devil

  • Dearest idol, how can I find rest

     

    Proverbs 6
    20  My son, keep your father's commandment,
    and forsake not your mother's teaching.
    21  Bind them on your heart always;
    tie them around your neck.
    22  When you walk, they will lead you;
    when you lie down, they will watch over you;
    and when you awake, they will talk with you.
    23  For the commandment is a lamp and the teaching a light,
    and the reproofs of discipline are the way of life,
    24  to preserve you from the evil woman,
    from the smooth tongue of the adulteress.
    25  Do not desire her beauty in your heart,
    and do not let her capture you with her eyelashes;
    26  for the price of a prostitute is only a loaf of bread,
    but a married woman hunts down a precious life.
    27  Can a man carry fire next to his chest
    and his clothes not be burned?
    28  Or can one walk on hot coals
    and his feet not be scorched?
    29  So is he who goes in to his neighbor's wife;
    none who touches her will go unpunished.
    30  People do not despise a thief if he steals
    to satisfy his appetite when he is hungry,
    31  but if he is caught, he will pay sevenfold;
    he will give all the goods of his house.
    32  He who commits adultery lacks sense;
    he who does it destroys himself.
    33  Wounds and dishonor will he get,
    and his disgrace will not be wiped away.
    34  For jealousy makes a man furious,
    and he will not spare when he takes revenge.
    35  He will accept no compensation;
    he will refuse though you multiply gifts.

    Dearest idol, how can I find rest

    Dearest idol, how can I find rest
    Any moment you lie betwixt my breasts?

    By worldly bread and dainties amused
    The devilish snare, the beguiling ruse

    Pursuing vanities and earthly toys
    Seems right to men, yet kills and destroys

    "No room for Christ!" my constant refrain
    Yet feed my lusts, at leisure run and play

    Taking fire to my bosom, living to my flesh
    Spurning the holy myrrh of righteousness

    Foolish soul, trying to serve two masters
    Sure to reap what you sow: burning disaster!


    Dearest idol, how can I find rest
    Any moment you lie betwixt my breasts?

    Life's a vapor:  this day may be my last
    Only a life lived with Christ will last

    For your joy, O, my soul, be jealous
    Cut down the grove – be zealous!

    Throw down the altars, the false promises
    No true happiness in the Asherahs

    Make full proof you are Christ's wife
    Put away all whoredoms out of sight

    Prodigal, awake! Come to your senses!
    No life or joy apart from Christ's presence!

    Dearest idol, how can I find rest
    So long as you lie betwixt my breasts?

    My Lord gladdens more than corn or wine
    Makes me leap, causes my face to shine

    Jesus! Fill my gaze by day and night
    Who can compare! O! Spiritual sight!

    Reconciliation! Christ, my Surety!
    I have my Beloved, and He has me!

    O! Christ in my heart! On Thee let me muse
    Fetter me here, may I never be loosed

    O! To cleave, to sup with my well-beloved
    No other pleasure I desire on earth or above!

    Betwixt my breasts! O! to abide in Thee!
    Foretaste of glory! All in all to me!

    Dearest idol, by God's Spirit thee I dismiss
    So Christ alone might lie betwixt my breasts!

    From Matthew Henry's Complete Commentary on Song of Solomon 1:13-14: "A bundle of myrrh is my wellbeloved unto me; he shall lie all night betwixt my breasts.  My beloved is unto me as a cluster of camphire in the vineyards of Engedi."

          "The strong affection they have for Christ as their beloved, their well-beloved, 13. Christ is not only beloved by all believing souls, but is their well-beloved, their best-beloved, their only beloved; he has that place in their hearts which no rival can be admitted to, the innermost and uppermost place. Observe, (1.) How Christ is accounted of by all believers: He is a bundle of myrrh and a cluster of camphire, something, we may be sure, nay, every thing, that is pleasant and delightful. The doctrine of his gospel, and the comforts of his Spirit, are very refreshing to them, and they rest in his love; none of all the delights of sense are comparable to the spiritual pleasure they have in meditating on Christ and enjoying him. There is a complicated sweetness in Christ and an abundance of it; there is a bundle of myrrh and a cluster of camphire. We are not straitened in him whom there is all fulness. The word translated camphire is copher, the same word that signifies atonement or propitiation. Christ is a cluster of merit and righteousness to all believers; therefore he is dear to them because he is the propitiation for their sins. Observe what stress the spouse lays upon the application: He is unto me, and again unto me, all that is sweet; whatever he is to others, he is so to me. He loved me, and gave himself for me. He is my Lord, and my God. (2.) How he is accepted: He shall lie all night between my breasts, near my heart. Christ lays the beloved disciples in his bosom; why then should not they lay their beloved Saviour in their bosoms? Why should not they embrace him with both arms, and hold him fast, with a resolution never to let him go? Christ must dwell in the heart (Eph. iii. 17), and, in order to that, the adulteries must be put from between the breasts (Hos. ii. 2), no pretender must have his place in the soul. He shall be as a bundle of myrrh, or perfume bag, between my breasts, always sweet to me; or his effigies in miniature, his love-tokens, shall be hung between my breasts, according to the custom of those that are dear to each other. He shall not only be laid their for a while, but shall lie there, shall abide there."

    I Peter 4:1  Since therefore Christ suffered in the flesh, arm yourselves with the same way of thinking, for whoever has suffered in the flesh has ceased from sin, 2  so as to live for the rest of the time in the flesh no longer for human passions but for the will of God. 3  The time that is past suffices for doing what the Gentiles want to do, living in sensuality, passions, drunkenness, orgies, drinking parties, and lawless idolatry. 4  With respect to this they are surprised when you do not join them in the same flood of debauchery, and they malign you; 5  but they will give account to him who is ready to judge the living and the dead. 6  For this is why the gospel was preached even to those who are dead, that though judged in the flesh the way people are, they might live in the spirit the way God does.

    Psalm 73:25  Whom have I in heaven but thee? and there is none upon earth that I desire beside thee. 26  My flesh and my heart faileth: but God is the strength of my heart, and my portion for ever. 27  For, lo, they that are far from thee shall perish: thou hast destroyed all them that go a whoring from thee. 28  But it is good for me to draw near to God: I have put my trust in the Lord GOD, that I may declare all thy works. (KJV)

    Psalms 16:11  Thou wilt shew me the path of life: in thy presence is fulness of joy; at thy right hand there are pleasures for evermore. (KJV)


    Related:

    Work found at http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Joseph-D%C3%A9sir%C3%A9_Court_-_Half-length_Woman_Lying_on_a_Couch_-_WGA05528.jpg  / CC BY-SA 3.0 / {{PD-Art|PD-old-100}}

    Scripture quotations unless otherwise indicated are taken from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version. Copyright ©2001 by Crossway Bibles, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

    Scripture quotations marked KJV are taken from the King James Version of the Holy Bible.

  • by my God I can leap over a wall (Psalm 18:29b)

       
    Many Christians think once they're saved, they don't need Christ!

    Some are primarily concerned about getting a ticket out of hell, and are looking forward to heaven – rather than being concerned about how they live here, and that's a very low view of Christianity and salvation (and if you persist in that, I'd seriously question you as to whether you are really saved or not – for faith without works is dead and we are warned time and again not to receive God's grace in vain).

    Others make the dreadful mistake of thinking they can live the Christian life and fight spiritual battles with their own resources. How foolish that is! The Christian life is a life of spiritual warfare (e.g. - Ephesians 6:10-20 & II Corinthians 10:1-6). Since God has delivered us from the domain of darkness and transferred us to the kingdom of his beloved Son, in whom we have redemption, the forgiveness of sins (Colossians 1:13-14), and because the devil is the enemy of Christ, he is also the enemy of all those who have been united to Christ by grace through faith. We must keep in mind that the devil is continuing to prowl day and night, constantly scheming and lying, seeking ways to devour us and to entangle us, to keep us from fixing our eyes on Jesus and running the race set before us.

    We will not be able to live and thrive and bring glory to God in the Christian life unless we come to see that the God who delivered us from the domain of darkness in the first place is the one to whom we must continue to turn and to ask for fresh supplies so we might press in our race, to keep walking the kingdom of light – similar to how the Israelites had to go out and collect manna for each day. Christ is our whole life. He is not only our justification, He is also our sanctification (I Cor. 1:30).  How can we expect to live the Christian life apart from the life of Christ in us?!

    In Psalm 18, David brings a song of praise and thanksgiving to God commemorating and celebrating the great deliverances God granted him, exalting and exulting in God, his strength (see also II Samuel 22).

    To the choirmaster. A Psalm of David, the servant of the Lord, who addressed the words of this song to the Lord on the day when the Lord rescued him from the hand of all his enemies, and from the hand of Saul.

    Here's David, who was soon to be made king over all Israel – and yet see how humble he is: notice how he refers to himself as a servant of the Lord. Though David will be king, he is ever mindful who is the King of kings. And David doesn't take one iota of credit for the victories – but he rightly ascribes it all to God's merciful and gracious provision. Throughout the whole Psalm, David readily and happily acknowledges that God alone is his strength and that God alone gave him the victory, thus rendering to God all the praise, honor and glory due His name.

    David starts off with these words:

    1  I love you, O LORD, my strength.
    2  The LORD is my rock and my fortress and my deliverer,
    my God, my rock, in whom I take refuge,
    my shield, and the horn of my salvation, my stronghold.
    3  I call upon the LORD, who is worthy to be praised,
    and I am saved from my enemies.

    And then David continues throughout the Psalm fervently declaring the many ways the LORD delivered him, boasting in God as his strength and professing his continued reliance on God. (I'd encourage you to read prayerfully through the whole psalm.)

    And because it is Leap Day, the second half of verse 29 got my attention:

    ... by my God I can leap over a wall.

    It seems to me that many, many Christians have walls that God is calling them to leap over, but they're failing, and they keep failing. Why? Many times it is because they have not come to know the LORD as their strength as David did. They keep trying to fight spiritual battles in their flesh. They keep turning to their own resources, wisdom, strength and ingenuity, and, as a result, they remain impotent – for they've not come to know the power of the Holy Spirit at work in them. They keep trying to pull themselves up by their bootstraps! They keep turning to secular books and counselors and twelve step programs, etc., rather than turning to the living God Himself. Should not God's people seek their God? Should not God's people seek their God as their strength?

    Jesus said that He is the vine and we are the branches, and without Him we can do nothing (see John 15:1-17).

    NOTHING!

    You may not be leaping over walls because you've not come to know the living supply of Jesus Christ through His Holy Spirit. In fact, some of you who profess to be Christians may not be leaping because you've never been born again. If you have never been born again, God's Holy Spirit has not come to dwell in you, and you don't have that vital connection with the Lord Jesus Christ, as the branch abides in the vine; therefore, there's no way you can expect to know and experience Jesus Christ as your strength.

    Or, perhaps some of you have been able to leap over some walls – and in fact, compared to most people, you're looking pretty good – however, you're not really leaping by the power of God, instead you're relying on your own strength. You've never come to know God as your strength. You have fallen into the all-American, Pharisaical snare of self-reliance. You've never come to end of yourself and the end of your own strength, so you might begin to cry out to ask for and to know God's strength. As so you function as a Christian primarily in your own fleshly strength. However, that way of life is contrary to the life God intends for the Christian:  the Christian is to put no confidence at all in the flesh and to live by the Spirit. In Galatians, Paul warns us: having been born again and started the Christian life in the Spirit, we must not return to the flesh!

    Many of us hold up Biblical figures and other saints from Christian history, and we're tempted to think they had something we don't have. Well, what they had first of all was an understanding that they were NOTHING apart from Christ, they had NOTHING apart from Christ, and they could do NOTHING apart from Christ! They saw their total insufficiency and their need to rely on God alone, their need to know Him as their strength – and that experiential knowledge is what drove them to the throne of grace to find mercy and grace to help in their time of need. And they saw every moment as a time of need! Consider this testimony of the apostle Paul:

    Who is sufficient for these things? ... Not that we are sufficient in ourselves to claim anything as coming from us, but our sufficiency is from God... (II Cor. 2:16b, 3:5).

    You may never have gotten so low and so desperate and so needy that you cried out to God so you might know Him as your strength: to really know Him – not just recite God is your strength as a Bible verse, not just sing God is your strength in a hymn on Sunday morning, not just listen to someone sing God is your strength in a YouTube video, but to know God as your strength the way David did. You may never have come to the place where you were faced with such a high and huge and thick and insurmountable wall, that you finally cried out to God in desperation, "Who is sufficient for these things? Be my Strength! I am not sufficient! Without You I can do nothing!"

    That was my position as a Christian for over twenty years. I was leaping over some walls, and I was engaged in some so-called "good works," but I regret to say that many, perhaps most of those, were done out of my own flesh. But then there came a time several years ago when a Christian had asked me to forgive an offense – and I couldn't do it – and I wouldn't do it. I was the unforgiving servant (Matt. 18:21-35) – and in a very dangerous position! But thanks be to God, in spite of myself, God's grace pursued me, and in God's command to me to forgive another as He had forgiven me, I began to see how much greater God's gift of salvation and forgiveness was toward me than I ever imagined, and how great a sinner I was, that I really was a wretch, though I'd sung it for years in "Amazing Grace" – after that time I could truly confess from the heart that I, Karen, was a wretch – and at that point, grace really did become amazing to me for the first time! The Holy Spirit convicted me and showed me how pitiably small the offense was that I was asked to forgive in comparison with all my sins that God forgave me for Christ's sake! And I found myself able to desire and then to do what I could not do in my own strength – for God gave me the desire and the ability to do His good pleasure (Philippians 2:12-14): so I was able to forgive as the Lord had forgiven me. Impossible with Karen, but possible with God! Hallelujah! He was my strength! Without Him I could do nothing, but with Christ I could do all things!

    Since that time, God has continued to show me time and time again that without Him I can do nothing, absolutely nothing at all. And as soon as I become puffed up and begin to think I can do anything without Him, thanks be to God, He knocks me back down again to the dust to show my utter insufficiency and my total dependence on Him. Oh, yes, it's certainly painful – but it is profitable! Blessed is the man whom God chastens!

    When I was recently convicted to send a message explaining the Gospel to an unsaved family member, I knew that God had given me that desire, but I had nowhere else to turn but to God, for I knew in and of myself I was wholly insufficient. I was tempted to fear the repercussions, I was tempted to please man rather than God and shrink back from following through, and I knew I had no words to write at all except what God would supply – and so I prayed God would be my strength, that His Spirit would strengthen me to fulfill the desire He had placed in me. And all glory to God alone, He was my strength – and He strengthened me to leap over that wall – and God wants to do the same in all His children, so His name alone might be magnified.

    I love these two passages for they show us how by our God we can leap over walls, and not only that – they show that our coming to know God as our strength and having His strength work in us brings Him glory.

    Hebrews 13:20  Now may the God of peace who brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus, the great shepherd of the sheep, by the blood of the eternal covenant, 21  equip you with everything good that you may do his will, working in us that which is pleasing in his sight, through Jesus Christ, to whom be glory forever and ever. Amen.

    II Thessalonians 1:11  To this end we always pray for you, that our God may make you worthy of his calling and may fulfill every resolve for good and every work of faith by his power, 12  so that the name of our Lord Jesus may be glorified in you, and you in him, according to the grace of our God and the Lord Jesus Christ.

    God is all about His glory, and God receives no glory when we rely upon our own strength – even though we may be leaping over some walls, and we may be looking good to ourselves, to other Christians, or to the world. But anything we do that isn't done by the power of Christ in us brings no glory to God. God alone is to be our strength and our boast and our glory:

    I Corinthians 1:26  For consider your calling, brothers: not many of you were wise according to worldly standards, not many were powerful, not many were of noble birth. 27  But God chose what is foolish in the world to shame the wise; God chose what is weak in the world to shame the strong; 28  God chose what is low and despised in the world, even things that are not, to bring to nothing things that are, 29  so that no human being might boast in the presence of God. 30  He is the source of your life in Christ Jesus, whom God made our wisdom and our righteousness and sanctification and redemption. 31  Therefore, as it is written, “Let the one who boasts, boast in the Lord.”


    What wall stands before you that you have been unable to leap over? Have you come to know Christ as your strength, or are you continuing to walk the vain, dangerous, and God-dishonoring road of self-sufficiency?
    Are you continuing to attempt to live the Christian life in your own flesh and robbing God of the glory due His name? Will you ask God to show you your insufficiency, so you might come to know God's sufficiency and come to know Him to be your strength, so like David, you might leap over a wall? Will you ask God to grow your knowledge of Him and your trust in Him so you might lay aside your own fleshly efforts and embrace Him as your strength, so you might sing with David: "I love you, O LORD, my strength... by my God I can leap over a wall!" ... and confess with the apostle Paul:  "I can do all things through him who strengthens me" (Philippians 4:13).


    Related:

    Scripture quotations unless otherwise indicated are taken from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version. Copyright ©2001 by Crossway Bibles, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

    Work found at http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Messene_01.jpg  / CC BY-SA 3.0 / by Herbert Ortner.

  • five years ago ~ for your joy (AND an inheritance | Richard Sibbes & the Sealing of the Spirit)

    Letter 136 on Assurance and Fighting for Joy
    AND an inheritance | Richard Sibbes & the Sealing of the Spirit

      
    Five years ago today I began blogging here, and not long afterwards God put me on a journey I could not have foreseen. I was born again, and I had received forgiveness of sins back in 1982. I knew I was a child of God in some sense, I didn't have any doubts about my final destination – and yet not long after that time I began to be tormented with guilt, depression and doubts about my past and my past sins, and my past sins and failures began to plague, burden, overwhelm and paralyze me.

    In the fall of 2008, I was driven to look into the Scriptures (where else could I go? God alone has the words of eternal life!). At that time I wrote a series of posts on dealing with past sins and guilt, in which I reviewed the work of Christ on behalf of the believer (on my behalf!). If you're struggling with assurance that your sins have been forgiven and your guilt has been taken away in Christ, I would encourage you to look at those posts here. Not long after writing those posts, God was gracious to me, and He gave me a felt assurance of forgiveness, which I wrote about several months later in my post my new song: "My soul is clean".

    In spite of the firm assurance of forgiveness of sins God had given me at that time, I began to see there was much, much more to the Christian life that I was lacking. For years, I kept saying I wasn't a joyful person, and I read about joy in the Bible, but I patently denied those promises were possible for me. Thank God that He was longsuffering and merciful towards me!

    A couple years before that time, I remember reading Psalm 86:4 where the Psalmist is praying, "Rejoice the soul of Your servant," and a seed was planted. I saw there that as much as I tried I couldn't make myself joyful, but joy was a gift I could ask God for. Finally, in the fall of 2009 I began to cry out to God in earnest to give me Habakkuk 3 joy (please see my post the laborer's lamentation & affirmation) – and much to my surprise and delight, less than a week later God imparted to me a sense of joy in Him I didn't think possible. (We must remember that our God is the God who is for us, the God with whom all things are possible, the God who delights to give His children good gifts, and the God who can do exceedingly above all we can ask or think!)

    Many of you don't know those things about me. I've been writing about assurance and fighting for joy since that time, and today's post is my 136th post on it. As I mentioned in an Advent post WHY HAS JESUS COME? So we might draw near to God | Even a Vapor, I would be the last person I thought would be doing such a thing! But God!

    Many of you may read my posts today or read my comments to you, but you don't know the journey God has had me on, so I would encourage you to look back at the way God has led me, so it might serve as an encouragement for you to begin to look at the Scripture, so you might begin to ask hard things of God (for nothing is too hard for Him!), so God's Spirit might open your eyes to see the inheritance God has for you – and then you might be strengthened to enter into that inheritance (enter into Christ!) and enjoy it (enjoy Christ!) beginning today!

    If you're only looking at this life as a holding place, if you're only biding your time here looking forward to heaven, know this – you are robbing yourself of the riches of the inheritance Christ died to give you and – and not only that, but you are robbing the lost world of a testimony to the power and goodness of a living God who wants us to be His witnesses here, bubbling up with living water – and not only that, but you are grieving, limiting and quenching the Holy Spirit of God. That was the sin of the Israelites time and again throughout the Old Testament. There are many, many examples to be found, but in particular Psalm 78 tells us how Israel had no real understanding or expectation of what God could do, and so they sinned and rebelled against God as they tested and provoked the Holy One of Israel time and time again.

    11  They forgot his works
    and the wonders that he had shown them.
    12  In the sight of their fathers he performed wonders
    in the land of Egypt, in the fields of Zoan.
    13  He divided the sea and let them pass through it,
    and made the waters stand like a heap.
    14  In the daytime he led them with a cloud,
    and all the night with a fiery light.
    15  He split rocks in the wilderness
    and gave them drink abundantly as from the deep.
    16  He made streams come out of the rock
    and caused waters to flow down like rivers.
    17  Yet they sinned still more against him,
    rebelling against the Most High in the desert.
    18  They tested God in their heart
    by demanding the food they craved.
    19  They spoke against God, saying,
    “Can God spread a table in the wilderness?
    20  He struck the rock so that water gushed out
    and streams overflowed.
    Can he also give bread
    or provide meat for his people?”
    21  Therefore, when the LORD heard, he was full of wrath;
    a fire was kindled against Jacob;
    his anger rose against Israel,
    22  because they did not believe in God
    and did not trust his saving power...

    40  How often they rebelled against him in the wilderness
    and grieved him in the desert!
    41  They tested God again and again
    and provoked the Holy One of Israel.
    42  They did not remember his power
    or the day when he redeemed them from the foe,
    43  when he performed his signs in Egypt
    and his marvels in the fields of Zoan.

    My dear brothers and sisters, let us take heed and learn from their example, so we do not follow in their footsteps! Our God is a God who can spread a table in this wilderness! Let us not be sluggish, let us not be unbelieving, let us not drop as carcasses in the wilderness, but let us press on to enter into in greater and greater measure the inheritance God has given us! Let us travel from grace to grace and from glory to glory. The veil has been torn! Where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty! Let us take hold of that for which Christ has taken hold of us! Let us trust that the God who redeemed us wants to do more for us than He did for us at our beginnings! Let us look with anticipation that we might see the light shining brighter and brighter until the final Day! Having carried, seen and tasted the grapes of Eschol, may God be gracious to us and give us that different Spirit that possessed Joshua and Caleb, rather than the complacent spirit that consumed the other 10 spies – and prevented them from crossing over Jordan into the promised land!

    In Acts 26, we read Paul's account of His encounter with the Lord Jesus Christ on the Damascus Road, as Jesus commissioned Paul...

    18  To open their eyes, and to turn them from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan unto God, that they may receive forgiveness of sins, AND inheritance among them which are sanctified by faith that is in me.

    And in Ephesians 3, Paul wrote:

    7  Of this gospel I was made a minister according to the gift of God's grace, which was given me by the working of his power. 8  To me, though I am the very least of all the saints, this grace was given, to preach to the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of Christ...

    I don't write here for fun, profit or profession, but I write because my desire is that God might use my words to open your eyes and turn you from darkness to light, from the power of Satan unto God, so you might receive forgiveness of sins AND an inheritance among those who are being sanctified by faith that is in Jesus Christ. Many of you may already be saved, you may have received forgiveness of sins – but I ask you this: Do you have any real sense of the unsearchable riches of Christ? Have you been given a spiritual sight of your inheritance in the saints?

    I consider myself the least of all the saints. I know all that I have I have received by the sovereign grace of God. In His wonderful will (though painful & grievous at the time), God began to hedge up my way, so I might begin to hunger and thirst for Him as I had never done before – and then He began to grace me with glimpses into His glorious inheritance, the unsearchable riches of Christ. Because God's Spirit has begun to open to my eyes to begin to see the unsearchable riches of Christ, I long for your eyes to be opened to these treasures as well. I consider all that God has given me a stewardship, and I want to be found faithful. And not only that, but I want you to know the joy of the Lord in your pilgrimage here on this earth. I know how miserable it is to be unassured, doubting, whining and discontent, and I hate it when I begin to slip and lapse back into that! That is so very far from the abundant life Jesus Christ died to give us!

    For years I was like the older son in the parable of the prodigal son (Luke 15), the son who dutifully stated at home – but his eyes were blinded to the riches of his father's inheritance. Yes, he worked faithfully, but he had no joy. Yes, he labored diligently, but he had no understanding of the love of his father. He had no real understanding of his privileged position, and he was oblivious to the riches that were already available to him:

     And he said to him, "Son, you are always with me, and all that is mine is yours..."

    O! This is exactly what our heavenly Father is crying out to each of us through His Holy Spirit – because by faith in Jesus Christ, we enter into a heavenly inheritance with all the saints. May God give us ears to hear Him! God doesn't want us just to be saved from hell fire, but He wants us to enter into full assurance of faith, a living fellowship and a joyful pilgrimage with Him through the Lord Jesus Christ – beginning this very day. Our Lord desired that the church at Laodicea be shaken out of their lukewarmness so she might open the door to Him and sup with Him! But, sad to say, how few of us have any inkling or understanding of these things. We see Christianity as a creed, a philosophy or an obligation – but it is access into the Most Holy Place! Jesus Christ died in our place that we might be brought back to God, that we might have intimate fellowship with the living God through the sacrifice of the body and blood of our Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ. The way has been opened to us! O! How pitiful we are! How deceived we are! The Psalmists wrote things like: "One thing I ask... One thing I seek..." What was that one thing? It was fellowship with the living God! They panted, fainted and longed to be with God, to be near to God! They cried out for the living God! Do we? Shouldn't we?! I plead with you not to waste your life here, but to be fervent and zealous to seek to know the riches of your inheritance.

    The devil works to keep us out of the Kingdom of God, and even once we're in the Kingdom, he schemes to keep us blinded to the riches of the inheritance that is ours as children of God. He wants to keep us in that position of the older son, or in that position of the man who had some sight, but professed he only saw men as trees walking, not having a clear view of the goodness and love of God and His desire to have fellowship with us. My friends: we are the bride of Christ. God's love for us is jealous and zealous!

    Jeremiah 2:2  Go and proclaim in the hearing of Jerusalem, Thus says the LORD,
    I remember the devotion of your youth,
    your love as a bride,
    how you followed me in the wilderness,
    in a land not sown.

    The devil wants to keep our ears closed to what the Spirit has to say to us. He wants to keep our eyes shut to having a spiritual sight of our inheritance in the saints. Even though we are freed from the power of the devil, our adversary continually prowls and constantly works to fight to keep us in the dark, to keep our eyes closed to the fullness of what God in Christ has for us. The apostle Paul prayed that the eyes of our understanding would be enlightened, and that is my prayer for you.

    Ephesians 1:18: The eyes of your understanding being enlightened; that ye may know what is the hope of his calling, and what the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the saints...

    Notice there that Paul was praying for those who were already saints. Implied there: there is much, much more for all of us to know of the riches of the glory of our inheritance! In Ephesians 3:8, a verse I referenced above, Paul talks about the unsearchable riches of Christ. By His love constraining us and by His Spirit strengthening us, may we press on to know Christ and begin to search His unsearchable riches!

    * * *

    I've written a poem about my desire for you to know Christ's unsearchable riches, and then following that, I've included an excerpt from an article about Richard Sibbes' (1577-1635) teaching on sealing with the Spirit. I would strongly encourage you to go and read the entire article here <http://www.puritansermons.com/banner/beeke01.htm>.

    Giving thanks unto the Father, which hath made us meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light (Col. 1:12, KJV),

    By the grace of God, blogging to the glory of God so you might begin to enter into the inheritance He has for you, that your joy might be complete,

    ~ Karen

    Acts 26:18  To open their eyes, and to turn them from darkness to light,
    and from the power of Satan unto God, that they may receive forgiveness of sins,
    AND inheritance among them which are sanctified by faith that is in me.
    AND an inheritance

    For my sins, He bled and died
    This my Savior, Jesus Christ!

    Blotted out my transgressions
    Covered with His righteousness

    A brand plucked from the fire!
    The just God became my justifier!

    Turned from darkness into the light
    With all the saints by faith sanctified

    To my Father, all thanks I raise
    He qualified us to partake

    For all peoples, a feast He prepared
    Behold! His Son He did not spare!

    Above and beyond that first sight
    His Spirit breathes to raise to Zion's height

    Exceedingly above all we can ask
    God's love all knowledge does surpass

    "'It is finished! Winter is past!"
    Expect His gaze through the lattice

    Over Bether I've seen Him glide
    This my Lover, Jesus Christ!

    Excels every earthly delight!
    This my Bridegroom, Jesus Christ!

    Rend the heavens! O! make haste
    Pour forth that all the saints might taste

    The riches of Your inheritance
    Intoxicating and holy trance

    Filled with all Your fullness
    Whirling, leaping in the dance

    Though many may sneer: "Undignified!"
    By Michal's heart scorned and despised

    Paraclete, descend, come beside
    A single glimpse, compelling sight

    To heaven's table, celestial flight
    Wine on the lees, well refined

    Tap the barrels, Spring of Life!
    Full of water, mercies wide

    To God's children bearing witness
    Shining brighter from grace to grace

    Sweet incense flowing from above
    Aroma of everlasting love

    Abounding hope, perfect peace and joy
    For every man, woman, girl and boy

    On the wings of glory, fly!
    Reveal the Beloved – Jesus Christ!

    Breathe, O refreshing breeze!
    Astonishment, come and seize!

    Holy Spirit of God, comfort and seal
    The deep things of God take and reveal

    Above and beyond the first
    Grant us greater hunger and thirst

    Be true to Your promises
    Do not leave us as orphans

    Manifest Your glorious presence
    Shine Your face, lift up your countenance!

    Having supped, having a taste
    How can we stay complacent?

    * * *

    Richard Sibbes & the Sealing of the Spirit

    From Joel R. Beeke's "Richard Sibbes on Entertaining the Holy Spirit":

         ... Sibbes thought of the Spirit’s sealing in two ways: (1) a one-time sealing, and (2) a sealing that came later as one matured in the Christian life.

         The once-and-for-all sealing of salvation is granted when a person first believes in Christ and God’s promises. Sibbes taught that as a king’s image is stamped upon wax, so the Spirit stamps the believer’s soul with the image of Christ from the very moment of believing. Such sealing produces in every believer a lifelong desire to be transformed fully into the image of Christ.

         This seal, which every believer possesses, whether he is conscious of it or not, serves as a mark of authenticity. It distinguishes the believer from the world. As merchants mark their wares and herdsman brand their sheep, so God seals His people to declare that they are His rightful property and that He has authority over them, Sibbes said.

         The second aspect of Sibbes’s doctrine of sealing is more elusive. Owen argued that Sibbes said sealing had to occur twice in the life of the believer. But Sibbes was not arguing for a second measure of positional assurance, as if to imply that God was not altogether sure of our stance with Him or His stance towards us upon regeneration. Sibbes plainly stated: “Sealing of us by the Spirit is not in regard to God, but ourselves. God knoweth who are His, but we know not that we are His but by sealing. The sealing then is for our benefit exclusively, and not for God.”

         So the second kind of sealing Sibbes wrote about was a process. It was the kind of assurance that could increase gradually throughout our lives by means of singular experiences and by daily, spiritual growth. This sealing had degrees; it could grow with spiritual maturity. Sibbes wrote: “The Spirit sealeth by degrees. As our care of pleasing the Spirit increaseth so our comfort increaseth. Our light will increase as the morning light unto the perfect day. Yielding to the Spirit in one holy motion will cause him to lead us to another, and so on forwards, until we be more deeply acquainted with the whole counsel of God concerning our salvation.”


    Related:

    Links to my series "Dealing with Past Sins & Guilt"
    my other posts on assurance and fighting for joy including:

    my 3rd Xangaversary: "His grace abounded to this chief of sinners"
    why Naphtali?
    Advent # 5 WHY HAS JESUS COME? So we might draw near to God | Even a Vapor (why Naphtali? ~ revisited)
    Advent #1 WHY HAS JESUS COME? that we might have life & life more abundantly
    Advent # 7 WHY HAS JESUS COME? So we might be satisfied with Him

    learning to run without fear
    "The Christian should not just believe the truth, and know it..." | the Father's assurance
    update w/ excerpt: Lloyd-Jones' sermons on the role of experience in Christianity
    The flags unfurled ... Christ's eternal banner | Lloyd-Jones ~ a third type of assurance
    The Father's Inheritance (Eleven days' journey ~ A lamentation & an exhortation)
    the door, the sword, the crown ~ through faith & patience (Hebrews 6:11-12)
    As a deer pants ... Is your soul panting for God? (Psalms 42 & 43)
    "The honeycomb I lift!" ~ Will you join me? I Samuel 14:24-30

    Scripture quotations unless otherwise indicated are taken from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version. Copyright ©2001 by Crossway Bibles, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved. Emphasis mine.

    Work found at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:RichardSibbes.jpg  / CC BY-SA 3.0 / {PD-Art|PD-old-100}

About me...

Christian hedonist in training. Pressing on to know more and more of the joy of the LORD. Pleading with God to rend the heavens and revive and refresh my own soul, as well as His Church, to His praise, honor and glory.

Thank God. He can make men and women in middle life sing again with a joy that has been chastened by a memory of their past failures. ~ Alan Redpath

My other websites

tent of meeting: Prayer for reformation & revival

(See also Zechariah821. Zechariah821 is a mirror site of tent of meeting, found on WordPress)

deerlifetrumpet: Encouragement for those seeking reformation & revival in the Church

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