epcblog

Devotional thoughts (Monday through Thursday mornings) from the pastor of Exeter Presbyterian Church in Exeter, NH // Sunday Worship 10:30am // 73 Winter Street

Friday, July 31, 2009

More talk with God from Romans 4-5

4 This life of justification by a living faith that proceeds forward in works consistent with that faith is the story of the patriarch Abraham. Our faith is counted to us as righteousness apart from any of the works that we do. This does not mean that we don’t have to do works. Of course not. Real living faith will move forward in works, but those works are far from perfect, and they do not give us our legal standing. We need to trust in Your promise to us of the resurrection age to come. We believe in You. We are fully convinced that You are able to do what You have promised. We believe in the One who raised Jesus from the dead. He was delivered up for our trespasses and was raised for our justification.

5 Since we have been justified by faith, we have peace with You through Christ. We also have access through Him to much grace, and we rejoice in this future hope of resurrection glory that He has secured for us. Because of the greatness and the certainty of that future age of glory, we are even able to rejoice in our present sufferings, because we know that You are using those sufferings to produce endurance, character, and more hope in us. Our hope in the resurrection age will not be disappointed, because You have placed within us a vital part of the life of resurrection by pouring the Holy Spirit into our souls. Your Son died for the ungodly. Our justification is not based on our goodness. We have received reconciliation through Christ. We are connected to the world of resurrection through the one Man who won for us justification. Through Adam, death has reigned in this world, leading to condemnation for all men. But now, through faith in Christ, the free gift of righteousness will reign through eternal life for all who are united to Him. In this world sin has reigned in death because of Adam. But now, and forever and completely in the resurrection age, grace reigns through the righteousness that is through Jesus Christ our Lord.

Thursday, July 30, 2009

More talk with God from Romans 2-3

2 We have deserved Your judgment, and we make our case much worse by judging others, and doing the things that we judge in them. You will render to each one according to his works. There is a day of wrath coming. Who can stand in that day? There will be tribulation and distress for every human being who does evil, but glory and honor and peace for everyone who does good. How can we be judged as those who have done good? Your law is written on our consciences. It will not be the hearers of the law that will be justified in Your sight, but the doers of the law. Even our secrets will be known and judged by You. How will we be declared not guilty? It is one thing to teach others the Ten Commandments; it is another to actually keep these precepts. It won’t be enough for us to have the outward mark of the sacraments of Your church if we are law-breakers.

3 It is great to be a part of Your church. There we hear Your Word. But we see our guilt by Your Word. How can we be delivered from the mess of our guilt. We will only be found to be law-breakers along with all the wicked, both those who have been in the church and those who have been outside it. But now You have revealed to us another way, through faith in the one Law-Keeper, who also became for us the one Sin-Bearer. We have been justified by faith apart from the works of the Law.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

More talk with God from Romans 1

Thank You for the gospel, and for those who have been set apart to proclaim it. What is the good news if it does not conclude with the resurrection age that You promised through the Old Testament prophets? That age requires a man of power who can bring it about. Your Son was declared to be that man through His own resurrection from the dead. As we wait for that day, it is ours to pursue the obedience that consists of and proceeds from faith, and to seek to bring about that obedience of faith in one another. We are called to be holy, set apart from something and set apart for something; set apart from a perishing world, set apart for a world that will never perish. Even now we are set apart for something in this world, for the patient obedience and endurance that You command of us and grant to us as we wait for the coming again of Christ. May be mutually encouraged in the church by the faith that we have each been given. It is ours to live by faith. The facts of Your existence, Your eternal power, and Your divine nature should be plain to us and to everyone. The facts of our depravity should also be obvious. This cannot be the end of the story. There must be some glory beyond this present disorder and confusion. This better story is what You have promised through the prophets, and secured for us through Your Son Jesus Christ.

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Prayer based on Romans 16

Father God, thank You for Your servants throughout the church who are performing a great variety of good works in the Name of Your Son. We thank You for these men and women and ask that You would grant them great success in their important deeds of love and service. We thank You for the friends that You grant us as we labor together in Your body. May we never bring foolish obstacles in Your church, distracting others from the simple duty of faith working itself out through love. May we be wise in what is good and innocent concerning evil. Defeat Satan through Your church according to the power of the gospel and the will of Christ. Glorify Your Name forever, even using us for Your eternal purposes.

Monday, July 27, 2009

Prayer based on Romans 15

Glorious God, there are those around us everywhere who are in great need. We lift them up to You now. We long for Your blessing upon all of our brothers and sisters from every land. Your plan of redemption is so vast and so marvelous. Use the gifts that You have granted to us for the fulfillment of this great plan as we bring the gospel of Christ to all who have never heard of His glorious Name. We lift up to You the missionaries and pastors that we have had the blessing of knowing and supporting personally. We pray for Your financial provision for them. May they also be granted every spiritual gift, excellent health in body and mind, and true peace that can only come from You. Grant them fruitfulness in their labors for the glory of Your Name.

Sunday, July 26, 2009

Prayer based on Romans 14

Lord God, teach us to be patient and appropriately tolerant within Your church. May we live unto You in all situations, for we belong to You. Teach us not to despise one another, but show us the way of love. Grant us the spiritual strength to serve You in peace within the body of Christ. We want to see our brothers and sisters built up in faith and godliness. We want to walk in faith ourselves. We need to turn away from all arrogance. Teach us the wisdom that comes from following Your Son.

Saturday, July 25, 2009

Prayer based on Romans 13

Father God, thank You for the gift of civil authority structures that You have appointed in this world. Use them for Your good purposes in the restraint of evil and for the encouragement of good. May we rightly honor them, and joyfully follow them. We would cooperate with them as conscience permits, but may we not be distracted from seeking first Your kingdom and Your righteousness. Teach us to love our neighbors as ourselves. Salvation is nearer to us now than when we first believed. Grant us the incomparable blessing of the Spirit of Christ in us, that we would make no provision for the flesh to gratify its desires. In all these ways may we relate honorably with all those around us.

Friday, July 24, 2009

Prayer based on Romans 12

Merciful Lord, we think of the great story of grace that You have revealed to us in Christ, and we give ourselves again to You. Teach us how to be Your people, not as imitators of the world, but as members of one another within the glorious body of Christ. Grant us genuine love for one another and true goodness and affection. Teach us to serve You with energy and gladness in accord with the calling that You have given to each of us. Teach us how to live in this world by the power of Your Son as those who are committed to goodness and love.

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Prayer based on Romans 11

Our Father, do great and marvelous works of grace everywhere according to Your sovereign will. In every generation You have chosen a remnant by grace who will not bow the knee to Baal. We marvel that we have had such a spirit of stupor for so long, refusing to hear and love the truth. We grieve sincerely concerning the condition of those all around us who will not yet come to You. Father have mercy on a great host of Jews and Gentiles. Bring them in, O God. Your gifts and Your calling will never be taken away. All have been disobedient. We seek Your mercy upon all. You are God. You know the beginning from the end. Everything is from You. Everything comes through You. Everything is going to You. To You be glory forever.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Prayer based on Romans 10

O God, we submit now to Your plan for righteousness by faith. Christ, the fullness of all righteousness, has come from heaven to save us. He has now returned on high to send forth Your Holy Spirit upon Your chosen people. He has given to us the Word of truth which is being preached all over the world. That Word is near us, in our hearts and in our mouths. We believe in Him. We profess this faith within the assembly of those who call upon Your Name. Send forth many true ambassadors of the truth, so that the good news of this Word can go forward everywhere with great power. Grant us joy as we gather together in Your presence to call upon Your Name. Help us to remember that we are a part of a body that transcends our time and place. Help us to consider that we worship together with those who are alive with Christ in the heavens.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Prayer based on Romans 9

Sovereign God, we rejoice in Your plan for the salvation of Jews and Gentiles. Your promises to Your people of old have not failed, for not all of the children of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob according to the flesh were Your children according to the promise. Thank You for the grace of election in the lives of Your loved ones. You will have mercy on whom You will have mercy. We will not speak against You concerning Your judgments. We do not demand that we know or understand everything that You have done or everything that You will do. You will make known the riches of Your glory in all of Your great works according to Your own will and in Your own appointed time. We rejoice that some who were not viewed as Your people in former days have now been granted righteousness by faith in Your Son. Father, may we never stumble over Christ, for He is the Rock of our salvation.

Monday, July 20, 2009

Prayer based on Romans 8

Lord God, what a great and solid hope is ours through Christ! Help us by Your Spirit to live by that same Spirit rather than by the flesh. We have Your Spirit in us, and we belong to You. Even if our body should die because of sin, we shall be alive because of Jesus. Thanks be to You, O God, for this blessed assurance! You have given us hope for even the weakest saint. You will give life again to our mortal bodies. Teach us how to live. Teach us how to put to death the deeds of the flesh that we might live for You now in the way that we should. Thank You that You have granted to us the Spirit of Adoption, by which we cry out to You, our merciful Heavenly Father. Your Spirit bears witness with our spirits that we are Your children. Make us willing to suffer for You today, knowing the truth of the age of glory that is surely coming. We are longing for that day. We long for the redemption of our bodies. This is our hope. Help us now by Your Spirit, that we might know how to seek You in prayer. We know that You are for us. You loved us so long ago, and You have planned everything that is necessary for our joyful participation in the age of resurrection. Even now You will help us. One day we will see that You have given us all things. Father, may Your Son take our prayers and intercede for us in ways that are right and good. Please do not let anyone or anything separate us from Your love for us in Christ Jesus, our Lord.

Sunday, July 19, 2009

Prayer based on Romans 7

Father God, we have been released from the system of the Law, for we have died to the Law through the death of Christ. Fill us now with Your Spirit, that we might pursue obedience in a new and powerful way. We hate our sin. Will we ever have victory over such a powerful enemy? We thank You that we have seen our sin more clearly through the Law, but we need stronger help that we might stop sinning. Though in our minds we have had a desire to follow the good things in Your Law, our flesh has been too strong for us. We need Christ. We need the gift of the Holy Spirit. Thank You for Your bountiful provision. Now we humbly and earnestly beseech You that You would defeat sin in us day by day through Your presence and power at work within us.

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Prayer based on Romans 6

Our Father, help us moment by moment in our fight against sin. Thank You for our baptism. Help us to remember our union with Your Son. We have been united with Him in His life, in His death, and in His resurrection. He lives, and so shall we live. Let the fact of His resurrection remind us of our own resurrection which is surely coming. To continue in sin makes no sense for us. Why would we willingly present ourselves to sin as servants again? We have been saved from that horrible master. We do not want to serve him any more. We know that sin just leads to death. This is not the way for us. Our way is the way of life. Help us, O God, for we are still sinning.

Friday, July 17, 2009

Prayer based on Romans 5

Glorious Lord, do we now have access to You through Jesus Christ? We rejoice in Him. We rejoice even in our sufferings, for we know You are doing good things through whatever trials are appointed for us. We have peace with You in Him. He is our holy representative. He was the great Law-Keeper, and He did this for us. Now His obedience is credited to us. We give You glory for this great gift. We are so very thankful. We were dead in Adam’s transgression, but now we have found life through the righteousness of Jesus Christ, our Lord. Reign in our hearts day by day. What a joy is ours, for our Representative has won for us the most abundant blessings.

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Prayer based on Romans 4

Lord of Hosts, we could never have been justified by our works. Even Abraham was given righteousness by believing You. His works that proceeded from faith were the proof of Your gift of life to Him. With all who live in Your presence from every age we rejoice in You and in the blessing that has come to us by faith, for our sins have not been counted against us and our great debt has been forgiven. We also rejoice in the extent of Your mercy, for You have provided a way of righteousness for people from every land. What a glorious promise You made to Abraham so long ago! To think that such a great promise has now touched our lives! Surely we could never have received peace with You through the Law, but You have been pleased to give us the best of all gifts. Grant us growth in grace and faith day by day. We know that You will hear us when we cry out to You, for Your Son died for our sins, and He was raised for our justification.

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Prayer based on Romans 3

Lord God, we thank You for the privilege of being associated with Your worshipping assembly. Grant to us an appreciation of the reason for our acceptance in Your sight. Surely our confidence is only in Christ. The problem of unrighteousness is universal, but now You have shown us the way of life through the Substitute that You have appointed for us. By the works of the Law no one could ever be justified in Your sight. We have been saved by grace through faith in the great work of Your Son alone. He is our Propitiation. We boast in Christ, for we have been saved by Him apart from any good thing that we claim to accomplish. Thank You for Your abundant mercy.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Prayer based on Romans 2

Righteous Lord, would we dare to judge others when we would do the same things that we critique in them? You have been so kind to us, but we have not repented as we should. We are to be patient and careful in doing good, but we have sought out the evil way continually. Even when we have had much exposure to Your commandments, we still have not kept Your Law. Your Son will judge the secrets of men’s hearts when He returns. How will we stand? We cannot stand by Law. Even if we boast in our knowledge of the Law, still we violate Your precepts. Are we counting on some sacrament or family association to bring us peace with You? You require a true life of obedience, even love for You and for others from the depths of our hearts. We need Your appointed way of mercy, O God. Thank You for Jesus Christ.

Monday, July 13, 2009

Prayer based on Romans 1

Father God, we thank You for the calling that You have put upon our lives through the gift of Jesus Christ. We have received Your grace through Him and He has granted to us meaningful opportunities of love and service. We thank You for Your church. We pray that You would bless Your people everywhere with the truth of the gospel. We pray that this good news would be powerful for salvation through the gift of faith. Everyone knows of You by Your works of creation, yet we have been fools, for we would not worshiped and served You. Our lives have been examples of outrageous sin, even in ways that are contrary to nature and reason. In every way we have turned against You, and have encouraged others in pathways of evil. Our situation was desperate, but You have provided an answer for us in the righteousness and mercy of Your Son.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Prayer based on Leviticus 21

Great God, we thank You for the provision of the greatest Mediator, the Lord Jesus Christ, our High Priest. He is holy to You forever. We are His bride. Through Him we have been made holy, despite the obvious fact of our defiling sin. We were permanently stained by immorality and corruption. Yet Your Son has touched us and we are completely clean. If our skin were to show our record of disobedience, we would be full of every kind of defiling blemish. How would we be able to come into Your presence? Yet now we have bean cleansed by the blood of Christ.

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Prayer based on Ezekiel 1

Glorious Lord, You are with Your people in the place of exile and suffering. Your Word comes to us even there. You grant to us messages from Your heavenly courts to encourage us in the land of imprisonment. Thank You for the work of Your angels, who are before Your holy presence continually. There is so much that we do not understand. We ask that You would help us to know what we should know, and to have peace regarding those things that we cannot know at present. You go where You will, O God. We are confined to a place. We face limitations. You are different. You are a fiery presence of purity. We are afraid as we hear Your Word, and are comforted by our remembrance of Your Son’s death for sinners.

Friday, July 10, 2009

Romans 3

The big issue in Romans 1-3 is our right standing before God. Is that right standing through our own good intentions, our comparative merit to others around us, our understanding of some religious doctrine, our affirmation of God's Law, our ceremonial heritage within a community of faith? Paul has made the case that none of these things will do, and that God demands our obedience. Mankind as a whole have not given this to God, and even the Jews, His chosen people, have not given Him what He requires. They have only added to their own condemnation as lawbreakers by presuming to judge others. They themselves have commited the same violations that they see and condemn in others.

Since all are guilty before God according to our own merit, does that mean that their is no advantage in being a Jew at all? Is there no value in being marked as those who belong to the covenant people? While Paul indicates that there are many blessings that come to those who are in the Lord's covenant community. The first advantage that Paul lists is that the Israelites were entrusted with the oracles of God, meaning the Scriptures. There are certain things that we can know by natural revelation, even if we have no access to any written Word of God. We can know that there must be a God, an uncaused Cause of all things. We can know something of His power and wisdom, and many other worthy attributes. We can also observe brokenness around us, and consider that something somewhere has gone wrong. We can feel the yearning within our hearts for eternity, and for the removal of what seems unworthy of such a powerful and wise Creator. While we can know certain things, and strongly suspect many other truths, we cannot figure out what has gone wrong in our world; we cannot ascertain how, or even if, it will ever be fixed; we cannot know how we can be partakers of something better beyond this life unless God condescends to speak to us. This speech of God, the oracles that give us soul-satisfying answers to the big questions of life, have been granted to us by special revelation, and are recorded for the life of the covenant community in the inestimable gift of the Scriptures.

The Jews had this gift, and just because they ignored it or threw it away in disobedience did not make the gift of little value. We may try to come up with silly arguments to deny the blessings we have received, or to make our condemnation somehow God's fault rather than our own. We, all of us, both Jew and Gentile, need to come to terms with our true guilt before God. Are the Jews any better off than the Gentiles when it comes to the matter of our guilt before the Lord. No, the Scriptures document for us the way of the Israelites according to the works-like features of the Law. Did they retain the land and God's many blessings according to their works? No, they lost the land, the king, and the temple, and were sent into exile almost as if they were enemies of God, and certainly as those who were facing His serious correction. This is by no means the end of the story for the Jews, and let's not forget that Paul was born and died as a Jew, a Pharisaic Jew at his birth, and a Christian Jew at his death. Yet the Jews, by their works, fall into the worldwide universal category of those who would be enemies of God in the words of Psalm 14. According to that measure, there is no man who even seeks after God. We have all gone astray, and according to our own works of the Law, we cannot be justified. By the Law of God, every mouth must be stopped. The verdict is in. We are guilty.

But now, (what wonderful words), but now another way has been provided for us by which we can be judged to be right with God. This is a rightness before God that comes through faith in the provision of our Substitute, the Messiah, Jesus. This verdict of being right comes to all who trust in Jesus, whether Jew or Gentile. All have sinned and have fallen into God's condemnation; but all who trust in Jesus, God's provision for us, have been given the free gift of righteousness through Jesus.

The way this works, and all of this we can see in the Law and the Prophets, is that God has sent a Seed of the woman to win life for His people who were under a just sentence of death. This required a perfect Substitute, even God, who would stand in our place to take God's wrath. Someone had to be an accurate Substitute for man, and be capable of facing death in our place, thereby requiring His humanity. This concept of an offering that turns aside God's wrath is called a propitiation, or a propitiatory sacrifice. The merit of this sacrifice must be received by faith, or we would think that somehow we had received the blessings of heaven through our own works. The whole notion of faith is that there is someone else who has accomplished our redemption. This is why Jesus did for us. Here was the way that God could uphold the requirement of His justice, that sin deserves death, and also uphold his determination to justify a great host of people from among the Jews and the Gentiles. Was this achieved by our works? Of course not! Otherwise we could brag about our greatness. This was achieved by the works of another, and we have gained His great achievement simply by trusting in Him. This way of faith is the only way that we can be right by God, and it is the only way that both the Law could be upheld and sinners saved. The righteous demands of the Law have been satisfied by Jesus in His obedience and death, and we have been credited with that righteousness, and are counted by God to be Law-doers in Him.

Thursday, July 09, 2009

Romans 2

All of humanity stands guilty before a holy God because of our serious and problem of sin. Yet somehow, even though we ourselves do the things that we condemn in others, we imagine that somehow we need have no concern about our guilt before God. Yet when we agree that others are guilty according to God's Law and we ourselves do te same things they do, we are actually passing judgment upon ourselves.

How is it that we try to contend for our innocence? How do we suppose that we will escape the judgment of God? One possibility is that we might presume upon the fact that we are a people who have been chosen by God for his mercy. If we truly have received the Lord's mercy, this cannot be an excuse for avoiding the call of God to repentance. Is it possible that we are only storing up for ourselves more guilt for the Day of Judgment every time we condemn others for the things that we ourselves do?

Here is an amazing fact to ponder: Even though Paul teaches us that our salvation is only by grace through faith, he also clearly teaches that God’s righteous judgment will be a rendering to each one according to his works. The true man of faith receives the mercy of God given to him in Christ, and that mercy leads him to true repentance. It is never an excuse to continue in sin. His grace is not meant to be a theological hiding place for the man who simply decides to continue in licentious living. It is a new power for life and love that yields the surrender of true gospel obedience. This is the pathway of eternal life. The way of hypocritical and self-seeking immorality only leads us to God’s wrath and fury. It is a counterfeit of true grace.

This is true for Jews and for Gentiles. Again, how is it that we contend for our innocence before God and our acceptance by God? Is it through our identification with a religious tradition apart from the obedience of faith? Is simply being a Jew enough for salvation? Is it enough to have heard the Law of Moses, even if one is guilty according to the Ten Commandments? Having heard the Law does not save anyone. It is the doers of the Law that are righteous before God. If a Gentile could somehow be judged to be a doer of what the Law required, then he could be counted as righteous, even if he had never heard of the Law. Such a person would show that the Law of God was somehow written upon his heart.

A day will come when God will judge the secrets of men by Jesus the Messiah, and it will not be enough of a defense for our obvious sin to say to Him, “I am a descendant of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.” Someone might say, “I hear God’s Law, I rely on God’s Law, I love God’s Law, I approve of God’s Law, I teach God’s Law.” None of this is enough. Do you do God’s Law? Or do you break God’s Law like everyone else? How will you stand before God? Have you had any idolatry or adultery in your heart and in your life? Do you covet and steal? How will you be forgiven for these things?

Are you counting on a religious ritual to make your defense before God? Will he be satisfied by a mark in the flesh made by some person. Circumcision was a great sign ordained by God. It was a ritual that was a commitment to keep the Law. But to take pride in circumcision while disobeying the Law is like boasting in your wedding ring while pursuing another man's wife. There is no outward ritual that will be a good defense before God in the absence of the inner reality to which that outward sign testifies.

Somehow we need to be found to be keepers of the Law in order to be right with God. We need the circumcision of the heart, a true seal of approval from God Himself. These are things that can only come to us as gifts. Jesus Christ came as the one true Jew, circumcised in the flesh, but also completely circumcised in the heart. As the real Israelite, living in the complete consecration of perfect holiness and in the fullness of the Holy Spirit, he came not to condemn the world but to save it through His own death for us. Through Him, even those who have no outward circumcision can be counted as having righteousness. By His power, we can even become living displays of faith and love.

Hypocrisy and ceremonial pride have never been acceptable to the Father. We have sinned against Him deeply. Yet a Redeemer has come from the heavenly Zion to save us. He is a true Jew, and His righteousness is full and sincere. This is the One who has willingly shed His blood for our salvation.

Wednesday, July 08, 2009

Romans 1

Ancient letters had a certain format that the Apostle Paul used in an amplified way. It was customary to begin a correspondence with a statement introducing the writer and the recipient, followed by an introductory salutation. That means that Paul’s letter to the Romans could have started as simply as this: “Paul, to the church in Rome, Greetings!” Of course, he says much more than that. He expands His greeting, and through these extended words we are helped to understand both Paul as an apostle sent by God, and the multi-site assembly of Christ in Rome as the Lord’s special people in that place.

Paul is a servant of Jesus the Messiah, a sent representative of the mightiest eternal King, an ambassador with the solid message of the gospel, the good news that will be described in wonderful detail in the first 11 chapters of this letter. This Jesus, according to His human nature is the promised Son of David who would sit enthroned over the people of God forever. According to His divine nature, He is the Son of God. While He has always been the Son of God in His essence, He has been declared by the Holy Spirit to have the highest royal heavenly authority through His resurrection from the dead.

As an apostle, Paul brings a message that demands the obedience of those who would hear and believe it. This apostolic gospel is going forth to all the nations, and it has reached the city of Rome. There are those within that city who are called by God as His beloved holy ones, set apart as “saints,” the designation given in the New Testament to the entire worshipping assembly of believers. Of all those who are living in Rome, these believers and followers of Jesus Christ have been called to belong to this great Messiah. These are the ones who have grace and peace from God our Father, and from the Lord Jesus Christ.

Paul is eager to visit these saints in Rome so that he might preach this gospel to them. He is always praying for them, and He longs to be there with them. To do so would be good for Paul’s soul, and it would be good for those who would hear the preaching of the gospel from his lips.

This message of the “good news” is a powerful word explaining the way that people can have a right standing with God and the fullness of salvation from God, blessings that come to us entirely by faith rather than through any merit from the Law that anyone might try to claim. In terms of any supposed merit that would come from obedience to the Law, our situation is bleak. The wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all men. All men everywhere are without excuse. They know God, since His eternal power and divine nature have been clearly perceived in any reasonable consideration of the things that He has made. Yet from the beginning, mankind would not honor God or give Him thanks, choosing instead to worship images of created things rather than the Creator.

This rejection of God had consequences. God gave up mankind to their folly and lust. Now they display their own willful suppression of the truth in the unrighteousness of their lives. God gave them over to their passions. Though they claimed to be wise, they are found to be fools, hating any sense of boundaries, and loving their own shameless perversion. Because of this, God further gave them over to their own debased minds. They violated His good ways with every part of their being. Their very souls that should have been seeking him, sought base ways of depravity instead. Their hearts were turned also against one another, tearing down those they should have loved. Their thoughts and their words have turned against one another, and their societies have become places where the lowest kind of evil is not only tolerated, but even affirmed and celebrated.

So much for any hope of our achieving righteousness with God through our own merit! Because of the fact of our depravity, a manifest moral corruption that is everywhere around us and also within us, we absolutely require some other way of peace with God besides the Law. This way has been provided for us through the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ. He came into this depraved world to save us. His resurrection from the dead testifies to the success of His great endeavor.

Here, in Him, we find our only reliable success. The world is still a very puzzling and dangerous place. Our lives can easily be taken away in a moment according to the most revolting injustice. Therefore our hope cannot be in our own abilities or in the goodwill of those who share this planet with us. Our success must be found in Jesus Christ. He is the object of our faith, and in Him we have found life. All of our progress in obedience must come as a fruit of the faith that we have in Him.

Tuesday, July 07, 2009

Acts 28

The story of the Apostle Paul is a story of much trouble and danger, but it is also a story of much success and deliverance. Paul had a very important part to play in the safety of 276 passengers aboard a ship that was travelling towards Rome. Because of severe weather in the Mediterranean Sea, the ship was off course, eventually running aground on the island of Malta. After everyone on board made it safely to land, we might think that all the excitement was over. But just then Paul was bitten by a deadly snake, causing the natives to conclude that he must be a murderer. They waited for him to swell up and die. When that did not happen, they came to the conclusion that the man was a god. We are reminded of the early days in Lystra…

Paul was no god, but he was a messenger of God’s grace. He was also used by the Lord as an agent of healing on that island. They remained there for three months, and were well-supplied by the appreciative people of Malta. They then continued on their journey by sea, and eventually by land, on their way, at last, to Rome. Along the way they met fellow believers who were a great source of encouragement to Paul and his gospel companions.

He soon called together Jewish leaders in the city to explain his situation. Asserting his innocence of any true offense against his own countrymen, Paul explained why he had appealed to Caesar, that it was “because the Jews objected.” What did they object to? They objected to any sign that Paul might be vindicated by the appropriate civil authorities where he was being held. Paul certainly had no charge to bring before Caesar’s tribunal against his own nation. Once again, he used his own situation as a prisoner to bring up the topic that he desired to speak about before their consciences: “the hope of Israel.” The hope of Israel is a King, a Land, and an age when the King most fully and eternally reigns in the Land. This is our hope now as well. We know that the King has come, that He has entered the real Land above, purifying the way for us, and that a day is coming when that King and His Land will come upon the earth with fullness and power.

The leaders of the Jews in Rome indicated that they had received nothing yet in writing specifically about any charges against Paul, nor had any of the Jews in Rome spoken against Paul, or even spread any evil report against him. On the other hand, Christians were being spoken against everywhere in Jewish circles.

Large numbers of Jews came from morning till evening on an appointed day in order to hear from Paul concerning the Christian faith and life. He taught them from the Hebrew Scriptures about the kingdom of God. As always, some were convinced, and others did not believe the message he preached. There was no one Jewish consensus in the first century. There were Jews who saw in Jesus the key to the hope of Israel, and there were others who rejected Jesus as the key to that hope. Of course, there were others still who looked for no such hope at all, whether through Jesus or not through Jesus.

As Isaiah had been warned hundreds of years prior to the coming of the Messiah, the messenger of God could expect that many would hear and see with their ears and eyes, but they would not be able to understand and love the truth with their hearts. They would be spiritually blind and deaf. This is not presented to Isaiah as something that God will be unaware of. It is a part of His judgment against His people, as it had earlier been His judgment against Pharaoh when God hardened the heart of the king of Egypt in the day when He saved His people out of that land.

Now something different was happening, a development that was not unknown to Isaiah. The Old Testament people of God would sadly take the place of Egypt in their stubborn rebellion against God and His Word, and so He would harden the hearts of Jews, and yet He would at the same time begin to call out for Himself a chosen people from the Gentiles. They would be the ones who would listen to the Word of hope preached by Paul and others.

This is where the two volumes of Luke-Acts ends. The Apostle Paul is under house arrest in Rome for two years. He is not travelling from church to church. He is not being expelled from synagogues. He is not battling an angry mob at Ephesus. People are coming to Him, and He is proclaiming a message to them. That message is the Word of the Kingdom of God. It is the story of the great King of the kingdom, the Lord Jesus Christ. Men may try to stop the progress of that kingdom and that message, but they will ultimately fail, because they cannot stop the King of the kingdom. The man who is able to turn one of the foremost persecutors of the church into one of the foremost champions of the message of Christ and His grace, is able to cause that Word to move forward with all boldness and without any hindrance. He can bring the nations streaming into His New Jerusalem using His humble servants who would proclaim that the hope of Israel has now become the hope of the nations.

Monday, July 06, 2009

Acts 27

Somewhere in the middle of chapter 16 of this book the narrator began using the word “we” to describe the travels of Paul and his companions. Much has taken place since that time, and it would appear that Luke has been with Paul through most of these challenging events. That word “we” tells us that Paul is not without gospel companionship on his voyage to Rome, a trip that ends up being not only dangerous, but truly life threatening. Luke assures us that there is another sense in which it can rightly be said that the apostle is not alone. God is with His servant through this time of trial.

It seems that the trip became more dangerous because of some delays that placed them in a season of increased risk in Mediterranean waters. Paul, either through his considerable experience as a traveler, or because of divine revelation, advises the captain that they should all wait out the winter in a place of safety, concerned that the voyage might result in serious loss of property and life. His opinion proved to be sound, but it was ignored. Though at first it appeared that the pilot would be able to accomplish his goal without incident, a violent storm soon threatened the vessel.

Their severe trouble at sea continued for many days, and they were forced to take drastic measures in order to be able to keep on going at all. It was at this point that Paul received an angelic visitation assuring him not only that he would stand before Caesar in Rome, but also that the lives of all those on board the ship would be spared. Paul relayed this message to those around him, reminding them that they should have listened to him earlier when he had advised them not to continue in their journey.

The goal now was to somehow run the ship aground, thereafter making their way to safety. At one point the sailors attempted to escape by themselves in a lifeboat, but Paul warned the centurion and the soldiers in charge of the prisoners, telling them that many people would die if some of the men were allowed to flee. The soldiers then cut away the lifeboat from the main ship before the sailors had a chance to escape.

As the dangerous weather continued, the stature of this one prisoner, Paul, seemed to increase among those who were in charge. It was as if Paul had gradually become the leader of this spiritual struggle, with Paul’s God leading Paul. The apostle urged everyone to eat, giving thanks to God in front of them all. Like a pastor of a very troubled makeshift congregation of 276, Paul was trying to somehow guide his mixed multitude through the discipline of the Almighty. We are told that they were all somehow encouraged as he spoke to them, even as they had to rid the ship of the rest of the food after eating to avoid sinking.

When day came, their goal of some safe shore was in sight, though the stormy seas continued. They struck a reef, and now the soldiers planned to kill the prisoners, rather than giving them the opportunity to escape. By this point the centurion in charge had enough admiration for Paul that he wanted to save him from death, so he kept the soldiers from carrying out their plan. Imagine the sight as 276 people made their way to land in rough seas, hanging on to planks and pieces of the ship. Consider this fact as well: They were all brought safely to land. No one died; no one escaped. This was a remarkable providence.

The Apostle Paul was like God’s Noah in this desperate situation. He had a concern not only for his own life, but for men like Luke, who apparently was with him. But he also demonstrated a concern for this small sampling of the world in his midst, the strange group of fearful men, attempting to live on at least for one more day in order to fight the fight that God had for them.

Throughout the Scriptures we see figures like Joseph, the son of Jacob, and Moses, who prepare us for the fact that when the Christ comes, he must suffer in order to accomplish His glorious mission. This is the way that our salvation is won, through the suffering of one Man. This suffering-unto-glory pattern does not end once the victory of the cross and the resurrection has been achieved. The same way exists for the apostolic church, and even for the church throughout the word down to the present hour. There is a ship of safety that has been provided for us throughout this challenging age. We are together in Christ, our ark of hope.

Our situation is superior to that of Joseph and Moses so long ago. We live after the coming of the One who accomplished our salvation through the shedding of his blood. We have the apostolic Word before us in the New Testament epistles, granting to us an authoritative interpretation of the Old Testament Scriptures. Though we still face much in the way of wind and waves, we have abundant assurance in the Word from heaven that not one of His beloved will be lost.

Sunday, July 05, 2009

Prayer based on Leviticus 20

Almighty Father, the consequences for our sin against You are so very serious. Through our murderous affections and actions the land is full of blood and misery. Turn us away from our strange and dangerous fascination with spiritual evil. Free us from all unlawful inquiry into demonic pathways. Keep us from the sea of immorality that many would think of as normal. We have done depraved things that have brought great trouble upon Your people. Father, we thank You for the atoning blood of our Savior. Through Him the gross uncleanness of our sin has been fully dealt with. Our future is secure. Though we will not be perfected in holiness until this life is over, we have already been washed by the blood of Christ and cleansed through the renewing grace of the Holy Spirit. Grant that we would understand our current privileges in Christ our Lord, and at just the right time, bless us with a fuller experience of the glory of Your presence, and the victory over sin that Your Son has secured for us.

Saturday, July 04, 2009

Prayer based on Lamentations 5

Father, we face the truth of our affliction with brutal honesty. Food, shelter, safety, life… these are things we need. Celebration is only a bitter memory. Yet You are still the Lord. You will reign forever. Restore us, O God. Our confidence is in Your Son, for He was utterly condemned for our transgressions, and rose again for our justification.

Friday, July 03, 2009

Acts 26

Thursday, July 02, 2009

Acts 25

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Who runs the world? There are times when it may feel that the Lord’s servants are merely the victims of powerful people. Yet all men and angels are ultimately under the authority of one Sovereign, and He does all that pleases Him, even when we may have no sense of His work. We need to believe this as a matter of faith, and not because it feels that way to us at any given moment.

The apostle Paul spent many months under the authority of provincial authorities, first of Felix and then of Festus. These civil rulers seem completely out of their element adjudicating the conflict between Christian Judaism and the Judaism of the ruling council in Jerusalem. There will always be those who hate the Lord and His church. They may attempt to gain the ear of those who have the authority of the sword in society. They hope to use civil power to put away their enemies. No matter how clever their crafty plots may be, they will never be able to silence the Word of the Lord. They imagine that they have accomplished their will when they see one man die on a cross or placed in a tomb, but they have not considered the power of the Resurrection. They think that a servant of God is effectively silenced when he is imprisoned, but consider the mighty work that the Lord has done through men who were trapped in prison cells.

When Festus gives the enemies of Paul an opportunity to make their case, they continue to bring forward accusations that they cannot prove. They want to see this case transferred to Jerusalem because they have a plot in mind that will not require any persuasive evidence or any legal victory. Festus wants to accommodate them, but when he suggests the change in venue to Paul, the apostle does something most unexpected. As a Roman citizen, Paul appeals this matter to Caesar. Even more surprisingly perhaps, Festus immediately agrees to send Paul to Caesar. It is as if we see the hand of the Almighty emerge from some unseen place of power, and we can begin to imagine how this righteous prisoner of the Lord might indeed end up testifying for the Lord Jesus Christ in Rome, as God had promised long before.

Before Paul is sent away to the capital of the Empire, he will have at least one more opportunity to speak for Christ and the resurrection in front of his accusers and others gathered to hear him in this place. This all seems very irregular. Felix, Festus, and soon Agrippa, all agree that Paul has done nothing deserving death or imprisonment. Still he has been under arrest for over two years, and will now be sent to Rome as a prisoner. Yet God has His great purposes in all of this. Those who were planning to kill Paul on the way to Jerusalem have not achieved their goal. It is not ours to be able to reveal all of the fullness of God’s accomplishments during these months of His servant’s detention in Caesarea. To be sure, the mystery of God’s providence is far beyond us. Yet we know that His ways are good, and that He will accomplish all His decrees.

We can observe in these various public hearings that Paul and his detractors have debated about the one whom Festus calls “a certain Jesus, who was dead, but whom Paul asserted to be alive.” A man who was only trying to establish his own innocence might have missed out on many occasions to speak about Jesus and the resurrection. Paul has not made that mistake. Even a man, Festus, who seems to have very little clue about these matters is clear about the fact that Paul is talking about someone other than Paul.

King Agrippa heard about this all from Festus, and would soon have his opportunity to see a civil assembly turned into some strange church court. This was not Paul’s strategy for the progress of the kingdom. If he had been a free man, surely he would have been on his way to Rome and to points further west. He desired, as always, to preach Christ where the Lord was not yet known. Yet in the meantime, Felix did hear the Word, and so would Festus and Agrippa.

Not only would they hear this man’s speech, but they would also observe his demeanor and that of his accusers. This all should have been deeply impressive. Here is one Man who has done nothing wrong to offend civil order. He calmly presents the facts that have brought him to this moment surrounded by a number of grown men, both in Jerusalem and in Caesarea, men who insist that the prisoner should not be allowed to live any longer. The difference between this one man, Paul, and his obvious abusers must have been quite a thing to watch.

We do not see this all with our eyes, but we get to read the account it, an account which is included in Luke’s book for our encouragement. With the eyes of our hearts we see the victory of faith as Paul prepares to make one more defense prior to setting sail toward the western part of the empire. We hear echoes of the greatest victory known to men, which came on a Roman cross near Jerusalem. We feel hope spring up again after months of discouraging inaction, and we remember that we need to believe, and to be faithful. We know that we are surrounded by a great cloud of witness, and that nothing can separate us from the love of Christ. And we remember again that God runs the world.

Wednesday, July 01, 2009

Acts 24

Sometime things don’t happen right away with God. Even the martyrs in heaven who are enjoying the blessing of that “first resurrection” life in the present heavens are said to cry out with a loud voice, “How long?” (Revelation 6:10). Those who are living for Christ here below, even when we have a firm belief in the promises of God, we wonder how long it will be until God’s Word will be finally accomplished. We believe in the Hope that is Jesus Christ, and we are waiting for the second resurrection, but can be easily surprised at the time of waiting that we continue to experience at the present.

Paul had come to Jerusalem expecting that he would meet difficulty in that city. He was torn away from the temple, and almost torn apart by a mob. He was under arrest, and faced the Jewish religious council. One plan for his death had already been discovered and foiled. He now stood before a civil governor in Caesarea, and would defend himself a second time against the accusations of those Jews who had rejected Christ and his apostle.

Tertullus, the lawyer for the opposition, seemed to suggest that Paul’s guilt as some kind of insurrectionist was a matter that should be obvious for the governor to see. This man was a ringleader in a sect that they call “the Nazarenes.” The Jews had done society a favor by arresting Paul. Yet the tribune Lysius sent this prisoner to Felix with a note that made it clear that he, at least, was unable to discover any civil guilt in Paul that deserved anything close to death, or even imprisonment.

When Paul was given permission to defend himself, he gave an orderly account of what had taken place. Paul had only been in Jerusalem for about twelve days. He came there to bring alms for the nation and to present offerings to God in connection with the fulfillment of certain vows. He had not disputed with anyone, or stirred up a crowd in any way. The one thing that he was prepared to confess was His faith in the one who said, “I am the Way.” Paul worshiped God, believed in the Scriptures, and especially had a firm hope in the great promise of God, that there would come a day of resurrection, a coming to life on earth again for both the just and the unjust, the righteous and the wicked. If the charge was faith in Jesus and the resurrection, Paul was guilty. If it was disturbing civil order as an insurrectionist, he was not guilty. He had labored to have a clear conscience toward both God and man.

Concerning his accusers, Paul said that they themselves believed in the coming resurrection. He also said that they were the wrong people to bring any evidence against him, since they had no first-hand knowledge of his activities in Asia, though they claimed that he stirred up trouble there. They could not prove the charges that they were bringing against him. If the charges were about trouble Paul started in Jerusalem, there was no proof of any such accusation. If the charges were about his activities in places like Ephesus, they were simply the wrong people to bringing those charges, since they could only report the slander of others, and not anything that they had witnesses with their own eyes.

There was one other thing that Paul did that caused a stir, and he was willing to admit it, that in the midst of the Jewish ruling assembly itself he had sparked a lively division by crying out these words: “It is with respect to the resurrection of the dead that I am on trial before you this day.” Felix apparently had some knowledge of Christian Judaism, and perhaps not wanting to renew a debate over the resurrection in his presence, he seems to have cut off the interrogation at that moment. Paul would continue a prisoner, but he was able to have some measure of liberty and the good care of his friends.

Meanwhile time passed. Felix and his wife were entertained by Paul’s moral and spiritual lectures, though alarmed about his teaching concerning a coming judgment. What a strange mixture of conflicting passions is man! Felix sensed his own guilt of eternal judgment at one moment, and looked for a possible bribe from the one who warned him at some later moment. So Felix sent for Paul from time to time, apparently for his own entertainment, and two years passed without Paul getting very much closer to Rome than when God had promised him that he would go there to testify to the truth about Christ. The chapter ends with this depressing statement, “When two years had elapsed, Felix was succeeded by Porcius Festus. And desiring to do the Jews a favor, Felix left Paul in prison.”

Our well-being as followers of the Way cannot be tied to the speed of God’s work in us or through us. We need to remember the person of our Savior and the certainty of His promises. Even if there is no one else who can hear, we must keep our own souls alive by proclaiming the truth to our hearts. God gave His Son to be an atoning sacrifice for our sins. The Lamb of God has accomplished this great work, and has risen from the dead. How long it takes to get to Rome, or to heaven, is not the issue. It is enough that God is with us now, even in a prison cell, and that we will surely be with Him in glory forever.