature; do not spend too much time analyzing your feelings.
That is the high road to morbidity.
This whole matter is very subtle and the subtlety often comes in
this way. You read the lives of the great saints of all the
centuries and you will find that every one has emphasized the
importance of self-examination. Irrespective of what particular view
of theology they may have held, they are all one at this point. They
urge that we must examine ourselves, that we must search our own
hearts. Now the very fact that they have done so has meant that
naturally and inevitably we, too, have to look at our feelings. They
want us to make sure that we are not mere intellectualists who are
interested in arguing about theology. They want to make sure that we
are not moralists who are just interested in a code of morals. But
the tendency always is that in following them we make too much of
the feelings.

We must recognize that there is all the difference in the world
between rejoicing and feeling happy. The Scripture tells us that we
should always rejoice. Take the lyrical Epistle of Paul to the
Philippians where he says: "Rejoice in the Lord always and again I
say rejoice." He goes on saying it. To rejoice is a command, yes,
but here is all the difference in the world between rejoicing and
being happy. You cannot make yourself happy, but you can make
yourself rejoice, in the sense that you will always rejoice in the
Lord. Happiness is something within ourselves, rejoicing is "in the
Lord." How important it is then, to draw the distinction between
rejoicing in the Lord and feeling happy. Take the fourth chapter of
the Second Epistle to the Corinthians. There you will find that the
great Apostle puts it all very plainly and clearly in that series of
extraordinary contrasts which he makes: "We are troubled on every
side (I don't think he felt very happy at the moment) yet not
distressed," "we are perplexed (he wasn't feeling happy at all at
that point) but not in despair," "persecuted but not forsaken,"
"cast down, but not destroyed" – and so on. In other words the
Apostle does not suggest a kind of happy person in the carnal sense,
but he was still rejoicing. That is the difference between the two
conditions.

Your business and mine is not to stir up our feelings, it is to
believe. We are never told anywhere in Scripture that we are saved
by our feelings; we are told that we are saved by believing.
"Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved." Never
once are feelings put in the primary position. Now this is something
we can do. I cannot make myself happy, but I can remind myself of my
belief. I can exhort myself to believe, I can address my soul as the
Psalmist did in Psalm 42: "Why art thou cast down, O my soul, and
why are thou disquieted within me? Hope thou"... believe thou, trust
thou. That is the way. And then our feelings will look after
themselves.

If you want to be truly happy and blessed, if you would like to
know true joy as a Christian, here is the prescription – "Blessed
(truly happy) are they who do hunger and thirst after
righteousness" – not after happiness. Do not go on seeking thrills;
seek righteousness. Turn to yourself, turn to your feelings and say:
"I have not time to worry about feelings, I am interested in
something else. I want to be happy but still more I want to be
righteous, I want to be holy. I want to be like my Lord, I want to
live in this world as he lived, I want to walk through it the way he
walked through it. You are in this world, says John in his first
Epistle, even as he was. Set your whole aim upon righteousness and
holiness and as certainly as you do so you will be blessed, you will
be filled, you will get the happiness you long for. Seek for
happiness and you will never find it, seek righteousness and you
will discover you are happy – it will be there without your knowing
it, without your seeking it.
Finally, let me put it in this way: "Do you want to know supreme
joy, do you want to experience a happiness that eludes description?
There is only one thing to do, really seek him, seek him himself,
turn to the Lord Jesus Christ himself. If you find out your feelings
are depressed do not sit down and commiserate with yourself, do not
try to work something up but – this is the simple essence of it – go
directly to him and seek his face, as the little child who is
miserable and unhappy because somebody else has taken or broken his
toy, runs to its father or its mother. So if you and I find
ourselves afflicted by this condition, there is only one thing to
do, it is to go to him. If you seek the Lord Jesus Christ and find
him there is not need to worry about your happiness and your joy. He
is our joy and our happiness, even as he is our peace. He is life,
he is everything. So avoid the incitements and the temptations of
Satan to give feelings this great prominence of the centre. Put at
the centre the only One who has a right to be there, the Lord of
Glory, Who so loved you that he went to the Cross and bore the
punishment and the shame of your sins and died for you. Seek him,
seek his face, and all other things shall be added unto you.

<Taken from
http://www.sovereigngraceministries.org/sgo/v21no1/joy.html>
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Desiring God 2004 National Conference - September 24-26,
Minnesota
This
conference will including speakers like C.J. Mahaney, John Piper,
David Powlison, and Al Mohler. For more information, see
http://www.desiringgod.org/news_events/dgm_national/2004/
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Low priced Christian CDs at
www.christiancheapcds.com/list.html -
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under $1!
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