“Faith & The World” - 2007 - Pilgrimage & Victory

O Lord,

The world is artful to entrap,

approaches in fascinating guise,

extends many a gilded bait,

presents many a charming face.

Let my faith scan every painted bauble,

and escape every bewitching snare

in a victory that overcomes all things.

In my duties give me firmness, energy, zeal,

devotion to thy cause,

courage in thy name,

love as a working grace,

and all commensurate with my trust.

Let faith stride forth in giant power,

and love respond with energy in every act.

I often mourn the absence of my beloved Lord

whose smile makes earth a paradise,

whose voice is sweetest music,

whose presence gives all graces strength.

But by unbelief I often keep him outside my door.

Let faith give entrance that he may abide

with me for ever.

Thy Word is full of promises,

flowers of sweet fragrance,

fruit of refreshing flavour

when culled by faith.

May I be made rich in its riches,

be strong in its power,

be happy in its joy,

abide in its sweetness,

feast on its preciousness,

draw vigour from its manna.

Lord, increase my faith.

“Christ, Our Hope”

HOPE

The beauty of Christmas is Christ and this advent season as I thought about Christ, our hope for life and death, I reflected on Scriptures of this theme and was reminded of the blessedness that we have in Christ who is our only hope for today and tomorrow and forever. Christ is eternal life, Christ is our life, Christ is our hope. Thanks be to God for His gift!

“Christians look toward with hope to the joy of being with Christ in glory forever. Faith is defined as “the substance of things hoped for” (Heb 11:1) because the invisible things hoped for in the future are grasped through faith. Hope is certain; it is “an anchor of the soul, both sure and steadfast” (Heb. 6:18, 19). According to the Bible, Christ is “our hope” (1 Tim. 1:1), and our God is called “the God of hope” (Rom. 15:13).

An ethic of hope pervades the New Testament. It is an ethic of pilgrimage for strangers on their way home (Heb. 11:13, 1 Pet. 2:11). It is an ethic of purity, as the one who hopes to be like Jesus when He appears “purifies himself, just as He is pure” (1 John 3:3). It is an ethic of preparedness, since we should be ready to leave this world at any time (2 Cor. 5:6-8), Phil 1:21-24; cf. Luke 12:15-21). Hope calls us to be patient (Rom 8:25); cf 5:1-5). Hope gives strength and confidence for running the race, fighting the good fight, and enduring the tribulations that continue in this life (John 16:33; Acts 14:22; Rom 8:18; 2 Tim. 4:7, 8).

Though the Christian life is marked more by suffering than triumph (Acts 14:22; 1 Cor. 4:8-13; 2 Cor. 4:7-18), our hope is sure and our mood should be free from despair (1 John 4:18).”

“Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who according to His great mercy has regenerated us again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, to an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled, and unfading, reserved in Heaven for you.” 1 Peter 1:3,4

Quote taken from Reformation Study Bible Note, p. 1943.

“Merry Christmas”

“And the Word became flesh, and tabernacled among us. And we beheld His glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father, full of grace and of truth.” John 1:14

From our home to yours…Merry Christmas friends! We are on vacation until December 26th. Have a wonderful time with the brethren, your family and friends. It is a time of rejoicing!

Music:  Joy To The World

“The Advent of Jesus Christ”


The Advent of Jesus Christ
Rev. Charles R. Biggs

Dear People of God,

One famous Christmas song gleefully declares: “It’s the most wonderful time of the year!” That of course means different things to different people. For the Christian, this “most wonderful time of the year” should be a time of celebration of the birth of Jesus Christ and the fact that God truly dwelled in human flesh “with us”. This time of year should also be lived in eager anticipation and joyful expectation as we await the return of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ!

Our English word ‘Advent’ comes from a Latin word ‘Adventus’ that means “coming”. Advent season has historically had a special place on the calendar because the purpose of this festive season is to remind the people of God of Christ’s first advent or coming in a manger in Bethlehem who came to live and die for the sins of his people. The Advent season has historically been the time when we celebrate Christ’s first coming.

Something that can be forgotten however is the fact that the Advent Season is not only about the glorious birth of our Savior, but it is also a season of celebration to remind the people of God of a second advent where the resurrected-ascended-glorified Christ will return to fully manifest his rule and dominion over heaven and earth, and to glorify his “Maranatha people”- -those who are eagerly awaiting his return, who cry out: “Maranatha! Come, Lord Jesus in this present evil age!

Each day of the year, Christians should live as if it was Advent Season. Christians should day by day live expectantly awaiting Christ’s Second Coming (parousia- Gk.), living in light of the gospel of the First Advent of Christ, and hoping each day for gospel of the Second Advent and full revelation of the New Heavens and the New Earth in Christ!

This can be perhaps the most wonderful time of the year because it can cause people to be pregnant with expectation and hope, but if we have the eschatological perspective of the Apostle Peter in 1 Peter 4 in our minds, we can experience this love, hope and joyful expectation each day of the year!

During this season I have been reflecting on 1 Peter 4:7-11 as an excellent Advent scripture text to keep in the forefront of our minds and imaginations as those united to Christ Jesus (and particularly in light of our recent Galatians series). This scripture has helped me to be reminded of the fact that every day can be like the Advent Season!

The Apostle Peter writes:
ESV 1 Peter 4:7-11: The end of all things is at hand; therefore be self-controlled and sober-minded for the sake of your prayers. 8 Above all, keep loving one another earnestly, since love covers a multitude of sins. 9 Show hospitality to one another without grumbling. 10 As each has received a gift, use it to serve one another, as good stewards of God’s varied grace: 11 whoever speaks, as one who speaks oracles of God; whoever serves, as one who serves by the strength that God supplies- in order that in everything God may be glorified through Jesus Christ. To him belong glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen.

The Apostle Peter reminds us that because we live as a Church at the end of the eschatological age awaiting eagerly the Second Advent of Christ (“the end of all things is at hand”, v. 7a), Christians should be those who are self-controlled and sober-minded in order to prayerfully focus our attention on the Second Advent of Christ that is always at hand (v. 7b).

In light of this end being near (including the end of this present evil age of sin and misery, and all of our various individual sufferings God lovingly calls us to in Christ), we are to keep loving one another earnestly because love covers a multitude of sins (v. 8b). That is, love covers all of the sins that we continue to struggle with as those united to Jesus Christ by faith (v. 8). The true love of Christ covers the sins that we continue to see in ourselves, as well as in other brothers and sisters.

In other words, we should live lovingly “others-centered” as we serve and love them resisting our own sinful tendency toward selfishness and self-centeredness!

The Apostle Peter goes on to remind us that in light of the Second Advent of Christ to be those who show their love in service to one another! Act as if you are gifted by God- - because you are - -and in light of your giftedness, lovingly serve the brethren with the strength that God supplies, without grumbling (v. 9), complaining, biting and devouring each other (cf. Gal. 5:13-16).

We should ask ourselves daily: “How are we doing individually before God as “stewards of God’s manifold or varied grace?” (v. 10). The question reminds us that we are recipients in Jesus Christ of his grace and gifts and that we are therefore never without what we need the most- -God’s grace!

Peter says that God will be glorified through our loving service in Jesus Christ! Peter closes with a grand and eloquent doxology that we are to remember: Christ is the One we are ultimately glorifying and serving when we live like this by His grace and strength (v. 11c).

Remember at this time of Advent: Creation shows that God is above us; the Law shows that God is against us; the manger shows us God with us! And if God is with us, he is for us in Jesus Christ!

Rejoice people of God in your Savior!

Each day can be like Advent season as the people of God if you keep the right eschatological focus and expectation on Jesus Christ seated at God’s right hand!

Merry Christmas! And may this be the most wonderful time of the year for you…and may it continue each day throughout the year!

In Christ,
Pastor Biggs

Ketoctin Covenant Presbyterian Church (KCPC)
KCPC at Sermon Audio
A Place For Truth

“Only At the Feet of Jesus”

One of my usual clichés when folks are struggling in their faith is “remember to go the feet of Jesus” meaning that everything, without question, we need to humbly submit to Christ, every decision, prayer, emotion, suffering and trial because He is the Sustainer, Protector and Preserver of our life and has given us His Word and His Holy Spirit, the Comforter, to help us and guide us in all of life. It is on our spiritual knees at His feet that we remember who we are and in whose strength we live, breathe and have our being. It is at His feet in humble submission that we remember His sacrifice for us and our election to glory as royal children of the King.

Dr. Richard Gantz in this month’s Tabletalk* magazine talks about this subject in his “Forgiveness at the Feet of Jesus” and I share a small excerpt here wherein he is sharing about the woman in Luke 7:36-50 who washed Jesus feet with her tears and dried them with her hair. As women we can relate to this in a really profound way. Listen to what he says:

“Put yourself at the feet of Jesus. That’s where you’ll hear words of life and forgiveness. Those will be the best words you can ever hear, and His feet are the proof. That night they were dusty. That night as her tears fell upon them, the dust was streaked, and her hair must have been matted as she tried to dry His feet with it. But now His feet are pierced. Now His feet show us the wounds by which our sins are forgiven: “He was crushed for our iniquities” (Isa. 53:5). O blessed Savior. O blessed feet that felt the blows of the hammer that nailed Him to the cross. All kinds of people landed at Jesus’ feet for all kinds of reasons – to pray, to worship Him, to thank Him. There was a healed leper. There was a demon possessed man, and, of course, there was this woman. You know something, none of us will ever fall before Him just as she did, or even any of the others. But we belong there, nonetheless. If you wonder how it is possible to do so today, since the feet of Jesus are in heaven, it is simple. It is by coming to Him as that woman did so long ago, in faith and repentance, holding nothing back. It is seeing yourself for just what you are, a sinner yourself deserving hell and needing the salvation that can only come at the feet of Jesus. It is seeing Him for what He is, a Savior who saves and forgives to the uttermost (Heb. 7:25).” Gantz, p. 15

So then as His children “go to the feet of Jesus” and remember what He has done and is doing for you. Remember that “Salvation is of the Lord” (Jon 2:9) and that He is continually working in your life to “will and do of His good pleasure” (Phi 2:13) for your good and His glory. Go to Him, not the world, not searching and seeking answers in every other thing and place, but in Him, your Lord and Savior, your Near Kinsman, your Beloved Bridegroom and He, as a tender and loving Savior, will strengthen you and give to you “exceedingly abundantly above all that you can ask or think.” (Eph 3:20)

Isn’t this just the greatest news to your ears and blessing to your heart?

* Dr. Richard Gantz, “Forgiveness at the Feet of Jesus,” Tabletalk, December 2006

“Let Us Go To The House of the Lord” - Psalm 122

Psalm 122

Let Us Go to the House of the LORD
A Song of Ascents. Of David.

* * *

I was glad when they said to me,

“Let us go to the house of the LORD!”

Our feet have been standing

within your gates, O Jerusalem!

Jerusalem–built as a city

that is bound firmly together,

to which the tribes go up,

the tribes of the LORD,

as was decreed for[a] Israel,

to give thanks to the name of the LORD.

There thrones for judgment were set,

the thrones of the house of David.

Pray for the peace of Jerusalem!

“May they be secure who love you!

Peace be within your walls

and security within your towers!”

For my brothers and companions’ sake

I will say, “Peace be within you!”

For the sake of the house of the LORD our God,

I will seek your good.

*  * *

“Swimming Cells & The Quest for the Illusive Black Pearl”

Once upon a time there was a girl with flaxen hair with the curls of Rapunzel longing for the lovely and illusive “black pearl.” She longed for it but her Royal Leader thought it not best at the present time. But lo and behold, an intervenor came upon her and much to her surprise knocked her lovely old but much loved and scratched 7290 into a pool of water and after much buzzing, clicking and vibrating, it came to its end never to be revived again. What horror, what sadness came upon her. 8o(( Her Royal Leader, being the Knight in Shining Armor that he is, then took upon himself the great task of leading her on a mid-week expedition to find the lovely and illusive “black pearl” — yes, surely a pearl of great price! After long and laborious searching, waiting and fighting great battles in the cellular world of massive numbers completely out of this known world, she found her beloved “black pearl” under the guise of the “BLACKBERRY PEARL” wherein the Great Beloved One, Leader and Authority Over All Funds obtained it and she then covered it in glorious black leather goods and brought it safety back to her abode where it will live happily ever after.

So then, my dear friends, the saga of this story is the lesson learned that even though you may have an unfortunate and unplanned water “accident” wherein your dearly beloved old friend, companion and outdated “Blackberry” may have a sudden demise in a pool of water, yes, even the bath, there is “a way when there is no way” to “get over it” and adorn yourself with the much loved and sought after “black pearl”! I am a testimony to it..! And though my days may soon regret the extra work I will have because of it…I am adorned in it nonetheless! 8o))

____

Pictured “Blackberry Pearl

p.s. Interesting that their new flash website shows this beauty coming out of the water!! They must have known!

Lady Joan

What Is Calvinism?

What Is Calvinism? by Benjamin B. Warfield

It is very odd how difficult it seems for some persons to understand just what Calvinism is. And yet the matter itself presents no difficulty whatever. It is capable of being put into a single sentence; and that, on level to every religious man’s comprehension. For Calvinism is just religion in its purity. We have only, therefore, to conceive of religion in its purity, and that is Calvinism.

In what attitude of mind and heart does religion come most fully to its rights? Is it not in the attitude of prayer? When we kneel before God, not with the body merely, but with the mind and heart, we have assumed the attitude which above all others deserves the name of religious. And this religious attitude by way of eminence is obviously just the attitude of utter dependence and humble trust. He who comes to God in prayer, comes not in a spirit of self-assertion, but in a spirit of trustful dependence. No one ever addressed God in prayer thus: “0 God, thou knowest that I am the architect of my own fortunes and the determiner of my own destiny. Thou mayest indeed do something to help me in the securing of my purposes after I have determined upon them. But my heart is my own, and thou canst not intrude into it; my will is my own, and thou canst not bend it. When I wish thy aid, I will call on thee for it. Meanwhile, thou must await my pleasure.” Men may reason somewhat like this; but that is not the way they pray. There did, indeed, once two men go up into the temple to pray. And one stood and prayed thus to himself (can it be that this “to himself” has a deeper significance than appears on the surface?), “God, I thank thee that I am not as the rest of men.” While the other smote his breast, and said, “God be merciful to me a sinner.” Even the former acknowledged a certain dependence on God; for he thanked God for his virtues. But we are not left in doubt in which one the religious mood was most purely exhibited. There is One who has told us that with clearness and emphasis.

All men assume the religious attitude, then, when they pray. But many men box up, as it were, this attitude in their prayer, and shutting it off from their lives with the Amen, rise from their knees to assume a totally different attitude, if not of heart, then at least of mind. They pray as if they were dependent on God’s mercy alone; they reason — perhaps they even live — as if God, in some of his activities at least, were dependent on them. The Calvinist is the man who is determined to preserve the attitude he takes in prayer in all his thinking, in all his feeling, in all his doing. That is to say, he is the man who is determined that religion in its purity shall come to its full rights in his thinking, and feeling, and living. This is the ground of his special mode of thought, by reason of which he is called a Calvinist; and as well of his special mode of acting in the world, by reason of which he has become the greatest regenerating force in the world. Other men are Calvinists on their knees; the Calvinist is the man who is determined that his intellect, and heart, and will shall remain on their knees continually, and only from this attitude think, and feel, and act. Calvinism is, therefore, that type of thought in which there comes to its rights the truly religious attitude of utter dependence on God and humble trust in his mercy alone for salvation.

There are at bottom but two types of religious thought in the world — if we may improperly use the term “religious” for both of them. There is the religion of faith; there is the “religion” of works. Calvinism is the pure embodiment of the former of these; what is known in Church History as Pelagianism is the pure embodiment of the latter of them. All other forms of “religious” teaching which have been known in Christendom are but unstable attempts at compromise between the two. At the opening of the fifth century, the two fundamental types came into direct conflict in remarkably pure form as embodied in the two persons of Augustine and Pelagius. Both were expending themselves in seeking to better the lives of men. But Pelagius in his exhortations threw men back on themselves; they were able, he declared, to do all that God demanded of them — otherwise God would not have demanded it. Augustine on the contrary pointed them in their weakness to God; “He himself,” he said, in his pregnant speech, “He himself is our power.” The one is the “religion” of proud self-dependence; the other is the religion of dependence on God. The one is the “religion” of works; the other is the religion of faith. The one is not “religion” at all — it is mere moralism; the other is all that is in the world that deserves to be called religion. Just in proportion as this attitude of faith is present in our thought, feeling, life, are we religious. When it becomes regnant in our thought, feeling, life, then are we truly religious. Calvinism is that type of thinking in which it has become regnant.

“There is a state of mind,” says Professor William James in his lectures on “The Varieties of Religious Experience,” known to religious men, but to no others, in which the will to assert ourselves and hold our own has been displaced by a willingness to close our mouths and be as nothing in the floods and waterspouts of God.” He is describing what he looks upon as the truly religious mood as over against what he calls “mere moralism.” “The moralist,” he tells us, “must hold his breath and keep his muscles tense”; and things go well with him only when he can do so. The religious man, on the contrary, finds his consolation in his very powerlessness; his trust is not in himself, but in his God; and “the hour of his moral death turns into his spiritual birthday.” The psychological analyst has caught the exact distinction between moralism and religion. It is the distinction between trust in ourselves and trust in God. And when trust in ourselves is driven entirely out, and trust in God comes in, in its purity, we have Calvinism. Under the name of religion at its height, what Professor James has really described is therefore just Calvinism. We may take Professor James’ testimony, therefore, as testimonty that religion at its height is just Calvinism. There are many forms of religious teaching in the world which are not Calvinism. Because, teaching even in religion often (ordinarily even) offers us only “broken lights.” There is no true religion in the world, however, which is not Calvinistic, Calvinistic in its essence, Calvinistic in its implications. When these implications are soundly drawn out and stated, and the essence thus comes to its rights, we obtain just Calvinism. In proportion as we are religious, in that proportion, then, are we Calvinistic; and when religion comes fully to its rights in our thinking, and feeling, and doing, then shall we be truly Calvinistic. This is why those who have caught a glimpse of these things, love with passion what men call “Calvinism,” sometimes with an air of contempt; and why they cling to it with enthusiasm. It is not merely the hope of true religion in the world: it is true religion in the world — as far as true religion is in the world at all.

____________

From Selected Shorter Writings of Benjamin B. Warfield, vol. 1, Edited by John E. Meeter, published by Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Company, 1970. originally from The Presbyterian, Mar. 2, 1904, pp. 6-7.

Source: Monergism

“Calvinism & Shadowy Lurkers”

In recent days I have had several notes from shadowy lurkers who come for visits and are opposed to the Scriptural teaching of God’s providence and sovereignty and especially for the true biblical doctrines and thus true religion, i.e., what we term as “Calvinism.” Of course, we know that this age-old battle has raged since the garden and will continue until Christ returns in glory. It amazes me, as it did Spurgeon and most Reformers and Calvinists (i.e., the really true Bible-believing Christians because Calvinists start with Scripture and end with Scripture and thus leave men and women in the dust on their faces), that one could read even the smallest text, or shortest Scripture and not understand that when God says in His Word, “In the beginning GOD created” that He is in charge of His universe directing everything according to His own sovereign power and will for His purposes and glory. What is man that God should be mindful of him? The puny creature saying to the Creator, “why has Thou made me thus” and suppressing the righteousness, providence and glory of God to exalt mankind and his sinful works of self-righteous salvation. Man is nothing, and counted as less than nothing and good for the dunghill. So then, if we take God at His Word, all of His Word, without the idol of man’s free will and merit and ignorant assumptions of goodness in ourselves, and trust wholly and completely in Him as He reveals Himself in Scripture, we are, as BB Warfield states so beautifully, “explicitly” Calvinists. Thus, the whole of Scripture wraps up in this beautiful package of true religion for us “Calvinists” and that, in itself, is the glory of knowing the “true and living God” in all of His fullness. Beautiful doctrine given to us from a glorious, generous and merciful God and Savior!

Thus, to my shadowy lurking critics, Yes, I was saved in eternity by the Sovereign God of life and breath, revealed in His perfect time, for His perfect plan and purpose, for His perfect glory and yes, I did come to know the “Calvinistic” God of the Bible by reading the Bible and like the Apostle Paul, and every other believer that truly believes God is who He says He is, went down upon my knees and face by His providential gift of faith and salvation! What can I say then? Alleluia, What a Savior! To God be the Glory!

Ephesians 1:3-14: Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places,he chose us in him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and blameless before him. In love he predestined us for adoption through Jesus Christ, according to the purpose of his will,to the praise of his glorious grace, with which he has blessed us in the Beloved. In him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of our trespasses, according to the riches of his grace, which he lavished upon us, in all wisdom and insight making known to us the mystery of his will, according to his purpose, which he set forth in Christ as a plan for the fullness of time, to unite all things in him, things in heaven and things on earth. In him we have obtained an inheritance,having been predestined according to the purpose of him who works all things according to the counsel of his will, so that we who were the first to hope in Christ might be to the praise of his glory. In him you also, when you heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation, and believed in him, were sealed with the promised Holy Spirit, who is the guarantee of our inheritance until we acquire possession of it, to the praise of his glory.

Finally to my lurking critics, I pray your eyes and ears are opened by God’s grace and mercy and your hearts freed so that you might worship the true God of the Bible in His fullness and then, obviously and boldly, it will be a delight and joy to call yourself a professor of true religion, a Calvinist.

Recommended Reading: The Bible, B.B. Warfield, John Owen, John Calvin, Stephen Charnock, Charles Hodge.

Links on Calvinism

p.s. Another help for my Arminian friends, get rid of Scofield, it will only bring you down to the pit.