KCPC Blog

Thomas Watson On How to Profitably Hear the Word Preached

  1. Prayer– Come with your soul prepared to hear God’s Word by praying for God’s blessing.
  1. Appetite– Come with holy appetite. You are about to feast with Christ.
  1. Tender Teachable Heart– “What will you have me to do? Speak to me, dear Father.”
  1. Be Attentive– Discipline your mind to be attentive with your mind in preaching; keep yourself from distractions as much as possible. Try to be as involved in hearing as the preacher is in preaching (Calvin taught this).
  1. Receive with meekness– Receive with meekness the ingrafted word (James 1:21); this is a submissive frame of heart (Psalm 131). Through meekness the Word gets deeper into our souls and we are more able to receive it.
  1. Faith– Mingle the preached word with faith as you’re listening and as you later reflect and meditate upon the truth. The chief ingredient of listening to a sermon must be faith in order to apply the word.
  1. Retain– Retain and pray over what you have heard. Don’t let the sermon run through your mind like water going through a sieve. Our memory should be like the chest of the ark where the Law was placed. Go from your knees to the sermon and go from the sermon to your knees.
  1. Practice– Practice what you have heard; live out what God has taught you.
  1. Beg– For the effectual blessing of the Holy Spirit; this is the “swallowing of the medicine to heal you”.
  1. Familiarize– Go home and speak about it to family, friends, others, so that you will become very familiar with the truths.

***Remember each sermon as if it was the last you will ever hear, because that just may be the case.***

Westminster Shorter Catechism: Q4

Question: What is God?

Answer: God is a Spirit, infinite, eternal, and unchangeable, in his being, wisdom, power, holiness, justice, goodness, and truth

Scripture memory:

ESV John 4:24 God is spirit, and those who worship him must worship in spirit and truth.”

An explanation:

The Shorter Catechism in question four focuses our attention on the essence of God, or on God’s being. God is one in essence, three in Persons as the Triune God. The Father is God; the Son is God; the Spirit is God. “There is one God, in respect of His essence and being, but one in three distinct persons, of Father, Son and Holy Ghost” (J. Owen’s Catechism). God’s essence is considered by listing God’s attributes. Our forefathers taught correctly that when considering God’s attributes, we should remember that God is the most simple being, or is free from all composition and division. His attributes are not parts of God (God cannot be divided). Whatever is in God, is God. Dividing up God’s attributes in this way are to aid us in knowing Him better.

What God is, He is eternally and unchangeably. Though God’s attributes are many, yet they are nothing but God’s revelation of His single, undivided Essence, or Being. What a Glorious God! Let us meditate upon His attributes, and commune with our Triune God. Let us include God’s revelation of Himself in our prayers.

God is…infinite, eternal, and unchangeable in His being. Think of how God is glorious in that He is Almighty, all-powerful, everywhere present, has always existed and always will, and will never change! Take time to reflect on each particular attribute in this way: Say “God is…infinite, eternal, and unchangeable in His…wisdom; …in His power;…in His holiness;…in His justice;…in His goodness; …in His truth.” Meditate quietly before God’s throne (Hab. 2:20).

Think about this Glorious God who personally loves you and has revealed Himself to you, who possesses in His being, not merely goodness, but omnipotent goodness; a God who is powerful, but who is also holy and loves to do good, and never evil; a God who cannot do evil, not merely because He wills not to do evil, but because it isn’t “in Him” that is, in His being to do any wrong or evil, rather there is wisdom, and truth, and goodness. His justice is perfectly holy. He is kind to all in Jesus Christ. Jesus is the perfect manifestation and revelation of this Glorious God. Let us look in the face of Christ and see the One who is the radiance of the Glory of God, the exact imprint of His nature, who upholds the universe by the Word of His power, and after making purification for sins, sat down at the right hand of God! Rejoice! (Heb. 1:3-4).

A prayer: I humble myself quietly before you, O Great and Good God. Thank you for salvation. Let me properly meditate upon your greatness, your attributes this day. Help me to walk with you and commune with you personally. May I delight in you, and find you to be my portion (Psa. 27:4; 73:28).

In Christ’s Love,

Pastors Biggs and Halley

Westminster Shorter Catechism: Q3

Question: What do the Scriptures principally teach?

Answer: The Scriptures principally teach, what man is to believe concerning God, and what duty God requires of man.

Scripture memory: ESV 2 Timothy 1:13

“Follow the pattern of the sound words that you have heard from me, in the faith and love that are in Christ Jesus.”

An explanation: The primary reason God has given us the Holy Scriptures is so that we can know Him and live obediently before Him. Who is God? How do we know Him? God has been kind to reveal Himself clearly and sufficiently as the only God, the True and Living, Triune God who has not left Himself without a witness (Acts 14:17; Exodus 3:14; Deut. 6:4-6; 1 Cor. 8:6). Although man has been created in God’s image, because of the contamination of sin on our minds and hearts, we do not by nature worship the truth and living God as we should. We are idolaters by nature who worship false gods; we exchange the truth of God with a lie (Jer. 17:9; Rom. 1:22-25). Yet God has taught us about Himself through the Scriptures, and through the Scriptures we can know God and have eternal life (John 17:3).

How do we know how to live before God and others? God has clearly and perfectly revealed this in His Word, particularly in the Ten Commandments. Our Lord Jesus summarized the teaching of the Law as loving God with all of our hearts, souls, minds and strength, and our neighbor as ourselves (Mark 12:30). The Law of God is a summary of the Bible’s teaching about what love looks like, and how our lives should be lived. We are to love God alone and first before all other things, to honor God with our worship without images, being careful to glorify His name, and to keep His Sabbath Holy. Toward our fellow men (our neighbors), we are to see to it that we properly honor them, preserving and blessing their lives, being committed to our spouses if married, taking care of others’ property, loving and telling the truth, and being content in all circumstances.

Yet we fall short of this perfect will of God (Rom. 8:3-4). God in His great mercy has sent Christ to redeem us from the Law as a way of works, so that we could live it, and be righteous by His grace alone, through faith alone. Christ is our hope. God has revealed Himself ultimately to sinners in Christ. God has called all men to repentance, and given all authority to Jesus Christ to be the Judge of all mankind (Acts 17:30-31). Let us repent in light of God’s goodness and mercy in Christ Jesus. Let us live obediently before Him as the true fruit of saving faith in Him (Rom. 1:5; 6:17; James 2:14).

A prayer: Father, make me a fruitful and joyful Christian in Christ as you have promised (John 15:1-11). Let me be obedient to you by faith and so fulfill the law (Rom. 8:3-4; 13:8-10). Help me to live my life loving you and my neighbor as myself, and so live a life that is pleasing to you (2 Cor. 5:9).

In Christ’s Love,

Pastors Biggs and Halley

 

Westminster Shorter Catechism: Q2

Question: What rule hath God given to direct us how we may glorify and enjoy him?

Answer: The word of God, which is contained in the scriptures of the Old and New Testaments, is the only rule to direct us how we may glorify and enjoy him.

Scripture memory: All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness… ESV 2 Timothy 3:16

A brief explanation:

God is not silent, He has spoken. God has clearly spoken and revealed Himself in creation and in men’s consciences, but He has especially revealed Himself in His God-Breathed-Out Word (Psalm 19; Rom. 1:19ff; 2:14-16; Eph. 2:20). God condescended to reveal Himself to His creatures, and to grant them knowledge about Himself and about His will. God has given us the Holy Scriptures, sixty-six books of the Bible, to know Him, and learn from Him so that we might glorify and enjoy Him! Isn’t God good to us?!

Man rebelled in Adam and refused to heed God’s Word. In this terrible fall, man’s mind was darkened, and His ability to hear was damaged. God’s Word is not readily available on our minds and hearts as sinful creatures. We do not by nature think God’s thoughts after Him as we were created to do. Even when man has God’s Word, he is not content with it, but often refuses to listen, or desires to know of secrets about God and about himself that God has not been pleased to reveal (Deut. 29:29). Sinful man also desires in his fallen, “endarkened” state to add to God’s Word (Rev. 22:18). But let us received with humility the Word as God has revealed it (Isa. 66:2; Jer. 9:20a; James 1:21). God has spoken to us with authority and clarity, and this is sufficient for all of life and godly living (2 Peter 1:3ff). God’s Word profits us in teaching, reproving or rebuking us, in correcting us, and in giving us right thoughts about God and ourselves.

God has particularly given His God-breathed-out Word to teach us our desperate need for His grace because of our great sin against Him (Eph. 2:1-10). We have all fallen short of the glory of God (Rom. 3:23). We have all sinned and are deserving of God’s wrath. Yet God in Christ, came to teach us that the God who requires perfect obedience to His Word, has also provided a Substitutionary Substitute to live perfectly for us where we have failed, and to take all of the curses of our disobedience upon Himself! Christ has come to teach the truth, and to listen to the truth, and to live the truth for man’s sin and failures. Christ is the Truth; He is the Word (John 1:1-3; 14:6). God is rich and mercy and gives His own ears to hear and obey His Word.

A prayer: Dear Father, help us to hear and obey your Word. To receive it as it is, the very Word of God. Let us receive it with humility, reverence, and obedience. Let us live for you, and to be thankful that you have privileged us with having your perfect, infallible, inspired Word. Let us memorize it and hide it in our hearts. We often have deaf ears, grant us hearing ears like your Beloved Son (Isaiah 50:4).

In Christ’s Love,

Pastors Biggs and Halley

Westminster Shorter Catechism: Q1

Question: What is the chief end of man?

Answer: Man’s chief end is to glorify and enjoy Him forever.

Scripture memory:

 ESV Romans 11:36 For from him and through him and to him are all things. To him be glory forever. Amen.

An explanation:

God made man specifically so that man could glorify and enjoy Him. This was man’s ‘chief end’ which means this was God’s goal for man. The goal for which He created man was so that man would bring glory to the Triune God and to be filled with joy in fellowship with Him.

We can see how far man has fallen from this ideal. How do we know something is faulty? A thing is faulty if that which it was designed to do, it does not do. Man is faulty; he is broken by sin. Mankind chose to live for self, and sinned against God, his only hope, and the only true fulfillment and rest for his soul. Man was created for God and man will never find rest and satisfaction until He rests in God, as our dear forefather Augustine taught us. How can we ever find the goal and satisfaction of our lives if we are so selfish and broken from sin?

God loved man so much that He sent Christ to redeem some of His creatures, His own Beloved Elect, to redeem them from the fall into sin, and to enable them by His grace to find His chief and, or main purpose in life! Christ lived a perfect life, finding in His life the true purpose for which man was created! No one else after the fall into sin had ever experienced such blessed living! Christ has come to free us from our slavery to self and to trying to find our purpose in this fallen world, so that we can find the true joy and delight of serving and worshiping God as He has designed us. Now we can live joyfully and fully in Him! He is our delight.

What a Savior!

A prayer:

Dear Heavenly Father, I was created to glorify and enjoy you, but I don’t do this as I should. Forgive me for Christ’s sake. What a privilege to be your child. Fill me with your Spirit so that I can better glorify you in all I do, and to be filled with your joy in the Lord Jesus! You are my portion (Psa. 73:23-28). Amen.

In Christ’s Love,

Pastors Biggs and Halley

The Bible and Ancient Near Eastern Literature

“This is an evil in all that is done under the sun, that the same event happens to all. Also, the hearts of the children of man are full of evil, and madness is in their hearts while they live, and after that they go to the dead… For the living know that they will die…

The words of the wise are like goads, and like nails firmly fixed are the collected sayings; they are given by one Shepherd. My son, beware of anything beyond these. Of making many books there is no end, and much study is a weariness of the flesh. The end of the matter; all has been heard. Fear God and keep his commandments, for this is the whole duty of man. For God will bring every deed into judgment, with every secret thing, whether good or evil.” – Ecclesiastes 9: 3, 5a; 12:11-1

Revelation from God

As God’s people we are privileged to have special revelation from God that is found in the Bible. God has condescended from the beginning of creation to reveal Himself and to teach mankind. As theologian Herman Bavinck wrote: “The creation is the first revelation of God, the beginning and foundation of all subsequent revelation. The Biblical concept of revelation is rooted in that of creation. God first appeared outwardly before His creatures in the creation and revealed Himself to them.”1Herman Bavinck, Reformed Dogmatics, Vol. I: Prolegomena (Grand Rapids: Baker Books), 307

Although mankind sinned against God in rebellion, and desired to know for himself autonomously apart from God, God has nevertheless written large His power and attributes in creation and even within man’s conscience (Gen. 3:1-5; Rom. 1:19ff; 2:14-16).

The Apostle Paul teaches that all of mankind knows God to a certain extent, and the truths that He has revealed about Himself and us still remain to a certain degree in our hearts and consciences:

For [God’s] invisible attributes, namely, his eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly perceived, ever since the creation of the world, in the things that have been made. So they are without excuse…For when Gentiles, who do not have the law, by nature do what the law requires, they are a law to themselves, even though they do not have the law. They show that the work of the law is written on their hearts, while their conscience also bears witness, and their conflicting thoughts accuse or even excuse them.” (Romans 1:19-20; 2:14-15).

Theologian Herman Bavinck wrote: “Holy Scripture proceeds from the existence and revelation of God. God does not leave Himself without a witness, and for that there is reason there is from the side of humans a searching to see if they could perhaps grope for Him and find Him (Acts 17:27). Revelation, according to Scripture, existed both before and after the fall. Revelation is religion’s external principle of knowing.”2Herman Bavinck, ibid., 277.

We must assert from the beginning of our studies that revelation is an act of God’s condescending grace and kindness to His humanity. God was not obligated to reveal Himself to His creatures and to invite them to know Him (and thus know themselves). But God has revealed Himself clearly, and we want to know Him from the Bible, using it as eyeglasses to see clearly all other things.

The confident foundation and starting point we must have when comparing the Bible with other ancient Near Eastern literature is knowing confidently that the Bible is God’s Word of special revelation to mankind and it is trustworthy. God has spoken (2 Tim. 3:16ff). The True and Living God has spoken…to us! This should absolutely amaze you! Not only do we know His revelation is true because God has spoken, but when we live submitted to it, it makes sense of our experiences, and answers all of our deepest questions with great satisfaction.3“No mythology can ultimately satisfy our desire for truth [as image-bearers]. Only God can do that. As Augustine once remarked, ‘You [God] have made us for yourself, and our heart is … Continue reading

In contrast to other ancient Near Eastern literature, the Bible gives us a transcendent, objective perspective to know ourselves and the world in which we live. As Old Testament Professor John Oswalt writes: “Revelation assumes that this world is not self-explanatory and that some communication from beyond is necessary to explain it.”4John Oswalt, The Bible Among the Myths: Unique Revelation of Just Ancient Literature? (Grand Rapids: Zondervan Books, 2009), Kindle Location: 104. If the world is not explained by God, as He gives it through the Bible, we will still ask questions about ourselves and the world, but we will more often than not get these answers wrong, and add a bit of perversion to the little truth we do comprehend and get right.5In other classes, you may recall that I have spoken about the great questions that all mankind have asked (and still ask!), and these questions are formulated in great literature: “Who are … Continue reading

When studying ancient Near Eastern literature, and comparing it with the Bible, there have been essentially two paths that students have followed:6These types of studies are called “Comparative Religion” or “Comparative Literature” studies and are barely two hundred years old.

  1. Some have claimed that the Bible is just another piece of ancient Near Eastern literature; it is no different than any other ancient writing. These would say that there is nothing special about the Bible; it is in fact merely another literary artifact of an ancient culture.
  2. The Bible is unique, and it revelation from God, and is to be our starting point for considering all other literature.

We will choose and walk carefully on the latter path using the Bible as our eyeglasses to help us to see well, and to follow God in His thoughts as we think these things through. As Christians, we should begin with the premise that the Bible is the very revelation of God, and the Word of God to all mankind.

The Original and the Copies: Similarities and Differences

We should expect there to be similarities between the Bible and other ancient Near Eastern literature, and we should in no way be intimidated by this. We should expect to find mankind who is made in God’s image, seeking to tell the story of creation, the flood, or other great events in history. God’s revelation is given to man in real history, in time and space.

If you think of the Bible as the original copy of all revelation (even if some of the revelation was written down more formally later), then you would expect that there would be copies of that original revelation. In Genesis chapters 4-11 we learn that mankind was sent “east of eden” away from the special presence of God because of sin. We should expect mankind to take the little revelation that is known and to continue to make it known with a certain degree of truth. We should also expect to find that the further one wanders from the special presence of God, the further one is from the truth.

Because the original copy of the story is from God, then the further one is away from the only True and Living God, the further from the truth the story will be, but there would still exist many copies, or similar stories because the Bible says we are significant beings made in God’s image, and we are made to know truth. Even when we don’t know the whole truth, and refuse to submit to the revelation we do have, we desire to know something rather than nothing, thus why history is full of stories, particularly stories about origins and major events.

What we find is that there are similarities between the Bible and other ancient Near Eastern literature (from here on “ANE literature”), but there are important differences as well. Scholars and students who tend to think the Bible is just another piece of ANE literature tend to focus on only the similarities; but there are very important differences that reveal that the Bible is God’s Word, and that it is unique among all the ANE. Before we consider the specific similarities and differences between the Bible and ANE literature, let us sketch a brief overview of the last two hundred years.7This is an outline from John Currid’s book, Against the Gods (Wheaton, Il: Crossway, 2013). Kindle HDX version.

A Brief Overview of the Studies of Ancient Near Eastern Studies and the Bible

Before 1798, the knowledge of the history of the ANE was principally derived from the Bible. With the growth and expansion of archaeological research in the 1800s and early 1900s, there was much new information and new questions being asked, and conclusions being posited about the relationship between the ANE literature and the Bible.

Between 1873 and 1905, a period of suspicion began after the finding of an Assyrian flood story. The archaeologist who found this flood story was named George Smith and he wrote: “…This account of the deluge opens to us a new field of inquiry in the early part of Bible history. The question has often been asked, “What is the origin of the accounts of the antediluvians, with their long lives so many times greater than the longest span of human life? Where was Paradise… From whence comes the story of the flood… [this supplies us with] material which future scholars will have to work out.”8Currid, Against the Gods’, Kindle Location: 188-196. Also, George Smith, “The Chaldean Account of the Deluge,” Transactions of the Society of Biblical Archaeology 2 (1873): 213-234.

The future scholars have been working this out up to this day, and not necessarily ways that honor God. During the first half of the twentieth century there has been the archaeological discovery of thousands of tablets of ANE literature (discovery of language and cultures of Egypt, Hittite, Mesopotamian, Babylonian, et al). Many scholars between the late Nineteenth and early Twentieth Centuries began to be suspicious about the Bible and asserted that the flood story found in the Bible must be dependent upon early Mesopotamian texts. Much of the working out of these findings have tempted and turned many students toward a liberal view of the Bible. Some began to teach that the biblical stories has been stripped of polytheism, but were all derived from Babylonia. This is very unfortunate and has caused Christians to be intimidated about studying ANE literature.

Comparing Worldviews of Ancient Near Eastern Literature and the Bible

The Old Testament in our Bibles is essentially different from its ANE neighbors, but there are significant similarities we want to note. In the ANE, there are creation stories and there are flood stories. Should these similarities make us think that the Bible is guilty of “crass plagiarism” from other ANE works?!9This was the position of Frederich Delitzsch (son of conservative Old Testament scholar Franz Delitzsch whose excellent Old Testament commentaries are still in print). Currid in Against the Gods … Continue reading Have the Biblical authors cleansed the pagan elements of the stories and “Yahwized” them to fit the purpose within Israel’s storyline or worldview as liberal scholars have asserted?10Friedrich Delitzsch, Babel and Bible (New York: Putnam, 1903), 50. “Yahwized” refers to what some liberal scholars have thought about Genesis begin “sanitized” from an … Continue reading

Wouldn’t it make more sense to understand that the Bible is God’s true revelation in history, in real time and space, and that there are similar stories, motifs, metaphors, and images that we might find in other ANE literature because the Bible was written in real history to real historically and culturally rooted people? Isn’t it more honest to acknowledge the Bible’s own teaching of man’s fallenness, and see that while these ANE stories have been repeated, they also have been “bastardized” and “perverted” the further they were told away from the revelation of the Bible and its influence?11“Bastardized” and “perverted” were the words of Old Testament professor John Currid.

In ANE literature, we discover, as we would expect, kernels of historical truth. The pagan authors are subject to clear general revelation in creation and are God’s image bearers who have God’s law written in their consciences as we have learned (Rom. 1:19ff; 2:14-16), nevertheless, they also distort the truths and “dress them up with polytheism, magic, violence, and paganism.” As Old Testament scholar John Oswalt writes helpfully: “Fact became myth.”12Oswalt, ibid., pg. 32. Professor Oswalt means that much of the facts of God’s Word were perverted into myth, and the stories became contaminated with error, while retaining some elements of the truth.

We should remember as Christians with reading any stories, or studying any literature well, there will be always be affirmation (or “Yes!”) of the truths that we find, because we know that there is common grace and we should expect to find elements of truth in the works of image bearers of God. Remember that “all truth is God’s truth!”13“If we regard the Spirit of God as the sole fountain of truth, we shall neither reject the truth itself, nor despise it wherever it shall appear, unless we wish to dishonor the Spirit of … Continue reading But as good students, we should also expect antithesis (or “No!”) where sin has perverted the truth, or darkness has kept the light of truth from shining, which is the common curse on mankind because of sin. When we focus on similarities, we will tend to find affirmations between ANE and the Bible, but when we focus on the differences we will see more clearly that there are many places where we must deny in antithesis to the claims made by the ANE author(s).

When we read the Bible with this understanding, we will see clearly that the Biblical authors are not borrowing, nor are they “Yahwizing” from the pagan elements to present the same story, but when they are using metaphor, images, and cultural references they are often doing so in a polemical manner to purposely rebuke the pagan, polytheistic versions of the story.

For instance, the plagues of Egypt are a revelation of God’s power against all the so-called polytheistic gods of Egypt (Exodus 7-12). Moses’ Word from God defeats the magicians of Pharaoh’s court (Exodus 7). Psalm 29 teaches us that YHWH is the “Rider on the Storm/Clouds”, not Baal as was thought in Ugaritic ANE literature. The use of God’s “strong hand” and “Thus says” in His revelation is to demonstrate God’s Almighty power over the other gods of paganism. There is a polemical element in the Bible, but no perversion of the truth or plagiarizing in Scripture. God’s revelation in the Bible is a polemical, inspired antithesis against lies, half-truths, and errors. Here is an example of the polemical nature of Scripture (against Egypt and against Baal):

“Behold, the LORD is riding on a swift cloud and comes to Egypt; and the idols of Egypt will tremble at his presence, and the heart of the Egyptians will melt within them.” (ESV Isaiah 19:1)
“He lays the beams of his chambers on the waters; he makes the clouds his chariot; he rides on the wings of the wind…” (ESV Psalm 104:3)

Old Testament professor John Currid writes that polemical theology is one of the most important ways of examining and studying the relationship between the Bible and other ANE literature. “It helps to highlight the distinctiveness and uniqueness of the Hebrew worldview over against the dominant setting of the rest of the ancient Near East.”14Currid, Against the Gods, Kindle Location: 501-509.

Major differences in ANE literature and Bible

In the worldview of all ANE literature other than the Bible, there is an “immanent frame” or focus on what is in this world strictly from man’s perspective; the worldview of ANE literature is based on a “closed” world, even though there are deities and heavenly creatures. There is continuity in this frame rather than transcendence from without as with the Bible.15Language of “Continuity” and “Transcendence” from Oswalt, 2009.

With the ANE worldview of continuity there is always a close relationship between deity, humanity, and nature, but there are no boundaries, neither is there revelation received from outside this frame (as in the transcendent worldview of the Bible). “[The] gods are humans and natural forces; nature is divine and divinity has human-like characteristics; humanity is divine and is one with nature. There is no distinction in nature among deity, humanity and nature, only in roles. All things that exist are part of each other.16Oswalt, Kindle Location: 647-654.

In this closed, immanent frame of perspective found in continuity, the gods have attributes of what man sees and observes in nature; nature can be controlled through the gods; man must seek the favor of the gods, although the character of the gods are like sinful humanity written large (the gods are sneaky, cranky, deceptive, manipulative, etc). Professor Oswalt writes: “…Since the idol is like Baal, it is Baal. What is done to the idol is done to Baal. But Baal is also like the storm: he is potent; he is life-giving; he is impetuous; he is destructive. Therefore, he is the storm. Thus, what is done to Baal is done to the storm, and what is done to the storm is done to Baal.17Oswalt, Kindle Location: 656-668.

This continuity between deity, humanity and nature is the logic of idolatry: Man from this closed perspective buries a seed, a tree grows, and he forms an idol out of the tree in order to access the gods who may make him prosper. The tree is not just symbolic of the god, but the god is within nature, the tree, and thus in the idol as well.18This explains the reason why after years in Egypt, the Israelites could so easily, with a little help from leadership, make a golden calf, not to worship another god, but to worship the right and … Continue reading This kind of thinking or way of “seeing things” is known formally in philosophy and theology as “Pan-en-theism”: Deity is within all things. There is continuity in that all is in a sense divine, or the gods are within all things: man, nature, etc. The Prophet Isaiah revealed God’s perspective on the folly of idolatry and this helps to better understand the idolatrous mindset:

“He shapes it into the figure of a man, with the beauty of a man, to dwell in a house. 14 He cuts down cedars, or he chooses a cypress tree or an oak and lets it grow strong among the trees of the forest. He plants a cedar and the rain nourishes it. 15 Then it becomes fuel for a man. He takes a part of it and warms himself; he kindles a fire and bakes bread. Also he makes a god and worships it; he makes it an idol and falls down before it. 16 Half of it he burns in the fire. Over the half he eats meat; he roasts it and is satisfied. Also he warms himself and says, “Aha, I am warm, I have seen the fire!” 17 And the rest of it he makes into a god, his idol, and falls down to it and worships it. He prays to it and says, ‘Deliver me, for you are my god!’” (ESV Isaiah 44:13b-17).

This is why in this way of looking at reality, there are no boundaries, and this is clearly seen in blatant and pathetically sickening immorality found in paganism. From this closed perspective if one is childless, one does not pray, but goes to the temple of the goddess of fertility, undergoes rituals that emphasize seed, then they may seed the ground on which they live, and there may be interactions between man and land, man and beast, and man and other women. There may be an eating of seeded fruit of the land, like pomegranates, in order to manipulate or use a kind of magical technique to bring about the desired results.

All of this is “logical” to this kind of ANE pagan thinking because all is connected. There is no sacredness of marriage, no marriage covenant; no God outside the world one can pray to; only technique or magic, or ritual that one can perform in order to find help or wholeness in this world. There are no boundaries therefore between parent and child, around marriage, members of the same sex, and between man and animals, or man and the divine or angelic.

Contrastly, the Biblical worldview begins with a self-existent, transcendent God who is distinct from, but never separate from His creation. Transcendence is the underlying principle of Biblical revelation; there is a Creator-creature distinction, because God has been kind to reveal Himself clearly to His creatures.

“In the beginning God…
…I am God, and there is no other; I am God, and there is none like me…” (Gen. 1:1a; Isaiah 46:9)

In the Bible, there is a condescending kindness on God’s part to reveal Himself and to make Himself known; there is revelation from outside, and the focus is on God and His revelation, not first or primarily on man.

Before we get into specific differences between the Bible and other ANE literature, let us list some of the common features of ANE literature, particularly in epics and mythical literature:

Common Features of ANE Literature19See Currid, Oswalt, Matthews and Benjamin.

(1) Polytheism (a pantheon of gods); (2) Images (gods are represented by images); (3) Existence of eternal chaotic matter (ANE literature assumes that matter is the fundamental element that has always existed; matter is animate, but not necessarily personal); (4) Low view of the gods (they are untrustworthy, selfish, contemptuous, tricky, conniving, etc. They are not respected by mankind); (5) Conflict is the source of life (there was conflict between gods and chaos as the dawn of time); (6) Low view of humanity; (7) Magic is ultimate source of power; (8) History is not important.

The Revelation in the Bible

(1) Monotheism (one God, and one God alone); (2) Iconoclasm (No images of God; God is to be worshipped as the Spirit He is!); (3) First Principle of all things is God, not matter; (4) God is all-powerful, there is no conflict at creation; (5) High view of humanity (man is made in God’s image as a servant-son); (6) God is reliable, trustworthy, faithful, full of loving-kindness and mercy (“Hesed” or “Chesed”); (7) Prohibition of all magic and technique of controlling creation and/or others; (8) Importance of history (time and space as we know it).

Theology

Bible: Monotheism – One God. There is a strict monotheism revealed in the Bible. God alone is God; there are no other gods. God creates by divine fiat (power of His Word alone), and into nothing. There is no self-existence chaotic matter that must be organized. God speaks and creates ex nihilo, out of nothing, and then orders the world in beauty and for His glory. God does this to glorify Himself and to make a home for humans to enjoy Him. Always remember that ex nihilo creation is unique in the Bible; there is no other literature like the Bible, because it is the Holy and Infallible revelation of Almighty God. God alone is Sovereign King who is Self-Existent, Omnipotent, Omniscient, and Omnipresent. As God says in Isaiah (against the gods):

“I am the LORD, and there is no other, besides me there is no God; I equip you, though you do not know me, 6 that people may know, from the rising of the sun and from the west, that there is none besides me; I am the LORD, and there is no other…. Declare and present your case; let them take counsel together! Who told this long ago? Who declared it of old? Was it not I, the LORD? And there is no other god besides me, a righteous God and a Savior; there is none besides me. 22 “Turn to me and be saved, all the ends of the earth! For I am God, and there is no other.” (ESV Isaiah 45:5-6, 21-22).

ANE Literature: Polytheism – Many gods. The gods are like sinful man writ large. They are the kinds of beings you would expect if man was inventing gods, or making stories of what they think a god is like. The gods are just aspects of nature and stuff of this life (such as love, war, beauty, thunder, weather, fertility, etc), and they possess characteristics of sinful man writ large: they are tricky, deceptive, cranky, and sexual promiscuous. They do possess some great powers, but they are limited by a greater “force” which is magic. In the polytheistic worldview, the gods are not holy, they are not perfect, they are all self-created, or created by another god, and they do not possess ultimate, unlimited power, only magic does. In ANE literature, Magic is supreme power.20See Currid, Ancient Egypt and the Old Testament (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1997), 40. The God of the Bible alone is Self-Existent, Omnipotent, Omniscient, and Omnipresent. I dare you to find any other God like Him. As God says, “Who will you compare with me?” The greatest of the ANE gods was essentially the greatest magician.

“To whom then will you compare me, that I should be like him? says the Holy One….To whom will you liken me and make me equal, and compare me, that we may be alike?” (ESV Isaiah 40:25 ; ESV Isaiah 46:5)

Morality

Biblical Morality: The Bible teaches what is right and wrong as being an expression of God’s attributes and character. God alone determines what is right and wrong, and mankind is to follow these rules. The rules are given in the context of covenant and love so that mankind will not live as slaves, but freely and joyfully follow the will of the Creator, as man was created to live joyfully in God’s presence and with purpose. There is an objective morality revealed by God, and not merely what is good for a family or a group of people.

ANE Literature: Morality is what is good for groups of people to live together peacefully and helpfully. It is subjective, and is not a revelation from outside, from beyond as revelation from the gods necessarily. Morality and laws that have been found in ANE are wise and often reveal how much God has revealed Himself in the consciences of man (Rom. 2:14-16). Man often lives deceptively and sinfully with a selfish, self-focused bent, only seeking not to get caught, or to have enough technique in magic to oppose the inevitable circumstances that must follow because of folly and immorality in God’s world.

History

Bible and History: The Bible is revealed in real space and time history. God reveals and redeems in history. There is a particular grammar in the Hebrew language that clearly reveals that what is being taught in Genesis in particular, and in the Bible generally is meant to be historical narrative; events that really happened (called from Hebrew vav-consecutive-plus-imperfect, often translated “And it was…” in our English Bibles—this is extremely important). God is the Creator and Lord of history, of all time and space and has created man to live within history (thus the focus on a Sabbath rest every week, to remind man of his created-ness and historied-ness). History is moving to an end, a climatic, Sabbath-Rest-Consummation ruled over by Jesus Christ:

“…[God’s] revelation of His will] as a plan for the fullness of time, to unite all things in him, things in heaven and things on earth….to bring to light for everyone what is the plan of the mystery hidden for ages in God who created all things, so that through the church the manifold wisdom of God might now be made known to the rulers and authorities in the heavenly places. This was according to the eternal purpose that he has realized in Christ Jesus our Lord…There remains a Sabbath rest for the people of God.” (ESV Ephesians 1:10, 3:10-11; Hebrews 4:9).

ANE Literature and History: Particularly epics and myths are not intended to be history, but to teach lessons to humanity and to answer questions that mankind has. History does not matter, because all of life is connected and will just repeat itself in cycles, and what matters most is now. Professor Oswalt writes: “‘Now’ is all there is, all we have by which to explain reality. Time has always rolled and it always will, but it is going nowhere. The task is to find ways of ensuring that it does not stop rolling or that it does not roll in some completely unforeseen way.”21Oswalt, Kindle Location: 692-699. ANE epics and mythical literature have no interest in being historical. The use of the grammar in the language is often poetic, and perhaps can be called “mythico-historical” but it is not necessary that it be truly history.

Humanity

Biblical Account: Man is made in God’s image as a prophet, priest and king over God’s creation to bring glory to God, to depend upon God’s power, goodness and revelation to Him, and to extend the peace found with God in the garden to the ends of the earth (Gen. 1-3).

“Let us make man in our image, after our likeness. And let them have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over the livestock and over all the earth and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth.” So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them. And God blessed them. And God said to them, “Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and subdue it and have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over every living thing that moves on the earth.” – Genesis 1:26-28

Man is sinful because he rebelled against God and became interested in gaining knowledge and wisdom apart from God and His revelation; he believed the lie of the serpent. Sin has made man idolatrous, and now he exchanges the truth of God for lies (the Bible only makes sense of the consistent idolatry and paganism we find everywhere in the world, particularly in the ANE):

“Claiming to be wise, they became fools, and exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images resembling mortal man and birds and animals and reptiles. Therefore God gave them up in the lusts of their hearts to impurity, to the dishonoring of their bodies among themselves, because they exchanged the truth about God for a lie and worshiped and served the creature rather than the Creator, who is blessed forever! Amen.” – Romans 1:22-25

ANE Literature: Man is insignificant, a mere slave of the gods. In the ANE you will find no history of unique individuals for the sake of that particular person. You will find stories of individuals but only insofar as the story is intended to communicate a larger lesson to an audience. There was no reason to understand or speak of the uniqueness of human beings, they were insignificant in ANE literature.

Creation Accounts (Biblical versus Enuma Elish, or Babylonian Creation Story)

Biblical Creation Account: In the creation account, the one God who is Spirit and eternally self-existent creates all things out of nothing, by divine fiat (by powerful word). Only God exists in Himself, with no need of nothing outside of Him. God creates man in His image to have dignity as a servant-son. Everything that is created is dependent upon God and He exists independently of all creation. Reason for being written: The gracious condescension of God to covenant with his creatures to reveal Himself as a gracious, powerful, and all-knowing King and father.

“In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth. The earth was without form and void, and darkness was over the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God was hovering over the face of the waters. And God said, “Let there be light,” and there was light…”

Enuma Elish, Babylonian Creation Story: Creation is the result of the cosmic struggle between order and chaos at the dawn of time. Cosmic matter is eternal and must be ordered. The god Ea defeats Apsu and from his body comes the cosmos. Marduk defeats Tiamat (the chaos monster) and Marduk sets up his temple-palace. Marduk becomes supreme deity through magic. Humans are created for slavery to the gods and for the enjoyment of the gods. Reason for being written: Why should the people serve the Babylonian king? Because the Babylonian king is Marduk’s representative, and this will bring flourishing and peace to the people.

“When a sky above had not (yet even) been mentioned,
(And) the name of firm ground below had not (yet even) been thought of;
(When) only primeval Apsu, their begetter, And Mummu and Tiamat—
she who gave birth to them all—
Were mingling their waters in one;
When no bog had formed (and) no island could be found;
When no god whosoever had appeared,
Had been named by name, had been determined as to (his) lot,
Then gods were formed within them.”22Thorkild Jacobsen, “Mesopotamia: The Cosmos as a State,” in Henri Frankfort et al., Before Philosophy (Baltimore: Penguin, 1973 reprint), 184. Quoted in Currid, Against the Gods, Kindle … Continue reading

Flood Accounts (Biblical versus Gilgamesh, or Utnapishtim’s Story)

Biblical Flood: God sees mankind’s great sin and wickedness on the earth (Gen. 6). He warns Noah, who is a righteous and believing man, to build and ark to save his family and two of every creature. It rains for forty days and forty nights, the flood subsides, then eventually Noah and his family represent a new creation, a new beginning for the human race. There is a sacrifice of worship to YHWH that is pleasing, and a rainbow is revealed to show God’s good and gracious (common grace) intentions toward mankind. The rainbow as a covenant sign (Gen. 9) is unique in ANE literature.

Utnapishtim (or Sometimes “Atrahasis”)/Gilgamesh Flood Story: Utnapishtim survives flood and is granted eternal life. The gods are frustrated with humans and brought a flood. The gods engage in disputing and infighting among themselves, they cannot agree on the sending of the flood (Ea, the god of the waters and seas, actually has to go against the counsel of the other gods to “save” Utnapishtim; there is no mention of justice, or punishment of sin, it is more because the gods are like sinful men in that they are cranky and moody, never holy, holy, holy as only YHWH is!). Utnapishtim builds great ark and on the ark there is a micro-cosmic preservation of life. After flood of six days and seven nights, there is a sacrificial meal that is instigated by fear (not love or gratitude!) and the gods like filthy flies gobble up the meal. No rainbow as a covenant sign; this is unique to the Bible and reveals YHWH’s graciousness and mercy.

While there are similarities between the Bible and other ancient Near Eastern literature, we see that there are tremendous, significant differences. These significant differences point to the fact that the Bible is Holy Scripture, the very trustworthy and reliable Word of God.

The Bible is in no way the mere word of man. Although men were inspired and carried along by the Holy Spirit: “…Knowing this first of all, that no prophecy of Scripture comes from someone’s own interpretation. For no prophecy was ever produced by the will of man, but men spoke from God as they were carried along by the Holy Spirit” (ESV 2 Peter 1:20-21).

As we learn in the Bible, it is the very Breathed-Out Word of Almighty God, sufficient for all the special revelation we need from God, and needful for correction of our ideas about the world in which we live, and the literature we read: “All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be competent, equipped for every good work” (ESV 2 Timothy 3:16-17).

Let us thank God that while we can enjoy the beautiful and excellent literature from the ancient Near East, and we can thank God for the truths that we find in it. But we should also thank God that He has not left Himself without a witness, and we can come and truly know Him through the Lord Jesus Christ. As the Apostle Paul teaches at Mars Hill in Acts 17, there is great truth to be found in pagan literature, particularly ancient Near Eastern literature, but it is to be carefully examined by the truth of God’s own revelation of Himself in creation and Holy Scripture:

“The God who made the world and everything in it, being Lord of heaven and earth, does not live in temples made by man, 25 nor is he served by human hands, as though he needed anything, since he himself gives to all mankind life and breath and everything. 26 And he made from one man every nation of mankind to live on all the face of the earth, having determined allotted periods and the boundaries of their dwelling place, 27 that they should seek God, in the hope that they might feel their way toward him and find him. Yet he is actually not far from each one of us, 28 for “‘In him we live and move and have our being’; as even some of your own poets have said, “‘ For we are indeed his offspring.’ 29 Being then God’s offspring, we ought not to think that the divine being is like gold or silver or stone, an image formed by the art and imagination of man. 30 The times of ignorance God overlooked, but now he commands all people everywhere to repent, 31 because he has fixed a day on which he will judge the world in righteousness by a man whom he has appointed; and of this he has given assurance to all by raising him from the dead.” (ESV Acts 17:24-31).

Let us wisely use the revelation that God has given to us in Acts 17 to learn as students of ANE literature and culture that epic poetry (such as Epic of Gilgamesh) can be a good starting point in engaging culture. Notice how the Apostle Paul begins with affirming where there is truth (common grace: “Yes….yes….yes…”): “As even your own poets have said…” (Acts 17:28).

Notice the Apostle Paul in Acts 17:28 uses no quotations from the Old Testament because he is addressing those who are far from special revelation in the Bible, and are pagan idolaters, but he does use their own cultural writings: “In him we live, move and have our being…” quoting Epimenides of Crete,23“They fashioned a tomb for thee, O holy and high…/the Cretans, always liars, evil beasts, slow bellies!/But thou art not dead; thou art risen and alive forever,/for in thee we live and … Continue reading as well as Aratus of Cilicia: “We are his offspring” (Acts 17:28).24“…In reading pagan/profane [unbelieving] authors, the admirable light of truth displayed in them should remind us, that the human mind, however much fallen and perverted from its original … Continue reading

But also notice the antithesis, or the “No!” The Apostle Paul boldly exposes ignorance that is rooted not so much in lack of knowledge, as in moral unwillingness to see and confess what is true (Acts 17:29b-31; cf. Romans 1:19-32). God will hold all mankind accountable by the Lord Jesus Christ. Therefore, because God has clearly revealed Himself in Scripture and history, particularly through the Lord Jesus Christ, all men must repent of the ignorance that is caused by sin. Man speaks truth (affirmation/common grace), but man also speaks lies (antithesis/common curse).

More…

A Brief Introductory History of “The Gilgamesh Epic”

The Epic of Gilgamesh is the most significant work to come out of ancient Mesopotamia (from two Greek words “Meso” middle or between and “Potamos” River = Civilization between the two rivers, Euphrates and Tigris). This is the most widely copied piece of literature in the ancient world. The epic is essentially a search for knowledge and wisdom. Gilgamesh was a hero of the Third Millennium BC (ca. 2700-2500 BC). There are about 72 poems in epic that are arranged in translation in a 12-tablet format. The epic was originally written in Cunieform (concepts through wedge-like shapes). Most of the epic we have today is from a redactor-editor, priest-exorcist by the name of “Sin-lique-unninni” who lived between ca. 1500-1000 BC.

Most material to our translation of Gilgamesh came from the library of Ashurbanipal in ancient Nineveh during his reign as king (ca. 668-627 BC- his reign overlaps with King Josiah and the prophecy of Jeremiah). The story itself is of Gilgamesh the Shepherd-King of the city-state of Uruk. This epic has been very popular and appeals to many because of the nature of Gilgamesh’s search for meaning and understanding. It has been translated in Sumerian, Akkadian, and Hittite languages (long before English translations). Tablets were found circa 1880 by archaeologist George Smith.

“The heart of man is not compound of lies,/ but draws some wisdom from the only Wise,/ and still recalls him. Though now long estranged,/ man is not wholly lost or wholly changed./ Disgraced he may be, yet is not dethroned,/ and keeps the rags of lordship once he owned…./Whence came the wish, and whence the power to dream,/ or some things fair and others ugly deem?/ All wishes are not idle, nor in vain….”
– J. R. R. Tolkien

Rev. Charles R. Biggs

Bibliography

Currid, John D. Against the Gods: The Polemical Theology of the Old Testament, Wheaton, Il: Crossway, 2013.
______________. Ancient Egypt and the Old Testament, Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 1997.

Matthews, Victor H. and Benjamin, Don C. Old Testament Parallels: Laws and Stories from the Ancient Near East, New York: Paulist Press, 2006 (third edition).

Niehaus, Jeffrey J. Ancient Near Eastern Themes in Biblical Theology, Grand Rapids: Kregel Academic, 2008.

Oswalt, John. The Bible Among the Myths: Unique Revelation of Just Ancient Literature? Grand Rapids: Zondervan Books, 2009.

Pritchard, James B, ed. The Ancient Near East: An Anthology of Texts and Pictures, Volumes 1-2, Princeton Univ. Press, 1958.

Walton, John H. Ancient Near Eastern Thought and the Old Testament: Introducing the Conceptual World of the Hebrew Bible, Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2006.

References

References
1 Herman Bavinck, Reformed Dogmatics, Vol. I: Prolegomena (Grand Rapids: Baker Books), 307
2 Herman Bavinck, ibid., 277.
3 “No mythology can ultimately satisfy our desire for truth [as image-bearers]. Only God can do that. As Augustine once remarked, ‘You [God] have made us for yourself, and our heart is unquiet until it rests in you’.” Jeffrey J. Niehaus, Ancient Near Eastern Themes in Biblical Theology (Grand Rapids: Kregel, 2008).
4 John Oswalt, The Bible Among the Myths: Unique Revelation of Just Ancient Literature? (Grand Rapids: Zondervan Books, 2009), Kindle Location: 104.
5 In other classes, you may recall that I have spoken about the great questions that all mankind have asked (and still ask!), and these questions are formulated in great literature: “Who are you?” (speaking of God); “Who am I?” (learning about who we are as beings); “Where am I?” (what is the world, etc); “Where am I going/what is my purpose?”; “What went wrong?”
6 These types of studies are called “Comparative Religion” or “Comparative Literature” studies and are barely two hundred years old.
7 This is an outline from John Currid’s book, Against the Gods (Wheaton, Il: Crossway, 2013). Kindle HDX version.
8 Currid, Against the Gods’, Kindle Location: 188-196. Also, George Smith, “The Chaldean Account of the Deluge,” Transactions of the Society of Biblical Archaeology 2 (1873): 213-234.
9 This was the position of Frederich Delitzsch (son of conservative Old Testament scholar Franz Delitzsch whose excellent Old Testament commentaries are still in print). Currid in Against the Gods notes that liberal commentators think that Genesis is the Hebrew version of a Babylonian legend (S. R. Driver) and that many biblical texts show the path along which the Marduk myth was transformed into Genesis 1 (Hermann Gunkel).
10 Friedrich Delitzsch, Babel and Bible (New York: Putnam, 1903), 50. “Yahwized” refers to what some liberal scholars have thought about Genesis begin “sanitized” from an originally mythic text and reconfigured into a historical narrative.
11 “Bastardized” and “perverted” were the words of Old Testament professor John Currid.
12 Oswalt, ibid., pg. 32.
13 “If we regard the Spirit of God as the sole fountain of truth, we shall neither reject the truth itself, nor despise it wherever it shall appear, unless we wish to dishonor the Spirit of God” (J. Calvin, Institutes of Christian Religion, 2.2.xv).
14 Currid, Against the Gods, Kindle Location: 501-509.
15 Language of “Continuity” and “Transcendence” from Oswalt, 2009.
16 Oswalt, Kindle Location: 647-654.
17 Oswalt, Kindle Location: 656-668.
18 This explains the reason why after years in Egypt, the Israelites could so easily, with a little help from leadership, make a golden calf, not to worship another god, but to worship the right and only God who redeemed them– wrongly! It was not the God they had wrong, but the method of worshipping him which was taught in Egyptian Polytheism and Idolatry 101 and had obviously influenced them. God’s reaction against this is another example of the polemical nature of the Old Testament.
19 See Currid, Oswalt, Matthews and Benjamin.
20 See Currid, Ancient Egypt and the Old Testament (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1997), 40.
21 Oswalt, Kindle Location: 692-699.
22 Thorkild Jacobsen, “Mesopotamia: The Cosmos as a State,” in Henri Frankfort et al., Before Philosophy (Baltimore: Penguin, 1973 reprint), 184. Quoted in Currid, Against the Gods, Kindle Loc. 604-12.
23 “They fashioned a tomb for thee, O holy and high…/the Cretans, always liars, evil beasts, slow bellies!/But thou art not dead; thou art risen and alive forever,/for in thee we live and move and have our being”.
24 “…In reading pagan/profane [unbelieving] authors, the admirable light of truth displayed in them should remind us, that the human mind, however much fallen and perverted from its original integrity, is still adorned and invested with gifts from its Creator” (J. Calvin, Institutes, 2.2.xv).

O Come, O Come, Immanuel

Beloved, let this truth be our deepest desire and prayer this Christmas! “O Come, O Come, Immanuel!” Let us pray as God’s people that Jesus Christ will come and take us to be with Himself, and to “close the path to misery” here in our lonely exile in this present age.

The wonderful Christmas hymn “O Come, O Come Immanuel” captures the proper longing and desire that should be in every believer’s heart. This is expressed with a heart-felt and duplicated emphasis to stress a holy panting for God: “O Come, O Come!” When we pray or sing this from the heart, this reveals a longing for God’s shalom-peace, and a desire for precious rest that will embrace the whole world (cf. Luke 2:10-14). It is an deep expression for all things to be renewed, and for God’s people to enjoy His presence without the hindering and contaminating presence of sin, death, and the evil one.  As Christians, we cry

“Maranatha! Come, Lord Jesus” and “Your Kingdom Come” (Rev. 22; Matt. 6)

when we pray the Lord’s Prayer, and these are also similar heart-felt prayers for the peace that will come when God renews all things.

In the Old Covenant time, you may recall that Israel was deported to Babylon as punishment for her sins against her covenant God (cf. Matt. 1:12, 17). The exile was forever part of God’s Old Covenant story of His people. In the exile and captivity, God’s fatherly discipline would be revealed to chastise His elect, the True, believing Israel, but this would cause them to shine in the midst of darkness, and to live for God’s glory (see Jer. 29). God’s elect, True and Believing Israel were to live godly lives while in exile, in the midst of a crooked and perverse generation (Dan. 12:1-3; cf. Phil. 2:12-16). In God’s judgment in exile, there was also salvation and sanctification for True Israel, to make them a people prepared to meet the LORD. This is the wonderful salvation message of the prophets of old.

Although True Israel was God’s Beloved, they were pilgrims, exiles, aliens in a strange land, and they cried out to God (cf. 1 Pet. 2:9ff):

“Come come…and ransom captive Israel, that mourns in lonely exile here.”

The people of God who believed God’s promises found in His Word revealed through the mouths of the prophets, and they awaited with hope the day when God’s presence would be with them permanently, and God’s glory would cover the whole earth! (Isa. 11:9; Jer. 33:9; Hab. 2:14). This would be a Day when God’s enemies would be judged and punished, and God’s oppressed people would be free! God’s Beloved would be ransomed from their captivity! And the people waited with hope.

Although True Israel belonged to God, they lived as those who mourned. God spoke in the mouths of the prophets comfort for the people, saying essentially: “Blessed are you who mourn, you will be comforted” (cf. Matt. 5:3ff). God would reveal His comforting grace through promise in the midst of lonely Israel’s sadness (Isa. 40:1ff). They waited, and waited, and waited for the Day when the Son of God and Son of David would appear:

“…Until the Son of God appear!”

The people of God were eagerly awaiting and expectantly anticipating the Messiah, the Anointed King, who they knew would renew Israel and bring everlasting light and righteousness into a dark and evil world. The mystery that wasn’t fully understood from the Old Covenant perspective was that when Israel returned from Babylonian captivity (under Nehemiah, Ezra and a few of the Minor Prophets), when Israel returned to the land, they would still be oppressed by their enemies (for centuries!), and all their hopes went mostly unrealized. Yet they were to feed on God’s promises: “Open your mouth and I will fill you,” said the LORD (Psa. 81:10). The people were to continue trust God that He was faithful, and that He would eventually dwell as “Immanuel” with His Beloved people.

When Messiah did come in the Lord Jesus Christ, Israel was still under foreign oppression and rule. Messiah, rather than immediately destroying God’s enemies was seemingly destroyed Himself—by these same foreigners! Messiah who was to ransom them, who was to bring glorious victory for all who believed, was humbled in deep suffering and rejection, and was seemingly defeated in death—death from the foreign powers Israel had expected to be immediately conquered by Messiah, their hope! This is one of the reasons that Jesus was such an obnoxious “stumbling block” to many of the Jews (1 Cor. 1:21ff; 1 Pet. 1:8); this seemed like foolishness to them.

Yet Jesus Christ, the Messiah, as He promised, rose from the dead on the third day; death did not conquer Him. Jesus rose victoriously from the grave! In His resurrection, God, the Eternal Son, permanently united to our nature, rose to reveal that He was free from the enslaving clutches of sin, death, and the devil! Jesus the Messiah rose gloriously in power to ascend to the Eternal Throne of David. Jesus was resurrected to give victory over sin, death, hell and the devil to all those who put their faith in Him, whether Jew or Gentile!

If anyone was in Christ, “Behold, a new creation!” (2 Cor. 5:17-21).

Jesus the Messiah uniquely and powerfully overcame our worst enemies first: indwelling sin and its dominion over God’s people, the fear of death, slavery to the Prince of the Power of the Air, and the punishment of hell (Heb. 2:14-18; Eph. 2:1-4). Freedom in Jesus! Jesus told His people He came as a ransom to lay down His life to pay our debt of sin to a Holy God! (Mark 10:45).

Christ Jesus when He ascended as King on David’s Eternal Throne at God’s right hand, sent forth His Spirit to dwell within His people, and to encourage us and strengthen us to endure and complete our exile-pilgrimage here and to know His sweet, loving presence as Immanuel “with us” (Acts 2:28-33). Now on behalf of True Israel, Jesus is preparing a place for us (John 14:1ff); this is why our hearts should not be troubled!

The return from exile back to the land where God would dwell with His people in peace, giving them rest, and victory and security from all of His and our enemies, has begun with the resurrection and ascension of Christ, and the outpouring of His Spirit upon us! The return from exile has begun as He frees His people by HIs Spirit from captivity to sin and the devil, and frees us to live loving HIs truth and growing in His likeness.

This initial or inaugural beginning of the return from exile and deportation to Babylon that has begun with Jesus’ resurrection-ascension and the Spirit of Pentecost is another aspect of the mystery that was revealed, but not fully understood in the Old Covenant (Rom. 16:25-27; Eph. 3:1-10). This mystery is that the Messiah, Jesus Christ, would be resurrected and would begin the return from exile not to the Promised Land here on earth (in the Middle East in Israel), but to the Heavenly Land, or place the Promised Land in the Old Covenant had foreshadowed and pointed upward to: the “Better Country” or the “Heavenly Country” (Hebrews 11:13-16). This is the country that Abraham and all of his true, believing children longed for throughout the Old Covenant:

These all died in faith, not having received the things promised, but having seen them and greeted them from afar, and having acknowledged that they were strangers and exiles on the earth. For people who speak thus make it clear that they are seeking a homeland.  If they had been thinking of that land from which they had gone out, they would have had opportunity to return. But as it is, they desire a better country, that is, a heavenly one. Therefore God is not ashamed to be called their God, for he has prepared for them a city. – Hebrews 11:13-15

As God’s True Israel, united to Jesus Christ, recipients of His Holy Spirit, we can still sing “O Come, O Come, Immanuel” with all of our hearts (this is not a song for merely ethnic Israel to sing). Although the return from exile has begun for us in Jesus, and we are already seated with Christ in the Heavenly Places (Eph. 2:6; Col. 3:1-4), nevertheless, we mourn, we suffer tribulation, and persecution, yet we should be expectantly awaiting His Second Coming! (1 Pet. 4:8; Titus 2:11-14). In fact, it is through tribulation that we will actually enter the Kingdom of God (Acts 14:22; Revelation 1:9-10).

Full return from exile is for all those who truly love His appearing! (1 Tim. 4:8). Do you long for and love His appearing? The exile in the Old Covenant separated the mere ethnic, outwardly circumcised unbelieving Jews from the inwardly, believing, True Jews with circumcised hearts (cf. Rom. 2:25-28; not all of Israel is Israel, see also Rom. 9-11). The True Israel in any time, walks by faith, even when circumstances around them and in the world were at their worst! (Habakkuk 2:4; Heb. 11:1, 6; 12:1-3; 2 Cor. 5:6-10). How are you doing? Are you awaiting, anticipating, longing? Or not?! What does this teach you about yourself and your need before God? Are you a True Israelite, or merely one outwardly (see again Romans 2:25-28).

Similar to our forefathers in the faith who lived in the Old Covenant, yet with much more revealed truth where we stand on this side of the cross, we wait, too, and long for Messiah’s Second Coming and Glorious Appearing! (2 Tim. 4:1, 8). Let us then, as God’s True Israel (Gal. 6:16) live “Advent Lives” each day of the year, not just in this season when we think about Christmas and the Incarnation.

And as for all who walk by this rule, peace and mercy be upon them, and upon the Israel of God. – Galatians 6:16

In our union with Christ, no matter how great the oppression, trouble, tribulation, and misery, we have Christ. Is HE enough for you? Is Christ your glorious and joyous portion? (Psa. 16:5, 11; 73:22-28). Is it good for you to be near to God? (Psa. 73:28; Heb. 4:16). In the midst of our arduous pilgrimage, we possess Christ’s powerful and Holy Spirit to give us hope, light, life, and joy in this present age, until He appears, until He comes again. Now we have Christ with discouragement, darkness, death, and devastating sadness (as Israel before the first coming!), yet we can rejoice!

“Rejoice! Rejoice! Immanuel; shall come to Thee, O Israel!”

Let us sing as we worship our glorious and beautiful King on David’s Throne, and as we await our Homecoming to the Heavenly New Creation and New Jerusalem, where we shall behold Immanuel face to face (1 John 3:1-3; Rev. 21:1-7)! Let us sing:

“…Open wide our heavenly home; make safe the way that leads on high, and close the past to misery!”

Beloved of Immanuel, Let this be our song and prayer this Christmas. And let us visualize with holy, captured imaginations this scene that is about to take place in our lives:

“Behold, the dwelling place of God is with man. He will dwell with them, and they will be his people, and God himself will be with them as their God. 4 He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning nor crying nor pain anymore, for the former things have passed away.” – Revelation 21:3-4

 IN Christ’s love,
Pastor Biggs

Beholding the Glory of Christ at Christmas—What Did Simeon See?

I have a favorite hill in my little town of Round Hill, Virginia, which I enjoy ascending at a particular time of morning in the summer months. The light has already dawned by the time I start climbing to the summit. The light helps me on my way up the hill, but I don’t see the full glory of the sun until it comes up over the mount.

This is descriptive of our forefather’s Simeon’s place in redemptive history. He was living at the first light of the dawn of the last days. The light had dawned with the coming of Jesus in his incarnation, but Simeon did not behold the beautiful glory of the Son until his mother and father brought him into the temple. Although Simeon had believed God’s promises and had lived righteously in the strength of them, he had yet to behold the glory of God in the face of Jesus as he would.

“Now there was a man in Jerusalem, whose name was Simeon, and this man was righteous and devout, waiting for the consolation of Israel, and the Holy Spirit was upon him. 26 And it had been revealed to him by the Holy Spirit that he would not see death before he had seen the Lord’s Christ. 27 And he came in the Spirit into the temple, and when the parents brought in the child Jesus, to do for him according to the custom of the Law, 28 he took him up in his arms and blessed God and said, 29 “Lord, now you are letting your servant depart in peace, according to your word; 30 for my eyes have seen your salvation 31 that you have prepared in the presence of all peoples, 32 a light for revelation to the Gentiles, and for glory to your people Israel.” – ESV Luke 2:25-32

Simeon was a righteous and devout man, full of faith, who eagerly anticipated the fulfillment of God’s promises. He went by the Spirit’s guidance into the temple one morning, and on that special day beheld the unfathomable love of God the Father, the wonderful Savior of the world, the light to the Gentiles, the glory of Israel, and the embodiment and realization of all of God’s promises (Luke 2:25–32). Simeon beheld the light of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ (2 Cor. 4:6). He rejoiced, saying, “My eyes have seen your salvation!” (Luke 2:30).

But What Did Simeon See?

Simeon saw a child who would have looked like any other—nothing extraordinary to outward appearances. There was no glow, no halo around baby Jesus’ holy head. He was clothed in our humanity, in the likeness of sinful flesh, born in the likeness of men, and the glory that he had enjoyed as the eternal Son before the foundation of the world was cloaked (Isa. 53:2; John 17:5; Rom. 8:3; Phil. 2:7). As Charles Wesley superbly wrote:

“Veiled in flesh, the Godhead see, Hail! the Incarnate Deity!”

But Simeon saw something special because the Holy Spirit showed it to him by giving him eyes of faith (as emphasized in Luke 2:25, 26, 27). We are told specifically that Simeon “came in the Spirit into the temple” (2:27). Simeon then received into his arms his blessed Savior-King (2:28), the very revelation of God’s salvation to sinners.

It is similar with us today. The Holy Spirit is still leading believers to behold the glory of Jesus. In order to behold who Christ is, and what this means for us, the Holy Spirit must make our dead hearts alive (Eph. 2:1–5). We need to be enabled to behold him with eyes of faith, having the eyes of our hearts enlightened by the power and grace of God (Eph. 1:17–19; 2 Cor. 4:6).

Do You See Him, Too?

This Christmas, ponder deeply the significance of the birth of Jesus. What do you see when you look thoughtfully into the manger? Do you see just a child, merely a baby, or do you see the living God in human flesh to live and die for sinners, to be raised for our vindication and righteous declaration before a holy God, to ascend to God’s right hand as the King of kings and Lord of lords? If you see this, then it is God who has worked in your life, and you are an heir of all his wonderful “Yes” promises in Christ! (2 Cor. 1:20). Can you rejoice that even though your physical eyes may be dimmed by sin’s doubts, and you may grow weary as a pilgrim on the way, your eyes of faith can still see and can still be strengthened as you gaze upon your glorious King? Do you pray to see this more clearly? (Eph. 1:18).

As God’s people living between the first and second comings of Jesus Christ, we are taught to look on and behold the glory of Jesus Christ. We are taught that as we behold this glory, we are transformed by the Spirit from one degree of glory to the next (2 Cor. 3:18). One of the rich benefits of living on this side of the resurrection, as recipients of God’s Spirit, is that we can behold the image of God in the face of Jesus Christ (Heb. 1:1–3; 2 Cor. 4:6). The Old Testament saints beheld Christ’s glory in shadow and type (Luke 24:24–27; John 5:39), but we behold the true image of God as he is fully revealed in the time of fulfillment. Have you received him? Have you embraced this glorious King as he is held out to you in the gospel? Do you have “the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ” (2 Cor. 4:6)? Embrace him now. Take up the blessed Jesus in your arms of faith and receive him as your beloved King!

Beloved, rejoice that the glory of God in Christ has appeared! This salvation has been clearly revealed to all (Titus 2:11–14). We still await the full revelation of this glory, but let’s get in practice for it. John Owen wrote in his magnificent treatise Meditations and Discourses on the Glory of Christ,

“If our future blessedness shall consist in being where he is, and beholding of his glory, what better preparation can there be for it than in a constant previous 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?” (Works of John Owen, 1:275).

The Scriptures tell us to practice beholding this glory by eagerly anticipating Christ’s appearing and sober-mindedly being watchful for it (Titus 2:13; 1 Peter 4:7). We are to love his appearing (2 Tim. 4:8), just as Simeon, our forefather in the faith, did. Do you eagerly await him? This provides real food for your faith and clarity for your heart and mind. Seek to behold him through the Scriptures.

Simeon received a special promise: that the final chapter of God’s redemption would dawn with the coming of the Messiah before he died (Luke 2:26). And once he laid eyes on the glorious Savior, clothed in his own flesh—the eternal Son permanently united to his human nature—Simeon’s heart soared in exultation, joy, and praise. His soul was flooded with the peace that only God in Christ can give! (Rom. 5:1–11). He was ready to die. Are you ready to die? Can you say today, “To me to live is Christ, and to die is gain” (Phil. 1:21)?

What a glorious privilege it is for us, too, as those who live in the last days, on this side of the resurrection, at the end of the ages, at the close of history, and at the end of the world as we know it, to live anticipating the fact that we will see Jesus Christ face-to-face—not as an infant wrapped in swaddling clothes, but as the King adorned with power, majesty, and glory (Isa. 6:1ff.; 33:17; John 12:41; Rev. 4:9–11; 5:9–14). The apostle John says that we will very soon “see him as he is” (1 John 3:2–3), which is an answer to the Lord Jesus’ prayer for his own on the night of his death (John 17:24). We will behold the King in his full majesty, glory, and beauty!

“Your eyes will behold the king in his beauty” (Isa. 33:17; cf. Ps. 45). Hallelujah!

Are you eagerly awaiting his appearing? Like Simeon, our forefather, are you waiting for the full revelation of the comfort and consolation that God will bring in the salvation and restoration of all things at the return of Jesus Christ? (Luke 2:25–26; Titus 2:13)? Are you full of joy that is “inexpressible and full of glory” because of this (1 Peter 1:8)? Are you being led regularly by the Holy Spirit to behold him in God’s Word?

As God’s people, recipients of his Spirit and his promises, let us behold Jesus in his holy Word, looking daily at his graciousness, compassion, gentleness, judgment, and zeal for holiness, as he is displayed and revealed to us in his person, promises, offices, and grace! Behold, God’s salvation—and the only hope for sinners! Let this encourage us to be eager in our anticipation of his return on our pilgrimage in the present age.

Let us await the awesome moment when we shall be changed in the twinkling of an eye. Previously we could have beheld Christ only in the flesh, but on that day we will behold him face-to-face with eyes of incorruptible and eternal glory, and we will be changed! (1 Cor. 15:50–53). What a reason that is to serve him! Our eyes, too, by faith, have seen the Lord’s salvation, but we haven’t seen anything yet! Nothing can compare with what we will see (Rom. 8:18–21; 1 Cor. 2:9; 13:12; 2 Cor. 4:18). That is our great hope—live joyfully in it.

Do You See What Simeon Sees?

Have you beheld the Savior of the world as your only hope? Have you beheld the Savior to make you strong in grace? Have you beheld the Savior to encourage you on your pilgrimage and strengthen your faith? Have you beheld the Savior; do you anticipate seeing him better? Glory to the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit!

On my favorite hill, I can enjoy the light and see the beauty and glory of the sun, but I cannot dwell there. I cannot live there. Time goes on, the sun rises and sets, and it is night again. But one day, the night will be over and the full day will be here (Rom. 13:12; Rev. 22:5).

One day soon, I won’t run to see glory and capture moments of the beauty and glory; rather, it will consume me (2 Cor. 5:4). Let that cause your hearts to soar with exultation and the praise of God this Christmas; let your souls be filled with God’s sweet peace as you, too, say with Simeon:

“My eyes have seen your salvation!”

Take a moment right now to pray that you see Him who is “Fullness of Grace and Deity” more clearly? (Eph. 1:18; John 1:16; Col. 2:9).

In Christ’s Love,
Pastor Biggs

The Grace of Thanksgiving

We are called by our God to be thankful in Christ Jesus! (1 Thess. 5:18; Col. 3:16-17). Thankfulness for God’s mercies runs as a glorious river of grace throughout redemptive history. But how are we to feed and fuel this thanksgiving? We want it to do be from the heart. We know that we can be fake at times, and a bit hypocritical. God knows our hearts, so how do we give thanks out of love because of a sincere faith, a clear conscience and a pure heart?

We are to remember. We are called as God’s covenant people to always be remember God, and His undeserved, magnificent goodness to us in Jesus. But we so easily forget, and thus are tempted to ingratitude! We are to remember. We are called as God’s covenant people to always be remember God and His undeserved, magnificent goodness to us in Jesus. The natural, unregenerate person is unable to give thanks. Thanksgiving is a gift of grace from the Holy Spirit, particularly manifest when we remember God and His graciousness toward sinners. But we so easily forget, and thus are tempted to ingratitude!

Church historian D. Clair Davis describes the Christian life as “a combination of amnesia and déjà vu.”  He says, “I know I’ve forgotten this before.”  As we follow Christ we keep needing to learn the same lesson over and over because we keep forgetting them.  And each time it happens, we suddenly remember that we have had to relearn these very same lessons before.

Our thanksgiving to God should come from clear and biblically informed memories that remember the love and grace of God. What does Scripture teach concerning this? We are to remember God (Exodus 3:14-15). God reveals His Name to His people so that we will remember Him throughout generations. These memories of God’s Person and loving and good character lead to service and faith that desire to focus on God. God reveals Himself not because He needed anything, but that He might bless us, and allow us to enjoy Him and glorify Him in our lives of service for Him.

God remembers His covenant mercies to His people, therefore we are called to remember that He always remembers us! “Give thanks to the LORD for He is good; for His steadfast (covenantal) love endures forever” (Psalm 118). God instituted feasts in the Old and New Covenants so that we might formally remember His grace and goodness to us Jesus Christ. God said of Passover in the Old Covenant: “This day shall be for you a memorial day, and you shall keep it as a feast to the LORD; throughout your generations…” (Exo. 12:12-14). God knew our tendency to forget, and He graciously desired to capture the memories of His people as they told the story of His faithfulness in redemption. This remembering would lead to great thanksgiving from the heart, manifesting itself in covenantal obedience to God in response to His love: “…Let the hearts of those who seek the LORD rejoice! Seek the LORD and his strength; seek his presence continually! Remember the wondrous works that he has done…” (1 Chron. 16:9-12).

In the New Covenant, the Lord Jesus instituted the Sacrament of the Lord’s Supper to “do this in remembrance of me” (1 Cor. 11:23ff). This remembrance that we are to have is God’s ultimate saving work in Christ for sinners, how He laid down His own life for us! Through this New Covenant feast (1 Cor. 5:8), we remember the past acts of God in Christ for us, and anticipate His glorious return, and the consummate feast we will eat with the Lord in the New Creation! At the Lord’s Table, we thank God for His indescribable gift to sinners in Christ! (2 Cor. (9:11ff).

Our Puritan forefathers spoke of having holy conversations, something that we don’t diligently seek to practice today as we should. This holy conversation is simply seeking to edify other brethren by reminding them of the great things God has done, and is doing in our lives; this is another aspect of watching what we say, and seeking to edify those like us who are often tempted to ingratitude. This is another way of stirring up other to love and good works–to thanksgiving! (Heb. 10:24-25). We see this telling of God’s goodness in Exodus 18 when Moses tells Jethro, his father in law, of God’s salvation faithfulness. And Jethro rejoices! Let us rejoice together in this way! (1 Thess. 3:9).

Ingratitude is a great sin (Rom. 1:21: “They did not honor Him as God or give thanks to Him…”; cf. 1 Tim. 3:2; even secular psychologists today understand that ingratitude and complaning is because of narcissistic self-love). Thanksgiving is another gift of grace from God to His people. Thanksgiving is an act of faith that pleases God. We can be thankful because we have the Spirit of Joy and Rejoicing within us. This glorious Spirit has been secured for us because the Father set His affection and love upon us from eternity past, and in time the Eternal Son became man to redeem us by HIs precious blood. Let us give Him thanks! Glory to God! To the praise of His glorious grace! (Eph. 1).

Let us behold the Lord Jesus giving thanks to the Father for His wisdom in salvation, and His thanks for us as His own beloved, and let us imitate His holy attitude by His powerful Spirit (Luke 10:21; Heb. 2:13).

In Christ’s Love,
Pastors Biggs and Halley

Have You Thought About Your God Today?

Thoughts on Meditation Adapted from John Owen

Joyless today?

Too focused on self, on your problems, on your struggles, on your sins, and on this world? Is Jesus Christ too small for you right now? Are your thoughts of God orthodox and true, but not experienced in your emotions and in your heart? Do you believe that God is big, powerful, and good as the Scripture reveals, but you are not experiencing these truths from your souls, within your own heart?

John Owen’s encouragement to meditation may be particularly helpful. I have found many hard days, even joyless, discouraging days, where through meditating on Scriptural truths, I am able to be filled with joy inexpressible because of God’s goodness (1 Peter 1:8). Now we want to be careful here. We seek God because He is God, and worthy of all of our praise! We are not merely seeking God for an experience, but by seeking God, we can have a truly joyful and lovely experience in communion with Him that will encourage our tired, joyless and weary souls. Here is the way John Owen explained this experience of meditating:

“Let us rejoice with joy unspeakable and full of glory” in the grace of God that has been given to us in Jesus Christ! (1 Pet. 1:8). What we find in Christ will make our hearts leap within us, and all of our affections will overflow with delight and joy. Holy admiration of God consists in our affections and emotions being touched experientially by His grace. We are not to have barren, fruitless, mere intellectual knowledge of biblical truths, but we are rather to stir up our hearts in all our meditations on the grace of God, and not rest until we find them affected, moved, satisfied, and filled with a holy joy and contented resting in Jesus. This is the most eminent evidence of our union with Christ and His benefits.”

Meditation on God’s truth until we experience this emotionally (through reverence, awe, joy, etc.) is one aspect of what it means to love God with not only our minds, but also our hearts, souls, and strength (Mark 12:30). We are promised joy by our Lord Jesus as we abide in Him (John 15). In fact, the Lord Jesus wants us to experience the truth of God’s love in our hearts through joy:

“These things I have spoken to you, that my joy may be in you, and that your joy may be full” (John 15:11).

Ask the Spirit of God, who studies and knows the deep things of God (1 Cor. 2:8ff) to shine on these truths of God from Scripture, and lift you up to heaven (2 Cor. 3:18, 4:6). You already dwell in heaven in union with Christ (Col. 3:1-4). Why not seek to live like it?! Use the verses below, and the truths about God to aid you in meditating unto rejoicing in the LORD!

Think about these thoughts (various verses from Hebrews 2:5-9): “What is man, that you are mindful of him, or the son of man, that you care for him? You made him for a little while lower than the angels; you have crowned him with glory and honor, putting everything in subjection under his feet.” …At present, we do not yet see everything in subjection to him. But we see him who for a little while was made lower than the angels, namely Jesus, crowned with glory and honor because of the suffering of death, so that by the grace of God he might taste death for everyone.”

John Owen wrote: “Let us exercise ourselves unto holy thoughts of God’s infinite excellencies. Meditation, accompanied with holy admiration is the fountain of this duty. Some men have over busily and curiously inquired into the nature and properties of God, and have foolishly endeavored to measure infinite things by the miserable short line of their own reason, and to suit the deep things of God unto their own narrow apprehensions. Such are many of the disputations of the [Medieval theologians] on this subject, wherein though they have seemed wise to themselves and others, yet indeed for the most part they have ‘waxed vain in their imaginations’.”

Our duty lies in studying what God has revealed of Himself in Holy Scripture, and what is evidently suitable thereunto, and that not with curious searchings and speculations, but with holy admiration, reverence and fear. In this way, serious thoughts of God’s excellencies and properties, His greatness, immensity, self-sufficiency, power, wisdom and goodness are exceedingly useful to our souls.

How shall we meditate upon God today from Scripture?

God is great. “His greatness is unsearchable” (Psalm 145:3). His greatness is infinite. The heaven of heavens cannot contain our God! (1 Kings 8:27). “Do I not fill heaven and earth?” God asks (Jer. 23:24). God is always present with us; He is omnipresent. Let us admire, reverence, and adore Him. What are we as dust compared to a Being who is immense whose greatness we cannot measure, whose nature we cannot comprehend?!

God is infinitely self-sufficent. God’s understanding is infinite. “For from Him, and through Him, and to Him are all things, to God be the glory forever!” (Rom. 11:33-36). God needs nothing or no one outside Himself. He is all-sufficient and eternally blessed in the contemplation and enjoyment of His own excellencies. All the blessedness that we as creatures may attain unto is dependent, derivative, and communicated graciously by Him. He is absolutely blessed.

God has eternal power. God’s power is revealed in everything (Rom. 1:20). God upholds everything that exists by the word of HIs power (Heb. 1:3; Col. 1:17). He gives life, breath, and everything (Acts 17:28).

God is Infinitely Wise. In wisdom, He has created all things (Psalm 104:24). His power gives all things their being, but His wisdom gives them their order, beauty and usefulness. All things have a purpose. God even uses evil and sin as instruments to bring Himself glory and bring good to His people.

God is Infinitely Good. He does all things powerfully, and wisely, but He is also good. If God were merely all powerful and all wise, He might not necessarily be good. God is powerful, wise and good. Let us worship and adore Him!

When these excellencies of God have filled us with wonder, when they have prostrated our spirits before Him, and laid our mouths in the dust, and our persons on the ground, when the glory of them shines round about us, and our whole souls are filled with holy astonishment, then consider man—that God is mindful of him.

Let us now view ourselves: We are creatures. We are frail, poor, sinners, undeserving of God’s goodness. We are mere blind beggars waiting for the next handout. If there is an infinite distance between the Creator and creatures, how much more is that distance infinite as sinners who have offended a holy God?! What is there in us, we who are but dust and ashes, that would cause God to notice us, to be mindful of us?!

Although we as sinners are by nature at enmity with God (Rom. 5:6-9), and refuse to give Him the glory due His name (Rom. 1:25; 3:23), nevertheless in God the Father’s supreme and infinite power, wisdom and goodness, covenanted with His Beloved Son and Spirit to redeem sinners and make them His sons.

Let the results of these thoughts about God, lead us to holy admiration of God’s infinite love, care, grace, and condescension in having any regard for us.

“We see Him…namely, Jesus” (Heb. 2:9)

Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the Eternal Son of God, who became man, and revealed the power, wisdom and goodness of God to us. Let us admire and thank God for Jesus who we see with eyes of faith, and behold the glory of God in His lovely face (2 Cor. 4:6).

Let us rejoice in Jesus today!

Let us ask the Spirit of Jesus to give us eyes to see this glorious display of God’s wisdom, power and love to sinners in Christ. Let us ask the Spirit to help us to have wisdom and discernment in our knowledge of Him, and to have the eyes of our hearts enlightened so that we might know the hope to which we have been called, the glorious inheritance in the saints, and the unsurpassable/unbelievable/awesome/immeasurably great power for us who believe! (Eph. 1:15-23).

Meditate upon this, and may you be filled with joy that is inexpressible and full of glory! (1 Peter 1:8).

Remember what Owen said: “What we find in Christ will make our hearts leap within us, and all of our affections will overflow with delight and joy. Holy admiration of God consists in our affections and emotions being touched experientially by His grace.”

In Christ’s love,
Pastor Biggs