Living by God’s promises in affliction, Part 4

imagesGod promises His presence in our afflictions. Is there a more memorable Sunday School story than that of the three Hebrew children who were thrown into the fiery furnace? Maybe. But it has to rank pretty high on the list. And why is this story so memorable? Besides being a great story of holy resolve, trust, loyalty, and faith, it is most memorable as a story of God’s presence with His people in affliction. Continue reading “Living by God’s promises in affliction, Part 4”

Living by God’s promises in affliction, Part 3

sad-Picture-3While God holds out many promises to us in our afflictions, we must first note that He also promises to keep us from afflictions and dangers. And it is to these latter promises that we look first, trusting God that if it is in keeping with His glory and our eternal good, we will indeed be protected from trials and afflictions which He knows would otherwise undo us. Continue reading “Living by God’s promises in affliction, Part 3”

Living by God’s promises in affliction, Part 2

I have no idea what your life entails right now, but I can be reasonably sure that you’re facing a trial of some kind or another. Maybe in your marriage, maybe with your children, maybe with your studies, or maybe simply with the question of what to do with your life next… Some people have this crazy notion that becoming a Christian will remove all our troubles; but that’s just not so. On the contrary, it’s clear from the teaching of several Scriptures that afflictions are an expected and necessary part of our Christian pilgrimage. Continue reading “Living by God’s promises in affliction, Part 2”

Sin is still here

Nothing grieves me more than to discover every day that sin is still here. I don’t mean still here in this world; for I expect it to be here until Christ comes to eradicate it. This is, after all, a fallen world, a world under the curse of Adam’s rebellion against God. The Lord said “In the day you eat of it you shall surely die,” and the world of men has been under the curse of that death ever since. Nor do I mean still here in my family and friends; for I know full well that my wife and children, my dearest friends and loved ones, and every member of my church is a sinner living every day as pensioners of God’s grace and mercy. So what, then, do I mean?  Continue reading “Sin is still here”

Trial by jury

So I have jury duty today… It’s my duty as a citizen and it’s my loving service to my fellow citizens. Since we have the constitutional right to be tried by a jury every citizen should be ready and willing to serve as a juror when a fellow citizen needs him to. But as I reflect upon my duty today and upon our right to a jury this question comes to mind: Why does a guilty man want the right to be tried by a jury? Continue reading “Trial by jury”

What’s so bad about pride?

“There is one vice of which no man in the world is free; which every one in the world loathes when he sees it in someone else; and of which hardly any people, except Christians, ever imagine that they are guilty themselves…. There is no fault which makes a man more unpopular, and no fault which we are more unconscious of in ourselves. And the more we have it ourselves, the more we dislike it in others” (C. S. Lewis). That universal vice, that most unpopular fault, is pride.  Continue reading “What’s so bad about pride?”

Thoughts of His return

Today my thoughts are taken up with our Lord’s promise to return for His church. I think of His words in Jn 14.2-3, “In my Father’s house are many rooms. If it were not so, would I have told you that I go to prepare a place for you? And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and will take you to myself, that where I am you may be also.” O the joy of that promise! O the blessing of those precious words to my soul! Will you pause and think with me a moment? Continue reading “Thoughts of His return”