Friday, January 30, 2015

Stirring up the Godly



30 January

But let all those that put their trust in Thee rejoice: let them ever shout for joy, because Thou defendest them: let them also that love Thy name be joyful in Thee. Psalm 5:11



SUGGESTED FURTHER READING: Philippians 4

To urge God to grant him deliverance, David now argues that the effect of this action will stir up the godly to exercise greater trust in God and encourage them to give praise and thanks to Him. This passage teaches us that we are ungrateful to God if we do not take encouragement and comfort from whatever blessings He confers upon our neighbors, since by those actions He proves that He is always ready to bestow His goodness upon all the godly. Accordingly, we may rejoice because, as David says, Thou defendest them. Whenever God bestows blessings upon some of the faithful, the rest may be assured that He also will show Himself beneficent toward them.
This passage enforces the teaching that true joy proceeds from no other source but God and His protection. We may be exposed to a thousand deaths, but we may be consoled  in the valleys of death, knowing that we are covered an defended by the hand of God. The vain shadows of this world cannot beguile us when we take shelter under the wings of God.
We ought also particularly to notice the statement that those who trust in the Lord love His name. Memories of God must be sweet to us. They must fill our hearts with joy and ravish us with love as we taste of His goodness. By contrast, unbelievers wish the name of God to be buried and shun memories of Him with horror.

John Calvin

FOR MEDITATION: What an awesome perspective this passage gives us! Do we often begrudge the blessings others receive and accuse God of unfairness in not dispensing the same blessings to us? Here we see the great joy we should have for others and the great comfort we derive from the blessings they receive.

365 Days With Calvin
Selected and Edited by Joel R. Beeke

Thursday, January 29, 2015

Why God is Pleased to Place His People in a Very Tempestuous and Stormy Night


He does it that His people may be conformed to Christ.

As they are tempted and distressed, so was He; as it is with their souls a season of darkness, so it was also with His holy soul that was full of amazement under a sense of God’s wrath- though He never despaired indeed, as many of His servants are apt to do under the violence of sorrow. Isaiah 53:3: [He was] a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief.” When He was so saddened for our sakes, it is reasonable to think that we should sometimes taste the bitter cup, and not always rejoice and be at ease. If God did not spare His only Son, why should we expect to feel nothing but what is very mild and gentle? Our Lord has told us that the world will rejoice, but we shall be sorrowful (see John 16:20-22). The sufferings of Christ were to give satisfaction to divine justice; ours are not to be looked upon with such an eye. By these terrors and desertions we learn to value and esteem the love of Christ, who was pleased to redeem us when it cost Him so very dearly, and who was pleased not to decline the field of battle, though it was not to be managed without vast labor and a mighty pain. And the apostle says, “Rejoice, inasmuch as ye are partakers of Christ’s sufferings” (1 Peter 4:13).

He does it because our fall and our ruin came by pleasure.

It was a delight. Though a very short one, that made our forefather Adam apostatize; and it is equitable that we should be cured by something contrary to that which occasioned our disease, seeing that our joys are dangerous. He makes our grief and sorrows to be medicinal.

He does it because it is a very proper season wherein to be sorrowful.

Among all the other excellent appointments of providence, this one is that there should be a time to weep (Ecclesiastes 3:4). There is in this weeping night nothing strange or uncouth. All our fathers have, in some respect, pass under a cloud, and a cloud that has dissolved in rain, and which has given the good pilgrims much trouble as they went along. 1 Peter 1:6: “Now for a season ye are in heaviness through manifold temptations.” It is no more strange to see mourning in the church on earth than to see storms or snow in winter. Everything is beautiful in its season, and so is affliction. The night is useful to the world, though not as pleasant as the day. Our sickly state will not admit us to have nothing but what is satisfying to our palates; the wise God, therefore, many time, instead of very pleasant things confers the best upon us. We must allow the great Master of the family to maintain its order, prosperity, and welfare by His own methods, and to chastise us when and how and as long as He pleases; for His strokes, though very painful, yet are still very just. And it is in order to achieve some better thing that He designs for us that at the present we are made to grieve; for grief, as Dr. [Robert] Harris observes, is an imperfect passion, not made for itself but for some higher use, as are all the rest of the declining affections, such as hatred for love, fear for confidence, and so sorrow for joy, unto which it is subservient. Lancing and searing are not for themselves, but for ease and remedy. A bitter potion is not for sickness, though it may cause if for a time, but for health. In the same way, sorrow is made for joy, and joy is the end of sorrow. And God, we may be sure, will have His end.

He does it to show His own sovereignty both in afflicting and in comforting.

He causes such a prince as Job to sit upon a dunghill, in anguish and trouble, while another sits in unclouded glory on the throne. He pulls down one and sets up another, and does whatsoever He will in occasion of mourning for the soul, and one that He permits at various times; for though He does not deny what is absolutely necessary to the being of the Christian, yet He many times does not promise to give what would make it very comfortable. He, for wise reasons, allows the hearts of His people to be overwhelmed with sorrow when He could make them brim-full of joy, as in nature He lets the earth gape for thirst when He could immediately refresh it with seasonable flowers.
Who, in all this mysterious variety of His administrations, can say unto Him, “What art Thou doing?” Some countries are desert, barren and forsaken, burned up with scorching heat, and filled with beasts of prey; others are inhabited and fruitful, and greatly blessed, and He sees fit to have part of His dominions thus qualified. Some He draws with the sweet savor of His ointments, and they perceive nothing but what is gratifying and refreshing; but others He sorely terrifies with the greatness of His power, His holiness, and His majesty, and they never eat nor live with pleasure.
The Captain of our salvation causes some of His soldiers to meet with much more formidable dangers than others do: they have more sweat, fatigue, toil, and painful duty, though He will be sure to help them Himself when they are ready to give way. The manner of His dispensations to His servants is varied, both in life and at death. Some are chastened all the day long, and with sore pains upon their beds too, while others have no pain at all. Some go drooping to the grave, bowed down with God’s displeasure, while His favor and His gracious eye make others go smiling there. Enoch and Elijah had a pleasant removal from the world; very short and very glorious was their passage hence. But most men groan a long while before they are called away, and then He does it to show His own power, so that when the wound appears to be desperate He can cure it with a word. When the night is most full of horror, He can bring the reviving day. When the storms are highest, He needs but say to the waves, to our doubts and our fears, “Be still,” and immediately there is a calm.
What is such a God, so great and so good a God, not able to do! He who produced from a mere chaos this beautiful and pleasant world needs only say to us in the middle of our doleful darkness, “Let there be light,” and it shall be so. Job 5:18: “He maketh sore, and bindeth up. He woundeth, and His hands make whole.” It is in acknowledgment of this sovereign ability it is that David prays in Psalm 51:8, “Make me to hear joy and gladness, that the bones which Thou hast broken may rejoice.”
Why so? Had not Nathan told him that his sin was pardoned? Yes, but all the testimonies of men are nothing without the inward witness of the Holy Spirit. God has committed to men the administration of His Word, but reserves the Spirit to Himself, that Spirit which gives consolation to our hearts and peace to our consciences. When Mary and Martha were in sorrow for their brother’s death, it is said in John 11:19 that many of the Jews came from Jerusalem to comfort them. But they received no comfort until Christ Himself had come there.


Timothy Rogers
Trouble of Mind and the Disease of Melancholy, pp. 340-343

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Sure Hope for Deliverance

29 January

For Thou art not a God that hath pleasure in wickedness: neither shall evil dwell with Thee. The foolish shall not stand in Thy sight: Thou hatest all workers of iniquity. Thou shalt destroy them that speak leasing: the LORD will abhor the bloody and deceitful man.  
Psalm 5:4-6




SUGGESTED FURTHER READING: Daniel 6

Here David makes the malice and wickedness of his enemies an argument to enforce his prayer for divine favor. The language is abrupt, but the stammering of the saints is more acceptable to God than rhetoric, be it ever so fine and glittering. David's objective here is to show that the cruelty and treachery of his enemies is so intense that it is impossible for it to continue. God must arrest them in their course.
His reasoning is grounded upon the nature of God. Since righteousness and upright dealings are pleasing to God, David concludes that God will eventually take vengeance on men who persist in wickedness. How is it possible for them to escape unpunished, seeing that God is the judge of the world? 
This passage is worthy of special attention. Often we are greatly discouraged by the unbounded insolence of the wicked. If God does not immediately restrain this wickedness, we are stupefied and dismayed or cast down into despair. But David finds encouragement and confidence in such circumstances. The more his enemies proceed against him in lawlessness, the more earnestly he asks for help from God, whose official work it is to destroy the wicked because He hates all wickedness.
Let the godly, therefore, learn when they suffer violence, deceit, and injustice, to come to God so they may be encouraged by the certain hope of his deliverance.

John Calvin

FOR MEDITATION: God will judge the wicked. They will not prosper. Those truths are so simple yet so hard for us to believe. Do not let the prosperity of the wicked create doubt in your heart; rather, let it encourage you in the certain hope of deliverance.

365 Days With Calvin
Selected and Edited by Joel R Beeke

Life Proved by Growth


"Where there is life there will be growth, and if grace be true, it will surely increase. A painted flower keepeth always at the same pitch and stature; the artist may bestow beauty upon it, but he cannot bestow life. A painted child will be as little ten years hence as it is now."

What need there is to observe the wise distinction between the picture and the living-thing! Of painted likenesses of Christians we have more than enough; nor is the manufacture of portraits a difficult operation: what we want is the real thing and not the artistic imitation. Manton saith well that growth is the test. Many professors must be forever beginning again: they stick where they were, or thought they were. They were anxious about their souls, and are so still. They were trying and wishing, and with tries and wishes they are resting contented. If they were saved and knew it, they would find themselves making some measure of advance: not always advancing at the same rate, for all life is not equally rapid in its growth, but still progressing somewhat, forgetting the things behind, and reaching forth to that which is beyond.
Reader, how do you stand under this test? Come, search yourself, and see whether you are adding to your faith courage; and to courage, brotherly kindness; and to brotherly kindness, love. If there be no growth, it may be, nay, surely it must be, that you are not a child born into the family of God, but a pretty picture, which may adorn a room, but which cannot perform any of the actions of life. It is a sad thing if such be your case, for heaven is not a portrait-gallery; it is the home of loving, living souls, whom grace has quickened with eternal life.

Charles H. Spurgeon 
Flowers From A Puritan's Garden, "Life Proved by Growth," pp. 126-127

Righteous Before God



28 January

Here me when I call, O God of my righteousness: thou hast enlarged me when I was in distress; have mercy upon me, and hear my prayer. Psalm 4:1


SUGGESTED FURTHER READING: Matthew 1:18-25

David was in the uttermost distress and, indeed, was almost consumed by a long series of calamities. But he did not sink under his sorrow, nor was he so broken in heart that he could not approach God as his deliverer.
In his prayer, David testifies that, even when he is utterly deprived of all earthly succor, he can still hope in God. Moreover, he addresses his Maker as the God of his righteousness, which is like calling him the vindicator of his right. David appeals to God this way because people everywhere are condemning him. His innocence is besmirched by the slanderous reports of his enemies and the perverse judgments of the common people.
We should carefully note David’s reaction to this cruel and unjust treatment. For while nothing is more painful to us than to be falsely condemned and to endure wrongful violence and slander for doing well, such affliction often daily befalls the saints. It becomes us to learn under such hardship to turn away from the enticements of the world and to depend wholly upon God.
Righteousness is to be understood here as a good cause. David makes God the witness of his own righteousness as he complains of the malicious and wrongful conduct of men toward him. By his example, he teaches us that if our uprightness is not acknowledged by the world, we should not despair because God in heaven will vindicate our cause. Even the heathen know there is no better stage for virtue than a man’s own conscience. But our greatest consolation is to know that, when men vaunt themselves over us wrongfully, we may stand righteous in the view of God and of the angels.

John Calvin

FOR MEDITATION: What comfort it is to know that we are vindicated in the eyes of God! This knowledge eases the intensity of the pain resulting from false accusations and a tarnished reputation. Remember and emulate David’s reaction the next time that you suffer for the right.

365 Days With Calvin
Selected and Edited by Joel R. Beeke

Monday, January 26, 2015

The Heresy of Healing Cults

In his exposition of John 16:13 (1538) the Reformer [Martin Luther] uses words which, in the light of modern developments, seem prophetic. He is speaking of possible future perversions.



If seduction and darkness were again to begin through the wrath and decree of God (as will happen after our days, it is to be feared- if the world is destined to stand longer), and the devil were to begin to perform signs through some false saint and perhaps were to cure a sick person, you would no doubt see the mob press to espouse the cause in such a way that no preaching or warning would be of any avail. Come now, they would assert (as they have hitherto done in the case if the deceased saints), say whatever you please, I have nonetheless seen and found that a certain man who devoted himself to this preacher and accepted him was thereby helped.

For in those who have no love for the truth the devil will be powerful and strong. Accordingly, they are misled by all sorts of his deceptive tricks and are not wise enough to guard against them. This is why I have said: The Holy Spirit must be present with His revelation, so that we observe the Word of Christ and His message and judge all teachings and signs, life and doing, in accordance with them. If, then, these contradict the chief doctrine and article of Christ (by which, Christ here says, the Holy Spirit is to glorify Him), we should accord them neither attention nor acceptance though it were to snow miracles daily. For whatever contradicts this teaching is certainly a pack of lies and trumped up by the devil in order to seduce souls. If you want to see and find miracles and signs, then look for them here; for this doctrine was certainly proved by miracles from heaven and by all kinds of true, divine, genuine signs, and to date it has been sustained by not a few signs against the devil and his bogus signs.



Martin Luther

What Luther Says, p. 632

Compiled by Ewald M. Plass