‘Above all, if we would successfully resist Satan, we must look not merely to revealed wisdom but to Incarnate Wisdom. Here must be the chief place of resort for every tempted soul! … He must teach us, He must guide us, He must be our All-in-all … The sheep are never so safe from the wolf as when they are near the shepherd. We shall never be so secure from the arrows of Satan as when our head is lying on the Saviour’s bosom. Believer, walk according to His example, live daily in His fellowship, trust always in His blood, and in this way you shall be more than a conqueror over the subtlety and craft of Satan himself.'
Thursday, 9 July 2009
Overcoming Satan's schemes (part 2)
Monday, 6 July 2009
Overcoming Satan's schemes (part 1)
C.H. Spurgeon said, ‘If you would successfully wrestle with Satan, make the Scriptures your daily commune. Out of this sacred Word continually draw your armour and ammunition. Lay hold upon the glorious doctrines of God’s Word; make them your daily meat and drink. So shall you be strong to resist the devil. And you shall be joyful in discovering that he shall flee from you … Let us fight Satan always with an “it is written,” for no weapon will ever fight the archenemy as well as Holy Scripture. Attempt to fight Satan with the wooden sword of reason, and he will easily overcome you. But use the blade of God’s Word, by which he has been wounded many times, and you will speedily overcome him.’
Here are three examples.
When Satan attacks you with accusations, reminding you of your past failings, grasp hold of Scripture’s promise: If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness (1 John 1:9). This is an absolute promise. As big as your sin was, it is as big as that. You don’t need to justify you what you did, instead agree with Satan that what you did was awful, but then delight in the cross where that sin was dealt with.
When Satan attacks you with temptations grasp hold of Scriptures commands. So when he suggests that there is no harm in taking a glance at that person whose very presence creates longing within you remember among you there must not be even a hint of sexual immorality, or any kind of impurity, or of greed, because these are improper for God’s holy people (Eph. 5:3).
When Satan comes as the slanderer and accuses God of wrongdoing we need to be able to draw upon those texts that assure us that God is good. We may not know all God’s ways (Deut. 29:29) but we can know that he will do what is right. David writes in the Psalms: The LORD is gracious and compassionate, slow to anger and abounding in love. The LORD is good to all; he is compassionate on all that he has made (Ps. 145:8-9).
I can’t see us being prepared for Satan’s schemes without embedding ourselves in God’s written word and I can’t see us being embedded in God’s word without the discipline of taking time to study in, meditate upon it and committing it to memory!
Wednesday, 1 July 2009
The triumph of Christ
To the eye of reason, the cross is the centre of sorrow and the lowest depth of shame. Jesus dies a criminal’s death. He hangs upon the cross of a felon and pours out His blood upon the common mount of doom with thieves for His companions. In the midst of mockery, jest, scorn, and blasphemy, He gives up the ghost. Earth rejects Him and lifts Him from her surface, and heaven affords Him no light but darkens the midday sun in the hours of His extremity. Deeper in woe than the Saviour dived, imagination cannot descend. Satanic malice itself could not invent a blacker calumny than was cast on Him. Jesus hid not His face from the shame and spitting, and what shame and spitting it was! To the world, the cross must ever be the emblem of shame: to the Jew a stumbling block and to the Greek foolishness.
How different, however, is the view that presents itself to the eye of faith. Faith knows no shame in the cross except the shame of those who nailed the Saviour there; it sees no ground for scorn, but it hurls indignant scorn at sin, the enemy that pierced the Lord. Faith sees woe, indeed; but from this foe, it marks a fount of mercy springing. It is true it mourns a dying Saviour, but it beholds Him bringing life and immortality to light at the very moment when His soul was eclipsed in the shadow of death. Faith regards the cross, not as an emblem of shame but as a token of glory. The sons of Belial lay the cross in the dust, but the Christian makes a constellation of it and sees it glittering in the seventh heaven. Man spits upon it, but believers, having angels for companions, bow down and worship Him who ever lives though once was slain.
Friday, 26 June 2009
Draft vision
2. The gospel should be at the heart of all we do.
Our aim is not simply to meet people's felt needs. We want to bring people into contact with the truth. We believe that the gospel contains God's rescue plan to the core problems of sin and hell. We also believe that God's salvation brings people into an experience of life in all its fullness. We remember that we are commanded not simply to make converts but disciples.
Tuesday, 23 June 2009
Five books (and five books)
Five books that have influenced me:
1. Don Carson, How Long, O Lord?
Friday, 19 June 2009
Why do we make democratic decisions?
Thursday, 18 June 2009
Angels at work for us
Together we entered the terrifying building. At a table were women who took away all our possessions. Everyone had to undress completely and then go to a room where her hair was checked.
I asked a woman who was busy checking the possessions of the new arrivals if I might use the toilet. She pointed to a door, and I discovered that the convenience was nothing more than a hole in the shower room floor. Betsie [her sister] stayed close behind me all the time. Suddenly I had an inspiration, "Quick, take off your woollen underwear," I whispered to her. I rolled it up with mine and laid it in a bundle in a corner with my little Bible. The spot was alive with cockroaches, but I didn't worry about that. I felt wonderfully relieved and happy. "The Lord is busy answering our prayers, Betsie," I whispered. "We shall not have to make the sacrifice of all our clothes."
We hurried back to the row of women waiting to be undressed. A little later, after we had had our showers and put on shirts and shabby dresses, I hid the roll of underwear and my Bible under my dress; but I prayed, "Lord, cause Thine angels to surround me; and let them not be transparent today, for the guards must not see me." I felt perfectly at ease. Calmly I passed the guards. Everyone was checked, from the front, the sides, the back. Not a bulge escaped the eyes of the guard. The woman just in front of me had hid a woolen vest under her dress; it was taken from her. They let me pass, for they did not see me. Betsie, right behind me, was searched.
But outside awaited another danger. On each side of the door were women who looked everyone over for a second time. They felt over the body of each one who passed. I knew they would not see me, for the angels were still surrounding me. I was not even surprised when they passed me by; but within me rose the jubilant cry, "O Lord, if Thou dost answer prayer, I can face even Ravensbruck unafraid."