Thoughts and Meditations
Personal comments made by David F. Reagan unless
otherwise stated
April 27, 2006
More Light to Come
� While the
Pilgrims were still in the Netherlands and before they came
to America in 1620, John Robinson was their pastor. He was
not able to come with them to America. What follows is part
of his departing exhortation to them: �We are now quickly to
part from one another, and whether I may ever live to see
your faces upon earth any more, the God of heaven only
knows; but whether the Lord has appointed that or no, I
charge you before God and his blessed angels, that you
follow me no farther than you have seen me follow the Lord
Jesus Christ. If God reveal any thing to you by any other
instrument of his, be as ready to receive it as ever you was
to receive any truth by my ministry; for I am verily
persuaded, the Lord has more truth yet to break forth out of
his holy word� I beseech you remember, it is an article of
your church covenant, that you be ready to receive
whatever truth shall be made known to you from the written
word of God� But I must herewithal exhort you to take
heed what you receive as truth; examine it, consider it, and
compare it with other scriptures of truth, before you
receive it; for it is not possible the Christian world
should come so lately out of such thick anti-christian
darkness, and that perfection of knowledge should break
forth at once.� �quoted from The History and Antiquities
of the Dissenting Churches: Volume One by Walter Wilson
(p.33-34). See Daniel 12:8-9.
Topics:
Pilgrims, John Robinson, Truth
Precepts and Promises
� �A
promise may be described as a testimony which God has given
of Himself through Christ, to secure our faith in whatever
we may expect from Him. As a precept testifies what God
expects from us, so a promise testifies what we may expect
from Him. The glory of the New Covenant is that what we
expect from God enables us to perform what He expects from
us. It is in the strength of the promise that we are enabled
to obey the precept� The same apostle who complains
(2Corinthians 3:5) of an insufficiency to think anything of
himself, can yet boast that he can do all things through
Christ who strengthens him (Philippians 4:13). Nothing in
himself, but all things in Christ. The command creates our
duty, but the promise affords strength for obedience.� �from
Practical Godliness: The Ornament of All Religion by
Vincent Alsop (p.50).
Topics:
Promise, Precept, Enabling
April 26, 2006
Jesus Christ,
the Wisdom of God
� �Wisdom is the emphatic title of Christ in Scripture (Proverbs 8:12,
13, 31), where wisdom is brought in speaking as a distinct person;
ascribing counsel, and understanding, and the knowledge of witty
inventions to itself. He is called also the power of God, and the wisdom
of God (1Corinthians 1:24). And the ancients generally understood that
place (Colossians 2:3), �In him are hid all the treasures of wisdom and
knowledge,� as an assertion of the Godhead of Christ, in regard of the
infiniteness of his knowledge; referring wisdom to his knowledge of
divine things; and knowledge to his understanding of all human things.�
�from The Existence and Attributes of God: Volume One by Stephen
Charnock (p.580).
Topics: Wisdom, Deity of Christ
In the Middle
of the Field �
E. M. Bounds (1835-1913) was a prayer-warrior known for his books on
prayer. About 1902, he received an invitation to speak at the first
Atlanta Baptist Tabernacle Conference. He went to the meeting with his
son Osborne. �Bags in hand, they boarded a train headed west. As the
conductor approached the pair, he inquired of their destination. Bounds
said, �My son and I are going to Atlanta.� With that he withdrew from
his pocket a handful of change and said, �I know this is not enough to
get us all the way to our destination, but you can put us off at the
point where this fare runs out.�
�The conductor quickly counted the coins and said, �Brother Bounds, this
is not nearly enough to get you and the boy there. I would have to put
you off in the middle of a field somewhere.� Bounds replied, �Well, if
we are put out in the middle of a field, it will be precisely where God
wants us to be.�
�As a young man, Osborne was impressed by his father�s trust and faith
in God. When the conductor walked away, a well-groomed businessman
approached the pair and said, �I understand you are Reverend Bounds, and
that you and the boy don�t have quite enough to get you to your
destination.� �So we are told,� Bounds answered. The businessman quickly
enjoined, �Well, your fare is covered, Brother Bounds. Have a blessed
meeting in Atlanta.� � �from E. M. Bounds by Darrel D. King
(p.134-135). See Matthew 21:22; Mark 11:24.
Topics: Prayer, E.
M. Bounds, Faith in God
April 25, 2006
Does God Hear
You Breathing �
Matthew Henry is well-known as a Bible-commentator. But in his book,
Experiencing God�s Presence (p.23), he admonishes the believer �to
let God frequently hear from you. Let Him hear your voice, even if it is
only the voice of your breathing, which is a sign of life. �Thou hast
heard my voice: hide not thine ear at my breathing, at my cry�
(Lamentations 3:56). Let Him hear you, even if it is only the voice of
your groanings, and those so weak that they cannot be uttered (Romans
8:26). Speak to Him, even if it is in a broken language, as Hezekiah
did: �Like a crane or a swallow, so did I chatter� (Isaiah
38:14). Speak often to Him; He is always within hearing. Hear Him
speaking to you, and be mindful of His voice in everything you say to
Him.�
Topics: Prayer, Breath
Sensing the
Majesty of God �
�The modern Christian has lost a sense of worship along with the concept
of majesty [1Chronicles 29:11], and of course, reverence as well [Psalm
89:7]. He has lost his ability to withdraw inwardly and commune in the
secret place with God in the shrine of his own hidden spirit [Psalm
91:1]. It is this that makes Christianity, and we have all but lost it.
Added numbers, yes, but lost fear. Multiplied schools, yes, but lost
awareness of the invisible. Tons of literature being poured out, of
course, but no consciousness of the divine Presence. Better
communication, certainly, but nothing to communicate. Evangelistic
organizations, yes, but the concept of majesty and worship and reverence
has almost left us.� --from The Attributes of God: Volume One by
A. W. Tozer (p.181).
Topics: Worship,
Fear of God, Communion with God
April 24, 2006
Spiritual Dry
Rot � �There is
an evil under the sun which is as terrible as an open
catastrophe,--indeed, it works greater ill to the church in the long run
[than public sin],--and that is, when a man�s ministry is eaten
through and through with spiritual dry rot. I heard an old Indian
describe the way in which furniture may be devoured by the white ants.
The ants will come into the house, and eat up everything; and yet, to
all appearance, nothing is touched. The bookcases stand just where they
did, and the trunks and everything else remain exactly as they were; at
least, it is so to the eye; but directly they are touched, they all
crumble to pieces, for the ants have eaten the substance out of them. In
the same way, some men still remain in the ministry, and yet the soul of
their ministry has gone. They have a name to live, yet they are dead
[Revelation 3:1]: what can be worse than this condition?� �from An
All-Round Ministry by C. H. Spurgeon (p.137-138).
Topics: Dangers to Ministers, Backsliding
What We Are
Able � �You have
a passage to this purpose in Isaiah, showing that when you are weak and
young converts, the Lord will stay His rough winds and will proportion
the temptations according to your strength. Isaiah 28:27: �For the
fitches are not threshed with a threshing instrument, neither is a cart
wheel turned about upon the cummin; but the fitches are beaten out with
a staff, and the cummin with a rod.� As the smaller seeds, fitches and
cumin, must not be beaten out with great weights but with a rod and a
staff, so weak Christians shall not be exposed to great afflictions and
temptations but such as are proportionate to their strength, and strong
believers shall have temptations answerable to their strength. God will
lay upon His children no more than they are able to bear [1Corinthians
10:13].� �from The Mortified Christian by Christopher Love
(p.42).
Topics: New Converts, Promises Concerning Afflictions, Threshing
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