sufficiency

  • Birthday reflections ~ "Keep me an infant" (Isaiah 46:1-4)

     
    Isaiah 46:1 Bel boweth down, Nebo stoopeth, their idols were upon the beasts, and upon the cattle: your carriages were heavy loaden; they are a burden to the weary beast.  2 They stoop, they bow down together; they could not deliver the burden, but themselves are gone into captivity.  3 Hearken unto me, O house of Jacob, and all the remnant of the house of Israel, which are borne by me from the belly, which are carried from the womb: 4 And even to your old age I am he; and even to hoar hairs will I carry you: I have made, and I will bear; even I will carry, and will deliver you.

    From Matthew Henry's Complete Commentary on Isaiah 46:

    II. That the true God will never fail his worshippers: "You hear what has become of Bel and Nebo, now hearken to me, O house of Jacob! 3, 4. Am I such a god as these? No; though you are brought low, and the house of Israel is but a remnant, your God has been, is, and ever will be, your powerful and faithful protector."

          1. Let God's Israel do him the justice to own that he has hitherto been kind to them, careful of them, tender over them, and has all along done well for them. Let them own, (1.) That he bore them at first: I have made. Out of what womb came they, but that of his mercy, and grace, and promise? He formed them into a people and gave them their constitution. Every good man is what God makes him. (2.) That he bore them up all along: You have been borne by me from the belly, and carried from the womb. God began betimes to do them good, as soon as ever they were formed into a nation, nay, when as yet they were very few, and strangers. God took them under a special protection, and suffered no man to do them wrong, Ps. cv. 12-14. In the infancy of their state, when they were not only foolish and helpless, as children, but forward and peevish, God carried them in the arms of his power and love, bore them as upon eagles' wings, Exod. xix. 4; Deut. xxxii. 11. Moses had not patience to carry them as the nursing father does the sucking child (Num. xi. 12), but God bore them, and bore their manners, Acts xiii. 18. And as God began early to do them good (when Israel was a child, then I loved him), so he had constantly continued to do them good: he had carried them from the womb to this day. And we may all witness for God that he has been thus gracious to us. We have been borne by him from the belly, from the womb, else we should have died from the womb and given up the ghost when we came out of the belly. We have been the constant care of his kind providence, carried in the arms of his power and in the bosom of his love and pity. The new man is so; all that in us which is born of God is borne up by him, else it would soon fail. Our spiritual life is sustained by his grace as necessarily and constantly as our natural life by his providence. The saints have acknowledged that God has carried them from the womb, and have encouraged themselves with the consideration of it in their greatest straits, Ps. xxii. 9, 10; lxxi. 5, 6, 17.

          2. He will then do them the kindness to promise that he will never leave them. He that was their first will be their last; he that was the author will be the finisher of their well-being ( 4): "You have been borne by me from the belly, nursed when you were children; and even to your old age I am he, when, by reason of your decays and infirmities, you will need help as much as in your infancy." Israel were now growing old, so was their covenant by which they were incorporated, Heb. viii. 13. Gray hairs were here and there upon them, Hos. vii. 9. And they had hastened their old age, and the calamities of it, by their irregularities. But God will not cast them off now, will not fail them when their strength fails; he is still their God, will still carry them in the same everlasting arms that were laid under them in Moses's time, Deut. xxxiii. 27. He has made them and owns his interest in them, and therefore he will bear them, will bear with their infirmities, and bear them up under their afflictions: "Even I will carry and will deliver them; I will now bear them upon eagles' wings out of Babylon, as in their infancy I bore them out of Egypt." This promise to aged Israel is applicable to every aged Israelite. God has graciously engaged to support and comfort his faithful servants, even in their old age: "Even to your old age, when you grow unfit for business, when you are compassed with infirmities, and perhaps your relations begin to grow weary of you, yet I am he--he that I am, he that I have been--the very same by whom you have been borne from the belly and carried from the womb. You change, but I am the same. I am he that I have promised to be, he that you have found me, and he that you would have me to be. I will carry you, I will bear, will bear you up and bear you out, and will carry you on in your way and carry you home at last."

    * * *



    Keep me an infant so I might hear
    Your Spirit's whispers loud and clear:

    "Jehovah birthed you from sin's tomb,
    Who else carried you from the womb?

    "How could dying flesh beget eternal life?
    My grace made you to be Christ's wife!

    "Surely I will bear you up and out,
    My child, be not afraid; do not doubt."

    Keep me an infant so I might begin
    To see nothing good dwells within

    Keep me an infant so I might be humble
    Self-assurance fail, collapse and crumble

    Keep me an infant so I might embrace
    The chief cornerstone, chosen and precious

    Keep me an infant so I might bless
    Jesus Christ as my whole righteousness

    Keep me an infant so I might profess
    Trust in Christ, no confidence in my flesh

    Keep me an infant so I might sanctify
    Reckon myself dead to sin, to God alive

    Keep me an infant so I might die
    Through Christ really live and sin mortify

    Keep me an infant so I might self disdain
    Count loss for Christ whatever was gain

    Keep me an infant so I might be weak
    For Your Spirit ask, knock and seek

    Keep me an infant so I might recall
    Though hard I work, Your grace works all

    Keep me an infant so I might be thirsting
    Always Your pure spiritual milk drinking

    Keep me an infant so I might rely
    On Your Word for You do not lie

    Keep me an infant so I might rest
    In Your yoke during the fiery test

    Keep me an infant so I might remain
    Dependent on Your heavenly rain

    Keep me an infant so I might know
    Your eagles' wings carrying me below

    Keep me an infant so I might cast off Baal
    Bow to the only God who never will fall

    Keep me an infant so I might lean
    On the one true God who is unseen

    Keep me an infant so I might proclaim
    Your full sufficiency for Your fame

    Keep me an infant so I might decrease
    So You and my joy might ever increase

    Keep me an infant so I might be contrite
    And see Your countenance shining bright

    Keep me an infant so I might see
    All praise and glory belongs to Thee

    Keep me an infant so I might declare
    Christ carried me from womb to hoar hairs

    Keep me an infant so I might run
    By Your Spirit till my earthly race is done

    Keep me an infant so I might hear
    The Spirit's whispers loud and clear:

    "Jehovah birthed you from sin's tomb
    Who else carried you from the womb

    "How could dying flesh beget eternal life
    My grace made you to be Christ's wife!

    "Surely I will bear you up and out,
    My child, be not afraid; do not doubt."

    Luke 18:17  Verily I say unto you, Whosoever shall not receive the kingdom of God as a little child shall in no wise enter therein.

    "You have been borne by me from the belly, nursed when you were children; and even to your old age I am he, when, by reason of your decays and infirmities, you will need help as much as in your infancy."


    Related:

    HumanNewborn.JPG found at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:HumanNewborn.JPG  / CC BY-SA 3.0

  • Though beyond all measure I be pressed ~ "the Lord knows how to rescue the godly from trials"

    II Peter 2:9a
    the Lord knows how to rescue the godly from trials...

    The Lord knoweth how to deliver the godly out of temptations...
    (KJV)

    By worldly wickedness oppressed
    Be my stronghold in my distress
    No other rescue or defense
    But Christ, Zion's Sabbath rest

    Though beyond all measure I be pressed
    I look to Your sure deliverance
    O, God of Jacob, my sole fortress
    Be zealous, arise, ride through the desert!

    In the midst of rising corruption
    Vexed by taunts of ruthless nations
    Flood down from Your holy habitation
    Anchor me to preach Gospel salvation

    Though beyond all measure I be pressed
    I look to Your sure deliverance
    O, God of Jacob, my sole fortress
    Be zealous, arise, ride through the desert!

    Everlasting strength in the clouds
    Fill up my heart, may grace abound
    O light and truth, descend, rush down
    Silence the enemy's dark sound

    Though beyond all measure I be pressed
    I look to Your sure deliverance
    O, God of Jacob, my sole fortress
    Be zealous, arise, ride through the desert!

    O, mighty God of Jeshurun
    Revive me through Your risen Son
    In every trial and temptation
    Ride to me upon the heavens

    Though beyond all measure I be pressed
    I look to Your sure deliverance
    O, God of Jacob, my sole fortress
    Be zealous, arise, ride through the desert!

    My only hope, though Your face You hide
    My exceeding joy, the true vine
    Kiss my lips with Your richest wine
    Rejoice my soul, ease my wav'ring mind

    Though beyond all measure I be pressed
    I look to Your sure deliverance
    O, God of Jacob, my sole fortress
    Be zealous, arise, ride through the desert!

    The song of the ruthless put down
    For Your glorious name and renown
    Rescue me from the lion's mouth
    Songs of deliverance will ring out

    Though beyond all measure I be pressed
    I look to Your sure deliverance
    O, God of Jacob, my sole fortress
    Be zealous, arise, ride through the desert!

    Psalm 43
    1  Vindicate me, O God, and defend my cause
    against an ungodly people,
    from the deceitful and unjust man
    deliver me!
    2  For you are the God in whom I take refuge;
    why have you rejected me?
    Why do I go about mourning
    because of the oppression of the enemy?
    3  Send out your light and your truth;
    let them lead me;
    let them bring me to your holy hill
    and to your dwelling!
    4  Then I will go to the altar of God,
    to God my exceeding joy,
    and I will praise you with the lyre,
    O God, my God.
    5  Why are you cast down, O my soul,
    and why are you in turmoil within me?
    Hope in God; for I shall again praise him,
    my salvation and my God.

    II Peter 2:4  For if God did not spare angels when they sinned, but cast them into hell and committed them to chains of gloomy darkness to be kept until the judgment; 5  if he did not spare the ancient world, but preserved Noah, a herald of righteousness, with seven others, when he brought a flood upon the world of the ungodly; 6  if by turning the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah to ashes he condemned them to extinction, making them an example of what is going to happen to the ungodly; 7  and if he rescued righteous Lot, greatly distressed by the sensual conduct of the wicked 8  (for as that righteous man lived among them day after day, he was tormenting his righteous soul over their lawless deeds that he saw and heard); 9  then the Lord knows how to rescue the godly from trials, and to keep the unrighteous under punishment until the day of judgment, 10  and especially those who indulge in the lust of defiling passion and despise authority.

    II Timothy 4:16  At my first defense no one came to stand by me, but all deserted me. May it not be charged against them! 17  But the Lord stood by me and strengthened me, so that through me the message might be fully proclaimed and all the Gentiles might hear it. So I was rescued from the lion's mouth. 18  The Lord will rescue me from every evil deed and bring me safely into his heavenly kingdom. To him be the glory forever and ever. Amen.

    II Corinthians 1:8  For we do not want you to be ignorant, brothers, of the affliction we experienced in Asia. For we were so utterly burdened beyond our strength that we despaired of life itself. 9  Indeed, we felt that we had received the sentence of death. But that was to make us rely not on ourselves but on God who raises the dead. 10  He delivered us from such a deadly peril, and he will deliver us. On him we have set our hope that he will deliver us again. 11  You also must help us by prayer, so that many will give thanks on our behalf for the blessing granted us through the prayers of many.

    Psalm 68
    1  God shall arise, his enemies shall be scattered;
    and those who hate him shall flee before him!
    2  As smoke is driven away, so you shall drive them away;
    as wax melts before fire,
    so the wicked shall perish before God!
    3  But the righteous shall be glad;
    they shall exult before God;
    they shall be jubilant with joy!
    4  Sing to God, sing praises to his name;
    lift up a song to him who rides through the deserts;
    his name is the LORD;
    exult before him!

    Isaiah 25
    1  O LORD, you are my God;
    I will exalt you; I will praise your name,
    for you have done wonderful things,
    plans formed of old, faithful and sure.
    2  For you have made the city a heap,
    the fortified city a ruin;
    the foreigners' palace is a city no more;
    it will never be rebuilt.
    3  Therefore strong peoples will glorify you;
    cities of ruthless nations will fear you.
    4  For you have been a stronghold to the poor,
    a stronghold to the needy in his distress,
    a shelter from the storm and a shade from the heat;
    for the breath of the ruthless is like a storm against a wall,
    5  like heat in a dry place.
    You subdue the noise of the foreigners;
    as heat by the shade of a cloud,
    so the song of the ruthless is put down.
    6  On this mountain the LORD of hosts will make for all peoples
    a feast of rich food, a feast of well-aged wine,
    of rich food full of marrow, of aged wine well refined.
    7  And he will swallow up on this mountain
    the covering that is cast over all peoples,
    the veil that is spread over all nations.
    8  He will swallow up death forever;
    and the Lord GOD will wipe away tears from all faces,
    and the reproach of his people he will take away from all the earth,
    for the LORD has spoken.
    9  It will be said on that day,
    “Behold, this is our God; we have waited for him, that he might save us.
    This is the LORD; we have waited for him;
    let us be glad and rejoice in his salvation.”
    10  For the hand of the LORD will rest on this mountain,
    and Moab shall be trampled down in his place,
    as straw is trampled down in a dunghill.
    11  And he will spread out his hands in the midst of it
    as a swimmer spreads his hands out to swim,
    but the LORD will lay low his pompous pride together with the skill of his hands.
    12  And the high fortifications of his walls he will bring down,
    lay low, and cast to the ground, to the dust.


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    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.

    Work found at http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Lion_baring_teeth.jpg byWouter van Vliet / CC BY-SA 2.0

  • "Who wants candles when he has the sun?" ~ Edward Payson | letter 124 on assurance & joy

    From "Memoir, Select Thoughts and Sermons of the Late Rev. Edward Payson, Volume 1" by Edward Payson (1783-1827) and Asa Cummings:

    The feelings which prompted and sustained his [Payson's] restless activity for the glory of God and the salvation of men, very frequently disclose themselves in his correspondence and diary :—

    "December 26, 1821. I do not think you understand my feelings about a revival. Unless I am very much deceived, I have no controversy with God respecting it. But ought a minister to feel easy while his people are perishing, and Christians are dishonoring their Master? Did not Paul feel great heaviness, and continual sorrow of heart for his countrymen. All the joy and gratitude he felt, in view of what God had done for him and by him, could not remove that sorrow. And the prophet would weep day and night for the daughter of his people. Instead of feeling less, it seems to me that I ought to feel more, and to have no rest. But I do not murmur at God's dealings. I only wonder that he ever did any thing for me or by me; and that he has not long since cast me out of his vineyard. As to the bed-ridden female you mention, I see nothing very wonderful in her rejoicing and gratitude. Well may she rejoice and be grateful when she is filled full of divine consolation. She has outward trials, it is true; but what are they, when Christ is present? Who wants candles when he has the sun? Give me her consolations, and I will sing as loud as she does. And let her have my showers of fiery darts, and my other trials, and, unless I am much mistaken, she will groan as much as I do. I have seen very young Christians terribly afflicted by bodily pain and sickness, for months together, and all the time full of joy and thankfulness; and I have seen the same persons afterwards, when they were surrounded by temporal mercies, show very little of either. Things seem to be a little on the mending hand; and the church are again beginning to hope for a revival. Last Sabbath was an uncommonly solemn day."

    (p. 255-256)

    Like Payson and the apostle Paul, I confess I've had great heaviness and continual sorrow quite a lot lately as I look out at the state of many Christians and the church at large, as well as the lost loved ones.

    But ought a minister to feel easy while his people are perishing, and Christians are dishonoring their Master?

    How can we thrive and rejoice when our eyes have been opened to the dreary and dreadful and all but dead state of Christians and Christ's church?

    How can we thrive and rejoice while we grieve for the lukewarm and lethargic souls that fill our churches?

    How can we thrive and rejoice while we are burdened for the perishing souls of men and women and boys and girls outside of Christ?

    How can we be sorrowful yet always rejoicing in the midst of all these ruins, in the valley of dry bones, while in continuing trials, tribulations and temptations, as Paul wrote in II Corinthians 6: As sorrowful, yet alway rejoicing ...

    How can I?

    1. We must have a deep and abiding conviction of the sovereignty of God and humbly bow to His wisdom and His workings and ways.

    I have no controversy with God respecting it.

    But I do not murmur at God's dealings.

    Payson was longing and pleading to see God rend the heavens and come down and kindle a revival in the souls of his people (~ Isaiah 64), and yet he was trusting God's sovereign hand in the timing and did not murmur! Ah, but we are by nature a murmuring people, are we not? Prone to murmur, Lord, we feel it. Indeed!

    However, if we are Christians, we have received Christ's nature, and it is God who works in us, not only to will and to do of His good pleasure but also so we might do all things without murmuring (see Philippians 2).

    After explaining God's sovereign grace in election, making it clear there was no injustice in God at all for choosing some and passing over others, the apostle Paul wrote at the end of Romans 11:

    O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past finding out! For who hath known the mind of the Lord? or who hath been his counsellor? Or who hath first given to him, and it shall be recompensed unto him again?

    For of him, and through him, and to him, are all things: to whom be glory for ever. Amen.

    As Christians, we ought to have a desire to see people saved and to see the church reformed and revived, to see the sleeping church awakened out of her slumber, and so we should be working to the those ends and pleading with importunity at the throne of grace for these matters for we know these are our Father's heart's desires (as Payson referenced the watchmen in Isaiah 62 - day and night, not keeping silence, nor giving the Lord rest, but continuing on until He makes the church once again a praise in the earth, a lamp that burns, the city on the hill He intends us to be), but ultimately it is up to God as to when and how and where He will move in answer to those prayers. God's sovereignty in these matters continues to be our sanity. He has promised that we do not seek Him in vain, and yet we also know He works all things according to the counsel of His will and that His plan cannot ever be thwarted. We know as we labor in Him, as we are seeking His will to be done here on earth as it is in heaven, our labor in not in vain. As Whitefield once said, "God never sends any of His servants on a needless errand." Amen.

    2. We must have a profound humility and sense of thanksgiving to God for the work He has done to save us and to keep us through the Lord Jesus Christ.

     
    I only wonder that he ever did any thing for me or by me; and that he has not long since cast me out of his vineyard.

    As we continue to look upon our wretchedness, that God found us in the field alone and cast out in our blood, that He raised us up from the ash heap, that we are worms who deserve absolutely nothing, that Christ died for us while we were yet sinners, we know it is by grace through faith we have been saved, and so we are profoundly humbled and our hearts are drawn out in thanksgiving to God for our own salvation. And so, as we labor in the vineyard, no matter what fruits we might be privileged to see, we are brought back to Jesus' gentle rebuke to the disciples:

    Notwithstanding in this rejoice not, that the spirits are subject unto you; but rather rejoice, because your names are written in heaven.

    That perspective helps keep our eyes where they belong – on the Lord Jesus Christ first and foremost... Looking unto Jesus the author and finisher of our faith. God forbid we lose a sense of the wonder, love and praise at our own salvation – and may our God continue to increase that daily. And if we've never had that, for it's possible to be a Christian and not really have a sense of it, may God grant it to us (see # 3). Let us reflect more and more on His continuing persevering love toward us for we are all prone to wander and apart from His grace, we can do nothing and we are unable to keep ourselves. It is all of God's mercy and grace that we are His, that He alone might get all the praise, honor and glory. Not unto us, O LORD, not unto us, but unto thy name give glory, for thy mercy, and for thy truth's sake.

     
    3. We must have an experience of the living Christ.
    Well may she rejoice and be grateful when she is filled full of divine consolation. She has outward trials, it is true; but what are they, when Christ is present? Who wants candles when he has the sun?
    Payson had come to see that in comparison to Christ, all the world had offer was as candles in comparison to the sun!

    Is this how you view Christ: that any and all things the world has to offer are but candles when you have the Son of God?

    This begs the question: How do you know you have the Son of God?

    I heard the Scottish minister Kenneth Stewart once say something like this,

    "You know you HAVE Christ when you are content WITH Christ."

    Doesn't our heavenly Father tell us, all that He has is ours (see the end of Luke 15)? Hasn't Jesus told us that all things that the Father has are His and that the Spirit is sent to make all of that known to us (John 16:5-15)? Imagine it – and then consider it: Is Christ really enough for us? Are His unsearchable riches really not enough for us?

    Payson's experience was like the apostle Paul's:

    Philippians 3:7 But what things were gain to me, those I counted loss for Christ.8 Yea doubtless, and I count all things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord: for whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and do count them but dung, that I may win Christ...

    Notice there: ALL things but loss... the loss of ALL things. Paul counted them dung! All of them! Why? Because Jesus Christ had shone brighter to him than all things he had found on earth.

    Has Christ shone brighter to you than all things you have found on the earth?

    Who wants candles when he has the sun?

    The Third Day song expresses it this way:

    Nothing compares to the greatness of knowing You, Lord!

    Nothing! Nothing at all compares! All else is like candles in comparison to the sun, is it not?

    Can you say in truth with the apostle Paul that you are counting all things loss for Christ?

    Can you sing the song lyric in truth that nothing compares to the greatness of knowing Him?

    What in your world comes even close to comparing to Christ?

    You may say you are a Christian and you may even be a Christian, but have you really come to have the Son of God in the sense that you are wholly content with Him and need nothing more? Are all your springs in Him?

    Like the apostle Paul, Edward Payson had had a experience of the risen Christ, he had experienced intimate communion the living God.

    I call this the icing on the cake. For yes, we can have those other things I mentioned: an appreciation of the sovereignty of God and a profound humiliation and thanksgiving to God for our salvation – but this experience of the living God is what really fuels us on so we might persevere in the work God has for us in spite of what we see. Payson used the words, "when Christ is present."  Have you ever encountered the living God where you would say He was present, really present?

    I know I'm pushing the envelope by saying that in order to be sorrowful yet always rejoicing "we must have an experience of the living Christ," but I am making no apologies for it. I am pushing for this reason: I am seeking that your joy be full. I see too many forlorn, downcast and despondent Christians, who continue that way day in and day out, week in and week out, year in and year out. You know who you are. I was that way, too, and I don't want you to be that way for another moment. I want you to know the joy of the Lord, really know – not as a mere notion, not as a mere saying from your lips, not as yet another memorized Bible verse in the head, not as an emotional "high" – but to know in your heart the joy of the Lord, that you might have such intimate communion with Him that the rivers of living water are filling you and bubbling up and springing up and out of you, so you cannot help but sing the new song God has given you.

    Psalm 30:11 Thou hast turned for me my mourning into dancing: thou hast put off my sackcloth, and girded me with gladness; 12 To the end that my glory may sing praise to thee, and not be silent. O LORD my God, I will give thanks unto thee for ever.

    And I want to make it clear here that this gift of the felt presence of Christ is not merely for our own enjoyment (though of course we do enjoy Him wonderfully in it!) – but is given to us for God's joy and the enjoyment of the nations. We are blessed to be a blessing! We are fed to feed others! We drink to pour out to others! Freely we have received, freely we are to give! And then, as Christ is proclaimed and as the nations come to know Christ, the heavens rejoice, do they not, and God is magnified and glorified as His glorious name and praise runs throughout the earth! So Christian hedonism considered rightly is never self-centered, but is always Christ-centered, Christ-magnifying and God-glorifying!

    Now here's Bernard of Clairvaux expressing the way out of that cycle of joyless Christianity into a ever-deepening assurance:

    When once Thou visitest the heart,
    Then truth begins to shine,
    Then earthly vanities depart,
    Then kindles love divine.

    When ONCE! If you've had that visit of the living Christ once to your heart it does make all the difference. For it is then you are able to proclaim and exclaim with the Shulamite woman in the Song of Solomon ~ "Oh, if you knew my Beloved! You would never ask how He is different than any other beloved! He really IS altogether lovely! He IS beautiful beyond all measure! I have tasted Him and seen Him, and this is my testimony to you: He IS good. All the things I've read about, I knew they were true with my head for I knew the Scripture is God's Word and I know it is all true and infallible, but now! Ah! but now - it's all firing in my heart now! The truth is aflame! And I cannot hold it, hold Him, in any longer!"

    With such a visit, you not only know the doctrine in your head (to emphasize here: I'm not tossing out doctrine at all - not at all! - we can't ever do that! And doctrine itself is what really undergirds any true and right and pure experiences with the living God – otherwise we'll go off on our feelings, which may be fire, but very well may be false fire!), but the doctrine is now burning in your heart ~ much like what happened to the two disciples on the road to Emmaus (Luke 24), should I say CHRIST is burning in your heart?!

    Have you known the burning heart? Is truth aflame in you?

    Have you ever asked the living God to condescend to you and visit you in such a way so you might begin to comprehend with all the saints what is the breadth, and length, and depth, and height of God's love for you in Jesus Christ (see Paul's prayer at the end Ephesians 3)? (Please see my personal note below for more on this.)

    That is the very same love that was constraining and compelling the apostle Paul (II Cor. 5) and causing him to say that necessity was laid upon him ~ Woe is me if I don't preach the Gospel!

    Have you had such an experience of the presence of Christ that makes all the candles of the world dim in comparison to His shining face so that you consider all else loss and dung, that all else you once valued and treasured is now vanity and worthless in comparison with the Pearl of great price?

    Have you had such an experience of the presence of Christ that makes all the candles of the world dim in comparison to His shining face so that you strongly desire that the earth be filled with the knowledge of the glory of the LORD, as the waters cover the sea?

    Have you had such an experience of the presence of Christ that makes all the candles of the world dim in comparison to His shining face and propels you out to be a shining light in a dark world?

    Many of you have been seeking for a life ambition. I will guarantee you this: your ambition will become a holy ambition if God graciously comes and visits your heart once!

    Are you going to keep wasting your life on unholy ambitions? Or are you going to seek after Christ so your life's ambition might please and glorify your Maker and Redeemer?
    Who wants candles when he has the sun?

    This experience of the living Christ is a possibility for you and for all Christians, and I urge you to pursue Him and ask Him to shine His countenance upon you.

    Yes, I said all Christians. Please read Paul's prayers for the Ephesians in chapters 1 and 3 and Colossians 1. Have you ever really considered the inheritance God has for you as a Christian – beginning today, in the here and now? If we have Christ, we have eternal life, beginning NOW, it's not starting in heaven, but it's already begun. If you are Christ's, the Kingdom of God is within you! Paul speaks of these things as being available for ALL the saints. If you are a saint, these prayers are for you. These possibilities are for you. This blessedness, this experience of the love of Christ is available to you.

    Martyn Lloyd-Jones spoke of the glorious possibilities of the Christian life. And with that, he reminded us that we are in constant danger of interpreting the word of God by our own feelings or flesh or what we've experienced. Please read the Scripture and ask the Spirit of God Himself to show you all that He has for you in the Christian life! Our expectations of God can be so very puny at times! We get into the danger that the Israelites found themselves in: we limit the Holy One of Israel (Psalm 78). We read of the workings of God in the past, we read Christian biography, or we look at other people, and we think, "Oh, how wonderful that all was, but certainly this is not for me!" No! No! It IS for us! It is set before all of us. Has God changed? Does He not want to give His children good gifts and all we need to live a godly life? Does He not wish for us to know Him and His love and His joy and in greater and higher and deeper measure? Should we not be rejoicing with joy unspeakable and full of glory in the midst of our trials? Should we not know the love of God shed abroad in our hearts in tribulation? Should we not expect the Spirit of God to manifest Himself to us in our time of need? Should we not expect our hearts to burn as we encounter Christ in His word? Should we not expect the Comforter to come to assure us we are not orphans when we are alone and we feel forsaken? Should we not expect the Spirit to bear witness with our spirits that we are the children of God in the midst of suffering? Should we not expect the great high priest to come to us in His compassion and strength to encourage us and bear us up so we might come through temptations rather than collapsing under them? These are descriptions of the Christian life we find in the word of God. Cannot God do exceedingly above all we can ask or imagine? Is He not able to perform that which He has promised?

    In his hymn "I Hunger and I Thirst," John Samuel Bewley Monsell, Jr., expressed the wonderful divine filling and soul satisfaction, a fullness that cannot be found in all the world, no matter how far we search...

    I hunger and I thirst,
    Jesu, my manna be;
    Ye living waters, burst
    Out of the rock for me.

    Thou bruised and broken Bread,
    My life-long wants supply;
    As living souls are fed,
    O feed me, or I die.

    Thou true life-giving Vine,
    Let me Thy sweetness prove;
    Renew my life with Thine,
    Refresh my soul with love.

    Rough paths my feet have trod
    Since first their course began;
    Feed me, Thou Bread of God;
    Help me, Thou Son of Man.

    For still the desert lies
    My thirsting soul before;
    O living waters, rise
    Within me evermore.
    In the same way Edward Payson had eaten of the True Bread and had drunk of the Living Water, and he was seeking to continue to do so. He was looking to Christ alone to supply his life-long wants – for he knew that he had been dead in sins and transgressions but having been quickened by Christ, he now lived day by day by Christ. He knew there was no true and living sustenance for him apart from Christ's life. He knew there was no real joy or happiness to be found any place but in Christ. Payson was what John Piper would call a Christian hedonist. Payson walked through those rough paths and desert, as do we all for we all live in a fallen world, but in it all, he kept seeking Christ to satisfy him. Do you? Where do you turn when your world is rough paths and desert? Is your soul panting for the living God?
    Who wants candles when he has the sun?

    Payson also knew of the painful withdrawals of the face of God, something we hear or read little about today. As we read his words, we see how his relationship with Jesus Christ was his only source of real happiness because he had come to know, experientially know, Christ alone as his sole comfort and vital sustenance in the midst of all the sorrows that accompanied the ministry. Like the Psalmists, he kept seeking God's presence, He kept panting and longing and fainting for Christ alone, and in doing so he was lifted above all the stresses and concerns of the ministry that continued to press in upon him.

    "August, 6, 1821.

    "As to my desires for a revival, I have not, and never had, the least doubt that they are exceedingly corrupt and sinful. A thousand wrong motives have conspired to excite them. Still I do not believe that my desires were ever half so strong as they ought to be; nor do I see how a minister can help being in a 'constant fever,' in such a town as this, where his Master is dishonored, and souls are destroyed in so many ways. You can scarcely conceive how may things occur, almost daily, to distress and crush me. All these are nothing, when my Master is with me; but, when he is absent, I am of all men most miserable. But now he is with me and I am happy."

    (p. 248)

     

    May our Master give to each of us such a desire for Him. May He be gracious to us and visit us with His presence as He deems fit, to be like the dew, to pour down on us when we are thirsty, to supply a drop from His fountain to strengthen and sustain us and rejoice our souls on our pilgrimage through the weeping and thirsty Valley of Baca. May He lift up His countenance upon us so might be privileged to see a glimpse of His glory, and we might be able to say with Payson, "Who wants candles when he has the sun?" And though we will still have many occasions to be sorrowful on our journey here, may He grant us grace to always be rejoicing in and through Him.

     
    Romans 9:1 I say the truth in Christ, I lie not, my conscience also bearing me witness in the Holy Ghost, That I have great heaviness and continual sorrow in my heart.

    II Corinthians 6:10a As sorrowful, yet alway rejoicing ...

    Who wants candles when he has the sun?

    A personal note: In October 2009 I found myself continuing to be overwhelmed with a sense of depression and sorrow and had no real rejoicing in ministry. Things came crashing down on me, and while I was sitting in a coffee shop, and I began to pour out my heart to the Lord, asking Him rejoice my soul: that I might find my joy in Him - no matter what I might be seeing. I knew I needed to walk by faith and not by sight, and I couldn't depend on visible ministry results, which were uncertain at best - and in reality that reflected a sinful idolatry of my heart. I was dying on the vine and had come to the point where I knew I certainly couldn't live by such results for they were all vanity.

    Christ alone is the only true and unfailing sustenance for our souls. We live by Him. We never live by our work for Him! And this is a dangerous snare any of us who are in ministry. Anytime we begin to rely on the earthly for our joy, even good things, we are going to come up empty (please see my posts My love affair . . . whose trumpet, whose glory & incomplete joy and a conversation with Jesus about misplaced joy ("do not rejoice in this" - letter 73 on joy , as well as this earthly manna ~ the Christian hedonist's plea.) As John Calvin wrote, "Man's nature, so to speak, is a perpetual factory of idols." If we are not seeking Christ and being satisfied in Christ, we will be seeking elsewhere, but that elsewhere always leaves us empty and dry – every single time!

    The Lord has been gracious to me and heard by cries and has allowed me to begin to experience some of the glorious possibilities of the Christian life, and that is my desire for you as well. As Christians we are given liberty by the Spirit of God to go from grace to grace and glory to glory; the light does shine brighter and brighter until the Day we see Him face to face; therefore, we can be sorrowful yet always rejoicing as we come to know Christ more and more in an experiential sense.

    My series of letters on assurance and fighting for joy chronicle some of my journey. Some of the letters are more relevant to trials and struggles related to ministry and have included links to some of them here.

    Please Note: If God has been burdening you over the current state of the church and putting a desire into you to pray to see the church reformed and revived, I encourage you to visit my other sites, tent_of_meeting (prayer for revival) and deerlife (ministry encouragement on our pilgrimage), comment below and/or message me. I would also encourage you to read my holy ambition as well as these three posts, which express some of my heart for revival.

    More on Holy Ambition:


    Scripture quotations from the King James Version of the Holy Bible.
    Work found at http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:EdwardPayson.jpg  / CC BY-SA 3.0
    Work found at http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Quando_hai_buio.jpg  / CC BY-SA 3.0

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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