Happy Thanksgiving!
We thank the Lord for all his blessings, especially the gift of our Savior.
Reformed Baptist Congregation Exaltation | Edification | Evangelism
Happy Thanksgiving!
We thank the Lord for all his blessings, especially the gift of our Savior.
Basil of Caesarea says in his little work “On the Spirit” that the “truth is always a quarry hard to hunt, and therefore we must look everywhere for its tracks.”
The truth can be right in front of our eyes and sometimes we don’t want to see it or hear it, yet the Lord said, “the truth shall set you free.”
Let’s love the truth because the truth is of God.
Calvin says in his commentary on James 1:23 that, “heavenly doctrine is indeed a mirror in which God presents himself to our view, so that we may be transformed into his image.”
Thomas Goodwin makes a great point in his work on Justifying Faith (Works, Vol. 8) where he speaks of Christ justifying us.
He says the Ark of the Covenant is a type of the Person of Christ and the Mercy Seat is a type of God’s grace. I prefer to think of it as a type of the Propitiation of Christ. So the Person and Work of the Son are necessary elements in our being justified. There can be no justification apart from the other. Just as the Ark and the Mercy were joined together, so too is the Person and Work of the Son.
The Works of Thomas Goodwin, Volume 8, Book 2, Chp. 1, p. 141.
Here’s a wonderful excerpt from the Institutes on prayer.
“The fourth rule is that, thus cast down and overcome by true humility, we should be nonetheless encouraged to pray by a sure hope that our prayer will be answered. These are indeed things apparently contrary: to join the firm assurance of God’s favor to a sense of his just vengeance; yet, on the ground that God’s goodness alone raises up those oppressed by their own evil deeds, they very well agree together. For, in accordance with our previous teaching that repentance and faith are companions joined together by an indissoluble bond, although one of these terrifies us while the other gladdens us, so also these two ought to be present together in prayers. And David briefly expresses this agreement when he says: “I through the abundance of thy goodness will enter thy house, I will worship toward the temple of thy holiness with fear” [Ps. 5:7]. [Read more…]