The Christian life is about glorifying God, and in this video Paul Washer teaches some very important and pertinent points regarding marriage. It was definitely something that I needed to hear!
19/09/2009 at 10:49 pm (Uncategorized)
Tags: Bible, Christian life, Christianity, covenant, glorify, God, holiness, Jesus, Lord, love, marriage, marry, Paul Washer, truth, wedding
The Christian life is about glorifying God, and in this video Paul Washer teaches some very important and pertinent points regarding marriage. It was definitely something that I needed to hear!
25/08/2009 at 9:05 pm (Uncategorized)
Tags: Bible, Calvinism, doctrines of grace, Glory Road, gospel, Jesus, monergism
Here’s a review from Tim Challies on the book “Glory Road“, it sounds like something I’d like to check out as one who is a relative newcomer to the doctrine of monergism. It’s a collection of testimonies from ten black American church leaders regarding how they came to embrace the doctrines of grace.
25/08/2009 at 9:33 am (Uncategorized)
Tags: Bible, bondage, death, fight good fight, freedom, gospel, hell, judgment, life, sin, warning
“Go, and sin no more.”
22/06/2009 at 11:50 pm (thoughts)
Tags: Bible, crime, family, GBH, God, good person, grace, Jesus Christ, judgment, justice, law, love, loyalty, murder, sin, total depravity, truth, wickedness
As I was washing up the dishes, I was listening to a commercial inbetween songs being played on the radio. It was heartbreaking; two mothers affected by gun violence here in London. The first mother who spoke lost her son in gun violence. The second mother’s son was one that pulled the trigger and killed someone else. You could clearly hear the heartache in both of these parents; one can only imagine their anguish.
However what stopped me in my tracks was when I heard the second mother say that her son was really a “good boy” and that she had no idea what made him pull the trigger. I must say that this is part of the problem – too many people think that they are supporting their loved one when they essentially call them a “good boy”. Now I’m not a seasoned parent, but I firmly believe that we do our families no favours when we refuse to look squarely at the facts and fail to point out wrongdoing. It is misguided to think that “shopping” an errant son or daughter is being disloyal. I recall reading this story a while back about a woman who informed the police that her sons viciously attacked a man, leaving him blind in one eye . Amazingly she was made an outcast from her family! For doing the right thing! No one wants to see a loved one in jail but really, could none of them see that what she did probably stopped them from becoming murderers? I’m glad that she listened to her conscience.
How many of us have been to a funeral where people were eulogised as a “good lad really”, when many in the congregation knew that the departed was involved in illegal activity and that this was the result of their demise?
I’ve never understood the mentality of being an “informer” or “grass” as a bad thing. Perhaps its one of the things that the prophet Isaiah warned about when he said, “Woe to those who call evil good and good evil, who put darkness for light and light for darkness, who put bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter!” (Isaiah 5:20). The book of Deuteronomy is replete with verses advising the Israelites to purge evil from among them. When a transgression – from breaking a school window or stealing apples to rape or murder – has been committed, it does the community good and the perpetrator good to call a spade a spade.
At the root of all this though, is a refusal for us to admit that our loved ones may well have done wrong, even if they confess it without remorse. At some level, we all deny that we’re thoroughly depraved and deserve God’s holy judgment on us. We underestimate God’s holiness and we underestimate our innate evil. Beyond sin being what we do, it is what we say, think and is our condition. Thank God for the gospel, that He has sent His Son, Jesus to atone for the sins of those who repent and put their trust in Him.
Mothers, fathers, grandparents, family, whoever. If you really love your family member or friend and you know that they’re heading down the wrong road, show that love by telling them that what they’re doing isn’t right. Show that love by daring to be in the unpopular minority. Show them that love in the knowledge that you could be saving them and possibly someone else from having blood on their hands.
11/06/2009 at 10:50 pm (Uncategorized)
Tags: Bible, Bridget Baucham, children, Christ, discipleship, faith, family, fatherhood, God, godly family, gospel, motherhood, parenthood, Voddie Baucham
Found this video online, I found it a great encouragement as a first generation Christian wife and mum, hope you’re blessed by it too
28/05/2009 at 9:37 pm (thoughts)
Tags: Bible, born again, Christ, Christianity, essential, eternal, faith, good person, gospel, Jesus, knowledge, life, new life, Salvation, soteriology, the life, the truth, the way, treasure, truth
I remember many years ago when I finally realised that I was indeed not a good person, I thought that I cannot go to church as it’s for “good people”. I wanted to at least be perceived as “good” and “respectable” so I thought that by joining a church and becoming a faithful member that that should do the job.
How little I knew!
The Bible tells us that no-one is good (Psalm 14:1, 3, Psalm 53:1, Psalm 53:3), all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God (Romans 3:23). The just and true penalty for sin is death, but faith and repentance in Christ brings new, eternal life (Romans 6:23).
I also remember being told very early on in my Christian walk by a minister that it’s sad that some people “never move on from repentance”, as though repentance was a one-off event! Thank God for His word, I now know that repentance from sin is a hallmark of new life in Christ, that we are being sanctified. The gospel is central to the life of the believer! I’m in the middle of reading a book called “Living the Cross Centred Life: Keeping the Gospel the Main Thing” by C.J. Mahaney. In it, he declares the same thing – that while there are many worthy things to ponder and study from Scripture, the gospel is indeed central – the only essential message. In my mind, it’s a grave and sad error to toss the gospel aside once a “decision” has been made at the altar, as though salvation is a mere ticket to heaven.
In the clip below, Mr Paul Washer expresses the point better than I can.
By the way – if you’re not not convinced that you’re not a good person, whose standards are you going by? Yours or God’s? Take this test and see.
28/03/2009 at 11:59 pm (thoughts)
Tags: Bible, God, grief, healing, hope, Lord, loss, miscarriage, sovereignty
It’s taken me a bit longer than usual to write this post. Last month, three days after the joy of finding out that I was expecting my second child, I began to miscarry.
I’ve suffered loss and grief before but there was something about this that shook me to my very core. Apart from very few people, I’ve pretty much kept this to myself, which has only added to the sense of isolation that I’ve learned that a miscarriage can bring. Yet in the midst of all this, I am comforted that the Lord wasn’t at all surprised but that He really is in control. When I read Job 1:20-21, this resonated with me:
“Then Job arose and tore his robe and shaved his head and fell on the ground and worshipped. And he said, ”Naked I came from my mother’s womb, and naked shall I return. The LORD gave, and the LORD has taken away; blessed be the name of the LORD”.
I’ve often read this as Job worshipping even though he suffered. Now I see it like this – though he worshipped God, he still “kept it real” and wept and mourned for his profound loss. It could just be me, but I’ve felt that Christians are often expected to paint a smile on our faces and pretending that all is well even when it isn’t. Despite the Psalms being full of real emotions and pleas to God, there’s a sentiment that we’ve got to show unbelievers how strong we are in the Lord by carrying on, “business as usual”. I say the opposite is true… the apostle Paul wrote:
That is why, for Christ’s sake, I delight in weaknesses, in insults, in hardships, in persecutions, in difficulties. For when I am weak, then I am strong. (2 Corinthians 12:10)
Rather than denying that Christians suffer in life, it’s an opportunity for us to display our reliance on Christ to strengthen us and to glorify Him. Of course, the Bible contains many accounts of human suffering and needless to say the greatest example was the Lord Jesus Christ.
Even when things go wrong, even when we haven’t a clue why certain things happen or don’t happen for us, God is good. Though I still grieve the loss of my unborn child, I am glad that God knows all things and He comforts me through His word by the Spirit. Like the psalmist wrote, my help cometh from the LORD. Amen!
24/03/2009 at 8:24 am (Uncategorized)
Tags: altar call, Bible, decisional regeneration, evangelism, gospel, Jesus, preaching, Salvation, unbiblical, witness
01/03/2009 at 9:53 am (thoughts)
Tags: Bible, born again, election, gospel, monergism, new birth, regeneration, synergism, total depravity
Psalm 100:3 says:
Know ye that the LORD he is God: it is he that hath made us, and not we ourselves; we are his people, and the sheep of his pasture.
If this is true of our natural birth, then it must be also true of the second birth, our Christian new birth. It’s not about making a decision for Christ, but being made a new creation (2 Cor 5:17, Galatians 6:15). It is all by the grace of God, and I’m so grateful, because in my natural mind I would not, and did not, choose Him.
Soli deo gloria!
11/02/2009 at 4:10 pm (Uncategorized)
Tags: Bible, creation, darwin, evolution, gospel, truth
From The Register and The Telegraph: Apparently the Vatican has declared that the theory of evolution is traceable to Augustine and Thomas Aquinas and like the Church of England reckon that it’s not odds with the Biblical record of creation.
For those who don’t know it – the Vatican are not the arbiters of truth. God’s word, the Bible is.
01/02/2009 at 10:30 pm (praise and thanksgiving, thoughts)
Tags: Bible, faith, forgiveness, Frida Gashumba, genocide, God, healing, hope, hutu, inspirational, Jesus, Lord Jesus, love, Rwanda, Salvation, total depravity, tutsi
Today I finished reading an excellent book called “Frida – Chosen to Die, Destined to Live” by Frida Gashumba.
Frida Gashumba is a survivor of the genocide in Rwanda in 1994. The book details the terror and wickedness she witnessed and suffered as a fourteen year old. If anyone disagrees with the notion that humans are totally depraved, one only has to read of the atrocities carried out not just in this book, but throughout history or even in the news today. Several times I was moved to tears as Frida describes how all of her immediate family was slaughtered.
What was amazing though, is how the Lord totally transforms Frida’s life. Once a hater of Christians (sadly understandable in part due to some professed Christians taking part in the genocide), the Lord uses a schoolfriend of Frida’s called Julienne to preach the gospel to her. Reading Frida’s account of how Julienne boldly preached Christ at school and wherever she went – and backed up what she talked by her walk was nothing short of inspirational and it was wonderful to share in the joy of her account of her salvation by the Lord Jesus Christ.
It was refreshing to see how Frida went through the process of grief and forgiveness. She doesn’t hide that she didn’t want to forgive the Hutus who brutally murdered her family as well as hundreds of thousands of other Tutsis. Through the grace and power of God, she has been set free of bitterness and has even seen people set free as she has forgiven them. Many pages in this book had me exclaiming “Wow!” out loud, but this took my breath away:
Time and time again as I wrestled with the subject of forgiveness, I came back to two key passages in the Bible. The first was Luke 23:34 where, as Jesus is dying on the cross, He cries out, “Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing.” I began to realize that, like my family, Jesus had been hounded and hated to the point where He had been murdered by members of His own people. He had been persecuted as we had been persecuted. He had been tortured and abused as we had been…
The second key passage was Acts 7, which records how one of the first believers, Stephen, was stoned to death for his faith in Jesus – the first Christian martyr. Like Jesus, in the midst of suffering and pain, Stephen was able to forgive those who were killing him. As he lay dying, he cried out, “Lord, do not hold this sin against them.” Stephen was a human being just like me. He had no greater resources than I to enable him to forgive his murderers. God the Holy Spirit had enabled him to forgive. I understood that if Stephen could forgive, then I could too. “
Her journey to forgiveness made me reflect on how small and trivial my own cross is. Surely I can forgive those who have done wrong to me, even as I have been forgiven by the Lord? It’s a process that can be painful to go through, but it’s got to be better than holding onto bitterness and hate inside.
This book is one of hope in the midst of crushing despair and grief. With men this is impossible, but with God all things are possible!
27/01/2009 at 10:01 am (thoughts)
Tags: Bible, emotionalism, experiences, faith, God, Jesus, trust, truth
Was just thinking this morning about my walk with the Lord over the years – how much I am learning and the fact that there is yet plenty to learn and apply.
I remember clearly trusting in spiritual experiences (usually a very emotional time at church service) or the fact that I cried along to a worship chorus or hymn as evidence of my salvation, more than believing what the Bible has to say. If you’d asked me at the time I would have denied this but if I’m honest with myself I thought held the Bible in high esteem but in practice I didn’t trust what the Lord had to say or craved a “word” from what visiting “prophet”.
I thank God that He gave us His word and that it can be trusted far more than my own thoughts and feelings that are so easily moved in comparison. In the words of this hymn:
’Tis so sweet to trust in Jesus,
And to take Him at His Word;
Just to rest upon His promise,
And to know, “Thus says the Lord!”
Jesus, Jesus, how I trust Him!
How I’ve proved Him o’er and o’er
Jesus, Jesus, precious Jesus!
O for grace to trust Him more!
O how sweet to trust in Jesus,
Just to trust His cleansing blood;
And in simple faith to plunge me
’Neath the healing, cleansing flood!
Yes, ’tis sweet to trust in Jesus,
Just from sin and self to cease;
Just from Jesus simply taking
Life and rest, and joy and peace.
I’m so glad I learned to trust Thee,
Precious Jesus, Savior, Friend;
And I know that Thou art with me,
Wilt be with me to the end.
05/01/2009 at 10:25 am (Uncategorized)
Tags: apostasy, Benny Hinn, Bible, counterfeit revival, Creflo Dollar, deception, doctrine, Fred Price, gospel, heresy, heretics, Jamal Harrison Bryant, Joyce Meyer, Kenneth Copeland, lies, Matthew Ashimolowo, Myles Munroe, oneness pentecostal, pentecostal, pentecostalism, prosperty gospel, Ramson Mumba, shai linne, TD Jakes, Timothy Brindle, Todd Bentley, truth, unbiblical, word of faith
The song speaks for itself, it’s called “Faulty Doctrine” by Timothy Brindle and shai linne. The video highlights some of the purveyors of error and heresy.
04/01/2009 at 10:56 pm (random, thoughts)
Tags: Bible, Christ, Christian, Christianity, Devotion, God, Jesus, Lord, piety, religion, religious, worship
“It’s not about religion, but about relationship.”
I’ve heard this many times since I’ve been a Christian. Okay, I am a bit of a pedant at heart and disagree with the denigration of the term “religion”. Here’s the Oxford English Dictionary definition:
religion
• noun 1 the belief in and worship of a superhuman controlling power, especially a personal God or gods. 2 a particular system of faith and worship. 3 a pursuit or interest followed with devotion.
— ORIGIN originally in the sense
life under monastic vows: from Latin religio ‘obligation, reverence’.
If you talk about relationship as opposed to “religion”, I think I do understand what you’re getting at, that Christianity is not about dead formalism or fake, shallow devotion to God. I just think that when we say things like “I’m not religious” though, we should be careful to explain what that means. It’s possible that I could be thinking too much into this, but the phrase is wide open to various interpretation. For instance, someone could deduce that it means that it’s unnecessary to fellowship with other believers, if their idea of the word “religion” means going to church. Or to them it could mean that you don’t bother with “religious” stuff, such as reading and studying the Bible or prayer. Someone else could wonder if the phrase means that the person saying it is a bit of a fruit-loop, tree hugging, woolly hippy type and dismiss them accordingly. Or perhaps they could simply think that you’re trying to somehow “trick” them, and trying to repackage Christianity to “sell” to them?
As I said before, I could be over thinking this and may be way off the mark. But I do believe that “religion” isn’t a dirty word. From the King James Version of the Bible:
“Pure religion and undefiled before God and the Father is this, To visit the fatherless and widows in their affliction, and to keep himself unspotted from the world.” (James 1:27)
One of my resolutions (by the way, I don’t just have them at new year, I need resolutions all year round!) is to be more accurate in how I speak about the Lord and the things of God… and while it is true that once we are born again we do have a relationship where we can cry “Abba, Father”, we must be clear about how we get that relationship and how mere church attendance or other vain worship pales just doesn’t cut it.