Throwing You a Lifeline

Lifeline_four_to_view

 

Help! I’m Drowning!

That’s the feeling that many people experience. Not a literal drowning, but something very similar… it may be pressing financial concerns, the icy hand of a serious illness recently diagnosed, a wayward child who seemingly won’t respond to all your loving discipline, or the dark thoughts of suicide invading a friend’s life.

Paul_Tautges_smallSome years ago–it was towards the end of 2009–I was working on some strategic ideas with the publishing company I served at the time. It would be a good idea, I thought, to generate some small-sized books which dealt with the kinds of issues people are facing today. Itches that need to be scratched, or, to put it another way, issues that people are facing on a day-to-day basis where they feel the need for sound counsel from the Bible. The outcome of this was the commencement of several booklets published under the series name, Living in a Fallen World, and under the consulting editorship of my good friend, Dr. Paul Tautges. Paul’s burden and my concern met precisely at this point. Paul’s book, Counsel One Another had also recently been published.

A Life-line

Through various events and circumstances, while over twenty of these resources saw the light of day in 2010 and 2011, the original publisher released them to be taken over by a US-based publisher. The outcome was a rebranding of the series, this time called the Lifeline Mini-books, an imprint of Shepherd Press. (Shepherd Press is known for its enormously helpful range of resources under the classification of Shepherding a Child’s Heart, the best-selling book by Dr. Tedd Tripp.)

Earlier in 2014, Shepherd Press released eight titles in the new series, thus: Help! He is Struggling with Pornography; Help! I have Breast Cancer; Help! I Want to Change; Help! My Spouse has been Unfaithful; Help! My Teen Struggles with Same-Sex Attractions; Help! My Toddler Rules the House; Help! Someone I Love has been Abused; Help! Someone I Love has Cancer.

Hot off the press this week are the next four titles, pictured above, and hyperlinked below:

Help! I’m DepressedLifeline_only_gif

Help! I’m a Slave to Food

Help! I Can’t Get Motivated

Help! My Friend Is Suicidal

Useful, Spiritual, Helpful

There are many more of these excellent mini-books in preparation and I plan to say more about them in due course. The main point to make at present is that these are immensely helpful! Packed with biblical content, written with feeling and concern for readers in the issues covered (all the authors are in the trenches of ministry themselves–here is no ivory tower, distant academic theorizing!), written with personal application projects to help readers engage practically with the issues concerned, and, especially important, written with a call to turn from sin and trust the Savior. All this in just 10,000 words (that’s 64 pages of small-format reading) makes for an excellent resource to use and give away.

Consider this series of excellent resources in your ministry, your church, for your friends and family, and for your own use!

 

 

 

 

Posted by Jim Holmes in Current Issues, Publishing Books Today, Spirituality, 0 comments

What If I Don’t Love Jesus?

A Powerful Sermon

colinmercer-03On November 23rd, 2014, Colin Mercer, pastor of Faith Free Presbyterian Church in Greenville, SC, preached powerfully on a challenging Bible text, 1 Corinthians 16:22, which reads as follows:

 If any man love not the Lord Jesus Christ, let him be Anathema Maranatha.

It is a Bible text that has fascinated me, reminding me somewhat of a passage written by the Apostle Peter, in 1 Peter 1:8, “Whom having not seen, ye love; in whom, though now ye see him not, yet believing, ye rejoice with joy unspeakable and full of glory”.

Below, you may view the whole sermon from Pastor Mercer. Or you may prefer to read the notes I took–consider them a kind of digest–of the sermon.

Here is the outline of notes I wrote down while Colin Mercer was preaching–I deciphered them from my handwritten scribbles but they have not been checked against the sermon itself, so they are necessarily skeletal; I may have missed out one or two subheadings:

The Unloving Sinner (or The Vital Importance of Loving Christ), preached Sunday evening November 23rd, 2014

Of John Flavel, Puritan minister in Dartmouth in the mid 1600s, it was said that “You had to have a soft head or a hard heart to remain unaffected under his ministry.” One evening, Flavel preached on this text. Usually he would preach to draw people to a winsome Savior. But on this occasion he felt it time to warn his hearers of the seriousness of not coming to the Savior, and he could not pronounce the benediction he was accustomed to pronounce, reasoning along these lines: He could not pronounce the benediction on people who were in his audience who did not love Jesus Christ.

Luke Short, one of his listeners, a fifteen-year-old boy, heard the sermon but was not converted. He emigrated to New England where he lived for several decades. Eighty-five years later, aged 100, still in good health, remembered the sermon and dreaded the anathema. Wonderfully, he was converted and subsequently he lived another sixteen years, dying at age 116 giving evidence of a thoroughly changed heart.

Anathema = doomed to destruction, set aside; Mara Natha, two words; this verse was addressed by the apostle to pretenders of faith, who professed to be Christians. It was not addressed to those who were truly saved.

1. A Great Command

The duty of love to Christ–see Matthew 22:36–it is not an option, not a mere suggestion. What is the greatest commandment? Perhaps the man expected it to be the 6th, 7th or 10th commandment, a commandment dealing with man to man, rather than man to God. But Jesus emphasized it was of love to God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit.

Paramount Importance: Not just affection or sentiment, but faith, duty. It is not what a person kbows about, says about or does for Christ, but it is about love for Christ. Where is our heart toward Christ?

Personal: Applies to every man–salvation is a personal matter. So, to Nicodemus, Jesus could say to him, “Marvel not that I say unto thee…” This stresses the personal nature of faith. Note the Corinthians passage references Jesus with all His names and titles–LORD JESUS CHRIST. This is a full Christ whom we must receive and embrace. It is not possible to have a part Christ. In Acts 16, the Philippian jailer was to call upon the LORD JESUS CHRIST.

Preeminently: Nothing is to go before our love for Christ, not the Bible, not the church, not the sacraments. Think of the Rich Young Ruler. He loved riches more than he loved Christ. People can love things about Christ more than they love Christ. There is no other way, even though it is not popular to say this in today’s society. Preachers fudge this question about the way to God. Jesus is THE way, THE truth, THE life (John 14:6). If any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his.

2. A Great Crime

This was in Corinth, and there may have been people there who were devoid of love for Christ. It is an appaling sin not to love Christ, a terrtible business, for example of not loving a neighbor or not to love a wife according to the vows he took, or imagine a woman rejecting her child or children. Consider siblings despising one another, or believers not loving one another–war amongst the saints–but the absence of love for Christ takes this to an altogether different level. Not to love Christ must be the greatest sin! If not to keep the greatest commandment, it must be the greatest sin.

Ingratitude: Think of what Jesus did in the incarnation–to seek and to save, not to be ministered unto… going about doing good, dying for the ungodly, bearing the wrath of God. Amazing love! We deserved none of it, and yet people despise and discount Him. He is lovely in His sinlessness, His sacrifice, His sufficiency. Imagine someone dying in a fire to save you and you are not even grateful to his family? He demands our first love yet we are idolaters. The Rich Young Ruler loved self more than riches. Self is the idol that is damning countless sinners.

Inexcusable: God sent His son to live and die for sinners. If Christ be the beloved the darling of the soul of God, think what is is to the Father, says Flavel. No good reason. What good reason can you bring for not loving Jesus? Not just talking about these things but the absence of love for Christ.

3. A Great Curse

Inevitable and Irreversible: The underlying idea is that of something being devoted to destruction on the last day. The awful sentence, “Depart from me for I never knew you.” Christ as Savior or there is loss–this is the inevitable alternative. Consider John Murray’s notes, and that this is an inevitable and irreversible situation being under the wrath of an angry God. It is impossible to trace steps back from such a condition.

Eternal: For ever under the wrath of God. Again, Matthew 7, “Not everyone who saith unto me ‘Lord, Lord’… Many will say unto me on that day… I never knew you.”

Inexcusable: No excuses will do. Reasons such as these will fail: “But I went to church.” “I had Christian parents.” “I read my Bible” I did all I could”

It would be an dreadful thing to did as an unloving sinner and to face the wrath of God. There is a full Savior for a needy soul.


 

More about John Flavel here

Image courtesy of http://www.apuritansmind.com/puritan-favorites/john-flavel-1630-1691/

John Flavel

 

Image courtesy of http://www.apuritansmind.com/puritan-favorites/john-flavel-1630-1691/
Posted by Jim Holmes in Spirituality, Theology, 0 comments

Thinking About Thanksgiving

Credit_luke_kapustka_www.flickr.com-photos-lukekapustka-6688446127

From the Green Fields of England to the Greenville of South Carolina

Counting back from late November 2014, a little short of 1,500 days ago from the time of writing, a small family set foot on US soil in Wayne County Airport, Detroit, Michigan. This was not for the first time, but it marked a major new chapter in their lives. As they boarded their connecting flight to GSP—Greenville Spartanburg Airport, South Carolina—their minds were filled with what had been, and what was yet to be.

What had been: A settled life in the United Kingdom… What was yet to be? The challenge of relocating to a new way of life in the USA. New living and working conditions; new school; new friends; new church; new currency; and new ways of driving an automobile—on the wrong side of the road, to start with.

That family? The Holmeses—that’s us. And the first major event in the USA? Thanksgiving 2010!

We have much for which to give thanks, and the season of Thanksgiving is always a time to stimulate these thoughts. On a previous Thanksgiving, I was asked to share some truths from the Bible at a family gathering of friends, and my mind turned to the account of ten lepers who encountered Jesus. In a remarkable display of His power, Jesus healed them completely—yet only one of them acknowledged it. See Luke 17:11-19.

Thankfulness

Here are some of the things I shared along the lines of giving thanks and glory to God:

Living in the twenty-first century here in the sophisticated United States, we may find it hard to imagine what it was like to have an incurable and defacing disease. We will easily go to the doctor’s office or the pharmacy and get a cream or lotion to help with a skin infection or irritation (or plastic surgery if needs be). But here were ten men with a horrible leprous condition, one which was (humanly speaking) incurable.

Imagine You Are a Leper

Imagine your fingers rotting away; the presence of a bacterium that won’t go away until it has feasted on your body, flesh and bones.

Smell the stench of flesh as it pulls away from bone; you would fear to see yourself in a mirror.

Perhaps your nose eroded so that you only see a cavity into your skull; your larynx affected so your voice is weak and reedy

Your nerve endings have been destroyed so you have no feeling of hot, cold or pain; you can burn yourself picking up a hot item from the fire and yet feel no pain!

You are visibly deformed; you are ritually defiled; you have no place in company with the people of God.

It is, as it were, the end of the line for you. You are destined to die, separated from friends and family, excluded from pleasures and enjoyments, and would have people run away from you. Perhaps you would carry a bell, and you would call out, “Unclean, Unclean!” to warn others of your approach. No sports; no social life; no close friendships, no embraces from loved ones. You are an outcast, the lowest of the low.

In the Bible, sin is sometimes described in metaphorical terms as leprosy. So I think it is easy for you, in your mind’s eye, see the picture of how sin is like leprosy, defiling us, separating us from a Holy God, marring our image, causing us to be unclean, unacceptable in His sight and presence. Sin has taken us away from God.  “For all of us have become like one who is unclean, And all our righteous deeds are like a filthy garment; And all of us wither like a leaf, And our iniquities, like the wind, take us away.” (Isaiah 64:6).

But God…

But God, in His wonderful purpose, had so worked the situation that Jesus was going to meet them. It was on His calendar for these ten men to meet the Savior.

Jesus was the only hope for these ten men. Jesus is the only hope for sinners today!

I believe it is on God’s calendar for you to meet the Savior of sinners. He is still calling sinners to Himself today, even though they are at a distance from Him (v 12). What will you do when He calls you? He calls you to cleanse you, not to leave you festering in your sinful condition. He calls you to repentance; He calls you to saving faith; He calls you to more than just an acknowledgement of His existence in general terms. He calls you to a personal relationship. He calls you to be a disciple, one who follows Him and learns from Him.

When the ten are healed, only one is serious in his response. People are happy to enjoy the kind providence of God, but do not want Him too near to them. They prefer a God-at-arm’s-length.

But let’s see what the one leprous man—this ex-leper—did:

He came personally to Jesus (v 15: He turned back)

He glorified God with a loud voice (v 15)

He fell on his face at Jesus’ feet and gave thanks (v 16)

He, a foreigner, gave glory to God (v 18)

Let’s now try and connect this matter of glorifying God and giving thanks to God to our lives today. What are we taught in the Westminster Larger Catechism?

Question 1: What is the chief and highest end of man?

Answer: Man’s chief and highest end is to glorify God, and fully to enjoy him forever.

What is the connection between glorifying and thanking God? I believe the answer is in Romans 1. Romans 1 (Romans is the manual that shows how people and God have become separated and how they can be reconciled, brought back into a right relationship) makes its starting point as follows:

For even though they knew God, they did not honor (Lit glorify) Him as God or give thanks, but they became futile in their speculations and their foolish heart was darkened. Romans 1:21

But if we know the gospel, and if we are trusting in Jesus alone for our salvation, how will we intend to thank and glorify God? I believe there are three areas in which we may specifically cultivate glorifying and thanking God—words that theologians like to use, and words which we should ourselves love:

For His work of creation, for this reveals to us the wonderful, wise and powerful person that God is who could speak worlds and universes into being! Romans 1:20 makes it abundantly clear to us that “… since the creation of the world His invisible attributes, His eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly seen, being understood through what has been made , so that they are without excuse.”

For His work in providence; consider how He preserves us in life, giving us life and breath and all things—health, strength, power to gain wealth, to labor and see results, to sow and to reap; to become well after we have been sick; to learn; to grow in experience. Consider the bounty and the beauty of what we enjoy. The lines have fallen for us in pleasant places. Who would not want to live in a place such as the upstate of South Carolina?

For His work, most especially, in redemption. He has appointed Jesus, a Prince and Savior, to save His people from their sins. Read about it in the Gospels, in Romans, in the New Testament, in the whole Bible. It’s all about Jesus. The apostle Paul said that there should be the giving of thanks (Ephesians 5:4); let us be giving thanks for Him who is God’s most wonderful gift (John 3:16)

2 Corinthians 9:15 urges us in these words “Thanks be to God for His indescribable gift!” His indescribable gift is the person of Jesus.

A Call to Faith

Are you in a right relationship with the One of whom the Bible speaks? Is your heart drawn out in thankfulness to the Son of God who planted His feet on this planet? Consider how He became a real man—but without sin—and lived an ordinary life for over thirty years in order that by His living a life of active obedience to God’s law and requirements, and then by dying a death as if being punished as a sinner—for the sins of His people were imputed to Him in His sacrificial death—sinners like you and I can be brought back to a right relationship with God by turning from sin and unrighteousness, and by trusting in Him alone!

 

Image Credit: Luke Kapustka www.flickr.com/photos/lukekapustka/6688446127
Posted by Jim Holmes in Heritage, Reflections, Travel, Worldview, 1 comment

Remembering Ulster’s Gentle Giant

Ian Paisley

A Big Man

It was in the late 1980s that the name Ian R K Paisley came on my radar. The media at the time presented him as something of a political buffoon, a ranter and raver, a disturber of the political peace. However, one afternoon I was in a bookstore in Pietermaritzburg, South Africa, and came upon a book titled “Christian Foundations” by the same Ian Paisley. It engaged me immediately. As I read, I found my spirit concurring with the author’s words. He ably asserted and illustrated truth after truth from the Bible.

Around the same time, surfing the radio waves one evening, I came across a weekly program from the Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster, going by name “Let the Bible speak.” Presented by a man with a strong, lilting Northern Irish accent, Leslie Curran, I was hooked. Short devotional thoughts, great gospel music, the Word read with clarity and grace, and a short but punchy exposition filled a half hour with good and edifying listening. It even occasionally referenced Bob Jones University in Greenville, South Carolina. At that time, I would not even have been able to point to a blank map of North America and guessed where South Carolina was!

While I never heard Dr. Paisley on the radio, I followed with interest and appreciation his ministry movements, especially once I relocated to the UK. I appreciated his stance for truth, righteousness, and the godliness born of the gospel of grace.

It was with sadness that I learned of Dr. Paisley’s death in September. Psalm 116:15 articulates it well: “Precious in the sight of the LORD is the death of his saints.”

Earlier today, thanks to Dr. Samuel Lowry, I came upon some notes originating from the The Ian R.K. Paisley Library book series published by Ambassador International in Belfast, and introduced along the following lines (I have added the headings for summary navigation):

 

In His Own Words: Remembering Dr. Ian Paisley

If you don’t know anything else about Dr. Ian Paisley, you should know that he was a fiery Presbyterian preacher and Irish politician with great devotion to his faith and to the unionist people of Northern Ireland. In fact, he was known as the “Big Man” of politics, and even co-founded the Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster. Before he passed away on September 12, 2014, his strong convictions led him to speak on platforms and in pulpits all over the world.

Alive and Singing

If you read in the press or hear on TV Ian Paisley is dead, don’t believe a word of it. I’ll be more alive than ever. . . . I’ll be singing as never before.

An Anchor

I want to take you to the text where I first cast anchor. In 1932, my father was minister of Hill St. Baptist Church in Ballymena. That church was born out of the 1859 revival. It had an unusual parentage. A Covenanting minister of The Reformed Presbyterian Church preceded my dad. In the basement of that Church, my mother held a children’s meeting and gently spoke from John 10:11 on the Good Shepherd. When the other children had gone out, I slipped up to her side. “Mummy,” I said, “I don’t want to be a lost sheep, I want to be a saved lamb.” When that Church was renovated I asked the Pastor for the old pew where I had knelt in prayer beside my mother. Now, I do not believe in relics, but I believe in precious memories. We placed it in the Lecture Hall at our Whitefield College, and in a recent students’ early-morning prayer meeting I knelt at that pew and repeated those lines: “High Heaven that heard that solemn vow, that vow renewed shall daily hear”.

Woe Is Me if I Preach Not the Gospel

If I am called to preach the gospel, and thank God I am, nothing will stop me. You could as soon stop the Niagara torrent with a teaspoon, or the rising sun with a lollipop stick, as stop a Holy Ghost preacher when God has commissioned him. Close him out of the house and he’ll preach it on the doorstep. Ridicule him, refuse him, sneer at him, slander him, seek to bury him, [and] he’ll rise again with the gospel upon his lips.

Shamrock

I studied in Wales under an old revival preacher of the 1904 Welsh Revival and practiced my preaching skills in the open-air. Once when preaching in a town center, a bystander, who was a little under the influence, on hearing my Northern Irish accent shouted out, “Tell us about the Shamrock.” I replied, “On Christ the solid rock I stand. All other rocks are sham rocks!” I also preached in those little chapels spotted over the Welsh valleys. Some congregations received me graciously. Others didn’t. I was an Ulsterman and lacked the richness of the wonderful Welsh tongue. In due course I returned home and entered the Theological Hall of the Reformed Presbyterian Church of Ireland.

A Tongue Like a File

In 1946, when twenty years of age, I was ordained as minister of Ravenhill Church, Belfast. The following Sunday Morning the renowned Reverend W. P. Nicholson was in the service. Just after I had finished preaching, Mr. Nicholson came forward to the front of the church, rapped the communion table sharply with his knuckles, and asked gruffly, “Young man, have you ever seen a cow’s tongue?” Being a country lad I said, “Yes, sir.” “Well, what is it like?” the famous preacher persisted. I said, “It is like a file.” Then lifting his hands to heaven he offered an unusual prayer. “Lord, give this young man a tongue like an old cow.”

Preaching Moving Sermons!

We had a small church; we had 346 seats and a congregation of sixty, including children. For six months I preached the most moving sermons of my life, because half the congregation left. So I thought I had better do something about it and went out on the door knockers. I started on a good street, Shamrock Street, and I knocked on my first door. A little lady opened the door, and I said as politely as I could, “Good morning.” Then she looked me up and down and snapped, “Are you the new preacher from around the corner?” I said, “I am.” She replied, “God Almighty help you among that bunch!” and she slammed the door in my face.

Are They Growing?

When I was a young preacher, I was like the little boy who was given a tulip bulb. He planted it in his mother’s garden, and he dug it up every day to see if it was growing! I was like that with young converts.

Ministry of Defense

We had trouble in the church over song-leaders, so I decided that I would become the song-leader. By the way, we had a choir in those days; it was the war department of the church, so I sacked them and told the congregation to sing, “No, not one! No, not one!” We have never had a choir since.

How to Grow Your Church from Prison

[I had] a couple of terms in prison for our uncompromising stand and each time our church grew. The first Sunday after I was released, we received 200 new members who had been saved or separated from apostasy during the time I was inside. So my elders said, “If we get 200 new members after three months’ imprisonment, you should have stayed for six.” I said, “You can do the other three months, gentlemen; I’ll stay out for now.”

With Jesus

The Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster caught fire, [grew to] around sixty congregations in Northern Ireland, this Martyrs Memorial Church was built, [and so were] many others across the British Isles, in North America, and [in] Australia. I’ll tell you what we are: we are God’s laugh at the devil. John the Baptist was God’s laugh at the Pharisees. They had their Sanhedrin, but here comes a fiery preacher. The early apostles were called “unlearned and ignorant,” but they had been with Jesus.

Reformation Truth Preaching

Every true revival in church history was a revival of great preaching. The church of Jesus Christ has gone cold and formal. The pulpit and preacher are weak; the pulpit has been pushed to the side because preaching is only a side-line. In churches which preach Reformation truth, the pulpit has the pre-eminence, and upon the desk is the open Word of God, and behind the desk is someone who believes that God has one method divinely ordained for the salvation of souls, and that is the preaching of the cross.

Weeping

The preacher who never weeps never really works. The preacher who never sobs never really supplicates. The preacher who never sheds tears seldom ever triumphs. A tearless ministry is dry and passionless. We are called to serve with humility and many tears.

Give Me Rome and Dublin!

I heard a preacher the other day say you should not have your eye on rewards. Well Moses had respect for the recompense of the reward. I would serve Jesus if there was no reward at the end of it, for serving Him is reward enough, but there is going to be a reward. It says He is going to set us over cities. Some people will have ten. I have asked God for two cities, Rome and Dublin—that would do me!

Not Ashamed of the Gospel

It is common today for a minister, when he remains for some considerable time in the ministry, to talk about the progress he has made in his theology, his philosophy, [and] in his religious ideas. Let me unashamedly confess that in over fifty years I have not made any progress whatsoever. I believe the Bible—from the first “In” to the last “Amen.” . . . I am not ashamed of the Gospel; not ashamed of the cause of the Gospel; not ashamed of the cost of the Gospel; not ashamed of the constraint of the Gospel; not ashamed of the consequences of the Gospel. And I will not be ashamed at the coronation of the Gospel. The Gospel Ship has not had an easy voyage since it was launched by the Hand of Grace in the Red River of the Redeemer’s Blood. Its passage has been stormy, but the crowning day is coming.

Preaching Christ

When the sun goes down, as it shall, upon my ministry, and when the sands of time run out, there will be a blessed picture before me. That of a little boy of six on that day when I started my pilgrimage for heaven. It has been a zigzag path—twice in jail, a member of three parliaments, and holder of high office. I do not know what lies ahead, but this I know: Jesus has never failed. People have let me down. I have let the Lord down, and I say that with penitence of heart and repentance of soul. If I never see you again, remember that Jesus Christ, Ian Paisley’s Savior, has been preached up in this place tonight. Oh sinner, come to Him and be saved. Backslider, return to Him and be restored. Christian, renew your vows. May God send to Ulster an old-fashioned, heaven-sent revival so that this beloved land will be delivered from the wrath that is to come. May it be so, for Jesus’ sake! Amen and Amen.

Posted by Jim Holmes in Heritage, Reflections, Westminster Standards, 0 comments

Jonathan Edwards, the Internet, UPS, and Air Travel

British Airways aircraft

Perceptive of the Future

Jonathan EdwardsJonathan Edwards (1703-58), described as one of America’s greatest thinkers ever, was gifted with a significant sense of what God would do in in future generations. I was reminded earlier in perusing the Preface to Iain H Murray’s Jonathan Edwards: A New Biography (page xiii) of these words:

[Edwards] would not have been surprised had he known of the great advances of the kingdom of Christ in the two centuries which have followed his death. Few Christians have looked to the future with brighter hope than Edwards. He believed, for example, that the age of scientific discovery was only in its beginnings and that there would come new and ‘better contrivances for assisting one another through the whole earth by more expedite, easy, and safe communication between distant regions than now’. The vast distances separating the nations of the eighteenth century would disappear, ‘the distant extremes of the world shall shake hands together’, and this progress would be God-given towards the day when ‘the whole earth may be as one community, one body in Christ’.

Edwards did not speak directly of the specifics of what he imagined people would achieve. Yet I love to think that the things we enjoy today–ease of international travel, rapid communication by electronic means whether in text or VOIP, capability of making speedy financial transactions, and the transportation of items expeditiously around the globe–are in measure the fruit of his sanctified imagination.

Think About This…

• Do you utilize the power of the Internet for good?
• Do you use your resources efficiently and strategically for the advance of Christ’s kingdom?
• Are you on the lookout for new and effective means of harnessing the power of technology to live life more efficiently in the service of Him who lived and died and rose again for sinners?
• Suggest three ways in which your life has been significantly transformed by technology in the last two years.

 

Header image credit: Courtesy http://www.publicdomainpictures.net/22088

Posted by Jim Holmes, 0 comments

Appreciating Our Veterans

Do You Appreciate Our Veterans?

Wartime Crosses MonochromeI shared these sentiments with a close veteran friend via email earlier today:

I deeply appreciate and esteem you. This being Vets Day made me think of people like you, and the debt that I (and others) owe you for your faithfulness in rendering military service, your involvement in the hot spots and other far-flung regions, whether in the direct defense of our interests as a nation, or in the maintenance of a military presence rendering good will to other countries.

The phrase, “The land of the free, because of the brave” comes to mind. I like to remind my eleven-year-old son of this.

My Dad, a Soldier…

My dad served in the army in Kenya and the regions of southern Africa, as well as a little more to the north of Kenya during WW2. He never saw active service (as in fighting), but I believe his involvement helped bring stability to the regions and perhaps kept potential German and Italian aggression at bay. And I am sure that our US presence in the regions where there is no direct conflict also represents a force to maintain peace, as well as being a more remote strategy in the defense of our local borders.

The Defense of Our Heritage

I treasure our Judeo-Christian heritage and the freedoms that we enjoy because of it. It must be defended! And so I like to think of the military and its role in parallel terms of application with the injunction of Paul to Timothy in 1 Tim. 2:1-2: “First of all, then, I urge that entreaties and prayers, petitions and thanksgivings, be made on behalf of all men, for kings and all who are in authority, so that we may lead a tranquil and quiet life in all godliness and dignity.”

www.blogspot52.com, November 11th, 2014

If you agree with these sentiments, and you have a friend or family member in the military, hit the share button!

Posted by Jim Holmes in Current Issues, Heritage, Worldview, 0 comments

When George Whitefield Hit the Jackpot!

Illustrating the Westminster Shorter Catechism

George Whitefield, a public domain image

George Whitefield, a public domain image

I have posted previously about the illustrations from John Whitecross on the Westminster Shorter Catechism. Recently in our family devotions, considering the eighth commandment, we read this fascinating account of an incident in the life of George Whitefield, one of the finest preachers ever to have lived.

The Catechism question and answer (number 75) go like this:

Q. What is forbidden in the eighth commandment?

A. The eighth commandment forbiddeth whatsoever doth or may unjustly hinder our own or our neighbour’s wealth or outward estate.

Whitecross Writes…

Here is Whitecross’ account of the incident. As you read it, keep in mind that the value of one guinea in those days was considerable, perhaps equivalent to well over $100.00.

Blue mask 2A widow with a large family was in difficulty over the payment of her rent and her landlord decided to sell her furniture to obtain the sum due to him. George Whitefield learned of her sad plight and gave her the five guineas which she so badly needed. A friend at hand told Whitefield that he could not afford this act of generosity. He replied, “When God brings a case of distress before us, it is that we may relieve it.”

The two men shortly took their journey together, and before long encountered a highwayman who relieved them of their money. Whitefield now turned the tables on his friend, reminding him how much better it was for the widow to have the five guineas than the highwayman. After their loss, the two resumed their journey. Soon, however, the highwayman returned and demanded Whitefield’s coat which was so much better than his own. Whitefield of necessity accepted the robber’s ragged garment until he could get a better.

Presently the same highwayman was for a third time seen galloping furiously towards them, but they spurred on their horses and reached shelter and safety without being overtaken. The robber was doubtless immensely mortified, for when Whitefield took off the tattered coat he found in one of the pockets a small parcel containing a hundred guineas.

The Shorter Catechism Illustrated, John Whitecross, London, Banner of Truth, Page 117

Online source citation

 

 

Posted by Jim Holmes in Humor, Westminster Standards, 0 comments

An Interview with John Lehman, Author, It’s Apparent … You’re a Parent!

Introducing John Lehman

John and Suzie Lehman

John and Suzie Lehman

It is an honor to serve authors in their writing endeavors. Some time ago, my pathway crossed with that of John Lehman, family counseling pastor at Hampton Park Baptist Church in the beautiful upstate city of Greenville, South Carolina.

John has become a friend as we have worked together on his writing and blogging projects. His first book, It’s Apparent … You’re a Parent! is available as a beautiful, small-format hardback of 128 pages.

Shortly after the book was released, in my capacity as a publisher at Great Writing, I interviewed John. Enjoy reading the interview, and also the short video introduction that John gives to his book.

Great Writing (GW) and John Lehman (JL) discuss the book

3d etched its apparent formatted jpegGW: John, thanks for taking the time in your busy schedule to talk to us about your new book. It’s a fascinating story as to how you came to write it. Tell our readers about it!

JL: It was just a few weeks before my eldest daughter’s wedding, and she mentioned to me that she and our second daughter were talking and wondered if I would write a book for their own child-rearing.  I was initially flattered, and excited, and then when I began, was quite overwhelmed!  I realized that what I wanted for them more than anything else was to know God’s Word and apply it in this situation in a very timely and accurate manner.

GW: At first, did you really take your kids’ request seriously for you to write down the principles you had used in your parenting?

JL:  Yes, once I realized that I was going to embark upon the project, I realized how serious it really was!  And, although parenting is quite a challenging task, watching one’s child become a parent could be even more difficult!  And, not that they would not do right, but I wanted to be sure that they were applying principles from God’s Word rather than just doing things the way “mommy and daddy” did them.

GW: We’ve heard that being an author can make one a solitary person, yet your book shows you as a very hands-on kind of dad and husband. Did you find that writing, in a sense, pushed you away from your family somewhat? Or was it the opposite, and that you found you could have them involved in the writing and reformulating process?

JL: I found the best time to write was when I had larger blocks of time to devote to it.  I should have been able to write a quarter of a page a day, and it would have been easy, but, instead, I wrote many pages at a time.  I took several “vacations” away from church and home to work through this.  Although it took me four years to finish, all told, it probably took me four months of actual time.  What helped the most through the process was talking about the principles they remembered, which allowed me to be sure the book was about principles rather than about practices.

GW: In reading through your work, it seems to me that you do not claim to have been a perfect parent. What’s your view on that?

JL: I recall early stating the principle that is within the book that “If any man lacks wisdom, let him ask of God . . .” and I did that quite often.  I’m thankful that the Lord gives guidance, and forgiveness, and therefore I was able to seek His will throughout the time, and when I erred, first go to Him for His forgiveness, and then followed through in asking my children and family that same.

GW:  John, what would you say was the most challenging aspect to you personally in writing this book?

JL: The most challenging thing about the book was making sure it would be profitable.  I didn’t want to just write a book for author’s sake, but wanted to do it to help others.  If anything, that helped me to be sure I wasn’t just going through the motions, but was seriously putting concepts and principles down on paper so they could be followed to help in years to come.  The Bible stands, and all it says is true, so if parents during my generation, or five generations from now, will use God’s Word, and the principles in it, they will be able to parent according to God’s standards, no matter what society is like.

GW: In America, the family is increasingly under attack. Can you be confident that this book will give ammunition to families to ward off the inroads secularism is making in our postmodern society? Could you give one or two examples?

JL: Just like folks today use “if  . . . then” statements for formulas, God has done the same.  God has promised in His Word that if man obeys His commands, then He will bless them.  Imperfect parenting can still result in proper outcome if the principles of God’s Word are applied and continually sought.

GW: Now that the book is complete, do you have the approval of your kids? What do they think of the book?

JL: I’m encouraged that they have all read the book, and have encouraged me by the principles that have been written down.  Some of our discussions have centered on the parenting we did as parents, and that has been enjoyable, and sobering, as I realized that God has helped in our child-rearing in and through us, and also IN SPITE of us!

GW: What would you like to say in closing, John?

JL: Thank you, interested present and prospective parents, for considering this book.  The only true source of anything is God’s Word, and I’ve sought to use it for the foundation and core of the instruction written down.  May the Lord bless you as you faithfully prepare and parent your children for God’s glory!

View John’s Introductory Video Trailer to His Book

And There’s Even More…

To find out more about John and his ministry–and to purchase a discounted copy of his book online–visit John’s site, www.itsapparent.org. Use the discount code SCACS to buy the book for a special discount (spend just $10 and get free shipping). There, you may also preview and download a sample chapter of his book as well as get a free download of the study guide that goes with it.

Posted by Jim Holmes in Interviews, Publishing Books Today, 0 comments

A Is for Adam; A Is for Apple

Seriously, but in a Lighter Vein!

Elsewhere on this site, I reference the New England Primer. It was a formative document used among early American settlers from Europe. It was used for teaching spiritual truth in a practical way. The literacy of many early Americans was bound up in this document.

I enjoy collecting interesting files, and here is one–a variation on the theme–that somewhat modernizes the concept, and does not have any of the spiritual content of the above-mentioned document!

Enjoy…

 

A is for Apple and other nursery learning devices. Click to enlarge.

 

 

 

 

 

Posted by Jim Holmes in Humor, 0 comments

John Newton: I Am What I Am…

The Westminster Shorter Catechism Illustrated

John Newton, image courtesy of the Cowper and Newton Museum

Our family devotions make use of the Westminster Shorter Catechism, and a couple of books that in particular help to explain and apply it. One is a book by Starr Meade, published by P&R Publishing, titled Training Hearts, Teaching Minds; the other, an old hardback published by Banner of Truth, is titled The Shorter Catechism Illustrated by John Whitecross.

We use the Whitecross book each Sunday evening to complete the seventh element. (Starr Meade’s book has six readings for the week.)

Explaining the Shorter Catechism in short readings, the book by Whitecross includes a number of fascinating and often memorable anecdotes and illustrations. Often putting a truth into an anecdote can help fasten it in one’s memory. Instructing a pre-teen child requires careful attention to resources such as this, especially when terms such as “Justification” and “Sanctification” can so easily be misunderstood.

Earlier this year, we read the section on sanctification:

Q: What is sanctification?

A: Sanctification is the work of God’s free grace, whereby we are renewed in the whole man after the image of God, and are enabled more and more to die unto sin, and live unto righteousness.

Read and Enjoy This Excerpt

Consider the following illustration that Whitecross recounts of John Newton as he illustrates the matter of sanctification:

Two or three years before John Newton’s death, when his sight was become so dim that he was no longer able to read, an aged friend and brother in the ministry called on him to breakfast. Family prayers following, the portion of Scripture for the day was read to him. It was taken from Bogatsky’s Golden Treasury: “By the grace of God I am what I am.” It was the passage read. After the reading of this text, he paused for some moments, and then uttered the following affecting soliloquy:

“I am not what I ought to be. Ah! how imperfect and deficient. I am not what I wish to be. I abhor what is evil, and I would cleave to what is good. I am not what I hope to be; soon, soon, I shall put off mortality, and with mortality all sin and imperfection. Yet, though I am not what I ought to be, nor what I wish to be, nor what I hope to be, I can truly say, I am not what I once was–a slave to sin and Satan; and I can heartily join with the apostle, and acknowledge, ‘By the grace of God I am what I am.” Come, let us pray.”

More on This Resource

(More from Whitecross here or you may read from an earlier [less typographically attractive] Google eBook here.)

Now You’ve Read the Article, View the Movie!

After preparing this post, I discovered this YouTube clip. Enjoy!

 

Posted by Jim Holmes in Reflections, Theology, Westminster Standards, 0 comments