KCPC Blog

The Grace of Giving and Generosity

Dear Family in Jesus,

Let us seek to flourish and thrive in being magnanimously generous in our giving. As we learned in Zechariah 6:9-15, we have been set free from slavery as God’s people to give our gifts to the LORD in gratitude! Because of God’s grace to us, let us more eagerly desire to honor and glorify God in Christ by “crowning” our King in the extension and advancement of His Kingdom, to the ends of the earth! Jesus is our Priest-King, the Branch of Righteousness God has given for His people to be made holy, who has promised to build us up as His holy temple (John 2:19ff; 1 Peter 2:6-11; cf. 1 Cor. 3:16ff; 2 Cor. 6:14-16) to complete fully the glory He has begun in us.

Yes, this is a message on giving. I am unashamedly writing as your pastor for you to think about giving and generosity. No, please do not put in trash and delete this email; please don’t set your “spam” settings to anything from Pastor Charles on giving! :-)  I realize that giving is more than financial giving but this is a message on financial giving (you can also give your time and talents, etc). I do commend you, dear KCPC family, on your kindness and mercy and the grace of God that I see in you!

However, I am prayerfully seeking to consider, plot, scheme, plan and help you so that you will be stirred up to love and good works as we are commanded to do! (Heb. 10:24-25). I realize that sometimes talking about giving and generosity stirs folks up to other things, not so much love and good works, but I trust the Spirit that He will guide you in this. So, please read on….Stop and pray and ask God to help you to consider these things with open minds and hearts. First of all, open your heart to the gospel in Christ:

Let me encourage you concerning generosity and giving today, especially as we prayerfully consider the THANK OFFERING to be received in the next couple of weeks, and as you think about how you would like to increase your giving and seek to be more generous toward God in the new year! Remember to give yourself sacrificially to God and others because Christ has given Himself for you so that you might be abundantly rich in Him. Your treasure is in heaven with Jesus; Your life is hidden with Christ in God! Rejoice!! (Matthew 6:24ff; Col. 3:1-4).

Behold the riches of God in Christ Jesus—all that Christ has is yours! You are a recipient of every spiritual blessings in Christ Jesus!

ESV Ephesians 1:3-6: 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, even as 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.

Beloved in Jesus: Remember that because of God’s love to you in Christ, give faithfully in your tithes and offerings. Give yourself back to Jesus who has given Himself for you (Rom. 12:1). Your tithes and offerings are tangible and concrete displays of the giving of yourself back to God in response to His Gospel promises to you in Christ. You are God’s precious treasure and possession; give yourself fully back to Him (Romans 5:6-11). If you have been redeemed you are not your own. Say it: “I am not my own; I belong to the Lord Jesus Christ” (Rev. 1:5-7).

Give gratefully to God to the needs that we have in our congregation and the larger denomination; give out of a heart saturated by God’s mercy to you in Jesus Christ. Meditate and think on how many ways God has blessed you. Say with the Psalmist: “Bless the LORD, O my soul, and all that is within me…!”

Psalm 103: Bless the LORD, O my soul, and all that is within me, bless his holy name! Bless the LORD, O my soul, and forget not all his benefits, who forgives all your iniquity, who heals all your diseases, who redeems your life from the pit, who crowns you with steadfast love and mercy, who satisfies you with good so that your youth is renewed like the eagle’s.

Forget not all His benefits…how easily we forget God’s mercies to us in Jesus—so make a point of remembering!

In this year alone, God has blessed KCPC in many ways! He has given us new covenant children, new members, even covenant children who have professed their faith. There have been relationships healed, stronger marriages, growth in grace, the faithful ministry of the word, and weekly administration of the sacrament, a closer and more affectionate fellowship at KCPC, the forgiveness of sins, the awakenings of hearts of the need for more grace and prayer, and many other blessings- -and this is just a short list of what God has done in our congregation.

Now think about your own life; your own family. How many mercies? Think of (5) mercies to you and your family; stop. Do it right now. Think about it. I encourage you to make a list of what God has done in your life and is doing presently! Be thankful; be grateful!!

The point in this exercise is to stir you up to love and good works! (Heb. 10:24-25). Now think about how you can more effectively give yourself to God and show Him your love by your giving and generosity to others. As God has abundantly given to you, now go and give voraciously and lavishly and sacrificially to others!

In your giving, always REMEMBER THE GOSPEL! Let the following encourage you in your prayer and planning to the Thank Offering, in your giving practices here at KCPC, especially during Thanksgiving and in the new year!

Meditate on God’s goodness to you and your family in the Gospel- -DAILY. You may use these scriptures:

CHRIST HAS MADE US RICH!

ESV 2 Corinthians 8:9 For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sake he became poor, so that you by his poverty might become rich.

We were impoverished, poor and naked before God, without any righteousness to offer him, and nothing but a weight of guilt, sin and debt to God. Christ put aside all of his glorious riches to make us abundantly rich and gloriously clothed in Him.

CHRIST HAS GIVEN US HIS MIND

Remember our ONE-ness in the Gospel (Others’ interests should be more important than our interests)! We are united to one another in one body by Christ’s Spirit:

ESV Philippians 2:2-4: …Complete my joy by being of the same mind, having the same love, being in full accord and of one mind. Do nothing from rivalry or conceit, but in humility count others more significant than yourselves. Let each of you look not only to his own interests, but also to the interests of others.

Let us give to each other because we are one body in Jesus at KCPC. May there never be needs in our congregation that we are aware of, that we do not seek as a congregation to provide together. There should never be anyone in our midst with known needs that are not met. If we cannot be generous to our brothers who we are united with and serve with together, how can we ever serve our enemies and the world as we are called to do?!

CHRIST HAS GIVEN US FAITH AND WORKS IN OUR UNION WITH HIM

Remember Your Faith and Your Love being demonstrated in your works

ESV James 2:14-18: What good is it, my brothers, if someone says he has faith but does not have works? Can that faith save him? If a brother or sister is poorly clothed and lacking in daily food, and one of you says to them, “Go in peace, be warmed and filled,” without giving them the things needed for the body, what good is that? So also faith by itself, if it does not have works, is dead. But someone will say, “You have faith and I have works.” Show me your faith apart from your works, and I will show you my faith by my works.

Remember to prove your love to Christ and one another; this is biblical. You say you love God, show it! Jesus said: “If you love me, keep my commandments.”

ESV 2 Corinthians 8:8 I say this not as a command, but to prove by the earnestness of others that your love also is genuine.

ESV 2 Corinthians 8:24 So give proof before the churches of your love and of our boasting about you to these men.

Remember Proverbs 11:24-25

ESV Proverbs 11:24-25: One gives freely, yet grows all the richer; another withholds what he should give, and only suffers want. Whoever brings blessing will be enriched, and one who waters will himself be watered.

“Objections” as to why you cannot or do not (will not!?) give!

You say: “But I’m really already stretched financially!”

If you’re “stretched”, God knows it and will provide for you; you can never out-give God! Hes is Jehovah Jireh, the God who provides! Your giving is an act of faith, and this same grace will be returned to you. In fact, it is through sacrificial giving that you learn more about how to be content in whatever situation and to have Christ strengthen you (look at the larger context of Philippians 4:10-23). The Apostle Paul teaches that we can do “all things” in Christ who strengthens us, and that means all things whether we living in abundance or need. God promises this:

ESV Philippians 4:19 And my God will supply every need of yours according to his riches in glory in Christ Jesus.

ESV 2 Corinthians 8:14-15: …Your abundance at the present time should supply their need, so that their abundance may supply your need, that there may be fairness. 15 As it is written, “Whoever gathered much had nothing left over, and whoever gathered little had no lack.”

You say: “But I tithe, isn’t that enough?!”

Thanks be to God for your tithing; that is a great start! But let us learn that the tithe was to show our utter dependence upon God for all things; that all that we have or will ever possess comes from God (1 Cor. 4:7), and that we are to learn not merely to give a tithe (10%) but learn to be willing to give all of ourselves and our possessions and belongings (nothing we should hold on too tightly! Luke 14:26ff). In other words, giving is for us to avoid idolatry and weighing ourselves down on our pilgrimage by prosperity. Giving is to give back to God as steward-managers of God, recognizing the danger of having too much stored away that might tempt us to lean on our savings plan rather on the God who has saved us!

“Come, follow me…” Jesus says.

You say: “But, I am in so much debt.”

Most of our lives we have some sort of debt.  God knows this. We can prayerfully and wisely seek to be debt free, but often the cause of our debt is because we are more consumers by nature than producers. Consumers are takers who want instant gratification and so we buy, and buy, and buy…. (I include myself in this temptation, 1 Cor. 10:13). We are often guilty of buying, because we hope for some peace or joy or satisfaction that we believe buying will give to us (but this is a lie).

In contrast, Producers will allow for delayed gratification. Producers are givers who want to be steward-managers of God’s resources and produce as much out of it as possible. Producers know that their giving will bless many and have eternal rewards and pay heavenly dividends; they produce for the Gospel’s sake. Consumers want for self; producers want to extend Christ’s kingdom. Most of our lives we will be a bit of both, consumer and producer. But seek consciously and prayerfully to budget not only for your debts, and to pay them off as best as you can, but also budget for your giving, so that you can become more of a producer for the kingdom than a mere consumer.

Wisdom has shown that oftentimes the Christian who is more of a consumer in the marketplace than a producer, is more of a consumer in the church than a producer-giver (meaning that there is a deeper root sin that has usually caused the debt and constrains the giving and generosity, and probably the progress in your sanctification as well).

Let us pray and seek to pay our debts faithfully, but let us put God first in our priorities, and seek to produce more for His kingdom, and trust Him to pay off the debt. If you have tremendous debts, ask God to search your heart, Psalm 139-style, and if there is anything greed, consumerism, selfishness to be repented of, then by all means, get to it and find mercy and grace in Christ (Heb. 4:16).

Remember we are commanded to seek first the Kingdom of God, and therefore we are to seek to be producer-stewards of God’s kingdom gifts (see Matthew 25:14ff also for caution and wisdom):

ESV Matthew 6:33-34: But seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things will be added to you. “Therefore do not be anxious about tomorrow, for tomorrow will be anxious for itself. Sufficient for the day is its own trouble.

You say: “But, I can give so little.”

Give your “widow’s mite”; give your few fish and single loaf of bread; give what you can and watch and pray that Jesus in His grace might multiply what you give. Perhaps your small gift will be received, seen, etc. and someone with much more would give because they saw you give little of what you have!? If there is readiness to give, it is from God and acceptable:

ESV 2 Corinthians 8:12 For if the readiness is there, it is acceptable according to what a person has, not according to what he does not have.

EXCEL in the grace of giving generously!

ESV 2 Corinthians 8:7 But as you excel in everything– in faith, in speech, in knowledge, in all earnestness, and in our love for you- see that you excel in this act of grace also.

Let us show our love for God, our love for one another, and the abundant grace of joy and thanksgiving we have by giving tangibly to needs.  Continue to be faithful to tithing, giving and generosity in general.

If you do not at least tithe 10% and you’re regularly being fed spiritually and being served by others at KCPC then ask God to search your heart and to teach you by His Spirit why you’re being disobedient to the clear teaching of Scripture. If you’re tithing but doing it in a self-righteous, smug spirit, or with an unwilling heart, ask God to search your heart and to teach you by His Spirit why you’re being disobedient to the clear teaching of Scripture.

“Whoever gathered much had nothing left over, and whoever gathered little had no lack.”

ESV 2 Corinthians 9:6-8: The point is this: whoever sows sparingly will also reap sparingly, and whoever sows bountifully will also reap bountifully. Each one must give as he has made up his mind, not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver. And God is able to make all grace abound to you, so that having all contentment in all things at all times, you may abound in every good work.

Believe.

Do you believe that you can be MAGNANIMOUSLY GENEROUS and that Jesus can be your ultimate portion and possession and treasure- -and that you can be a greater giver?

“Didn’t I say that you would see the **GLORY** of God if you just believed?”- John 11:40

Let us show our love for God in our giving and generosity. All things are possible with God! He will do above and beyond what we can ever ask or imagine by the power of His Spirit (Eph. 3:20-21).

In Christ’s love,
Pastor Charles

Westminster Shorter Catechism: Q27

Question: WSC 27: Wherein did Christ’s humiliation consist?

Answer: Christ’s humiliation consisted in his being born, and that in a low condition, made under the law, undergoing the miseries of this life, the wrath of God, and the cursed death of the cross; in being buried, and continuing under the power of death for a time.

Scripture Memory: “…And being found in human form, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross” (Phil 2:8).

An Explanation: Christ’s humiliation was His willing and joyful obedience to God the Father to complete the mission that God gave Him as part of the Eternal Covenant or the Covenant of Peace to redeem a people from sin (Psa. 40; Isa. 11; 42; 49; 52-53; 54:10; Ezek. 34:25; John 17:1-5; Heb. 13:20-21). His humiliation caused Christ to be affected, tempted and touched in every way by sin’s effects in a world of sin and misery without being contaminated or tainted by sin Himself.

The humiliation of Christ included He, being the Eternal Son, not merely making an appearance as a man (as He did as the Angel of the LORD in the Old Covenant), but taking upon Himself a human nature permanently in hypostatic-personal union with Himself for all eternity as Meditator and covenant representative of His people (Gal. 4:6; Luke 1:27-35).“The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you; therefore the child to be born will be called holy- the Son of God.” Jesus Christ, one holy person with two natures, both God and man, was born to godly parents who were poor and insignificant in the eyes of the world. His glory as Son of God was veiled to the eyes of the watching world, and he was recognized as a “man of sorrows, acquainted with grief” (Isa. 53; Luke 2:25ff).

Christ was born under the Law as a man required to keep all of the commandments of God, and to walk in obedience with God in humility all of his days upon the earth (Gal. 4:6; Psa. 40:6-8). He lived in a fallen and broken world, feeling the real threats of temptations to sin, yet without sinning Himself (Heb. 4:14-16). Upon completion of HIs perfect work of joyful and submissive obedience to His Father as part of the Eternal Covenant, He laid down His life as a final sin offering for sinners to bring to His own unity and peace with God (John 17:20-26; Eph. 2:14-22). He was denied and rejected by His own people, and even His dearest friends, and was crucified in weakness for our transgressions. He who knew no sin became sin for us, so that we might know the righteousness of God in Him (2 Cor. 5:21). In His life, he knew no place of His own to lay His holy head, and in His death, no place of His own to rest His “broken” and dead body (Luke 9:58; 19:38ff). But through all this, Christ Jesus our Savior rejoiced in the Holy Spirit for His Beloved Bride, who was the Joy set before Him! (Luke 10:21; Heb. 12:3).

A Prayer: You are the Perfect One, O Mighty Savior, Jesus, my kind king. Let me walk as a sinner saved by grace in joyful obedience in you today. Let me offer myself to you willingly and joyfully as you offered yourself for me (John 17:17-19). Let me grown in my love for you , as I ponder your great glory and love for sinners—for me—in your humiliating and lowly estate to bring me near to God! Thank you!

In Christ’s Love,
Pastor Biggs

Westminster Shorter Catechism: Q26

Question: WSC 26: How doth Christ execute the office of a king?

Answer: Christ executeth the office of a king, in subduing us to himself, in ruling and defending us, and in restraining and conquering all his and our enemies.

Scripture Memory: “…We are more than conquerors through him who loved us.” (Rom. 8:37)

An Explanation: Let us rejoice that God the Father has exalted Christ Jesus, Our Lord and Savior, to be the King of kings and Lord of lords (Phil. 2:9-11). God has granted the Son, our Beloved Savior, with all authority in heaven and on earth—over all flesh, both believers and unbelievers (Matt. 28:18ff; John 17:1-2). Christ is the Lord of all believers for whom He died, and has subdued their hearts to Himself (John 1:49), and He is the Lord of unbelievers who He will Judge based on their works at the Resurrection of the Last Day (Psa. 110:2; Acts 17:31).

Christ Jesus rules as our king by subduing our hearts to Himself, and making us willing and able to believe. He grants spiritual life to us while we are dead, and frees us from slavery to sin and to the devil, to enable us to live willingly and joyfully unto God (Eph. 2:1-3; Col. 1:13-14; Rev. 1:5-7; Rom. 6:5-11). Jesus rules over His people through His church, and defends us from all of His and our enemies.

As our Glorious Ruler, Christ continues to teach us, and to instruct us in His will and ways, through the Word of God by His Spirit (Isa. 33:22; Rev. 2-3). Christ appoints church officers (Eph. 4:11ff; Matt. 16:19;18:18; Heb. 13:7,17) who serve as His ministers or under­-shepherds in His Kingdom, who have been entrusted with the keys of doctrine and discipline to faithfully minister Word, Sacraments, and discipline for the peace and purity of His Beloved Church. Christ calls His people, His Beloved flock to Himself to be sheltered under His wings, and to come as chicks to a mother hen to find refuge and safety from HIs and our terrible enemies, the world, the flesh, and the devil! (Matt. 23:27; Psa. 91:4; cf. 1 John 2:14-18).

Jesus has defeated death, and taken the terrible sting out of death, so that now it is now a doorway not to judgement and eternal death, but to a perfect sight of Jesus (John 17:24; 1 Jo. 3:2), a glorious and living hope, a resurrection to eternal life, and a imperishable, undefiled, and unfading inheritance that is kept in heaven for us, guarded for us by Jesus, the Lord of all, and the Resurrection and the Life! (1 Cor. 15:25, 55-58; John 5:24-26; 11:25ff; 1 Peter 1:4ff). In Jesus, we are more than conquerors through Him who loved us, and nothing shall separate us from His great love for us! (Rom. 8:37-39). He is our king!

A Prayer: All Hail, King Jesus!! Let me live more wholehearted for you, O kind king and merciful Savior. Let the words of my mouth, and the meditations of my heart be pleasing in your sight! Prone to wander, Lord, I feel it. Take my heart and seal it by your Holy Spirit for your courts above! Amen.

In Christ’s Love,
Pastor Biggs

Solas of the Reformation

496th Anniversary of the Reformation of the 16th Century

This month we have the privilege of celebrating the 496th anniversary of the Reformation of the Sixteenth Century. October 31st is the occasion when many Reformed congregations gratefully remember the Spirit of God’s work through Martin Luther in nailing his 95 Theses on the church door at Wittenberg Germany that was the means through which God brought a fresh discovery of His Gospel to His church. The Reformation was one of the greatest revivals in the history of the church.

As heirs of this reformation and revival, and as those thankful for the knowledge of the Gospel of grace, there are five fruits that are worth memorizing and remembering each year at this time. These five fruits of the Reformation are five “solas” or “alones” that are important for us never to forget. These “solas” highlight God’s absolute mercy and passionate grace for His dear, lost and helpless children who He has rescued through the Person and Work of Jesus Christ. The ‘solas’ are ‘Sola Scriptura’ (Scripture Alone), ‘Sola Fide’ (Faith Alone), ‘Sola Gratia’ (Grace Alone), ‘Solus Christus’ (Christ Alone), and ‘Soli Deo Gloria’ (To God be Glory Alone!). Let’s look briefly at each of these:

Sola Scriptura: Scripture alone stresses that the God-breathed-out, inerrant Word of God is foundational and sufficient for all life and godliness (2 Tim. 3:16-17; 2 Pet. 1:3-4). Biblical creeds and confessions are helpful aids to God’s people, and we embrace tradition insofar as it is taught in Scripture. Scripture alone means that the last word and final authority for matters of life and doctrine are to be found in the Holy Scriptures. Scripture is to be preached by the power of the Holy Spirit as a primary means of saving and sanctifying sinners (2 Tim. 4:1ff).

Sola Fide: Faith is a gift of God, an instrument whereby believers receive as a gift all of the perfect righteousness that we need to stand before a holy God. The righteousness God requires is the righteousness found in Christ (Rom. 3:24-26, 4:5; 2 Cor. 5:21). Faith alone stresses that Christ does all the work that is required for one to be saved, and we receive this as a gift. We are not saved through faith and our works, but through Christ’s works alone received by faith. However, it is important to note that while we are saved by faith alone, we are saved not by a faith that is alone; it is a working faith that responds to God’s grace with obedience (Eph. 2:8-10).

Sola Gratia. Grace alone teaches that we are not saved in our cooperating with God in salvation. We are utterly helpless and unable to do anything good before God in our sinfulness (Rom. 3:23). Apart from Christ we can do nothing (John 15:5) and without the gracious, initiating, powerful work of God through HIs Spirit drawing us no one can be saved (Matt. 11:25-27; Tit. 3:4-7; John 6:37, 44). Our salvation is from beginning to end because of God’s mercy, not because of anything God might foresee in us (Rom. 9). We are saved by grace through faith, not of works, so that no one can boast (Eph. 2:8-9).

Solus Christus. Christ alone emphasizes that there is one mediator between God and man, the man Christ Jesus (1 Tim. 2:5). Christ has done all for us that we could never do, nor would want to do in our sinful fallenness. Christ is to be glorified and thanked for His good works for us. Christ is to have our ultimate focus and gratitude (Heb. 12:1-2) because of all He has done for us in His life, death, resurrection, and ascension to God’s right hand. While others may place undue and unbiblical emphasis on saints, Mary, and even angels, our hearts are centered on Christ alone as our loving Savior, Bridegroom, and friend.

Soli Deo Gloria. All that has been achieved for our salvation is to bring glory, honor and praise to the Triune God alone! (Rom. 11:33-36; Rev. 4:11; 5:9-11). We were made for His pleasure, and now live for HIs glory in gratitude for what He has accomplished for us in Christ.

As a congregation, let us memorize these five ‘Solas’ of the Reformation, and reaffirm them, and unashamedly make them known as God’s pilgrim people on the way to the Heavenly City.

In Christ’s love,
Pastor Biggs

Westminster Shorter Catechism: Q25

Question: WSC 25  How doth Christ execute the office of a priest?

Answer: Christ executeth the office of a priest, in his once offering up of himself a sacrifice to satisfy divine justice, and reconcile us to God, and in making continual intercession for us.

Scripture Memory: ESV Hebrews 9:14 …How much more will the blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered himself without blemish to God, purify our conscience from dead works to serve the living God.

An Explanation: On the cross, the Lord Jesus offered Himself up willingly by the Eternal Spirit as a sacrificial offering to propitiate God’s just wrath against sin, and reconcile sinners to God (Heb. 9:14, 26b; Rom. 3:24-26; Col. 1:20). Although Jesus was God’s perfect and holy priest, He also willingly became the final sacrifice. There are two parts to Christ’s priestly work that should be noted: 1) Oblation/Sacrifice and 2) Intercession for sinners. In John 17, we behold the glory of both of these aspects of Christ’s priestly office. Jesus intercedes or prays for His own that the Father has given Him as he willingly and joyfully goes to the cross to satisfy divine justice and redeem His people through His blood (“…Father, the hour has come…”, John 17:1). Jesus prays that He would glorify the Father through His priestly ministry, as the Father glorifies Him in the salvation work that will be accomplished through the cross and resurrection-ascension (John 17:1-5; cf. Heb. 10:10).

Christ completed His work of salvation for sinners through His death on the cross. He cried out: “It is finished” giving sinners great confidence in entering the blessed Holy of Holies through His blood, and giving His people boldness and confidence in their access to the Father (Heb. 4:14-16; cf. Eph. 2:18). Although Christ’s priestly work in His estate of humiliation was fully accomplished and finished, His Heavenly Priestly work had just begun! The Bible teaches us that the priestly work of Christ in His estate of exaltation is to ever intercede for His own people, ensuring their endurance to the end, and ministering to them by His grace through Word and Sacrament by His Spirit from His Heavenly Throne in heaven. This great Gospel hope is summarized wonderfully in Hebrews 7:24-28:

…But he holds his priesthood permanently, because he continues forever. 25 Consequently, he is able to save to the uttermost those who draw near to God through him, since he always lives to make intercession for them. 26 For it was indeed fitting that we should have such a high priest, holy, innocent, unstained, separated from sinners, and exalted above the heavens. 27 He has no need, like those high priests, to offer sacrifices daily, first for his own sins and then for those of the people, since he did this once for all when he offered up himself. 28 For the law appoints men in their weakness as high priests, but the word of the oath, which came later than the law, appoints a Son who has been made perfect forever.

Prayer: Dear Jesus, let me come daily and boldly to the Throne of Grace to have you minister to me in my needs. Let me enter into your prayer time and intercession as I seek communion and fellowship with you. Let me know your peace as I live for you (Heb. 9:14).

In Christ’s Love,
Pastor Biggs

 

Westminster Shorter Catechism: Q24

Question: WSC 24  How doth Christ execute the office of a prophet?

Answer: Christ executeth the office of a prophet, in revealing to us, by his word and Spirit, the will of God for our salvation?

Scripture Memory: ESV John 15:15 No longer do I call you servants, for the servant does not know what his master is doing; but I have called you friends, for all that I have heard from my Father I have made known to you.

An Explanation: We have learned that our Lord Jesus is our Prophet, Priest, and our King. What does it mean for Jesus to be our Holy Prophet from the LORD? How does Christ particularly execute his office as a prophet in both His estate of humiliation (incarnation) and exaltation (enthronement-session at God’s right hand in heaven)? First and foremost, let us rejoice in our God that He has not left us without His Word. Let us remember that if a faithful prophet has been raised up to speak to God’s Beloved church, then it is all because of God’s kind mercies toward us. If God has sent His own Son to speak (and He has!!), how much more should we rejoice, and seek to intently and carefully listen to Him! (cf. Heb. 1:1-3). Jesus is the Blessed Prophet, the Beloved Son of God greater than Moses to whom we must listen (Acts 3:22), especially as it regards the salvation from sin that God has revealed to us! (“This is my Son, my chose One, listen to Him,” Luke 9:35).

Jesus is a prophet in that He was the Perfect Word of God’s salvation revealed and expressed in His incarnation. John can say triumphantly: “The Word became flesh…” (John 1:14). Christ is God’s Truth revealed in flesh, the very “way, truth and life” from God to His people (John 14:6). Jesus came to reveal God’s truth powerfully in His Person and in His teaching and preaching. When Jesus came in the incarnation, he preached that the Kingdom of God was at hand in Himself (Mark 1:14-15). He taught that all of the Old Testament hopes and dreams of God’s salvation were being realized (Luke 4:18ff; 24:24ff; 2 Cor. 1:20). Jesus ultimately reveals the Father and the hope of salvation by grace alone, in Christ alone, received through faith alone, through the power of the Holy Spirit.

And Jesus still speaks to us (Heb. 12:25ff). Jesus has been enthroned on high, at God’s right hand as glorious King of kings, but He still speaks by His Spirit through His written Word and faithful servants, the preachers and teachers of His church (Eph. 4:9-16). Jesus still sows the Word preached into our hearts, and promises to cause His own to bear much fruit! (Mark 4:1ff; John 15:5). He uses His servants to preach the Word (2 Tim. 4:1ff) so that His people might come to Him, and to grow in in grace and mature (2 Pet. 1:3ff). Let us rejoice that although we are spiritual blind and ignorant by nature because of sin, God has caused the light of the Gospel of Christ to shine upon our hearts, and given us new life in Him. Let us meditate upon His Word, and hide it in our hearts that we might not sin against such a Blessed and Beautiful Savior! Amen.

A Prayer: Jesus, give us ears to hear you when you speak. Grant us hearts to love your Word, and to trust you more. Let us hear our Shepherd’s voice through the ministry of the Word and in our hearts.

In Christ’s Love,
Pastor Biggs

Affectionately Desirous of Him | Part VI: The Affectionate Journey Home to the Beloved

“If ye then be risen with Christ, seek those things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God. Set your affection on things above, not on things on the earth.”

KJV Colossians 3:1-2

The Christian life is a pilgrimage; it is a journey home. Here on our pilgrimage we must watch and pray, we must let nothing draw our affections off God in Christ (Matt. 26:41; Luke 21:34). We must agonizingly struggle against temptations within and without, in wholehearted dependence and full reliance upon the Holy Spirit who is with us as the comforting presence and sustaining power of Christ. We have been redeemed, but we await a Heavenly City, a Heavenly Country as our inheritance in Christ, where we will live in bliss with the Triune God for all eternity (Heb. 11:13-16; Rev. 19-22).

When we arrive home, we shall see Jesus face to face, we will be safe and secure from all alarm, and we will come to the completion of our sanctification process in Him (Phil. 1:6; 3:9ff; Jude 24-25; 1 Thess. 5:23-24). When we see Jesus our Bridegroom face to face this will culminate and consummate in the complete satisfaction of all of our soul’s desires (Rom. 8:18-25)! When we arrive home, Jesus, our Precious Savior, and Glorious Bridegroom, will welcome us as the Bride that He has redeemed, and bought, and transformed by His Spirit (Rev. 1:4-8).

The Bible teaches us that when we see our Beloved Bridegroom with our own eyes, we will be transformed fully and completely to be like Him! We are lovely in His sight now, but when we look upon Him and behold Him, we will be made beautiful and fully holy like Him. The Bible teaches us that it is this longing and desire of seeing Him face to face, and being made completely like Him that motivates us to holiness and purity in Him now:

Beloved, we are God’s children now, and what we will be has not yet appeared; but we know that when he appears we shall be like him, because we shall see him as he is. And everyone who thus hopes in him purifies himself as he is pure. – 1 John 3:2-3

As we travel on our pilgrimage now, knowing Jesus is with us–our ever-loving, ever-faithful Immanuel, God “with us”–so we long to get home. But how do we get home not merely safely as we desire, but joyfully and with delight in this present age? Particularly as we do know from Scripture and experience how many dangers, toils, and snares there can be in the Christian life?! We are to keep our eyes upon Jesus now by faith, meditating upon His love for us, and seeing His goodness with eyes of faith as He is held out to us in preaching and in Holy Scripture. We are to learn to meditate upon Heavenly blessings that we already possess to a certain degree in Christ, that will become fully ours in heaven (see Col. 3:1-3).

As the Puritan forefathers taught us, we are to have “heaven in one eye” throughout our earthly pilgrimage, keeping our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith (Hebrews 12:1ff)!J. R. Beeke and R. J. Pederson. Meet the Puritans: With a Guide to Modern Reprints (Grand Rapids, MI: Reformation Heritage Books, 2006), xxiii. We long to see the place that Christ has been preparing for His Beloved Bride. In fact, with the Holy Spirit, or in the Spirit, we cry together: “Come, Lord Jesus” (Rev. 22:17). Richard Sibbes wrote

This life is a life of desires and longings, the marriage with Christ shall not be consummated until heaven.Richard Sibbes, A Breathing After God, in Works, II: 228.

J. I. Packer wrote in his wonderful book A Quest for Godliness: “Basic to [the Puritans] pastoral care was their understanding of the Christian’s present life as a journey home, and they made much of encouraging God’s people to look ahead and feast their hearts on what is to come.”J. I. Packer, A Quest for Godliness, 334. See for example: Isaac Ambrose, Looking Unto Jesus, and Richard Baxter, The Saints Everlasting Rest. Believers ought to meditate upon the glories that are to be revealed to us in Christ, and then in us and for us in Christ as heirs of all of His wonderful blessings. This can affect our hearts with deep love, desiring to be good stewards of our time and seeking to please Him with the gifts and grace.

Heaven in our destination—where Christ is now—and this is the home we truly long for. The soul that has tasted God’s goodness in Christ doesn’t want heaven merely as His reward, but His reward is God in Christ. He wants Christ first, before all things, without the taint and hindrance of sin upon His affections, preventing him from loving Christ as much as he can imagine, and would like to (Psa. 16:5; Rom. 7:25; 1 Cor. 2:9). For the believing, mature soul, heaven is heaven, because His Beloved Bridegroom Christ is there. Richard Sibbes wrote so beautifully: “It is the presence of God that makes all things sweet and comfortable. What makes heaven to be heaven, but because God is there?Richard Sibbes, A Breathing After God, in Works, II: 228.

We should ponder this future grace to be revealed to us each day of our lives here to motivate us to more love, and more holiness, and consistent service for Him!  John Owen wrote that the best preparation for the glory we shall be exposed to in eternity, is by gazing now upon the glory of Christ in preparation of heaven. This spiritual desiring through mediation upon Jesus as He is revealed in His Person and Work will transform us and prepare us for heaven as Jesus prepares heaven for us. He wrote:

For if our future blessedness shall consist in being where He is, and beholding His glory, what better preparation can there be for it than in a constant contemplation of that glory in the revelation that is made in the Gospel, unto this very end, that by a view of it we may be gradually transformed into the same glory.John Owen, The Glory of Christ, in Works, I: 275.

As we behold Christ by faith now in our communion with Him, we will long to have our conjugal love consummated in heaven. Our communion with Him will make us cry out the more vehemently for His return. We desire to see Him face to face increasingly more. This will help us to be sober-minded, watchful, and constantly looking to the skies to behold His glory (1 Pet. 4:7; Matt. 26:41; Mark 13:32-39; Rev. 1:5ff).

“Maranatha! Come, Lord Jesus!”

– Rev. 22:20

Speaking of only human experiences that are lovely and enjoyable, when a Bridegroom here on earth is engaged to be married, he plans, prepares, longs for the day of marriage and consummation with his beautiful bride. This earthly experience is a shadow, a prototype of the Heavenly Marriage and the wonderful, eschatological consummation that is to be revealed by Christ to His Bride! (Psa. 45; Eph. 5:21-32). It is our privilege and duty in Christ Jesus, to long and look forward to this Great Day, the Wedding Supper of the Lamb where all will be rejoicing and bliss (Rev. 19). Thomas Shepard wrote that it is the Christian’s duty to be

…Constantly and continually ready to meet Christ and to enjoy communion with Him. Because we are betrothed (espoused) to Christ, we ought to be in a constant and continual readiness to meet Christ, and to have immediate communion with Him.Thomas Shepard, Parable of the Ten Virgins, 68-69.

In the Parable of the Ten Virgins in Matthew 25, we are taught that those who are full of expectation for the return of the Bridegroom are those who are truly full of the Holy Spirit, and are being matured under His influences to be preparing and ready and watchful and alert without distractions from dissipation, drunkenness, and the cares of this life (Matt. 25:1-13; Luke 21:34). The believing and watchful soul of the bride should possess both desire and hope as she awaits the return of the Bridegroom! Thomas Shepard wrote that there are two affections of the soul that chiefly look to a good absent: desire and hope. Hope is like the eye that goes out and looks, and desire is like the feet that runs out and longs. By hope and desire, we go forth to meet the Bridegroom.Thomas Shepard, Parable of the Ten Virgins, 112. Do you have this kind of hope and desire in Christ?

The more the believer’s affections are drawn to Christ, and long to be with Him for all eternity, the more He will vehemently, and even violently (Matt. 11:12: “the violent take it by force!”) will seek heaven above all things. The soul smitten by love for Christ has “set its affections on things above where Christ is at the right hand of God” because it knows that when Christ appears, then glory that has begun in regeneration will be fully consummated! (Col. 3:1-4). The believing soul longs for heaven so much that it cannot rest on this journey in complacent and contented satisfaction until it embraces Christ in heaven. Sibbes wrote:

For the soul of a Christian, like Noah’s dove, cannot rest in any glory here, till it return to the ark, till it come to the enjoyment of perfect glory, and have blissful communion with Christ forever and ever in heaven.Richard Sibbes, The Brides’ Longing, in Works, VI: 536.

As we love Christ sincerely as Mediator here on our journey home, we shall see Him as our treasure that must be obtained. There will be an increased and longing desire to be ever closer to Him.Thomas Neast, ibid., I: 182-83. He wrote that a true and longing love for Christ will never be languishing but always be growing as it feeds on Christ; gains confidence of access to Christ, and to God the Father through Him. As we grow in His love and His likeness so we will learn to cry with the Psalmist from the heart:

“Whom have I in heaven but you? And there is nothing on earth that I desire besides you.”

ESV Psalm 73:25

Christ will become our chief desire, the chief longing of our hearts as we grow in God’s grace and love. We will say: “Deus meus est omnia” or more particularly to our Great Savior and Redeemer, the Lord Jesus Christ we will cry out:

“Christus meus est omnia!” or,

“Christ is my all!”Thomas Neast, ibid., I: 182-83.

When it seems our hearts are growing dull or apathetic, let us remember Richard Sibbes’ advice:

When you find your hearts dull and cold, and inactive to do good. Then fetch fire…from the Second Coming of Christ, from the love of God in Christ, from the love of His appearance. Oh, rouse up and quicken your hearts with such considerations….Those that desire the coming of Christ exercise themselves much in holiness because they exercise themselves in the beginning of heaven here on earth.Richard Sibbes, The Brides’ Longing, in Works, VI: 551, 555.

But we must be careful to remember that we are not home yet, and so let us be careful that our hearts not grow cold as we await; let us be alert, watching dissipation and drunkenness and distractions from the cares of this life that seek to take our affections of Christ and place them on the world, or something fleshly (Luke 21:34).  Shepard wrote: “Spiritual defilement and disobedience to God is a forsaking of the husband, a total secret forsaking of Christ.Shepard, Parable of the Ten Virgins, 65. Jesus tells the Church at Ephesus in the Book of Revelation that they had lost their “first love”: “…Thou hast left thy first love” (Rev. 2:4). The kind and gracious Lord Jesus Christ calls them to repentance, to return to the service that they had before they fell away into sin where their hearts were engaged and desirous of things other than Christ.

This reminds the soul that Christ is our first love, and there are works that follow in pleasing Christ as our “First Love”, but there are also many things that compete for this primacy of place, and the soul must be aware of this. Holy love is to remember that Jesus is the first and the last, the Alpha and the Omega of our salvation who loves us and has freed us from our sins by His precious blood and has made us a Kingdom, priests to His God and Father (Rev. 1:5-6). Shepard poignantly asked professing believers:

Where is your heart? Have you not lost your love, your first love? ….The soul is prepared to meet Christ…if the soul has lost its affections [for Christ], it recovers them from the creatures who stole them away from Christ.Shepard, Parable of the Ten Virgins, 72.

What is the believer’s specific hope when the Bridegroom returns? Shepard raises our affections with a glorious answer!

All our sinful deformities will be taken away, and He shall adorn His Bride in perfect beauty. Jesus will openly acknowledge His Bride and declare His love for her before the world. He that has made it His glory to confess Christ in a holy life, Christ will confess him before God and the angels, and so before all the world. Jesus will say: ‘I have given them that glory, united them, and made them flesh of my flesh, that the world may know thou hast loved them as thou hast loved me.’ Christ has been desiring after them in glory (John 17:24), now, their desires being fulfilled…now He rejoices with exceeding joy…He shall rejoice over you with loud singing!Thomas Shepard, The Parable of the Ten Virgins, 514, 515, 517.

Because we have this great hope in Christ Jesus, let our affections burn hot in vehement passion for Him by the power of the Holy Spirit. Let us seek to be affected from deep within our hearts, so that we, in light of His abundant goodness and grace, because of His glorious beauty and majestic grace, we might offer to Him our most perfect sacrifice! Because He was broken for us, and in love laid down His life for us, let us offer up to Him our most valuable possession—our very selves—and let us, with the woman in Mark 14, give our hearts to Him, in undivided and wholehearted devotion to our Loving Bridegroom!

Let us seek to gaze at His beauty by faith (Isa. 33:17; Heb. 12:1-2), becoming like Him, and learning to love Him more increasingly, and serving Him with all that is within us—for His glory, and our enjoyment.

Amen.

In Christ’s Love,
Pastor Biggs

Affectionately Desirous of Him | Part V: The Affections and Beauty of Holiness, Part 2

Although the soul of man is most happy and satisfied in God, not all find this happiness in Jesus! What makes Jesus so lovely, so glorious and beautiful to some—and yet so reprehensible to others? We know externally as a man “[Jesus Christ] had no form or majesty that we should look at him, and no beauty that we should desire him. He was despised and rejected by men” (Isa. 53:2b-3). Jesus in His glorious Person came to His world, and it did not know Him, He came to His own people, but His own people did not receive Him (John 1:10-11). The Bible testifies to man that “Jesus is “wonderful”! “He is altogether lovely or desirable!” (Song of Solomon 5:16).

Jesus’s holiness makes Him lovely and beautiful. His holiness is beautiful and desirous only to the regenerate, those who are in Him, who desire to be like Him, whose affections have been inclined toward Him, who love Him, and cherish Him. But for the unregenerate and the sinful, those who reject God from their hearts and seek after mere created things to satisfy their longings and fulfill their needs, Jesus is reprehensible. Jesus is reprehensible, even offensive, because they hate holiness, and they hate the light that exposes their sins. “Men loved evil rather than light because their deeds were evil” (John 3:19).

Only holy people can desire to look on holiness; only people who have been made alive in Christ by His Spirit can desire after Christ and His holiness. Although Jesus cloaked His glory and divested Himself of His glorious privileges as God in the His incarnation (1 Tim. 3:16; Phil. 2:6-8), nevertheless, He is glorious in His humanity, and beautiful as the perfect and holy man, desirous to all those who are redeemed and desire holiness. As Jonathan Edwards (1703-58) said:

All the spiritual beauty of His human nature: His meekness, lowliness, patience, heavenliness, love to God, love to men…compassion…all is summed up in His Holiness.1Jonathan Edwards, The Religious Affections. Ebook (Dover Publications, 2013), Kindle Location, 3124-139.

Edwards taught that only saints and angels can truly appreciate God’s holiness fully manifested and revealed in the Lord Jesus Christ. This sight and gaze on this beautiful holy man will melt our hearts and begin to make us humble like Him. The only place in Holy Scripture where Jesus speaks of Himself and His character is when he says:

“I am meek and lowly in heart” (Matt. 11:29).

To be more like Him! Holy people are affected and attracted by holiness, especially when it is beheld in Christ. Jesus is beautiful and glorious because He is the image of the invisible God, the visible form of the Holy Father clearly revealed (Heb. 1:3; John 1:14-18, 14:9). Therefore, his character that is revealed in His love to the Father and to other sinners, His meekness, devotion, kindness, humility, all of his characteristics are holy and reveal what holy people can aspire to by His Holy Spirit.  Thomas Watson (1620-1686) wrote,

Faith is an assimilating grace….Looking on a bleeding Christ causes a soft bleeding heart; looking on a holy Christ causes sanctity of heart; looking on a humble Christ makes the soul humble (my emphasis).2Thomas Watson, A Body of Divinity, pg. 219. Quotes in Beeke and Jones, Puritan Theology, Ebook, Kindle Location 19574-590.

The more one beholds the loveliness and beauty of Christ’s attractiveness, the more one desires and is attracted to this holiness—and is transformed! As Thomas Brooks (1608-80) wrote, “A holy man…can never be holy enough.”3Brooks, Works, IV: 107-108. “To be a holy person is to know a holy Christ, to be in love with a holy Christ…”4Brooks, Works, IV: 129. Holiness is the excellency of all a man’s excellencies, and was the first suit that ever was put upon the back of man’s nature before the fall into sin.5Brooks, Works, IV: 163, 169. Holiness will render you most beautiful and amiable like your Savior!6Brooks, Works, IV: 169-71. Holiness will inflame a person to pursue it more and more:

The beauties of holiness do so affect him and inflame him that he cannot but desire to be more and more holy. Lord, saith the soul, I desire to be more holy, that I may glorify thy name more, that I may honor my profession more, and that I may serve my generation more. Lord, I desire to be more holy, that I may sin less against thee, and that I may enjoy more of thee; I would be more holy, that I may be more prevalent with thee, and that I may be more victorious over all things below…A man desires more holiness, so a man of holiness earnestly prays for more holiness (Psa. 51:2,7).7Brooks, Works, IV: 108.

A sight of this glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ, this beautiful humility and meekness will “melt and humble the hearts of men, wean them from this world, draw them near to God, and effectually change them,” Edwards wrote experientially.8Jonathan Edwards, The Religious Affections, Ebook. Kindle Location, 3221-233. A glimpse and experience of this holiness found in Jesus, received by faith in the believer, will humble the soul and wean the soul from all other competitive, created glories that compete for Jesus’s love and affection. Edwards wrote that true spiritual understanding is possible only for a believer, and it results in tasting God’s goodness in Christ. True spiritual understanding is

…A cordial sense of the supreme beauty and sweetness of the holiness or moral perfection of divine things, together with all that discerning and knowledge of things in religion that depends upon and flows from such a sense.9Jonathan Edwards, The Religious Affections, Ebook. Kindle Location, 3347-359.

This sense that Edwards speaks of distinguishes true Christians from mere hypocrites. The sense, or taste that one has in Christ of God’s beauty and holiness in Christ is more than a mere notional or mental or intellectual knowledge of God in Christ; it is experiential; it is the kind of knowledge that “surpasses knowledge” as the Apostle Paul writes in Ephesians 3:17-19: “…To know the love of Christ that surpasses knowledge, that you may be filled with all the fullness of God.”

To be more with Him! As we are increasingly attracted to Jesus’s holiness, we will desire to be with Him more in intimate communion of prayer and praise and fellowship (Col. 3:1-4). Believers will desire to enjoy more fellowship with Jesus, to rest in His love, to experience a foretaste of heavenly fellowship in communion with Him now. We will want to realize more of our conjugal union between us and Jesus Christ by His Spirit. John Owen used very tender and intimate terms to describe the biblical relationship believing souls have in their union with Christ, using the imagery of a Bridegroom and a Bride (cf. Eph. 5:27-32; see Song of Solomon). He said that believers’ communion with the Son of God is to know that,

Christ makes himself over to the soul, to be his, as to all the love, care, and tenderness of a husband; and the soul gives up itself wholly unto the Lord Christ, to be his, as to all loving, tender obedience…. ‘Poor Harlot,’ saith the Lord Christ, ‘I have bought thee unto myself with the price of mine blood; and now, this is that which we will consent unto—I WILL BE FOR THEE, AND THOU SHALT BE FORE ME, and not for another…10John Owen, Communion with God, in Works, 2:56.[10]

To do more for Him! The holiness that we see in Jesus Christ by faith makes believers desire to be more like Him, to be more with Him, and to do more for Him. In union with Christ Jesus, there is nothing that the Christian desires more than to please His Heavenly Father. We live our lives making it our “aim” to please Him (2 Co. 5:9). Once the sweetness of Jesus’s love is tasted and experienced to a certain degree, this love will manifest itself in obedience (John 15:14: Our Lord says: “You are my friends if you do what I command you.”). Thomas Shepard (1605-1649) wrote: “…The [satisfied and holy] soul will return in all fruitful obedience to the Lord, when he receives the sweet of the love of the LORD.” Henry Scougal (1650-1678) wrote:

The love of God is a delightful and affectionate sense of the Divine perfections, which makes the soul resign itself wholly unto Him, desiring above all things to please Him, and delighting in nothing so much as in fellowship and communion with Him, and being ready to do or suffer anything for His sake, or at His pleasure. Though this affection may have its first rise from favors and mercies of God toward ourselves, yet doth it, in its growth and progress, transcend such particular considerations, and ground itself on His infinite goodness…11Henry Scougal. The Life of God in the Soul of Man. (Scotland, Great Britain: Christian Heritage Books, 1996; reprint), 55.

Thomas Shepard wrote “That He loves me…fetches warmth and life into my heart….Love Christ, and you will never be weary of doing for Christ (emphasis mine)…What kindles love so much as this comprehending knowledge of the Lord Jesus, and His love, this will make a man a burning beacon of love, make a man melt into love.”12Thomas Shepard, Parable of the Ten Virgins, (Grand Rapids, MI: Soli Deo Gloria Books, an imprint of Reformation Heritage Books, 2006), 61. Holy love for Christ makes one do holy works for Christ. This love makes us want to be more holy, but also gives us a deeper and heartfelt desire to serve Christ in order to please Him. Thomas Brooks wrote: “Holy love is very laborious. Nothing makes a Christian more industrious, painstakingly diligent in the service and ways of God, than holy love.”13Thomas Brooks, ibid., IV: 120-21. Brooks wrote:

Holy love will make us to pray and to praise, it will make us wait and work, it will provoke souls to study Christ, to admire Christ, and to live to Christ, to lift up Christ, to spend and be spent for Christ, and to break through all difficulties that it may come nearer to Christ, and cleave closer to Christ.{[(|fnote_stt|)]}Thomas Brooks, ibid., IV: 121.,/fn>

As we grow in Christ as believers, we will desire to delight in Him and to serve Him wholeheartedly. We will make it our aim to please Him. The maturing Christian realizes increasingly more and more that He was “created in Christ Jesus to do good works which God prepared beforehand for him to walk in” (Eph. 2:10). The maturing Christian who is being dazzled by the beauty and influenced by the love of God will realize that she is possessed of Christ to be pure and zealous for good works, and that this, too, is the good news of the glorious Gospel: We are redeemed by His love to serve Him with passion:

“For the grace of God has appeared, bringing salvation for all people, training us to renounce ungodliness and worldly passions, and to live self-controlled, upright, and godly lives in the present age, waiting for our blessed hope, the appearing of the glory of our great God and Savior Jesus Christ who gave himself for us to redeem us from all lawlessness and to purify for himself a people for his own possession who are zealous for good works” (emphasis mine). – ESV Titus 2:11-14

To be continued…Part VI: The Affectionate Journey Home to the Beloved

In Christ’s Love,
Pastor Biggs

References

References
1 Jonathan Edwards, The Religious Affections. Ebook (Dover Publications, 2013), Kindle Location, 3124-139.
2 Thomas Watson, A Body of Divinity, pg. 219. Quotes in Beeke and Jones, Puritan Theology, Ebook, Kindle Location 19574-590.
3 Brooks, Works, IV: 107-108.
4 Brooks, Works, IV: 129.
5 Brooks, Works, IV: 163, 169.
6 Brooks, Works, IV: 169-71.
7 Brooks, Works, IV: 108.
8 Jonathan Edwards, The Religious Affections, Ebook. Kindle Location, 3221-233.
9 Jonathan Edwards, The Religious Affections, Ebook. Kindle Location, 3347-359.
10 John Owen, Communion with God, in Works, 2:56.
11 Henry Scougal. The Life of God in the Soul of Man. (Scotland, Great Britain: Christian Heritage Books, 1996; reprint), 55.
12 Thomas Shepard, Parable of the Ten Virgins, (Grand Rapids, MI: Soli Deo Gloria Books, an imprint of Reformation Heritage Books, 2006), 61.
13 Thomas Brooks, ibid., IV: 120-21.

Westminster Shorter Catechism: Q22

WSC Question 22: How did Christ, being the Son of God, become man?

Answer: Christ, the Son of God, became man, by taking to himself a true body, and a reasonable soul,being conceived by the power of the Holy Ghost, in the womb of the Virgin Mary, and born of her, yet without sin (Heb. 2:14, 16, 4:15, 7:26; Gal. 4:4; Luke 1:27, 31, 35, 42).

An explanation: Christ’s became man in the Incarnation because of His love for His own people, and a commitment to fulfill the Covenant of Grace that He had made with the Father and the Spirit before the foundation of the world (Heb. 13:20-21; Eph. 1:3-14). He said in obedience to the Father: “Sacrifice and offering you have not desired, but you have given me an open ear. Burnt offering and sin offering you have not required. Then I said, “Behold, I have come; in the scroll of the book it is written of me. I desire to do your will, O my God; your law is within my heart…” (Psa. 40:6-8; cf. Heb. 10:5ff).

The Eternal Son of God did not merely appear to be a man in the Incarnation, but he did take upon Himself a real human body in personal and permanent union with Himself: “See my hands and my feet, that it is I myself. Touch me, and see. For a spirit does not have flesh and bones as you see that I have” (Luke 24:39).The Apostle John teaches the importance of confessing this of Jesus Christ: “By this you know the Spirit of God: every spirit that confesses that Jesus Christ has come in the flesh is from God…” (1 Jo. 4:2). Jesus Christ not only has a real human body, but also a true and reasonable soul like all other men, yet without sin (Heb. 2:14, 17a; 4:15). During His earthly suffering, Jesus said: “My soul is very sorrowful, even to death; remain here, and watch with me” (Matt. 26:38).

The conception of Jesus Christ was unique in that He was conceived by the Holy Spirit in the womb of the Virgin Mary: “The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you; therefore the child to be born will be called holy- the Son of God” (Luke 1:35). The Spirit of God prevented Jesus from being contaminated from sin, and although He was like man in every way, He was sinless, and “holy, harmless, undefiled, separated from sinners” (Heb. 4:15; 7:26). Although unique as Savior and God-Man, Jesus Christ, grew up and matured, and completed His work of salvation for all of His own similar to other men dependent upon God’s Word and the Holy Spirit: “And the child grew and became strong, filled with wisdom. And the favor of God was upon him….And Jesus increased in wisdom and in stature and in favor with God and man” (Luke 2:40, 52).

Jesus willingly laid down His life in our nature (John 10:18), and was raised in our nature for the justification and vindication of His people (Rom. 4:25). Now Jesus Christ is seated at God’s right hand in heaven as a glorified man united permanently to Deity as our only Mediator (1 Ti. 2:5), to send forth His Spirit to uphold, equip, and sanctify and comfort His people (Acts 2:32-33; John 14:26ff; 16:12-15), and to forever intercede for us according to God’s will (Rom. 8:34; Heb. 7:25). We can summarize the Gospel thus:

“Great indeed, we confess, is the mystery of godliness: He was manifested in the flesh, vindicated by the Spirit, seen by angels, proclaimed among the nations, believed on in the world, taken up in glory.”
(1 Ti. 3:16; cf. Col. 2:9)

Prayer: Thank you, dear Jesus, Savior and Friend, for ruling and reigning in heaven as my Mediator. Full of power, grace, and truth to help and encourage me as I journey to heaven, keeping my eyes on you, the Glorious Author and Perfecter of my faith!

In Christ’s love,
Pastor Biggs

Affectionately Desirous of Him | Part IV: The Affections and Beauty of Holiness, Part 1

“My son, give me thine heart…” (Prov. 23:26, KJV)

“The great contest of heaven and earth is about the affections of the poor worm which we call man….Affections are in the soul as the helm in the ship; if it be laid hold on by a skillful hand, He turneth the whole vessel which way He pleaseth.”1John Owen, Spiritual Mindedness, in Works, VII: 395, 397.

Holy affections lead to holy desires that seek to live holy and happy lives before God. Pastor and theologian John Owen (1616-83) wrote that “the chief work of a Christian is to make all his affections, in all their operations, subservient unto the life of God (Rom. 6:17-18) …And every affection is originally sanctified according unto the use it is to be of in the life of holiness and obedience.”2Owen, VII: 419. God calls His Beloved “to be Holy as He is Holy”; the goal of our renewed affections is holiness (Lev. 19:2; 1 Pet. 1:15-16). True believers want to be like Christ.

We must remember that in tasting and seeing the Lord is good, and enjoying the experiential element, that we do not forget the end goal is to glorify God and to enjoy Him forever. We are to enjoy God most faithfully by seeking to obey Him and live for Him by His grace for God’s glory; this is what makes the regenerate person truly happy. We should not forget that the Holy Spirit’s main ministry is not to give thrills but to create in us Christ-like character.3J. I. Packer, A Quest for Godliness, 31.

The Puritans desired for us to desire and know God, and to commune with Him, and to be spiritually thrilled by Him by tasting His goodness experientially, but their main focus was on becoming like Christ. The Puritans were mature in their holiness, and wanted God’s people to possess this same maturing holy character for the glory of God.4Ibid., 23. J. I. Packer writes that the Puritans “exemplified maturity, and they had integrated lives committed to glorifying God and growing in holiness.” The Puritans taught that the best way of cultivating holy affections, and growing in holiness and sincere obedience to Christ was through communing with the Persons of the Triune God. This sweet and holy communion was particularly achieved as the believer meditated on the beauty and grace of God in the face of Jesus Christ with the eyes of faith. The Puritans encouraged believers to “keep their eyes on Jesus” the Author and Perfector of our faith! (Heb. 12:1-2).5See Ambrose, Isaac. Looking Unto Jesus: A View of the Everlasting Gospel (Harrisonburg, VA: Sprinkle Publications, 1986). Also John Owen. The Glory of Christ and Communion with God in Works, Volumes … Continue reading This gazing upon Christ would produce Christ-like holiness and happiness even in the direst and desperate circumstances that the believer might experience.

The Bible teaches us in 2 Corinthians 3:18: “And we all, with unveiled face, beholding the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from one degree of glory to another. For this comes from the Lord who is the Spirit.” This means that there are degrees of transforming glory whereby the soul is changed into the likeness of Jesus Christ through gazing with eyes of faith by the power of the Holy Spirit. We are to seek to grow in to maturity into our Head who is Christ (Eph. 4:11-16), to seek to be like Jesus in our lives, and to make our calling and election sure by increasing by degrees in our qualities and Christ-likeness through faith (2 Pet. 1:3-11). The Puritans taught this was primarily obtained by looking to Christ.6Packer, A Quest for Godliness, 13. Packer wrote that “to get the love of Christ in focus changes one’s whole existence.”

Jonathan Edwards (1703-1758) wrote: “The least glimpse of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ does more to exalt and ennoble the soul” than anything else in this world. “This knowledge is that which is above all others sweet and joyful…This light gives a view of those things that are immensely the most exquisitely beautiful, and capable of delighting the eye of understanding. This spiritual light is the dawning of the light of glory in the heart.”7Jonathan Edwards, A Divine and Supernatural Light, in Works, II: 17-18. As we behold Jesus in His glory and loveliness and beauty, our affections are ravished and our desires deepened for Him, so we desire to be like Him. We want to have the same loveliness and beauty He possesses. We desire Him to think of us as more lovely as a bride prepares herself for her bridegroom. We want God to say “You are my Beloved…in whom I am well pleased” not merely in our justification, or being made right with God in our union with Jesus in His holiness, but also in our sanctification. As Pastor Thomas Doolittle (1630-1707) said: “Love produces assimilation.” To love Christ is to desire to be like Him!8Rev. Thomas Doolittle, A. M., “Assurance is Possible,” in Puritan Sermons 1659-1689 (Wheaton, Ill.: Richard Owen Roberts, 1981), 1:261. Doolittle wrote that the signs of true love to God … Continue reading

John Owen taught that beholding Jesus in His beauty, loveliness and holiness was the principal exercise of our faith, and the only truly satisfying, safe and joyful way to go through both life and death. He said that this beholding of Jesus in His glory was “one of the greatest privileges and advancements of believers, both in this world and unto eternity”.9Owen, The Glory of Christ, in Works, I: 286. He wrote that “our apprehension of this glory is the spring of all our obedience, consolation, and hope in this world.”10Owen, Christologia, in Works, I: 243. The beholding Christ by faith will prepare us spiritually for heaven in growing us up in maturity and holiness of life.11Owen, The Glory of Christ, in Works, I: 291. The looking to Christ with spiritual eyes of faith will grow us and mature us by the power of the Holy Spirit. Owen wrote: “No man can by faith take a real view of this glory, but virtue will proceed from it in a transforming power to change him ‘into the same image,’ 2 Cor. 3:18.” As the soul is fixed and focused in its thoughts and contemplations on Christ, it will become increasingly holy, serene, and spiritual.12John Owen, The Glory of Christ, in Works, I: 292.

A human being made in God’s image is made for happiness, and the soul of man will persistently seek after and pursue happiness. Richard Sibbes (1577-1635) wrote that happiness is desirable by all men, and naturally grafted in every man; it is “the center of all the searchings of his heart and the turnings of his life.”13Richard Sibbes, A Breathing After God, in Works, II: 211. Tragically, because of the fall, and the sinful rebellion of man against God, men will seek to find happiness in all the wrong things and people. A human being can never see, and thus never be satisfied and drawn in their affections toward Christ without the work of the Holy Spirit. But once the soul is regenerated, it can only be happy in this holiness; it can only be truly satisfied and happy as with “fat and rich food” (Psa. 63:5) in Christ, enjoying a degree of holiness with Him.

Thomas Brooks (1608-1680) wrote that a soul can never be truly happy until he is truly holy.14Thomas Brooks, Works, IV: 246. Because man was created for God, and because God is holy, man can never know true happiness until He is like God. Man’s soul was to reflect God, and to rest in God, and to be satisfied with God. There is nothing in this creation that was designed to take the place of God and bring full satisfaction and enjoyment in the soul, but God. Therefore, one cannot be truly happy unless one is truly holy—that is, to be like God.

The soul in Christ can never be miserable and empty with God in Christ. Brooks wrote, “If you have holiness nothing can make you miserable; but if you lack holiness, nothing can make you happy.”15Brooks, Works, IV: 300. Holiness is its own reward, says Brooks. Holiness gives to the soul blessed “sights, sweet tastes…secret love-tokens…comfort and joy.”16Brooks, Works, IV: 174.  Sibbes wrote that God is goodness itself. He is all excellency, beauty, and goodness. Nothing can make us happy but drawing near to God (Psa. 73:28). The more we are convinced of God’s goodness, the better we are; for God’s goodness tasted and felt by the soul, does ennoble it, as a pearl set in a gold ring makes it the more rich and precious.”17Sibbes, The Saints’ Happiness, in Works, VII: 71.

Sibbes wrote that God “planted in man by nature a desire of holiness, and a desire of happiness…”18Sibbes, A Fountain Sealed, in Works, IV: 412-13. Love and delight carry the soul with them…”19Sibbes, A Fountain Sealed, in Works, IV: 419. He wrote, “Delight is most transcendent for pleasantness…God in Christ…is delightful and sweet…God be never so beautiful in Himself, if He be not beautiful to us in Christ, and in His Church.”20Sibbes, A Breathing After God, in Works,, II: 229-30. Let us gaze on the beauty of God in Christ, such as the mercy and love in Christ, the grace and love in Christ. Sibbes wrote affectionately that if we would see the glory of God, it appears most in God’s grace, mercy, and lovingkindness as it is revealed in Christ (Ex. 34:6).21Sibbes, A Breathing After God, in Works, II: 230. When our affections are drawn in love to Jesus Christ as He is revealed in the Gospel, there will be a humble and reverent admiration, and “admiring love.”

The more we are with God in communion with Him, we desire Him more, and we desire to be freer and freer from the pollution of our sins. Although we are united to Christ by faith, and there is no condemnation in Christ Jesus, nevertheless, we as believers still struggle with remaining indwelling sin. If we keep our communion with God, our desire for holiness can only increase. Sibbes counseled believers that as we increase in our desires for God and in our holiness, then we should turn our desires into prayers for further mortification and freedom from indwelling sin. “As many desires as we have, let them be so many prayers; turn our desires into prayers to God.”22Sibbes, A Breathing After God, in Works, II: 222. Our prayer ought to be: “Spirit of God, make me love the best things—give me an appetite and hunger for the best things!!”

Richard Sibbes wrote that love was the “first-born affection.” Love breeds desire of communion with God that causes joy and rejoicing in Him, and then the heart of man will pant after God as the deer pants after the water springs (Psa. 42:1).23Sibbes, The Saints’ Happiness, in Works, VII: 69. Sibbes taught that there was a movement toward, or inclination driven by love that brought joy, and then obedience.24Sibbes, The Saints’ Happiness, in Works,, VII: 70. Sibbes encouraged believers to have a holy eyesight, that is, a spiritual eyesight given by the Holy Spirit to see the beauty and glory of Christ (cf. Psa. 45:1ff). How can we see the beauty of God? Spiritual senses, spiritual eye-sight and spiritual taste that are given by the Spirit of Christ.25Sibbes, Breathing After God, in Works, II: 238. Sibbes wrote that the Spirit must help us to see the beauty of Christ through the ordinances, to shine on us in the face of the Son. He wrote: “Of sight comes love. David had spiritual eyes, and he desired to feed his spiritual eye-sight with the best object that could be, for therein is the happiness of man.”26Sibbes, A Breathing After God, in Works, II: 237. We can strengthen our spiritual senses through prayer, and through meditating on God’s goodness and love to us in Jesus Christ.27Sibbes, Breathing After God, in Works, II: 238-39. Let us desire to confess with the Psalmist:

“One thing have I desired of the LORD, that will I seek after; that I may dwell in the house of the LORD all the days of my life, to behold the beauty of the LORD, and to enquire in his temple” – Psa. 27:4, KJV

Holy affections lead to holy desires that seek to live holy and happy before God.

Are you desirous of communion with God? Do you desire to be like Christ more than anything else in this world? What is your true heart’s desire? Do you live holy before Him in reliance upon His grace? Are you happy?

To be continued…Part V: The Affections and the Beauty of Holiness, Part 2

In Christ’s Love,
Pastor Biggs

References

References
1 John Owen, Spiritual Mindedness, in Works, VII: 395, 397.
2 Owen, VII: 419.
3 J. I. Packer, A Quest for Godliness, 31.
4 Ibid., 23. J. I. Packer writes that the Puritans “exemplified maturity, and they had integrated lives committed to glorifying God and growing in holiness.”
5 See Ambrose, Isaac. Looking Unto Jesus: A View of the Everlasting Gospel (Harrisonburg, VA: Sprinkle Publications, 1986). Also John Owen. The Glory of Christ and Communion with God in Works, Volumes 1-2.
6 Packer, A Quest for Godliness, 13. Packer wrote that “to get the love of Christ in focus changes one’s whole existence.”
7 Jonathan Edwards, A Divine and Supernatural Light, in Works, II: 17-18.
8 Rev. Thomas Doolittle, A. M., “Assurance is Possible,” in Puritan Sermons 1659-1689 (Wheaton, Ill.: Richard Owen Roberts, 1981), 1:261. Doolittle wrote that the signs of true love to God include (1) Unfeigned desires to be like Him: “Love produces assimiliation”; (2) A hearty desire to be united to Him, to have Him with you; “Nothing is more social and gregarious in its nature than love”; (3) Your great care to please Him; “If you love me, keep my commandments…”; (4) The love that we bear unto His image; we love His likeness in others.”
9 Owen, The Glory of Christ, in Works, I: 286.
10 Owen, Christologia, in Works, I: 243.
11 Owen, The Glory of Christ, in Works, I: 291.
12 John Owen, The Glory of Christ, in Works, I: 292.
13 Richard Sibbes, A Breathing After God, in Works, II: 211.
14 Thomas Brooks, Works, IV: 246.
15 Brooks, Works, IV: 300.
16 Brooks, Works, IV: 174.
17 Sibbes, The Saints’ Happiness, in Works, VII: 71.
18 Sibbes, A Fountain Sealed, in Works, IV: 412-13.
19 Sibbes, A Fountain Sealed, in Works, IV: 419.
20 Sibbes, A Breathing After God, in Works,, II: 229-30.
21 Sibbes, A Breathing After God, in Works, II: 230.
22 Sibbes, A Breathing After God, in Works, II: 222.
23 Sibbes, The Saints’ Happiness, in Works, VII: 69.
24 Sibbes, The Saints’ Happiness, in Works,, VII: 70.
25 Sibbes, Breathing After God, in Works, II: 238.
26 Sibbes, A Breathing After God, in Works, II: 237.
27 Sibbes, Breathing After God, in Works, II: 238-39.