No More Dark Trails

No More Dark Trails

Genevan Institute for Reformed Studies
by Bob Burridge ©2011

We appreciate having some kind of light to help us see where we’re going when it’s dark. People have used many ways to get light at night or in dark places. They have used torches, candles, lanterns, flash lights, flood lights, and many kinds of each. One of the great advantages of modern police and armed forces is their night vision capabilities. While the typical the enemy is blinded by darkness, night vision equipped forces can see where he is, and move in on him.

A few years ago there was a story in the Back To God Hour’s devotional booklet Today about a missionary in the Philippines who lost use of his headlights on his way home late one night in is old Jeep. He said, “Leaning out the side doors, we made it home by the dying beams of a couple flashlights.”

God’s word often uses light to teach about seeing our way in moral darkness.

Psalm 119:105, “Thy word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto my path.”

God’s information and comfort are there to guide us along the right path. In our fallen condition we’re unable to see the dangers or to recognize them effectively.

God gives us a powerful light in his word. It shows us what we need to know about moral dangers and warns us about the consequences of certain things if we do them. Without the light of God’s word we would stumble around morally and take the wrong paths.

Just having the light is not helpful if it’s not used. A Bible that’s never read won’t protect you from lies, deceptions, and temptations.

God’s word needs to be read regularly
A flashlight home on the shelf won’t help when you’re out on the road or away camping. God’s word needs to be in your heart and on your mind. You need to be filling your mind with it so that it’s there when you need it. You won’t have time to look things up for the first time when problems come along.

God’s word needs to be studied so that it’s properly understood.
This is why good Bible instruction is needed. Those God has gifted, and who develop good Bible study tools are the Lord’s provisions for his family. Those who claim to be Bible teachers need to be examined and approved by a sound church. We have the authority God gives to those he calls to office to help us discern the reliability of what we are taught. There are many who teach wrong things as if they come right from Scripture. Be familiar with what the Bible says so that you recognize the counterfeit teachers.

God’s word needs to be thought about and prayed about.
This is how you gain the ability to see the path it lights up for you. The Bible needs to be applied personally and practically. Let the light shine on your path, on the things you’re doing or dealing with, and think about what the light of the word shows you.

Though it doesn’t show us everything, it shows us what we need to know to make wise and godly decisions to the best of our ability for the glory of God. That is what we are created and redeemed to do. That is why God gave us his word and opens our hearts by the power of Christ so we can live by it.

(Note: The Bible quotations in this article are from the King James Version unless otherwise noted.)

Three Exercises For the Soul

Three Exercises For the Soul

Genevan Institute for Reformed Studies
by Bob Burridge ©2011

We would all like to be healthy and physically fit. To do that we need to eat well, get regular and sufficient sleep, and keep our bodies exercised regularly.

We also want to be spiritually healthy. We would like to be confident, comforted and, calm in the Lord as we live each day.

To become spiritually healthy believers we also need to do certain things. We need to pray, to feed on God’s word, to worship, and to fellowship with believers in Christ who can encourage us and help us correct wrong attitudes and behaviors. There are some good spiritual exercises that help us grow strong.

1 Thessalonians 5:16-18 gives us three good spiritual exercises to do daily. However, like exercise videos you won’t benefit by just reading about them, or by doing them rarely. They must be used regularly.

1 Thessalonians 5:16-18 (KJV), “Rejoice evermore. Pray without ceasing. In every thing give thanks: for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning you.”

Spiritual Exercise #1: Rejoice evermore.

Joy comes into a believer’s heart by God’s grace. It is part of the fruit of the Holy Spirit (Galatians 5:22). To begin with, make your salvation sure. Hope of a real enduring joy without Christ is an empty dream.

Rejoicing is also something God commands his children to do. This verse is an imperative, a command. It says literally, “Always be rejoicing.” The grammar shows that this is an ongoing thing to be doing. It is a regular daily exercise, not just something you do when all is going well.

The world’s rejoicing is based upon outward circumstances. Anyone can stir up joy when things go well. The reality is: things don’t always go well.

The believer’s rejoicing is based upon spiritual circumstances. We know that in all situations God is working all things together for good (Romans 8:28). Don’t just rejoice when you get what you want. Trust that whatever comes is part of the greatest good. Rejoice in the assurances God gives you. Circumstances change and are not always pleasant, but his promises and faithfulness are changeless.

Even when the Thessalonians were going through persecutions, even when the Apostle Paul was arrested and beaten for his faith, he told us that he had good cause to rejoice.

God’s spiritual blessing that is found when you look to the reality behind what you see outwardly.

Spiritual Exercise #2: Pray without ceasing.

Being engaged in prayer is a continuing obligation. “praying without ceasing” doesn’t mean going around with closed eyes. It doesn’t mean that we are always consciously talking with God. That’s not the way those who are our examples in Scripture prayed.

It means that God should never be out of our thoughts. It means that we are constantly aware of him, and that we regularly turn our thoughts to him to call out to him in prayer. The healthy soul lives in continuing appreciation of God’s presence, assurances, and power.

    Be quick to turn to the Father …

  • to praise him for his wonders
  • to thank him for his blessings, and daily provisions
  • to ask his help for yourself and for others
  • to admit your moral failures and weaknesses
  • to express your trust in the Savior and his promises

Spiritual Exercise #3: In everything give thanks

Nothing is exempted from thankfulness. We need to learn to see all things as they relate to God’s plan. The healthy soul learns to thank God even when it doesn’t understand the good he’s doing.

The Thessalonian believers were being treated very cruelly by pagan neighbors and persecutors. Even in all this there was reason to thank God.

The Christian’s thanksgiving doesn’t come from what he understands is happening. It comes from his confidence in the Lord who loves him so.

Thank him continually, all the time, every day. Paul had suffered false arrest, beatings and a long jail term. He had been sent as a prisoner to Rome and held there for trial. While under arrest he wrote to the church in Philippi, saying;

Philippians 1:3-4, “I thank my God upon every remembrance of you, always in every prayer of mine making request for you all with joy”

Notice that all three spiritual exercises are present in this comment by Paul: He was rejoicing, he was praying, and he was giving thanks to God.

Even in hard times, the believer who exercises himself in these things will be spiritually strong.

Paul ends this section by reminding us that these things are God’s will concerning us. It pleases God when we keep up with these three exercises. To be spiritually strong and to please God, we need to make regular use of these exercises.

We need to remember that our exercise must be done from our position “in Christ”. Before someone gets into a physical exercise program he should be sure he is physically able. People often check with their doctor to be sure that they can safely do what’s required in the program without danger. If someone is unfit or has a respiratory or cardiac problem some exercises might be harmful.

Before you can expect to benefit from these spiritual exercises, you need to be fit for them. You can not do them while depending upon yourself in pride and self-confidence. You need to draw your ability and strength from the promise of God as a person redeemed in Christ. Only those confidently trusting in God’s provision of grace are fit to engage in these exercises.

When you recommend these three exercises to others, don’t imply that they are able to become strong by them without Christ. The first advice you need to give them is to make sure they are trusting only in the atonement for sin accomplished by the Savior. As we and others rest in him, God’s three-part exercise program will make us stronger.

(Note: The Bible quotations in this article are from the New King James Bible unless otherwise noted.)

Infallible Compassions

Infallible Compassions

by Bob Burridge ©2011

People are notoriously unreliable at times. Sin causes them to go back on their promises and to break contracts and agreements. It makes the hopeful light of the seeming compassion we saw in their promises fade quickly into the shadows of self-centeredness.

In contrast to lapses in the assurances people so easily offer us, God’s promises and God’s compassions are always reliable. In Lamentations 3:22-23 it says,

“It is of the LORD’s mercies that we are not consumed, because his compassions fail not. They are new every morning: great is thy faithfulness.”

God’s care for us and his promises come from his mercies. We deserve to be consumed, but his mercy provided the Savior. His mercies flow from his compassions which never fail. They are continual. They are there every morning.

Therefore those who are redeemed by grace can say to God, “Great is thy faithfulness”.

One of the best loved hymns is Great Is Thy Faithfulness. Verse one is based upon this passage in Lamentations. (The lyrics printed here are for study purposes only.)

Great is thy faithfulness, O God my father,
There is no shadow of turning with thee:
Thou changest not, thy compassions, they fail not;
As thou hast been thou for ever wilt be.

The words were written by Thomas O. Chisholm. He was born on July 29th, 1866 in a log cabin in Franklin, Kentucky. After finishing grade school, instead of going to college, he became a school teacher in Franklin at the age of 16.

After teaching for a few years, at the age of 21 he was made associate editor of the town’s weekly newspaper, The Franklin Favorite. It wasn’t for another six years that Thomas became a true Christian.

He moved to Louisville to work as an editor and business manager of a religious publication. In time he was ordained to serve a brief Pastorate, but had to resign for health reasons. He eventually settled in Vineland, New Jersey selling insurance. He retired in 1953 to the Methodist Home for the Aged in Ocean Grove, New Jersey. He died there in 1960.

During his life he wrote over 1200 poems, many of which were widely published in periodicals like the Sunday School Times, the Moody Monthly, and the Alliance Weekly.

In 1941 Thomas wrote these words, “My income has never been large at any time due to impaired health in the earlier years which has followed me on until now. Although I must not fail to record here the unfailing faithfulness of a covenant-keeping God and that He has given me many wonderful displays of his providing care, for which I am filled with astonishing gratefulness.”

The music usually published with his lyrics was written by W. M. Runyan. He was a musician who worked with Moody Bible Institute, and Hope Publishing Company. He received some of Chisholm’s poems in 1923 and particularly was moved by the words of this hymn based on Lamentations 3:22. Runyan tells of how he prayed that God would direct him to write a fitting tune for such a profound and important message. The Hymn as we know it was completed within the same year.

Not only is God infallibly compassionate. His compassions also make us able to be compassionate too by our redemption in Christ. We ought to show this attribute of God as something that grows in our redeemed heart.

Be faithfully compassionate — It’s what God redeemed you to be.

(Note: The Bible quotations in this article are from the New King James Bible unless otherwise noted.)

Brief Note for the Impatient

Brief Note for the Impatient

Genevan Institute for Reformed Studies
by Bob Burridge ©2011

Generally people are not very good at waiting for things. It’s a quality we all have to work on. It’s one we are impatient to see develop in those around us.

The events of a normal day bring uncomfortable reminders that patience is a skill we cling to with a loose grip. It might begin with waiting for the water to get hot in the shower, watching bread slowly turn into toast for breakfast, sitting stalled in traffic, or waiting on lights to turn green at intersections. People roll their eyes and shift their weight as if that will help the person ahead of them in the check out line find the right change or dig out the appropriate store discount card.

This is an obvious fact: God didn’t make his universe to provide things fast all the time. His promises were not intended to be fulfilled right away. Though the promise of redemption was made in Eden in the moments after our first parents sinned, it took all the millennia up to the death of our Savior to see it fulfilled. God wants us to learn patience. In his written word to us he provides important principles that can save a lot of agony in learning the lesson of waiting.

Psalm 27:14 is a good verse to memorize and to repeat to ourselves often.

“Wait on the LORD: be of good courage, and he shall strengthen thine heart: wait, I say, on the LORD.”

The lesson is taught all through Scripture. The Greek word used most of the time for “patience” in the original text of the New Testament is makrothumei (μακροθυμει). It’s made up of two root words:

1. “makro-” (μακρο-) means something large. Macro-economics is when we study the larger things that effect on the economy in a society. Macro-evolution is the theory that all things evolve from lower life forms. In contrast, micro-evolution refers to the little changes in races and breeds within created forms. A “macro’ in computer programming refers to a group of commands that do some larger job.

2. “-thumei (-θυμει) is from the root word that means “passion, emotion,” and sometimes it’s used to describe the way emotions break out in a display of “anger”.

When these two words come together they mean the ability to keep passions under control for a long time.

This word for “patience” is the first attribute of love in 1 Corinthians 13:4 where it says, “Love is patient … ” This means, “Love puts up with things for a long time” (the King James Version uses the word, “longsuffering”). Love doesn’t give up. It endures annoyances, the selfishness of others, and long seasons of waiting.

Patience (longsuffering) is the 4th element in the fruit of the Holy Spirit in Galatians 5:22-23. It’s the 5th item in Colossians 3:12 of those things with which to clothe ourselves as the elect of God.

They key to learning patience it is to improve our understanding of God’s power, wisdom and goodness.
We’re not just told to wait. We’re told to wait on the Lord, on Jehovah.

Good Courage
Psalm 27:14 tells us that we are to wait on him with “good courage.” The word use is khazaq (חזק) . It relates to being strong, courageous, and resolute. Our confidence that God is in control and is able to do all he desires to do helps us see beyond the moments of waiting. We know that there is an infallible plan at work. Our moments of waiting are part of that plan.

God has the wisdom to know what is best. He lays out the best path to take to get to that which is best for us. This confidence is what Job lacked when he cried out to have God explain the sufferings he had to endure. It’s what Habakkuk was forgetting when he demanded an answer from God about why evil was being permitted to surround his people. God answered the impatient prophet with those well known words in Habakkuk 2:4, “… the just shall live by his faith.”

The knowledge of God’s power and faithfulness even in times of prolonged difficulty was what gave confidence to King David when he was pursued by Saul.

God is always good, which means that his plans are always aimed at the right goals. He has the power to fulfill his plan exactly when it should be fulfilled.

Psalm 135:6 Whatever the Lord pleases He does, In heaven and in earth, In the seas and in all deep places.

Romans 8:28 And we know that all things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are the called according to His purpose.

Strength of Heart
The Psalm the assures us that the strength of heart we need in those times of anticipation comes from God our Creator, our Loving Redeemer. It is his promise.

Based upon our knowledge of God’s wisdom, power, and goodness we can learn to have the courage and the strength we need to wait patiently for God’s timing.

In the little things where you have to wait, you need to remember that if you have to wait God has ordained it to be. Your duty is to use the waiting time well. In the large things where waiting can be very hard and trying, you have the same promise. God knows what he’s doing and nothing can hinder him in it.

Wait on the LORD: be of good courage, and he shall strengthen thine heart: wait, I say, on the LORD.

(Note: The Bible quotations in this article are from the New King James Bible unless otherwise noted.)