Month: April 2014

When God Steps In

Daniel
UNEDITED SERMON NOTES

In the book of Daniel 6, God steps in.

Verse 16 So the king gave the order, and they brought Daniel and threw him into the lions’ den. The king said to Daniel, “May your God, whom you serve continually, rescue you!”

17 A stone was brought and placed over the mouth of the den, and the king sealed it with his own signet ring and with the rings of his nobles, so that Daniel’s situation might not be changed. 18 Then the king returned to his palace and spent the night without eating and without any entertainment being brought to him. And he could not sleep.

Daniel is a hold over from another Kingdom, and you would suspect that when a times comes for the people of Persia to put together their alliance that most of the talent pool would be expected to come from within…. but that is not the case.

Can you imagine the dismay when somebody suggest that this man from another period another power structure must be given a position? Everybody is never happy when you are the one and they are not the one promoted.

It was a ticklish subject – why Daniel? Get the old folk out of the way. Then there are some nationalist who ask – how dare we bring somebody from another nation?

All gvts run on revenue and they want to make sure there was no uprising – but now a moment has come when Daniel is not only listed among who is who in gvt, but one of the key leadership. Some felt stubbed in the back when Daniel was pick… The Bible says that Daniel had an excellent spirit.

You ought to ask the question, if you are accused of being a Christian, would it be possible for someone to proof that you serve a GOD who is invisible. WHen you looked at Daniel, it was clear that there was no flaw in the way he conducted business. There are people able to separate religion from real life. But Daniel obviously led God influence everything he did for that is the kind of administrator he was.

When people find that they cannot prove that you are not qualified, they look elsewhere.

There was nothing to dig up on Daniel. When they searched the record and wanted to know what kind of reputation – they could not find anything to convict Daniel. Here is a man who served His God so well. If you claim to be like Christ, you ought to be like Christ everywhere?

What do you do when you want to stop a person from being in an office and you cannot find anything to convict him…. well you have to be creative….

Some evil mind begin to speak theoretically – suppose it could be arranged so that this thing can become a liability rather than an asset?

Daniel was so intentional in his prayers for GOD.

They Crucified My LORD

revelations20;6
UNEDITED SCRIPT FROM TODAY’S PREACHING

This is one of the most beautiful sermons I’ve preached, but the most difficult to do.

Every time I see him. When I see what he did for me, I can barely take. Pray that I get through the sermon, but pray more than God will show us HIS son again.

Father in Heaven, today, help us to see JESUS today and recognize that he no longer hangs in the cross for he now ministers as our High Priest in the heavenly sanctuary. He is there when we pray, he is there when we have needs, he is there when we need him to forgive our sins.

As we open your word, guide us to the whole truth and help everyone recognize the truth and be changed by it.

It is important to recognize that Jesus died. I don’t think it takes a movie to see and understand why JESUS died. I think god has arranged in such a way that you can understand that – not just that he died or that he suffered  the pain. You can understand that  the central act of all eternity is the death of Jesus on Calvary and it was not for nothing but for me.

Revelations 20:6 –

Blessed and holy are those who share in the first resurrection. The second death has no power over them, but they will be priests of God and of Christ and will reign with him for a thousand years.

The bible speak about a second death suggesting a first death. The first death is the one we see.  The second death is the second death that is a result of sin. If you die i nChrist you are a sleep, it is a sleep because when the voice of Jesus sounds, you will hear the voice of Jesus in the tomb. When the life giver calls, even the death will hear the voice and will rise up in the power of divinity and will take them to meet with their LORD.

Jesus died so we could avoid a second death. I might die a first death before that great day of HIS appearance, but I don’t want to die a second death…..

GOD is able. If we die in Christ, we rise in HIM. If Christ had not die, we would all be susceptible to the second death.

Jesus came and brought a change to many laws that crippled the Sabbath. You couldn’t have a joy of the Sabbath because of the laws. Jesus did away with all those man-made lceremonial laws so that Sabbath could be a joy again…. When you walk and talk with Jesus you can enjoy the Sabbath.

When Jesus went to the cross, he declared it is done – the priest’s hand began to tremple, the real lamp of GOD had gone to the CROSS.
Colossians 2:14 holy laws that last forever were established. Ceremonial laws were nailed to the cross.

When JESUS writes laws, he writes in stones so that you cannot forget, but when he writes your sins, he writes in DUST.

Jesus went to the CROSS that we might enjoy a day of worship and delight in the law of GOD.

Jesus went to cross to show that the commandments of GOD are forever binding. The laws of GOD were not forever EXPUNGED…..

My record is not worthy to get me into heaven. But Christ wipes my record . By the death of CHRIST our sins have been forgiven. Christ has given us redemption through his BLOOD. The forgiveness of Sins according to the richness of HIS grace ( Ephessians 1:7)

Isaiah 53:3-5

 He is despised and rejected of men; a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief: and we hid as it were our faces from him; he was despised, and we esteemed him not. Surely he hath borne our griefs, and carried our sorrows: yet we did esteem him stricken, smitten of God, and afflicted. But he was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities: the chastisement of our peace was upon him; and with his stripes we are healed.

There is no reason why anybody in the family has to carry sins for redemption has been accomplished in CALVARY. Jeremiah had asked if there is no medication for our disease of SIN. Jeremiah 8:22 is there BALM in GILEAD?

At the cross we find our medication for a disease no doctor can diagnose of cure. Can you find a medicine that can take your sin away? Yes by the BLOOD of JESUS. Without BLOOD there is no remission of SIN. There is other cure for the cancer of SIN.

Jesus has power over SIN… There is POWER in the BLOOD of JESUS…

Decisions

elijah

I Kings 18:21

Grateful for the truth in the word of God and the power in the word that is beyond ourselves

In the word we don’t hear opinions of men – but truth of heaven.  Give it to us father and our souls shall be satisfied.

If God be for us – who can be against us.. If you are on GOD’s side and if GOD is on your side, there is no power on the face of the earth that can overcome you.

Elijah stood in the power of GOD against everything that can be arrayed against him and he will make because GOD is with him.

There seems to be powers arrayed us. There are people who don’t like you, there are systems against you and there are challenges beyond you = but GOD is able and if you GOD is on your side there is no problem that overcome you. If you’ve got faith in GOD, nothing is going to bring you doing.

Jezebel convinces her husband to worship Baal and now pushing the nations towards IDOLATRY – Which side wll you be? Will you stand on the fence – on GOD’s side just in case and with the other idols just in case.

There comes a time when you must decide where to place your heart. God wants the whole of your faith and cannot condone playing games and dancing and wavering from one opinion to another.

 

VICTORY FELLOWSHIP

Psalm 25.4-5

It began as a FELLOWSHIP in sacrificial giving towards God’s MISSION at HOME {i.e North America} so that the lost, the searchers and the next generation of Americans might hear the good news 

~ that we have the victory through the finished work of Jesus at Calvary. We have the victory for Jesus has bruised the serpent’s head; there breaking Satan’s regal power, clearing a way out of sin, destroying death by resurrection and granting believers the hope for heavenly procession in the greatest show the world has ever seen – the day of ascension at the hour of His triumphant return and appearance. 

THE SONG 

Through tears, God brought forth a harvest from second and first generation of immigrants from Mexico and Kenya respectively that sung the SONG of victory in their own languages and (to some extend) in pits and pieces. 

THE EXPERIENCE

At conversion, the song of victory becomes an EXPERIENCE as the lost (both in the church and outside) find their hearts strangely warmed by the move of God in the Holy Spirit leading one to know that he/she indeed trusts in Christ and Christ alone, for salvation. 

MOVEMENT

Out of a fellowship of giving, God has brought forth a movement of VICTORY. It wouldn’t be long before we see a great VICTORIOUS FELLOWSHIP not only dotting the landscape of Mid-South America but all parts of the world until at last ~ at the day of HIS APPEARANCE, it is…

– from every nation (e.g United States, Kenya, Tanzania, Canada, Mexico, Tunisia, Italy and etc), 
– from every tribe (e.g Igbo, Lisu, Kipsigis, Celtics, Franks, and etc), 
– from every people groups (e.g Caucasian, Mongoloid or Negroid), and 
– from every language (e.g Kiswahili, Kalenjin, Spanish, French, English and etc), 

…. standing before the throne and before the Lamb (Rev. 7:9).

THE WALK

The Kingdom of heaven shouts in VICTORY when those who have been added to Heaven’s Book of life begin to WALK IN VICTORY.

There is more that God can do than simply a few Kenyans and Mexicans bursting forth in a song of victory. God is calling the church in America and all people to WALK IN VICTORY over the sin that easily entangles. 

God’s people must walk in victory over racial, and all other forms of harassment; victory over stinginess in the name of frugality; victory over greed hidden in form of stewardship; victory over pride hidden in form of doing all the good you can to all the people you can, ~ and so many other sins that has crippled the work of the gospel in the land for so long. 

ELECTIONS

We can all join in prayers for our friends and fellow brothers and sisters in Christ who will gather in Alabama next month to choose a new president and make further decision about fellowship in giving to God’s mission so that the Kingdom of Heaven might continue to shout in victory every time a new born soul says “I’ve been redeemed!” In giving, you should remember the words of the Lord Jesus: ‘It is more blessed to give than to receive (Acts 20:35).

Election of a Presiding elder with a missionary zeal is the basis for resolving many issues facing the work of Home Missions. There is a need for a leader who will not stoop down to become a bishop. There is a need for a leader who will lead the church through a journey of public confession and repentance (in the light of God’s grace) rather than condemnation and disciplinary action (in the light of man-made laws). God is holy, merciful and full of grace. When the nation of Nineveh heard the gospel, they repented and as a consequence, God relented and his wrath thwarted. 

It is time for judgment to begin with God’s household; and if it begins with us, what will the outcome be for those who do not obey the gospel of God? ( 1 Peter 4:17).

THE FELLOWSHIP

It began as a fellowship of sacrificial giving and incorporated as Victory Fellowship with realization that something with potentials to be the flagship of home missions work the General church can dream about had been birthed by God at the bosom of the General Conference 

At this critical juncture, it is only the intervention of GOD that will save the denomination that gave birth to this vision from a path to theological liberalism and apostasy. 

When we began to call our brothers and sisters mistakers in need of correction and trial rather our fellow friends and sinners in need of a Savior like us, then we have drifted to another gospel. 

A different gospel (Galatians 1:6) will put people on trial, classifying them {in stereotypical way) as mistakers – But true Gospel will guide all people gently and lovingly to salvation through repentance at the convicting work of the Holy Spirit that leads to forgiveness and remissions of sins in the name of Jesus, and as a result, reconciliation with God and with one another. 

Liberal tendencies shows itself also in how we do God’s missions abroad and at home. There has been tendencies to yield without knowing to un~scriptural church extension methods aimed at saving the college and foreign missions rather than church extension work on the basis of FELLOWSHIP in sacrificial giving towards God’s MISSION at HOME {i.e North America} so that the lost, the searchers and the next generation of Americans might hear the good news and in love for God support the College and Foreign Missions.

And so we pray to GOD to raise someone who will keep that beloved denomination close to a reliable Bible for the sake of evangelistic and missionary outreach.

The Accuser Rebuked

38 Zechariah
Zechariah 3:1-3

3 Then [the guiding angel] showed me Joshua the high priest standing before [a]the Angel of the Lord, and Satan standing at Joshua’s right hand to be his adversary and to accuse him.
2 And the Lord said to Satan, The Lord rebuke you, O Satan! Even the Lord, Who [now and habitually] chooses Jerusalem, rebuke you! Is not this [returned captive Joshua] a brand plucked out of the fire?

Unedited Notes

We read the words of the BIBLE, but we cannot understand it without the anointing of the HOLY SPIRIT.

There is a time for talk, there is a time for action. God has brought Israel to appoint where some people have travel back to rebuilt the temple and there are people who have not left. But we understood, it was more than that. It is not about nationhood essentially, it is about a house dedicated to the house of GOD. And God is with them

God has not promised that when you do right, you will not be opposed. The contrary is true. The more you are like Christ, the more you are likely to have opposition.

How can they be stopped? What power can stop them now? And when nothing else can stop you down… then it is the power from within. If you begin to doubt in your heart that it is possible to stopped,

Satan is anxious to see you fail. God is not willing (says the bible) that any should perishing. God has stated where he is. Then one who is against you is the one to get you in trouble. It is not fair for someone to get you in trouble, for somebody to get you in trouble, watch you when you go, check you when you get and take down notes saying – I got you… And then when you are about to do something great… reminds you who you are…

Be careful who you let describe you anyhow…. See yourselves according to the pages of the BIBLE. The bible doesn’t change what it says regardless of who reads it.

In the midst of making so much progress, the devil begins to tell them who they are and they loose their enthusiasms….

When you are excited you work and you respond they way your culture tells you to respond. I respond the way God tells me to respond. It is terrible when you don’t have enthusiasm….

Enthusiasm was there until the devil took away. In this passage, Israelite have lost enthusiasm. In the midst of this, God say, I know what I will do, I will give Zechariah a vision.  Visions comes from God. If it comes from you – I will ignore it. If it comes from you, it is my opinion – ignore it, but IF the vision comes from GOD????

Everything we can do adds to filthy rags. My only righteousness comes from GOD. We don’t deserve anything GOOD. We don’t deserve mercy.. We deserve JUSTICE, but GOD’s mercy is equal to HIS justice. God’s justice doesn’t overrun mercy. Woe unto me if justice gets here befoer mercy gets here. Thank God that when God’s justice arrives, Mercy comes quickly…. NOTHING IN MY HANDS I bring… simply to the CROSS I BRING… Claiming the merits of the BLOOD of JESUS….

You can do one thing when you think you are right. If JUSTICE was to come here, no one would remain in our churches.

WHEN GOD STEPS IN!

PURITANISM

PuritansPuritanism was at heart a spiritual movement, passionately concerned with God and godliness. It began in England with William Tyndale the Bible translator, Luther’s contemporary, a generation before the word “Puritan” was coined, and it continued till the latter years of the seventeenth century, some decades after “Puritan” had fallen out of use …

Puritanism was essentially a movement for church reform, pastoral renewal and evangelism, and spiritual revival … The Puritan goal was to complete what England’s Reformation began: to finish reshaping Anglican worship, to introduce effective church discipline into Anglican parishes, to establish righteousness in the political, domestic, and socioeconomic fields, and to convert all Englishmen to a vigorous evangelical faith.

Edwardian Era ~ (1901 to 1910)

220px-Edward_VII_in_coronation_robes

The Edwardian era or Edwardian period in the United Kingdom is the period covering the reign of King Edward VII, 1901 to 1910, and is sometimes extended beyond Edward’s death to include years leading up to World War I.

The death of Queen Victoria in January 1901 and the succession of her son Edward marked the end of the Victorian era. While Victoria had shunned society, Edward was the leader of a fashionable elite that set a style influenced by the art and fashions of Continental Europe—perhaps because of the King’s fondness for travel. The era was marked by significant shifts in politics as sections of society that had been largely excluded from wielding power in the past, such as common labourers and women, became increasingly politicised.[1]

The Edwardian period is frequently extended beyond Edward’s death in 1910 to include the years up to the sinking of the RMS Titanic in 1912, the start of World War I in 1914, the end of hostilities with Germany in 1918, or the signing of the Treaty of Versailles in 1919.

Victorian Era {1837–1901}

220px-Queen_Victoria_1887
The Victorian era of British history (and that of the British Empire) was the period of Queen Victoria‘s reign from 20 June 1837 until her death, on 22 January 1901. It was a long period of peace, prosperity, refined sensibilities and national self-confidence for Britain.[1] Some scholars date the beginning of the period in terms of sensibilities and political concerns to the passage of the Reform Act 1832. The era was preceded by the Georgian period and followed by the Edwardian period. The later half of the Victorian age roughly coincided with the first portion of the Belle Époque era of continental Europe and the Gilded Age of the United States.

Culturally there was a transition away from the rationalism of the Georgian period and toward romanticism and mysticism with regard to religion, social values, and arts.[2] In international relations the era was a long period of peace, known as the Pax Britannica, and economic, colonial, and industrial consolidation, temporarily disrupted by the Crimean War in 1854. The end of the period saw theBoer War. Domestically, the agenda was increasingly liberal with a number of shifts in the direction of gradual political reform, industrial reform and the widening of the voting franchise.

Two especially important figures in this period of British history are the prime ministers Gladstone and Disraeli, whose contrasting views changed the course of history. Disraeli, favoured by the queen, was a gregarious Tory. His rival Gladstone, a Liberal distrusted by the Queen, served more terms and oversaw much of the overall law-making of the era.

The population of England and Wales combined almost doubled from 16.8 million in 1851 to 30.5 million in 1901.[3] Scotland’s population also rose rapidly, from 2.8 million in 1851 to 4.4 million in 1901. Ireland’s population decreased rapidly, from 8.2 million in 1841 to less than 4.5 million in 1901, mostly due to the Great Famine.[4] At the same time, around 15 million emigrants left the United Kingdom in the Victorian era and settled mostly in the United States, Canada, and Australia.[5]

During the early part of the era, the House of Commons was headed by the two parties, the Whigs and the Tories. From the late 1850s onwards, the Whigs became the Liberals; the Tories became the Conservatives. These parties were led by many prominent statesmen including Lord Melbourne, Sir Robert PeelLord DerbyLord PalmerstonWilliam Ewart GladstoneBenjamin Disraeli, andLord Salisbury. The unsolved problems relating to Irish Home Rule played a great part in politics in the later Victorian era, particularly in view of Gladstone’s determination to achieve a political settlement. Southern Ireland achieved independence in 1922

Georgian Era ~ (1714–1830)

120px-GeorgeIKneller1714The Georgian era of British history is a period which takes its name from, and is normally defined as spanning the reigns of, the first four Hanoverian kings of Great Britain (later the United Kingdom), who were all named ‘George’: George IGeorge IIGeorge III andGeorge IV.

The era covers the period from 1714 to 1837, with the sub-period of the Regency defined by the Regency of George IV as Prince of Wales during the illness of his father George III. The last Hanoverian monarch of the UK was William’s niece Queen Victoria who is the namesake of the following historical era, the Victorian, which is usually defined as occurring from the start of her reign, when William died, and continuing until her death.

Elizabethan Era ~ (1558–1603)

queen elizabeth

 

The Elizabethan era was the epoch in English history of Queen Elizabeth I‘s reign (1558–1603). Historians often depict it as the golden age in English history. The symbol of Britannia was first used in 1572 and often thereafter to mark the Elizabethan age as a renaissance that inspired national pride through classical ideals, international expansion, and naval triumph over the hated Spanish foe. In terms of the entire century, the historian John Guy (1988) argues that “England was economically healthier, more expansive, and more optimistic under the Tudors” than at any time in a thousand years.[1]

This “golden age”[2] represented the apogee of the English Renaissance and saw the flowering of poetry, music and literature. The era is most famous for theatre, as William Shakespeare and many others composed plays that broke free of England’s past style of theatre. It was an age of exploration and expansion abroad, while back at home, the Protestant Reformation became more acceptable to the people, most certainly after the Spanish Armada was repulsed. It was also the end of the period when England was a separate realm before its royal union with Scotland.

The Elizabethan Age is viewed so highly largely because of the periods before and after. It was a brief period of largely internal peace between the English Reformation and the battles between Protestants and Catholics and the battles between parliament and the monarchy that engulfed the seventeenth century. The Protestant/Catholic divide was settled, for a time, by the Elizabethan Religious Settlement, and parliament was not yet strong enough to challenge royal absolutism.

England was also well-off compared to the other nations of Europe. The Italian Renaissance had come to an end under the weight of foreign domination of the peninsula. France was embroiled in its own religious battles that would only be settled in 1598 with the Edict of Nantes. In part because of this, but also because the English had been expelled from their last outposts on the continent, the centuries long conflict between France and England was largely suspended for most of Elizabeth’s reign.

The one great rival was Spain, with which England clashed both in Europe and the Americas in skirmishes that exploded into theAnglo-Spanish War of 1585–1604. An attempt by Philip II of Spain to invade England with the Spanish Armada in 1588 was famously defeated, but the tide of war turned against England with an unsuccessful expedition to Portugal and the Azores, the Drake-Norris Expedition of 1589. Thereafter Spain provided some support for Irish Catholics in a debilitating rebellion against English rule, and Spanish naval and land forces inflicted a series of reversals against English offensives. This drained both the English Exchequer and economy that had been so carefully restored under Elizabeth’s prudent guidance. English commercial and territorial expansion would be limited until the signing of the Treaty of Londonthe year following Elizabeth’s death.

England during this period had a centralised, well-organised, and effective government, largely a result of the reforms of Henry VII and Henry VIII. Economically, the country began to benefit greatly from the new era of trans-Atlantic trade.

JAMES BOYCE

~ DON’T LISTEN TO THE ACCUSATIONS OF THE EVIL ONE~

In 1859, James Boyce was moved by God to found SBTS in Greenville South Carolina with a commitment to contend for the faith once delivered to the saints (Jude 1:3).

Three years later, the forces beyond control closed the seminary. For about six years, Boyce was in a valley of decision, managing failure and wrestling with God.

In 1865, God stirred Boyce ~again~ to call a few friends to begin the Seminary ….. again. At that conferencing, they refused to listen to the accusation of the evil one and the Kingdom of heaven gave a shout in victory when God smiled as those in attendance conquered their fear of failure and decided to agree that if the vision of a biblical Seminary they held so dear in their hearts must die, then they are the ones to die first.

At once they set out to begin again, later relocating the Seminary to Louisville, Kentucky in order to secure the school financially and extend the reach of the Seminary. 155 years later, we can testify that God’s hand was in the failure and God’s hand was in the beginning again.

SBTS and Boyce College today are among the world’s best evangelicals schools, totally committed to the Bible as the Word of God, to the Great Commission as our mandate, and the work of training, educating, and preparing ministers of the gospel for more faithful service.

Dietrich Bonhoeffer

4 February 1906 – 9 April 1945

Dietrich Bonhoeffer was a theologian, martyr, a spiritual writer, a musician, a pastor, and an author of poetry and fiction. The integrity of his Christian faith and life, and the international appeal of his writings, have received broad recognition and admiration, all of which has led to a consensus that he is one of the theologians of his time whose theological reflections might lead future generations of Christians into creating a new more spiritual and responsible millennium.

Dietrich Bonhoeffer was a German theologian famous for his stand against Adolf Hitler and the Nazi party. His beliefs and convictions ultimately cost him his life in a Nazi concentration camp. Dietrich Bonhoeffer was one of the most famous theologians and martyrs of the 20th century.

images

Bonhoeffer was not raised in a particularly radical environment. He was born into an aristocratic family. His mother was daughter of the preacher at the court of Kaiser Wilhelm II, and his father was a prominent neurologist and professor of psychiatry at the University of Berlin.

All eight children were raised in a liberal, nominally religious environment and were encouraged to dabble in great literature and the fine arts. Bonhoeffer’s skill at the piano, in fact, led some in his family to believe he was headed for a career in music. When at age 14, Dietrich announced he intended to become a minister and theologian, the family was not pleased.

Bonhoeffer graduated from the University of Berlin in 1927, at age 21, and then spent some months in Spain as an assistant pastor to a German congregation. Then it was back to Germany to write a dissertation, which would grant him the right to a university appointment. He then spent a year in America, at New York’s Union Theological Seminary, before returning to the post of lecturer at the University of Berlin.

During these years, Hitler rose in power, becoming chancellor of Germany in January 1933, and president a year and a half later. Hitler’s anti-Semitic rhetoric and actions intensified—as did his opposition, which included the likes of theologian Karl Barth, pastor Martin Niemoller, and the young Bonhoeffer. Together with other pastors and theologians, they organized the Confessing Church, which announced publicly in its Barmen Declaration (1934) its allegiance first to Jesus Christ: “We repudiate the false teaching that the church can and must recognize yet other happenings and powers, personalities and truths as divine revelation alongside this one Word of God. … “

In the meantime, Bonhoeffer had written The Cost of Discipleship (1937), a call to more faithful and radical obedience to Christ and a severe rebuke of comfortable Christianity: “Cheap grace is preaching forgiveness without requiring repentance, baptism without church discipline, Communion without confession. … Cheap grace is grace without discipleship, grace without the cross, grace without Jesus Christ, living and incarnate.”

During this time, Bonhoeffer was teaching pastors in an underground seminary, Finkenwalde (the government had banned him from teaching openly). But after the seminary was discovered and closed, the Confessing Church became increasingly reluctant to speak out against Hitler, and moral opposition proved increasingly ineffective, so Bonhoeffer began to change his strategy. To this point he had been a pacifist, and he had tried to oppose the Nazis through religious action and moral persuasion.

Bonhoeffer spent two years in prison, corresponding with family and friends, pastoring fellow prisoners, and reflecting on the meaning of “Jesus Christ for today.” As the months progressed, be began outlining a new theology, penning enigmatic lines that had been inspired by his reflections on the nature of Christian action in history.

“God lets himself be pushed out of the world on to the cross,” he wrote. “He is weak and powerless in the world, and that is precisely the way, the only way, in which he is with us and helps us. [The Bible] … makes quite clear that Christ helps us, not by virtue of his omnipotence, but by virtue of his weakness and suffering. … The Bible directs man to God’s powerlessness and suffering; only the suffering God can help.”

In another passage, he said, “To be a Christian does not mean to be religious in a particular way, to make something of oneself (a sinner, a penitent, or a saint) on the basis of some method or other, but to be a man—not a type of man, but the man that Christ creates in us. It is not the religious act that makes the Christian, but participation in the sufferings of God in the secular life.”

Eventually, Bonhoeffer was transferred from Tegel to Buchenwald and then to the extermination camp at Flossenbürg. On April 9, 1945, one month before Germany surrendered, he was hanged with six other resisters.

A decade later, a camp doctor who witnessed Bonhoeffer’s hanging described the scene: “The prisoners … were taken from their cells, and the verdicts of court martial read out to them. Through the half-open door in one room of the huts, I saw Pastor Bonhoeffer, before taking off his prison garb, kneeling on the floor praying fervently to his God. I was most deeply moved by the way this lovable man prayed, so devout and so certain that God heard his prayer. At the place of execution, he again said a prayer and then climbed the steps to the gallows, brave and composed. His death ensued in a few seconds. In the almost 50 years that I have worked as a doctor, I have hardly ever seen a man die so entirely submissive to the will of God.”

Faith and Repentance Inseparable

‘Repent ye, and believe the gospel.’—Mark 1:15

Our Lord Jesus Christ commences his ministry by announcing its leading commands. He cometh up from the wilderness newly anointed, like the bridegroom from his chamber; his love notes are repentance and faith. He cometh forth fully prepared for his office, having been in the desert,

“tempted in all points as we are, yet without sin”;

his loins are girded like a strong man to run a race. He preacheth with all the earnestness of a new zeal, combined with all the wisdom of a long preparation; in the beauty of holiness from the womb of morning he glittereth with the dew of his youth. Hear, O heavens, and give ear, O earth, for Messias speaketh in the greatness of his strength. He crieth unto the sons of men,

“Repent ye, and believe the gospel.”

Let us give our ears to these words which, like their author, are full of grace and truth. Before us we have the sum and substance of Jesus Christ’s whole teaching—the Alpha and Omega of his entire ministry; and coming from the lips of such an one, at such a time, with such peculiar power, let us give the most earnest heed, and may God help us to obey them from our inmost hearts.

    I. I shall commence my remarking that the gospel which Christ preached was, very plainly, a command. “Repent ye, and believe the gospel.” Our Lord does condescend to reason. Often his ministry graciously acted out the old text,

“Come, now, and let us reason together; though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as wool.”

He does persuade men by telling and forcible arguments, which should lead them to seek the salvation of their souls. He does invite men, and oh, how lovingly he woos them to be wise.

Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.

He doesentreat men; he condescendeth to become, as it were, a beggar to his own sinful creatures, beseeching them to come to him. Indeed, he maketh this to be the duty of his ministers, “As though God did beseech you by us, we pray you, in Christ’s stead, be ye reconciled to God.” Yet, remember, though he condescendeth to reason, to persuade, to invite, and to beseech, still his gospel hath in it all the dignity and force of a command; and if we would preach it in these days as Christ did, we must proclaim it as a command from God, attended with a divine sanction, and not to be neglected save at the infinite peril of the soul.

When the feast was spread upon the table for the marriage-supper, there was an invitation, but it had all the obligation of a command, since those who rejected it were utterly destroyed as despisers of their king. When the builders reject Christ, he becomes a stone of stumbling to “the disobedient”; but how could they disobey if there were no command? The gospel contemplates, I say, invitations, entreaties, and beseechings, but it also takes the higher ground of authority.

“Repent ye” is as much a command of God as “Thou shalt not steal.” “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ” has as fully a divine authority as “Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, with all thy soul, with all thy strength.”

Think not, O men, that the gospel is a thing left to your option to choose it or not! Dream not, O sinners, that ye may despise the Word from heaven and incur no guilt! Think not that ye may neglect it and no ill consequences shall follow! It is just this neglect and despising of yours which shall fill up the measure of your iniquity. It is this concerning which we cry aloud,

“How shall we escape if we neglect so great a salvation!”

Godcommands you to repent. The same God before whom Sinai was moved and was altogether on a smoke—that same God who proclaimed the law with sound of trumpet, with lightnings and with thunders, speaketh to us more gently, but still as divinely, through his only begotten Son, when he saith to us, “Repent ye, and believe the gospel.”
    Why is this, dear friends; why has the Lord made it a command to us to believe in Christ? There is a blessed reason. Many souls would never venture to believe at all if it were not made penal to refuse to do so. For this is the difficulty with many awakened sinners: may I believe? Have I a right to believe? Am I permitted to trust Christ? Now this question is put aside, once for all, and should never irritate a broken heart again. You are commanded by God to do it, therefore you may do it.

Every creature under heaven is commanded to believe in the Lord Jesus, and bow the knee at his name; every creature, wherever the gospel comes, wherever the truth is preached, is commanded there and then to believe the gospel; and it is put in that shape, I say, least any conscience-stricken sinner should question whether he may do it.

Surely, you may do what God commands you to do. You may know this in the devil’s teeth—”I may do it; I am bidden to do it by him who hath authority, and I am threatened if I do not with eternal damnation from his presence, for ‘he that believeth not shall be damned.'” This gives the sinner such a blessed permit, that whatever he may be or may not be, whatever he may have felt or may not have felt, he has a warrant which he may use whenever he is led to approach the cross. However benighted and darkened you may be, however hard-hearted and callous you may be, you have still a warrant to look to Jesus in the words, “Look unto me and be ye saved all ye ends of the earth.”

He that commanded thee to believe will justify thee in believing; he cannot condemn thee for that which he himself bids thee do. But while there is this blessed reason for the gospel’s being a command, there is yet another solemn and an awful one. It is that men may be without excuse in the day of judgment; that no man may say at the last, “Lord, I did not know that I might believe in Christ; Lord, heaven’s gate was shut in my face; I was told that I might not come, that I was not the man.” “Nay,” saith the Lord, with tones of thunder,

“the times of man’s ignorance I winked at, but in the gospel I commanded all men everywhere to repent;

I sent my Son, and then I sent my apostles, and afterwards my ministers, and I bade them all make this the burden of their cry, ‘Repent and be converted everyone of you’; and as Peter preached at Pentecost, so bade I them preach to thee. I bade them warn, exhort, and invite with all affection, but also to command with all authority, compelling you to come in, and inasmuch as you did not come at my command, you have added sin to sin; you have added the suicide of your own soul to all your other iniquities; and now, inasmuch as you did reject my Son, you shall have the portion of unbelievers, for ‘he that believeth not shall be damned.'”

To all the nations of the earth, then, let us sound forth this decree from God. O men, Jehovah that made you, he who gives you the breath of your nostrils, he against whom you have offended, commands you this day to repent and believe the gospel. He gives his promise—

“He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved”; and he adds the solemn threatening—”He that believeth not shall be damned.”

I know some brethren will not like this, but that I cannot help. The slave of systems I will never be, for the Lord has loosed this iron bondage from my neck, and now I am the joyful servant of the truth which maketh free. Offend or please, as God shall help me, I will preach every truth as I learn it from the Word; and I know if there be anything written in the Bible at all it is written as with a sunbeam, that God in Christ commandeth men to repent, and believe the gospel.

It is one of the saddest proofs of man’s utter depravity that he will not obey this command, but that he will despise Christ, and so make his doom worse than the doom of Sodom and Gomorrah.

Without the regenerating work of God the Holy Ghost, no man ever will be obedient to this command, but still it must be published for a witness against them if they reject it; and while publishing God’s command with all simplicity, we may expect that he will divinely enforce it in the souls of those whom he has ordained unto eternal life.

    II. While the gospel is a command, it is a two-fold command explaining itself. “Repent ye, and believe the gospel.”
    I know some very excellent brethren—would God there were more like them in zeal and love—who, in their zeal to preach up simple faith in Christ have felt a little difficulty about the matter of repentance; and I have known some of them who have tried to get over the difficulty by softening down the apparent hardness of the word repentance, by expounding it according to its more usual Greek equivalent, a word which occurs in the original of my text, and signifies “to change one’s mind.”

Apparently they interpret repentance to be a somewhat slighter thing than we usually conceive it to be, a mere change of mind, in fact. Now, allow me to suggest to those dear brethren, that

the Holy Ghost never preaches repentance as a trifle; and the change of mind or understanding of which the gospel speaks is a very deep and solemn work, and must not on any account be depreciated.

Moreover, there is another word which is also used in the original Greek for repentance, not so often I admit, but still is used, which signifies “an after-care,” a word which has in it something more of sorrow and anxiety, than that which signifies changing one’s mind. There must be sorrow for sin and hatred of it in true repentance, or else I have read my Bible to little purpose. In very truth, I think there is no necessity for any other definition than that of the children’s hymn—

“Repentance is to leave the sins we loved before, and show that we in earnest grieve, By doing so no more.”

To repent does mean a change of mind; but then it is a thorough change of the understanding and all that is in the mind, so that it includes an illumination, an illumination of the Holy Spirit; and I think it includes a discovery of iniquity and a hatred of it, without which there can hardly be a genuine repentance. We must not, I think, undervalue repentance. It is a blessed grace of God the Holy Spirit, and it is absolutely necessary unto salvation.
    The command explains itself. We will take, first of all, repentance. It is quite certain that whatever the repentance here mentioned may be, it is a repentance perfectly consistent with faith; and therefore we get the explanation of what repentance must be, from its being connected with the next command,

“Believe the gospel.”

Then, dear friends, we may be sure that that unbelief which leads a man to think that his sin is too great for Christ to pardon it, is not the repentance meant here. Many who truly repent are tempted to believe that they are too great sinners for Christ to pardon. That, however, is not part of their repentance; it is a sin, a very great and grievous sin, for it is undervaluing the merit of Christ’s blood; it is a denial of the truthfulness of God’s promise; it is a detracting from the grace and favour of God who sent the gospel. Such a persuasion you must labour to get rid of, for it came from Satan, and not from the Holy Spirit.

God the Holy Ghost never did teach a man that his sins were too great to be forgiven, for that would be to make God the Holy Spirit to teach a lie. If any of you have a thought of that kind this morning, be rid of it; it cometh from the powers of darkness, and not from the Holy Ghost; and if some of you are troubled because you never were haunted by that fear, be glad instead of being troubled. He can save you; be you as black as hell he can save you; and it is a wicked falsehood, and a high insult against the high majesty of divine love when you are tempted to believe that you are past the mercy of God. That is not repentance, but a foul sin against the infinite mercy of God.
    Then, there is another spurious repentance which makes the sinner dwellupon the consequences of his sin, rather than upon the sin itself, and so keeps him from believing. I have known some sinners so distressed with fears of hell, and thoughts of death and of eternal judgment, that to use the words of one terrible preacher, “They have been shaken over the mouth of hell by their collar,” and have felt the torments of the pit before they went thither.

Dear friends, this is not repentance. Many a man has felt all that and has yet been lost. Look at many a dying man, tormented with remorse, who has had all its pangs and convictions, and yet has gone down to the grave without Christ and without hope. These things may come with repentance, but, they are not an essential part of it. That which is called law-work, in which the sinner is terrified with horrible thoughts that God’s mercy is gone for ever, may be permitted by God for some special purpose, but it is not repentance; in fact, it may often be devilish rather than heavenly, for, as John Bunyan tells us, Diabolus doth often beat the great hell-drum in the ears of the men of Mansoul, to prevent their hearing the sweet trumpet of the gospel which proclaimeth pardon to them. I tell thee, sinner, any repentance that keeps thee from believing in Christ is a repentance that needs to be repented of; any repentance that makes thee think Christ will not save thee, goes beyond the truth and against the truth, and the sooner thou are rid of it the better. God deliver thee from it, for the repentance that will save thee is quite consistent with faith in Christ.
    There is, again, a false repentance which leads men to hardness of heart and despair. We have known some seared as with a hot iron by burning remorse. They have said, “I have done much evil; there is no hope for me; I will not hear the Word any more.” If they hear it it is nothing to them, their hearts are hard as adamant. If they could once get the thought that God would forgive them, their hearts would flow in rivers of repentance; but no; they feel a kind of regret that they did wrong, but yet they go on in it all the same, feeling that there is no hope, and that they may as well continue to live as they were wont to do, and get the pleasures of sin since they cannot, as they think, have the pleasures of grace. Now, that is no repentance.

It is a fire which hardens, and not the Lord’s fire which melts; it may be a hammer, but it is a hammer used to knit the particles of your soul together, and not to break the heart. If, dear friends, you have never been the subject of these terrors do not desire them. Thank God if you have been brought to Jesus any how, but long not for needless horrors. Jesus saves you, not by what you feel, but by that finished work, that blood and righteousness which God accepted on your behalf.

Do remember that no repentance is worth having which is not perfectly consistent with faith in Christ. An old saint, on his sick-bed, once used this remarkable expression; “Lord, sink me low as hell in repentance; but”—and here is the beauty of it—”lift me high as heaven in faith.” Now, the repentance that sinks a man low as hell is of no use except there is faith also that lifts him as high as heaven, and the two are perfectly consistent one with the other.

A man may loathe and detest himself, and all the while he may know that Christ is able to save, and has saved him. In fact, this is how true Christians live; they repent as bitterly as for sin as if they knew they should be damned for it; but they rejoice as much in Christ as if sin were nothing at all.

Oh, how blessed it is to know where these two lines meet, the stripping of repentance, and the clothing of faith!

The repentance that ejects sin as an evil tenant, and the faith which admits Christ to be the sole master of the heart; the repentance which purges the soul from dead works, and the faith that fills the soul with living works; the repentance which pulls down, and the faith which builds up; the repentance that scatters stones, and the faith which puts stones together; the repentance which ordains a time to weep, and the faith that gives a time to dance— these two things together make up the work of grace within, whereby men’s souls are saved.

Be it, then laid down as a great truth, most plainly written in our text, that the repentance we ought to preach is one connected with faith, and thus we may preach repentance and faith together without any difficulty whatever.

    Having shown you what this repentance is not, let us dwell for a moment on what it is. The repentance which is here commanded is the result of faith; it is born at the same time with faith—they are twins, and to say which is the elder-born passes my knowledge. It is a great mystery;

faith is before repentance in some of its acts, and repentance before faith in another view of it; the fact being that they come into the soul together.

Now, a repentance which makes me weep and abhor my past life because of the love of Christ which has pardoned it, is the right repentance. When I can say, “My sin is washed away by Jesu’s blood,” and then repent because I so sinned as to make it necessary that Christ should die—that dove-eyed repentance which looks at his bleeding wounds, and feels that her heart must bleed because she wounded Christ—that broken heart that breaks because Christ was nailed to the cross for it—that is the repentance which bringeth us salvation.
    Again, the repentance which makes us avoid present sin because of the love of God who died for us, this also is saving repentance. If I avoid sin to-day because I am afraid of being lost if I commit it, I have not the repentance of a child of God; but when I avoid it and seek to lead a holy life because Christ loved me and gave himself up for me, and because I am not my own, but am bought with a price, this is the work of the Spirit of God.
    And again, that change of mind, that after-carefulness which leads me to resolve that in future I will live like Jesus, and will not live unto the lusts of the flesh, because he hath redeemed me, not with corruptible things as silver and gold, but with his own precious blood—that is the repentance which will save me, and the repentance he asks of me. O ye nations of the earth, he asks not the repentance of Mount Sinai, while ye do fear and shake because his lightnings are abroad; but he asks you to weep and wail because of him; to look on him whom you have pierced, and to mourn for him as a man mourneth for his only son; he bids you remember that you nailed the Saviour to the tree, and asks that this argument may make you hate the murderous sins which fastened the Saviour there, and put the Lord of glory to an ignominious and an accursed death. This is the only repentance we have to preach; not law and terrors; not despair; not driving men to self-murder—this is the terror of the world which worketh death; but godly sorrow is a sorrow unto salvation though Jesus Christ our Lord.
    This brings me to the second half of the command, which is, “Believe the gospel.” Faith means trust in Christ. Now, I must again remark that some have preached this trust in Christ so well and so fully, that I can admire their faithfulness and bless God for them; yet there is a difficulty and a danger; it may be that in preaching simple trust in Christ as being the way of salvation, that they omit to remind the sinner that no faith can be genuine but such as is perfectly consistent with repentance for past sin; for my text seems to me to put it thus: no repentance is true but that which consorts with faith; no faith is true but that which is linked with a hearty and sincere repentance on account of past sin. So then, dear friends, those people who have a faith which allows them to think lightly of past sin, have the faith of devils, and not the faith of God’s elect.

Those who say, “Oh, as for the past, that is nothing; Jesus Christ has washed all that away”; and can talk about all the crimes of their youth, and the iniquitous of their riper years, as if they were mere trifles, and never think of shedding a tear; never feel their souls ready to burst because they should have been such great offenders—such men who can trifle with the past, and even fight their battles o’er again when their passions are too cold for new rebellions—I say that such who think sin a trifle and have never sorrowed on account of it, may know that their faith is not genuine. Such men as have a faith which allows them to live carelessly in the present who say, “Well, I am saved by a simple faith”; and then sit on the ale-bench with the drunkard, or stand at the bar with the spirit-drinker, or go into worldly company and enjoy the carnal pleasures and the lusts of the flesh, such men are liars; they have not the faith which will save the soul. They have a deceitful hypocrisy; they have not the faith which will bring them to heaven.
    And then, there be some other people who have a faith which leads them to no hatred of sin. They do not look upon sin in others with any kind of shame. It is true they would not do as others do, but then they can laugh at what others commit. They take pleasure in the vices of others; laugh at their profane jests, and smile at their loose speeches. They do not flee from sin as from a serpent, nor detest it as the murderer of their best friend. No, they dally with it; they make excuses for it; they commit in private what in public they condemn. They call grave offences slight faults and little defalcations; and in business they wink at departures from uprightness, and consider them to be mere matters of trade; the fact being that they have a faith which will sit down arm-in-arm with sin, and eat and drink at the same table with unrighteousness. Oh! if any of you have such a faith as this, I pray God to turn it out bag and baggage.

It is of no good to you; the sooner you are cleaned out of it the better for you, for when this sandy foundation shall all be washed away, perhaps you may then begin to build upon the rock. My dear friends, I would be very faithful with your souls, and would lay the lancet at each man’s heart. What is your repentance? Have you a repentance that leads you to look out of self to Christ, and to Christ only? On the other hand, have you that faith which leads you to true repentance; to hate the very thought of sin; so that the dearest idol you have known, whatever it may be, you desire to tear from its throne that you may worship Christ, and Christ only? Be assured of this, that nothing short of this will be of any use to you at the last.

A repentance and a faith of any other sort may do to please you now, as children are pleased with fancies; but when you get on a death-bed, and see the reality of things, you will be compelled to say that they are a falsehood and a refuge of lies. You will find that you have been daubed with untempered mortar; that you have said, “Peace, peace,” to yourselves, when there was no peace. Again, I say, in the words of Christ, “Repent and believe the gospel.” Trust Christ to save you, and lament that you need to be saved, and mourn because this need of yours has put the Saviour to open shame, to frightful sufferings, and to a terrible death.
    III. But we must pass on to a third remark. These commands of Christ are of the most reasonable character.
    Is it an unreasonable thing to demand of a man that he should repent? You have a person who has offended you; you are ready to forgive him; do you think it is at all exacting or overbearing if you ask of him an apology; if you merely ask him, as the very least thing he can do, to acknowledge that he has done wrong? “No,” say you, “I should think I showed my kindness in accepting rather than any harshness in demanding an apology from him.”

So God, against whom we have rebelled, who is our liege sovereign and monarch, seeth it to be inconsistent with the dignity of his kingship to absolve an offender who expresseth no contrition; and I say again, is this a harsh, exacting, unreasonable command? Doth God in this mode act like Solomon, who made the taxes of his people heavy? Rather doth he not ask of you that which your heart, if it were in a right state, would be but too willing to give, only too thankful that the Lord in his grace has said, “He that confesseth his sin shall find mercy”? Why, dear friends, do you expect to be saved while you are in your sins? Are you to be allowed to love your iniquities, and yet go to heaven? What, you think to have poison in your veins, and yet be healthy? What, man, keep the thief in doors, and yet be acquitted of dishonesty? Be stained, and yet be thought spotless? Harbour the disease and yet be in health? Ridiculous! Absurd!

Repentance is founded on the necessity of things. The demand for a change of heart is absolutely necessary; it is but a reasonable service. O that men were reasonable, and they would repent; it is because they are not reasonable that it needs the Holy Spirit to teach their reason right reason before they will repent and believe the gospel.
    And then, again, believing; is that an unreasonable thing to ask of you? For a creature to believe its Creator is but a duty; altogether apart from the promise of salvation, I say, God has a right to demand of the creature that he has made, that he should believe what he tells him. And what is it he asks you to believe? Anything hideous, contradictory, irrational? It may be above reason, but it is not contrary to reason. He asks you to believe that through the blood of Jesus Christ, he can still be just, and yet the justifier of the ungodly. He asks you to trust in Christ to save you.

Can you expect that he will save you if you will not trust him? Have you really the hardihood to think that he will carry you to heaven while all the while you declare he cannot do it? Do you think it consistent with the dignity of a Saviour to save you while you say, “I do not believe thou art a Saviour, and I will not trust thee”? Is it consistent with his dignity for him to save you, and suffer you to remain an unbelieving sinner, doubting his grace, mistrusting his love, slandering his character, doubting the efficacy of his blood, and of his plea? Why, man, it is the most reasonable thing in the world that he should demand of thee that thou shouldst believe in Christ.

And this he doth demand of thee this morning. “Repent and believe the gospel.” O friends, O friends, how sad, how sad is the state of man’s soul when he will not do this! We may preach to you, but you never will repent and believe the gospel. We may lay God’s command, like an axe, to the root of the tree, but, reasonable as these commands are, you will still refuse to give God his due; you will go on in your sins; you will not come unto him that you may have life; and it is here the Spirit of God must come in to work in the souls of the elect to make them willing in the day of his power. But oh! in God’s name I warn you that, if, after hearing this command, you do, as I know you will do, without his Spirit, continue to refuse obedience to so reasonable a gospel, you shall find at the last it shall be more tolerable for Sodom and Gomorrah, than for you; for had the things which are preached in London been proclaimed in Sodom and Gomorrah, they would have repented long ago in sackcloth and in ashes. Woe unto you, inhabitants of London! Woe unto you, subjects of the British Empire! for if the truths which have been declared in your streets had been preached to Tyre and Sidon, they would have continued even unto this day.
    IV. But still, to pass on, I have yet a fourth remark to make, and that is,this is a command which demands immediate obedience. I do not know how it is, let us preach as we may, we cannot lead others to think that there is any great alarm, that there is any reason why they should think about their soulsnow. Last night there was a review on Wimbledon Common, and living not very far away from it, I could hear in one perpetual roll the cracks of the rifles and the thunder of cannon.

One remarked to me, “Supposing there really were war there, we should not sit quite so comfortably in our room with our window open, listening to all this noise.” No; and so when people come to chapel, they hear a sermon about repentance and faith; they listen to it. “What do you think of it?” “Oh—very well.” But suppose it were real; suppose they believed it to be real, would they sit quite so comfortably? Would they be quite so easy? Ah, no! But you do not think it is real. You do not think that the God who made you actually asks of you this day that you should repent and believe. Yes, sirs, but it is real, and it is your procrastination, it is your self-confidence that is the sham, the bubble that is soon to burst. God’s demand is the solemn reality, and if you could but hear it as it should be heard you would escape from your lives and flee for refuge to the hope that is set before you in the gospel, and you would do this to-day.

This is the command of Christ, I say, to-day. To-day isGod’s time. “To-day if ye will hear his voice, harden not your heart, as in the provocation.” “To-day,” the gospel always cries, for if it tolerated sin a single day, it were an unholy gospel. If the gospel told men to repent of sin to-morrow, it would give them an allowance to continue in it to-day, and that would indeed be to pander to men’s lusts. But the gospel maketh a clean sweep of sin, and demandeth of man that he should throw down the weapons of hisrebellion now. Down with them, man! every one of them.

Down, sir, down with them, and down with them now! You must not keep one of them; throw them down at once! The gospel challengeth him that he believe in Jesus now. So long as thou continuest in unbelief thou continuest in sin, and art increasing thy sin; and to give thee leave to be an unbeliever for an hour, were to pander to thy lusts; therefore it demandeth of thee faith, and faith now, for this is God’s time, and the time which holiness must demand of a sinner. Besides, sinner, it is thy time. This is the only time thou canst call thine own. To-morrow! Is there such a thing? In what calendar is it written save in the almanack of the fool? To-morrow! Oh, how hast thou ruined multitudes! “To-morrow,” say men; but like the hind-wheel of a chariot, they are always near to the front-wheel, always near to their duty; they still go on, and on, but never get one whit the nearer, for, travel as they may, to-morrow is still a little beyond them—but a little, and so they never come to Christ at all. This is how they speak, as an ancient poet said—

 

“‘I will to-morrow, that I will, I will be sure to do it’;
To-morrow comes, to-morrow goes, And still thou art ‘to do it’;
Thus, then, repentance is deferred from one day to another,
Until the day of death is one, And judgment is the other.”

O sons of men, always to be blessed, to be obedient, but never obedient, when will ye learn to be wise? This is your only time; it is God’s time, and this is the best time. You will never find it easier to repent than now; you will never find it easier to believe than now. It is impossible now except the Spirit of God be with you; it will be as impossible to-morrow; but if now you would believe and repent, the Spirit of God is in the gospel which I preach; and while I cry out to thee in God’s name, “Repent and believe,” he that bade me command you thus to do gives power with the command, that even as Christ spake to the waves and said, “Be still,” and they were still, and to the winds, “Be calm,”, and they were quiet, so when we speak to your proud heart it yields because of the grace that accompanies the word, and you repent and believe the gospel. So may it be, and may the message of this morning gather out the elect, and make them willing in the day of God’s power.
    But now, lastly, this command, while it has an immediate power, has also a continual force. “Repent ye, and believe the gospel,” is advice to the young beginner, and it is advice to the old grey-headed Christian, for this is our life all the way through—”Repent ye, and believe the gospel.” St. Anselm, who was a saint—and that is more than many of them were who were called so—St. Anselm once cried out “Oh! sinner that I have been, I will spend all the rest of my life in repenting of my whole life!”

And Rowland Hill, whom I think I might call St. Rowland, when he was near death, said he had one regret, and that was that a dear friend who had lived with him for sixty years would have to leave him at the gate of heaven. “That dear friend,” said he, “is repentance; repentance has been with me all my life, and I think I shall drop a tear,” said the good man, “as I go through the gates, to think that I can repent no more.”

Repentance is the daily and hourly duty of a man who believes in Christ; and as we walk by faith from the wicket gate to the celestial city, so our right-hand companion all the journey through must be repentance.

Why, dear friend, the Christian man, after he is saved, repents more than he ever did before, for now he repents not merely of overt deeds, but even of imaginations. He will take himself to task at night, and chide himself because he had tolerated one foul thought; because he has looked on vanity, though perhaps the heart had gone no further than the look of lust; because the thought of evil has flitted through the mind—for all this he will vex himself before God; and were it not that he still continues to believe the gospel, one foul imagination would be such a plague and sting to him, that he would have no peace and rest. When temptation comes to him the good man finds the use of repentance, for having hated sin and fled from it of old, he has ceased to be what he once was. One of the ancient fathers, we are told, had, before his conversion, lived with an ill woman, and some little time after, she accosted him as usual.

Knowing how likely he was to fall into sin he ran away with all his might, and she ran after him, crying, “Wherefore runnest thou away? It is I.” He answered, “I run away because I am not I; I am a new man.” Now, it is just that, “I am not I,” which keeps the Christian out of sin; that hating of the former “I,” that repenting of the old sin that maketh him run from evil, abhor it, and look not upon it, lest by his eyes he should be led into sin. Dear friend, the more the Christian man knows of Christ’s love, the more will he hate himself to think that he has sinned against such love. Every doctrine of the gospel will make a Christian man repent. Election, for instance. “How could I sin,” saith he. “I that was God’s favourite, chosen of him from before the foundation of the world?” Final perseverance will make him repent. “How can I sin,” says he, “that am loved so much and kept so surely? How can I be so villainous as to sin against everlasting mercy?” Take any doctrine you please, the Christian will make it a fount for sacred woe; and there are times when his faith in Christ will be so strong that his repentance will burst its bonds, and will cry with George Herbert—

 

“Oh, who will give me tears?
Come, all ye springs,
Ye clouds and rain dwell in my eyes,
My grief hath need of all the wat’ry things
That nature hath produc’d. Let ev’ry vein
Suck up a river to supply mine eyes,
My weary weeping eyes; too dry for me,
Unless they set new conduits, new supplies
To bear them out, and with my state agree.”

And all this is because he murdered Christ; because his sin nailed the Saviour to the tree; and therefore he weepeth and mourneth even to his life’s end. Sinning, repenting, and believing—these are three things that will keep with us till we die. Sinning will stop at the river Jordan; repentance will die triumphing over the dead body of sin; and faith itself, though perhaps it may cross the stream, will cease to be so needful as it has been here, for there we shall see even as we are seen, and shall know even as we are known.
    I send you away when I have once again solemnly declared my Master’s will to you this morning, “Repent ye, and believethegospel.”

Here are some of you come from foreign countries, and many of you are from our provincial towns in England; you came here, perhaps, to hear the preacher of whom many a strange thing has been said. Well and good, and may stranger things still be said if they will but bring men under the sound of the Word that they may be blessed.

Now, this I have to say to you this morning: In that great day when a congregation ten thousand times larger than this shall be assembled, and on the great white throne the Judge shall sit, there will be not a man, or woman, or child, who is here this morning, able to make excuse and say, “I did not hear the gospel; I did not know what I must do to be saved!” You have heard it: “Repent ye, and believe the gospel.” That is, trust Christ; believe that he is able and willing to save you. But there is something better.

In that great day, I say, there will be some of you present—oh! let us hope all of us—who will be able to say, “Thank God that ever I yielded up the weapons of my proud rebellion by repentance; thank God that I looked to Christ, and took him to be my Saviour from first to last; for here am I, a monument of grace, a sinner saved by blood, to praise him while time and eternity shall last!” God grant that we may meet each other at the last with joy and not with grief! I will be a swift witness against you to condemn you if you believe not this gospel; but if you repent and believe, then we shall praise that grace which turned our hearts, and so gave us the repentance which led us to trust Christ, and the faith which is the effectual gift of the Holy Spirit.

What shall I say more unto you? Wherefore, wherefore will you reject this? If I have spoken to you of fables, of fictions, of dreams, then turn on your heel and reject my discourse. If I have spoken in my own name, who am I that you should care one whit for me? But if I have preached that which Christ preached, “Repent ye, and believe the gospel,”

I charge you by the living God, I charge you by the world’s Redeemer, I charge you by cross of Calvary, and by the blood which stained the dust at Golgotha, obey this divine message and you shall have eternal life; but refuse it, and on your heads be your blood for ever and ever!

A Sermon Delivered on Sunday Morning, July 13th, 1862, by C. H. SPURGEON,

At the Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington


 

Lives of the Puritans

puritans

Of all books which can be put into your hands, those which relate the labours and sufferings of good men are the most interesting and instructive. In them you see orthodox principles, christian tempers, and holy duties, in lovely union and in vigorous operation.

In them you see religion shining forth in real life, subduing the corruptions of human nature, and inspiring a zeal for every good work. In them you see the reproaches and persecutions which the servants of God have endured; those gracious principles which have supported their minds; and the course they have pursued in their progress to the kingdom of heaven.

Such books are well calculated to engage your attention, to affect your feelings, to deepen your best impressions, and to invigorate your noblest resolutions. They are well calculated to fortify you against the allurements of a vain world; to assimilate your characters to those of the excellent of the earth; to conform your lives to the standard of holiness; and to educate your souls for the mansions of glory. — Benjamin Brook, Lives of the Puritans.

William Childs Robinson (1897-1982)

Robinso

In the early years of the second World War, the Japanese invasion of China forced missionaries from the Chinese field, including medical missionary L. Nelson Bell. Returning to the States, Bell found his Southern Presbyterian denomination in spiritual decline and slowly falling over into modernism and unbelief. As Dr. Bell settled in the Asheville, N.C. area, he joined with other like-minded men who had been discussing the denomination’s problems and who, since 1936, had been planning to establish a magazine as a voice for sound Biblical principles.

May 2, 1942 marks the first issue of The Southern Presbyterian Journal. Authors for that first issue included Dr. William Childs Robinson, Rev. E. Edwin Paulson, Rev. Robert F. Campbell, General Douglas MacArthur, Rev. Samuel McPheeters Glasgow, Rev. D.S. Gage and Rev. Daniel Iverson.

William Childs Robinson wrote the lead article, in which he set out four “banners” or defining principles of historic Presbyterianism, principles which had been formerly emulated among Southern Presbyterians. These four banners were loyalty to Christ as King, the Bible as the Word of God written, the Westminster Standards as an expression of sound doctrine, and lastly, the banner of the Great Commission. These were the values that the new magazine espoused as it sought to call the denomination back to faithfulness.

Robinson is little known in Britain, but his influence for good was widespread. Born into a Christian family in North Carolina in 1897 Robinson was converted early, and after training at Columbia Theological Seminary entered the ministry of the Southern Presbyterian Church in 1920. His pastoral experience was short, as his gifts as an inspiring teacher were recognised and he was called to a Professorship at Columbia Seminary in 1926: a position he held until his home-call in 1982! In this situation Robinson may be seen as the last in a distinguished line of famous Southern pastor-professors including J. H. Thornwell, B. M. Palmer, J. L. Girardeau and R. L. Dabney.

Robinson, however, was called to teach and train men to preach the everlasting gospel in a time and situation of ever increasing apostasy, as higher criticism, evolutionism, and ecumenicalism made their inroads, finally impacting the conservative ‘Bible Belt’ the US South and its theological Seminaries. Over the years Robinson became increasingly isolated from younger and more liberal colleagues and modernist students, although others made great sacrifices to sit under his teaching. It was these who Robinson saw as the real fruit of his calling – men who would go on to preach an uncompromised gospel to a needy world.

God’s Voice

God's voice

It is important for you to know how to grow in the grace and knowledge of Christ (2 Pet 3:18). Fortunately, God has not left us alone in this glorious task. He has given us fellow believers, the local church, pastors, the canon of Scripture and the Holy Spirit. Indeed, he has “granted to us all things that pertain to life and godliness” (2 Pet 1:3).

Living in Light of Sin and Evil

grace-scripture-1
Sin is not here because it is a metaphysical necessity tied to our finitude, nor is it here because that is just the way things are. Instead, sin and evil are a reality due to our moral rebellion against God in space-time history, and Scripture nowhere minimizes this fact. Sin entered the world by our creaturely act of rebellion, first in the angelic realm and then in the human world.

Scripture takes sin and evil so seriously that the entire plan of redemption is to destroy it and to remove it from God’s universe! And, thankfully, because sin and evil are not metaphysically necessary, in removing sin and evil, he does not have to scrap us and start all over again. Instead, God must remove our sin by paying for it in full in Christ’s cross, and then transform us by the power of the Spirit, thus restoring us to our state of goodness even in a greater way in Christ.

The God of the Bible stands absolutely opposed to sin and evil. The same Scripture which teaches that God foreordains all things, including sin and evil, also teaches that sin and evil are an abnormality, an intrusion and a distortion of his good world, which God alone can remedy by the incarnate Son, his cross work on our behalf, and the power of the Spirit to transform us.

Even though it is true that God makes use of evil in order to bring about his good purposes, Scripture never concludes that evil and sin are less than what Scripture says they are. Evil remains evil: totally, radically, and absolutely, and God stands completely against it as the entire storyline of Scripture makes abundantly clear.

In God’s plan of redemption, God not only demonstrates that he is sovereign over sin and evil, but also that in his sovereignty, holiness, justice, and grace he is rooting out sin and evil in the cross work of Christ, thus demonstrating that he is perfectly good and trustworthy.

Scripture teaches that in redemption, God is not indifferent to our suffering and plight. Even though we do not deserve anything from him but judgment, God has displayed his grace and has acted to defeat sin and evil. In fact, it is precisely because he is the sovereign and gracious Lord that we can have real hope, help, and comfort since he is able to sympathize with us and powerfully to save us. Is this not what Scripture teaches?

In the coming of Christ, the promised “age to come” has dawned and in his death and resurrection he has defeated sin, death, and the evil one and won for us our salvation (e.g. Rom 3:21-25; Col 2:13-15; Heb 2:14-15; 1 Cor 15:56-57; Rev 5). In so doing, God has demonstrated that he is utterly trustworthy, just, and good.

We might not know all the mysteries of his ways, yet we do know that the truth of God’s sovereignty and goodness is beyond question. In our redemption, God is not sitting idly by, without care or concern for his people. In the cross and resurrection we have the greatest demonstration imaginable of God’s sovereignty over evil and his willingness to identify with us in order to save us from sin, evil, and death.

In our facing suffering there are many questions. But as we think of our sufferings in light of Christ and his cross, we learn how to trust. God the Son has suffered unjust suffering and when we remember this, we learn that God is for us and not against us, and that he stands opposed to sin and evil in a far greater way than we can even imagine. After all, what does the incarnation of God’s Son, his life, death, and resurrection teach us if not that God hates sin and evil and that he powerfully acts to destroy it, even though it is part of his foreordained plan (Acts 2:23). Thus, if we can trust God in using evil for good purposes in Christ, we can certainly trust him in all other events, including our lives.

Jesus in all of his sovereignty stands in complete opposition to sin and evil, and we must do likewise. When moral evil takes place, we do not blame God. Rather, we fight sin and evil by proclaiming the Gospel, and by God’s grace, seeing people made new; by standing for justice and righteousness and punishing evildoers, through the appropriate authorities, for their responsible actions. We never justify sin and wrong actions by appealing to divine sovereignty at the expense of human responsibility, nor do we reduce God’s sovereignty in light of human choices. We hold the depth and breadth of biblical teaching together as we fight with all our might against sin and evil, in line with what God himself is doing.

When Peter asked about John’s future in John 21:15-23, Jesus never answered him directly but instead said, “Follow me.” Our lives are part of God’s sovereign plan and most of the time we do not know what the Lord has ordained for our lives. For us, as Christians, we are assured that even in our suffering in this life, which is part of the fallenness of this world order, God never allows us to experience anything we cannot bear by his grace and power (1 Cor 10:12-13).

Sometimes the suffering we experience is due to persecution for the Lord’s name, which we should consider joy (Mk 8:34-38; 2 Tim 3:12; 1 Pet 4:12-16). Other times it may be due to the discipline of the Lord (Heb 12:1ff). Yet in many cases, we experience difficulties related to the abnormality of this world and we do not know why the specific events have occurred. However, what we are assured of is this: our God is sovereign and the defeat of sin and evil is accomplished in Christ. We live our lives in full conviction that in Christ, we have every assurance that God is sovereign over evil and that until he returns, we can live confidently, trusting God’s promises and Word.

Here is the conclusion of the matter, our sovereign and gracious triune God is worthy of all of our confidence and trust. The entire storyline of Scripture gives us confidence that our sovereign God is working out all things in this world for his glory and our good (Rom 8:28).

We only have knowledge of God’s plan and actions as creatures, but in light of God’s actions in creation and redemption; in light of God’s incredible plan of redemption centered in the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ and his incredible triumphant cross work for us; we have every reason to trust what God has said and to live in confident expectation for our great and gracious God to consummate what has already begun in Christ in a glorious new heaven and new earth (see Rev 21-22).

While we continue to live between the ages, as we await the second coming of our Lord, may we live as those who trust God’s promises no matter what we experience, proclaim Christ as our only hope and salvation, and stand with our great God against sin and evil as we long for Christ’s appearing. It is my prayer that this issue of SBJT will help toward this end, for God’s glory and the good of the church.

Reference
Stephen J. Wellum, SBTS Resource