Sunday, January 31, 2010

If we are in any of these prisons

Today's Puritan Audio Devotional:

Better to rot in prison!
by J. R. Miller
Play Audio! Download MP3

  ~  ~  ~  ~  ~

If we are in any of these prisons

(J. R. Miller, "Paul's Message for Today" 1904)

"Suddenly there was such a violent earthquake
 that the foundations of the prison were shaken.
 At once all the prison doors flew open, and
 everybody's chains fell off!" Acts 16:26

There is no prison too strong for God to break open;
there are no chains too heavy for Him to snap asunder,
there are no walls too thick for Him to shatter.

There are other kinds of prisons besides those built
with stone--prisons of trial, of temptation, of trouble,
of circumstances. If we are in any of these prisons,
God is just as able to bring us out of them!


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Saturday, January 30, 2010

The burning of these old Ephesian books!

Today's Puritan Audio Devotional:

We must hew our Agags to pieces!

by J. R. Miller, very helpful
Play Audio!  Download MP3

  ~  ~  ~  ~  ~

The burning of these old Ephesian books!

(J. R. Miller, "Paul's Message for Today" 1904)

"Many of those who believed now came and openly confessed their evil deeds. A number of them who had been practicing magic brought their books and burned them at a public bonfire. The value of the books was several million dollars!" Acts 19:18-19

One proof of the power of Christianity, was in the way these new believers at Ephesus renounced their evil ways and gave up their profitable sins. They saw the emptiness and folly of the things in which they had been trusting, and openly confessed the sinful deeds they had been doing. Many of them who had been engaged in the practice of magic arts, brought their books together and made a bonfire of them in the public square.

Always, those who follow Christ should be ready to part with whatever is sinful in their life and work, that Christ may be honored above all. Sins kept in the heart--poison the life, hide God's face, and shut out blessing. No matter what it may cost, our sins must be sacrificed, or they will destroy us!

The burning of these old Ephesian books suggests that we should have bonfires of our evil books. There are many books which ought to be burned! They carry in them Satan's poison! To read them is to debauch our own souls. To put them into the hands of others--is to ruin them.

In India, a man took down a book from the shelf--and a viper came out of the book and stung him to death! Just so, there are many books in which deadly vipers lie hidden! We should be most careful in choosing the books we read. A good book is a great blessing--but a bad book is a curse!


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Friday, January 29, 2010

My Shepherd!

Today's Puritan Audio Devotional:

Be thankful, my dear, that
he treats you as his enemy!

by John Newton, superb
Play Audio! Download MP3

  ~  ~  ~  ~  ~

My Shepherd!

(J. R. Miller "Bethlehem to Olivet" 1905)

"The LORD is my shepherd; I have everything I need!" Psalm 23:1

The shepherd is a favorite Scriptural picture of the divine love and care. In the Old Testament, the twenty-third Psalm gathers the whole wonderful truth in exquisite lines, which are dear to young and old wherever the Bible is known. Then in the New Testament, when our Lord would give His friends the sweetest revealings of His heart toward them, and tell them what they are to Him, and what He would be to them—He says, "I am the Good Shepherd."

The Hebrew shepherd lives with his sheep. If they are out in the storm—he is with them. If they are exposed to danger—so is he. Just so, Christ lives with His people. He enters into closest relations with them.

The shepherd knows his sheep. He has a name for each one and calls them all by their names. Just so, Christ knows each one of His friends, has intimate personal knowledge of each one. He knows the best in us—and also the worst—our faults, our sins, our wanderings. Yet, knowing us as we are—He loves us still and never wearies of us!

The shepherd is most gentle with his sheep. He does not drive them—but goes before them and leads them. When they need rest on the way—he makes them lie down, and chooses for their resting-place, not the dusty road—but green pastures. He is especially kind to the lambs, gathers them in his arms and carries them in his bosom. All this is an exquisite picture of the gentleness of our Good Shepherd in His care of His sheep. He is thoughtful toward the weak. He loves the lambs and makes room for them on His bosom. Whatever the need is, there is something in the heart of Christ which meets its craving and supplies its lack!

The shepherd defends his flock in all danger. Often he had to risk his own safety, even his life, in protecting his sheep. Just so, the Good Shepherd gives His life—for His sheep!

Christ's sheep are absolutely safe in His keeping. "I give unto them eternal life," He said; "and they will never perish—ever! No one will snatch them out of My hand!" Then at last, He will bring His own all safely home, "and they shall become one flock—with one Shepherd!"

  ~  ~  ~  ~  ~

Be sure to read Miller's choice 50 page booklet, "Bethlehem to Olivet".


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Thursday, January 28, 2010

There are some things that money cannot buy!

Today's Puritan Audio Devotional:

It is the vile monster!

Choice prayer by Henry Law
Play Audio!  Download MP3

  ~  ~  ~  ~  ~

There are some things that money cannot buy!

(J. R. Miller)

There are things that can be bought with money--but there are some things that money cannot buy!

With money--we may build a house, and adorn and furnish it. But money cannot buy home happiness, and the sweetness, comfort, and refinement which make true home life!

With money--we may purchase food and clothing, coal for the fire, and luxuries for physical enjoyment. But money cannot buy . . .
  fine character,
  moral beauty,
  a gentle spirit,
  peace in the heart, or
  any of the elements which make up a noble personality!

~  ~  ~  ~  ~

We have just posted several choice 4 page articles by J. R. Miller:

Do Nothing Rashly (Very helpful!)

Talking of One's Ailments (Most insightful!)

The Making of Character

Ministries that Bless

Our Deposit with Christ

Christ's Deposit with Us


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Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Is Jesus like anybody we know?

Today's Scripture Audio Devotional:

Job 1   Play Audio!  Download MP3
Pure Scripture, read in a meditative way--with
beautiful background music. Perfect for devotions!

  ~  ~  ~  ~  ~

Is Jesus like anybody we know?

(J. R. Miller,  The Joy of Service" 1902)

"The one who says he abides in Him--ought himself also so to walk, even as He walked." 1 John 2:6

A little child, after reading in the New Testament one day, asked her mother, "Is Jesus like anybody we know?" The child was eager to discover just what were the elements of the character of Christ, His disposition, His spirit, the mind that was in Him.

The mother ought to have been able to answer, "Yes, I am trying to be like Jesus; if you will look at my life, and study my character--you will see a little of what Jesus is like."

Every follower of Christ should be able to say the same to all who know him. The likeness is imperfect, for in many things we come short; but, if we are true Christians, we must be trying to live as He would--if He were in our place.

"Leaving you an example--so that you should follow in His steps." 1 Peter 2:21

 ~  ~  ~  ~  ~

We have just posted this most insightful and helpful 4 page article by J. R. Miller: "Thunder--or Angel's Voice?" Must reading!


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Tuesday, January 26, 2010

A secret of victorious living

Today's Scripture Audio Devotional:

Job 42   Play Audio!  Download MP3
Pure Scripture, read in a meditative way--with
beautiful background music. Perfect for devotions!

  ~  ~  ~  ~  ~

A secret of victorious living

(J. R. Miller, "Thread for a Web Begun" 1894)

There is a secret of victorious living which, if people knew it, would make all of life easier for them. It may be stated thus: that as we take up any duty and go forward with it, we shall receive the strength we need to do it. There are several Divine promises that give this assurance.

One reads, "As your days--so shall your strength be." Deuteronomy 33:25. This seems to mean that the help which God gives, varies according to the necessity of the particular day. God fits His blessing--to our days.
When we are faint--He increases strength.
When we are sorrowful--He gives comfort.
When we are in danger--He grants protection.
When we are weary--He gives rest.
"As your days--so shall your strength be."

Another of Christ's promises reads, "My grace is sufficient for you." Every word of this assurance shines with radiant light.

"My grace is sufficient for you." It is Christ's grace that is sufficient. We know that He has all Divine fullness, and therefore we are sure that no human need can ever exhaust His power to give help!

"My grace is sufficient for you." It is Christ's grace that is sufficient. If it were anything else but grace, it might not give us such comfort. Grace is undeserved favor, goodness shown to the unworthy. We deserve nothing, for we are sinners. But it is Christ's grace which is sufficient, and so we can claim it.

"My grace is sufficient for you."
It is present tense--IS sufficient. Christ is always speaking personally to the one who is in any need, and saying, "My grace IS sufficient for you."

"My grace is sufficient for you." The word "sufficient" is one whose meaning expands and amplifies with the measure of the need. No necessity is so small as not to be included; and none is so great as to go beyond the capacity of the blessing that is promised.

"My grace is sufficient for you." The grace is sufficient for each of His redeemed children--"for you" the promise runs.

Life lies before us, with . . .
  its burdens,
  its duties,
  its responsibilities,
  its struggles,
  its perplexities.
It does not come to us all in one piece. God breaks our years--into months and weeks and days, and never gives us more than just a little at a time--never more than we can bear or do for the day.

If we take up the present duty or burden--we shall always have strength to do it. If we do not have strength of our own sufficient for the work or struggle, we need not falter--but should go on, just as if we had omnipotence in our arm; for as we obey God, though the task is impossible to our ability--He will sustain us by giving us all the help we need.

  ~  ~  ~  ~  ~

We have just posted these choice J. R. Miller short articles:

Thread for a Web Begun (very helpful)

Reasons for Not Worrying


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Monday, January 25, 2010

If our lives were as good as our prayers

Today's Scripture Audio Devotional:

Genesis 3   Play Audio!  Download MP3
Pure Scripture, read in a meditative way--with
beautiful background music. Perfect for devotions!

  ~  ~  ~  ~  ~

If our lives were as good as our prayers

(J. R. Miller, "Living up to our Prayers" 1905)

If we only tried seriously to live up to our praying--it would have a powerful effect upon our character and conduct!

There is no prayer that most Christians make oftener--than that they may be made like Christ. It is a most fitting prayer, and one that we should never cease to make. But if we very earnestly wish to be transformed into Christ's likeness--we will find the desire growing into great intensity in our daily lives, and transforming them. It will affect every phase of our behavior and conduct. It will hold before us continually, the image of our Lord, and will keep ever in our vision--a new standard . . .
  of thought,
  of feeling,
  of desire,
  of act,
  of speech.
It will keep us asking all the while, such questions as these, "How would Jesus feel about this--if He were personally in my circumstances? What would Jesus do--if He were here today where I am?"

There is always danger of mockeries and insincerities in our praying for spiritual blessings. The desires are to be commended. God approves of them and will gladly bestow upon us the more grace we ask for:
  the increase in love,
  the greater faith,
  the purer heart,
  the new advance in holiness.
But these are attainments which are not bestowed upon us directly, as gifts from heaven. We have much to do in securing them. When we ask for spiritual blessings or favors, the Master asks, "Are you able to pay the price, to make the self-denial, to give up the things you love--in order to reach these attainments in holiness, in grace, in spiritual beauty?"

If our lives were as good as our prayers, we would be saint-like in character.

If we find that our prayers are beyond our living, our duty is not to lower them to suit the tenor of our living--but to bring our lives up to the higher standard of our praying!

  ~  ~  ~  ~  ~

We have just posted the following choice J. R. Miller short articles:

Living up to our Prayers

The Blessing of Work

Into the Desert

Finishing Our Work


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Sunday, January 24, 2010

None of us would want to have our hearts photographed!

Today's Scripture Audio Devotional:

Psalm 121   Play Audio!   Download MP3
Pure Scripture, read in a meditative way--with
beautiful background music. Perfect for devotions!

  ~  ~  ~  ~  ~

None of us would want to have our hearts photographed!

(J. R. Miller, "When the Song Begins" 1905)

"Having loved His own who were in the world--He loved them unto the end!" John 13:1

A friend is one who loves--and does not cease to love. Christ having loved His people--loves them unto the end.

One quality of true friendship, is trust. What could be more sacred than this comfort of feeling safe with a person, absolutely safe? That is the kind of friend Jesus is. You may always feel safe with Him. You may confess all your sins to Him. You may tell Him all your faults and your failures--how you denied Him the other night, how you failed to be true to Him, and all the evil thoughts of your heart; and He will be just as tender and gracious--as if you never had sinned! He loves unto the end!

None of us would want to have our hearts photographed, and the picture held up before the eyes of our neighbors! We would not want even our best friends to see a full transcript of our secret life--what goes on within us:
  the jealousies,
  the envyings,
  the bitter feelings,
  the impure thoughts,
  the meannesses,
  the selfishnesses,
  the suspicions,
  the doubts and fears!
Yet Christ sees all this unworthy inner life--He knows the worst that is in us--and loves us still! We do not need to hide our weaknesses from Him. He never withdraws His love. We may trust Him absolutely and forever!

"Having loved His own who were in the world--He loved them unto the end!" John 13:1


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Saturday, January 23, 2010

It is the student who must learn the lesson!

Today's Scripture Audio Devotional:

Psalm 130   Play Audio!  Download MP3
Pure Scripture, read in a meditative way--with
beautiful background music. Perfect for devotions!

  ~  ~  ~  ~  ~

It is the student who must learn the lesson!

(J. R. Miller, "Strength and Beauty")

"Work out your salvation with fear and trembling" Philippians 2:12-13

People sometimes think that salvation imparts . . .
  godly virtues,
  fine qualities of Christian character,
  lovely traits of disposition, and
  elements of spiritual beauty--
without any cost or effort to the believer himself!

Christ's followers are transformed--old things pass away, and all things become new. Those who believe in Him--are fashioned into His image. But these blessings do not come easily. The heavenly graces are not put into our life--as one might hang up lovely pictures on the walls to adorn a home! They must be wrought into our life in a sense, by our own hands. We must work out our own salvation, although it is God who works in us, both to will and to work.

For example, patience is not put into anyone's life--as one brings in a piece of new furniture. You cannot merely receive patience as a gift from God. Patience is a lesson to be learned--through long and watchful self-discipline. Christ is the teacher--but you are the student, and it is the student who must learn the lesson! Not even Christ will learn it for you--to spare you the effort. Nor can it be made an easy lesson for you. It costs to grow patient, and you must pay the price yourself!

The same is true of all the elements of a godly and worthy character.

We are always at school in this world. God is teaching us the things we need to learn. The lessons are not easy--sometimes they are very hard! But the hardest lessons are the best--for they bring out in us the finest qualities, if only we learn them well.

Those, therefore, who find themselves in what may seem adverse conditions, compelled to face hardship, endure opposition, and pass through struggle--should quietly accept the responsibility; and, trusting in Christ for guidance and strength, go firmly and courageously forward, conscious that they have now an opportunity to grow strong, and develop in themselves the qualities of worthy and noble character!


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Friday, January 22, 2010

We fritter away days, weeks, months!

Today's Scripture Audio Devotional:

Psalm 103   Play Audio! Download MP3
Pure Scripture, read in a meditative way--with
beautiful background music. Perfect for devotions!

  ~  ~  ~  ~  ~

We fritter away days, weeks, months!

(J. R. Miller, "The Sacredness of Opportunity")

"Redeeming the time, because the days are evil." Ephesians 5:16

"Gather up the fragments that are left over. Let nothing be wasted!" John 6:12

"Time is short!" 1 Corinthians 7:29

Time is made up of golden minutes--not one of which we should allow to be wasted! The Master said that for every idle word that men speak--they must give account. This can be no less true of idle minutes or hours.

Most of us live as if we had a thousand years to stay here in this world! We loiter away the golden hours of our little days--as if the days were never to end! We do not see how swiftly the sun is whirling toward his setting, while our work is but half done, our task perhaps scarcely begun!

We fritter away days, weeks, months--not noticing how our one little opportunity of living in this world is being worn off, as the sea eats away a crumbling bank until its last shred is gone! We set slight value on time, forgetting that we have only a hand-breadth of it--and then comes eternity!

Many of us fail to appreciate the value of 'single days'. "A day is too short a space," we say, "that it cannot make much difference if one, just one, is wasted--or idled away in pleasure!" Yet the days are links in a chain, and if one link is broken--the chain is broken. In God's plan for our life--each little day has its own load of duty.

How these lost days shame us--as they turn their reproachful eyes upon us, out of the irrevocable past!

Many people are wasteful of time. They fail to realize its value. They appear to have it in such abundance--that they dream it can never end. They do not know that a day lost--may mean misfortune or failure for them sometime in the future. They do not know that squandered hours, minutes spent in idleness--may cost them the true success of their life, bringing failure or disaster!

They should not make the mistake of imagining they have so much time--that they can afford to let days or hours or even minutes be wasted. They cannot afford to lose one golden minute of any day. We do not know what momentous issues, affecting all our future--are involved in any quietest hour of any common-place day. There is 'a time for everything'--but the time is short, and when it is gone, and the thing is not done--it never can be done!

What you make of your life--you must make in a few years at the most; for the human span is short--and any day may be your last one! Every day that passes--leaves life's margin a little less for each of us. Our allotment of time is ever shortening!

There are a great many things it is not worth our while to do. Some of us spend our days in poor trivialities which bless no one, and which will add no lustre to our crown.

Therefore, waste no opportunity! Squander no moment! There is just time enough for you to live your life well--if you spend every moment of it in earnest, faithful duty. One hour lost--will leave a flaw. A life thus lived in unbroken diligence and faithfulness, will have no regrets when the end comes.

 ~  ~  ~  ~  ~

We have just posted the following choice J. R. Miller articles--each is some 4 pages in length. It would be a good use of your time--to read one of these gems over the weekend.

      The Sacredness of Opportunity

Learning Our Lessons

Hands: a Study

Living Victoriously

Broken Lives

Tired Feet

Shut In

Helpful People

Coming to the End

Looking Unto the Hills

Afterward You Will Understand

The Practice of Immortality

Strength and Beauty

Christian Manliness

Misunderstood

Service Declined

What God Thinks of Us

Shallow Lives

Crowding Out the Best

Things to Leave Undone

Fruit in Its Season

True Religion

The Beauty of the Imperfect

How to Meet Temptation

At the Full Price

The Blessing of Hardness

The Ministry of Hindrances

In Time of Defeat

The Duty of Fault-Finding

The Duty of Laughter

Minding the 'Rests'

The Cure for Weariness

Judge as We Judge

Every Day an Easter

Christmas Making


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Thursday, January 21, 2010

The man who never laughs

Today's Scripture Audio Devotional:

Psalm 90   Play Audio!   Download MP3
Pure Scripture, read in a meditative way--with
beautiful background music. Perfect for devotions!

  ~  ~  ~  ~  ~

The man who never laughs

(J. R. Miller, "The Duty of Laughter")

"
The disciples were filled with joy and with the Holy Spirit." Acts 13:52

"The fruit of the Spirit is joy" Galatians 5:22

The Wise Man says that there is "a time to laugh." That is, there is a time when laughter is right, when it is a duty--and when it would be wrong not to laugh. Perhaps we have not been accustomed to think of laughter in this way. We regard it as an agreeable exercise--but are not apt to class it among duties, like honesty or kindness.

It would be a sad thing, however, if laughter should be altogether crowded out of life. Think of a world of human beings with no laughter--men and women always wearing grave, serious, solemn faces. Think of the laughter of childhood, departing from the world--how dull and dreary life would be! Nothing on earth is more beautiful, than the merry laugh of childhood.

Laughter has its place in every wholesome, healthy, holy life. The man who never smiles--is morbid! He has lost the joy chords out of his life. He has trained himself to think only of unpleasant things, to look only and always at the dark side. He has accustomed himself so long to sadness--that the muscles of his face have become set in hard, fixed lines--and cannot relax themselves. His thoughts of life are gloomy--and the gloom has entered his soul and darkened his eyes!

Where there is no laughter--all evils nest. Demons do not laugh!

The man who never laughs, must not blame his fellows if they think there is something wrong with his life, something dark within.

If the streams which flow out are only bitter--the fountain cannot be sweet!

The Wise Man says:
"A happy heart makes the face cheerful, but heartache crushes the spirit." Proverbs 15:13
"A cheerful heart has a continual feast." Proverbs 15:15
"A joyful heart is good medicine, but a broken spirit dries up the bones." Proverbs 17:22

"May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace" Romans 15:13

"Rejoice in the Lord always. I will say it again: Rejoice!" Philippians 4:4


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Stewards of God's Gifts

I was reading in my devotions this morning and came across this article on stewardship. In light of the fact that God directed me to preach on this topic this past Sunday, I wanted to share this article with you by way of follow-up. It is a great article on the topic of stewardship and you will be challenged as you read it. It comes from R.C. Spoul's ministry and was published in Tabletalk Magazine this past July (2009).

God Bless!


Stewards of God’s Gifts

by Ken Jones

A steward is one who manages or administers the estate, affairs, or goods of another. Inherent in this definition is the fact that a steward is not the owner of what he manages and is therefore accountable to the actual owner. Biblical stewardship is based on the concept that God is the owner of all things and that the human race has been created to manage what He has created. This is seen in the creation accounts in Genesis. God creates the earth and all things therein. Man is created by God in His image and is commanded to have dominion over all that God has created. Genesis 2:5 captures the essence of man’s role as steward over God’s creation in succinct terms: “When no bush of the field was yet in the land and no small plant of the field had yet sprung up — for the Lord God had not caused it to rain on the land and there was no man to work the ground.” The command in Genesis 1:28: “Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and subdue it and have dominion over…every living thing that moves on the earth,” further amplifies the fact that God is the Creator-owner and man is the creature-servant. Psalm 24:1 is even more emphatic in making this point: “The earth is the Lord’s and the fullness thereof, the world and those who dwell therein.”

God’s ownership is all inclusive — He owns everything and everyone. The fall is about (among other things) man’s failure to exercise dominion over the serpent (one of those living things), rebelling against the commands of the Creator-owner concerning the tree in the midst of the garden, and taking upon himself the prerogatives of ownership (“and you will be like God,” Gen. 3:5). The fall is a rebellion against God’s ownership of and authority over all things. Seen from this perspective, stewardship is not just the responsibility of Christians but of all humanity. The difference is that Christians by virtue of our regeneration have been given the capacity to comprehend God’s ownership of all things, and as a consequence we also have been given the capacity to recognize our accountability in our use and management of what God has given over to our care.

I say we have the “capacity” because our Christian faith does not mean that we will automatically recognize properly and fully the extent and implications of our stewardship. As regenerated sinners, we are still prone to the sort of self-centeredness that cries out “me, me” and “mine, mine.” In fact, we live in a world that promotes, nurtures, and celebrates the autonomous self, as if the individual were free to do whatever he chooses to do as long as no one is hurt. The 70s R & B group The Isley Brothers provided the theme song “It’s Your Thing” for that mindset. The song’s hook lyric line included the words “do what you want to do.” The rationale for pro-abortion and pro-choice advocates is that a woman has a right to do with her body whatever she desires. The point is this: like a biblically accurate understanding of the gospel, our responsibility as stewards in all of life is a concept that is foreign to our fallen nature. We therefore need to be reminded over and over again that God is the owner of all things and we are just managers or overseers of what He has entrusted to our care. It is critical that we do not “be conformed to this world” on this matter but rather that we are transformed by the renewal of our minds (Rom. 12:2).

In 1 Corinthians 6:18 and following, the apostle Paul warns against sexual immorality, but notice his rationale: “Or do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit within you, whom you have from God? You are not your own, for you were bought with a price. So glorify God in your body” (vv. 19–20). This is contrary to what the world, the flesh, and the Devil would have us think about our bodies and sexual urges. Paul’s point is that we are to govern our bodies and urges by the standard of the Creator-owner and not by standards we set personally or standards set by the world in which we live. We glorify God in our bodies by first recognizing His ownership in creation and in redemption. Secondly, we glorify God by presenting our bodies as living sacrifices in His service. Paul calls this our reasonable service or worship in Romans 12:1. Whether we are laboring in our vocation (notice Paul’s admonitions in Eph. 6:5–9 and Col. 3:22–24; 4:1) or our sexual conduct, we are stewards of the bodies we have been given, and it is our duty to use them for the service of the Creator-owner and subject them to His law.

It should be noted that this duty is one of delight and not of dread. The Westminster Shorter Catechism expresses it this way: “The chief end of man is to glorify God and enjoy Him forever” (Q. 1). Glorifying God and enjoying Him are inextricably linked — glorifying Him is our joy and we enjoy glorifying Him. Delighting in and glorifying our Creator-owner is translated into zeal and diligence in the service we render.

As Christians we must realize that slothfulness in our vocation or our other duties, failure to utilize our gifts in the service of the church, and selfishness with our financial resources or our time are but some of the blatant remnants of our fallen nature. It is that fallen remnant in our nature that exalts itself and continues to rebel against the will and rule of the God who created us and then saved us from His judgment. We need to remember that we are new creations who are progressively being conformed to the likeness of Christ our Savior.

Our union with Christ has eschatological dimensions that greatly impact our stewardship. By this I mean that although we are waiting for the triumphant consummation of the kingdom at the second coming of Christ, His life, death, burial, and resurrection has secured for us present benefits of eternal worth. In 1 Corinthians 10:11, Paul describes Christians as those “on whom the end of the ages has come.” Colossians 1:12–14 mentions particular benefits we enjoy right now. First, we are qualified to share in the inheritance of the saints. Second, we have been delivered from the domain of darkness. Third, we have been transferred to the kingdom of Christ. Fourth, we are redeemed and have the forgiveness of sins.

I mention all of this because the eschatological reality of what we presently possess in Jesus Christ undergirds the New Testament teaching on stewardship. In 1 Peter 4:2, the apostle Peter reminds his readers “to live for the rest of the time in the flesh no longer for human passions but for the will of God.” It is because of what we presently possess in Christ that our mind-set about our time, talent, and treasure should be different from those whose understanding is still darkened. This mind-set or worldview (which must be nurtured) includes how we view our purpose in this world (to glorify God), our priorities (to do the will of God), and our earthly possessions (provided by God for enjoyment as we do His will). When our attitude toward what God has entrusted to us is characterized by “mine, mine, mine” or “me, me, me,” it is indicative of our fallen nature and the darkened understanding of this present age. That self-centered worldview is contrary to what we are in Christ.

Stewardship in all of life rests on the knowledge that all we are and all we have has been given to us by God through Christ and belongs to God. We are therefore under His lordship. Laziness and selfishness are acts of ingratitude and betrayal toward God, and they portray a lack of trust in the very God who has given us all things pertaining to life and godliness.

I urge all who name the name of Christ to view all that we have (both right now and in the age to come) through the cross of Christ and His present reign at the right hand of our Father, so that whether we eat or drink or whatever we do, we do to the glory of God. He is Lord of all and we are His stewards. Our joy is to do His will with what He has given.
Soli deo gloria.


Motes and beams

Today's Scripture Audio Devotional:

Psalm 73   Play Audio!   Download MP3
Pure Scripture, read in a meditative way--with
beautiful background music. Perfect for devotions!

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Motes and beams

(J. R. Miller, "The Duty of Fault-Finding")

There is a duty of fault-finding. The Master Himself teaches it. In the Sermon on the Mount, He makes it very plain. We must note carefully, however, where the duty begins. We are to look first after our own faults. "Why do you look at the mote that is in your brother's eye--but do not consider the beam that is in your own eye?"

We must consider the beam that is in our own eye!

The form of this question suggest that we are naturally inclined to pay more attention to flaws and blemishes in others--than in ourselves; and also that a very small fault--a mere mote of fault in another person--may seem larger to us than a blemish many times greater in ourselves!

Of course, it is far easier to see other people's faults--than our own. Our eyes are set in our head in such a way--that we can look at our neighbor, better than at ourselves. Yet we all have faults of our own. Most of us have quite enough of them to occupy our thought, to the exclusion of our neighbor's faults--if only we would give them our attention.

Really, too, our own faults ought to interest us, more than our neighbor's, because they are our own; and being our own, we are responsible for them. We do not have to answer for any other one's sins--but we must answer for our own sins, "Each one must give an account of himself."

Also, the responsibility for getting rid of them, is ours. No faithful friend, no wise teacher, can cure our faults for us. If ever they are taken out of our life--it must be by our own faith, our own firm, persistent effort.

It is a fact, that the faults which we usually see and criticize in others--are the very faults which are the most marked in us! In our judgment of others--we show a miniature of ourselves. If this is true, we should be careful in judging others, for in doing so--we are only revealing our own faults! This should lead us also to close scrutiny of our own life, to get rid of the things in us which are not beautiful.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Spiritual beauty

Today's Scripture Audio Devotional:

Psalm 51   Play Audio!   Download MP3
Pure Scripture, read in a meditative way--with
beautiful background music. Perfect for devotions!

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Spiritual beauty

(J. R. Miller, "Strength and Beauty")

"Worship the Lord in the beauty of His holiness; tremble before Him, all the earth!" Psalm 96:9

"Let the beauty of the Lord our God be upon us." Psalm 90:17

Paul enjoins that, "whatsoever things are lovely" shall be in the vision of life, into which we aim to fashion our character.

We are to follow in the footsteps of our Master. Jesus Himself was, "Altogether lovely!" Song of Songs 5:16

Humanity was made to be beautiful. God's ideal for man was spotless loveliness--man was made at first, in God's image. But sin has left its foul trail everywhere! We see something of its debasement, wherever we go. What ruins sin has wrought!

All of Christ's work of grace--is towards the restoration of beauty of the Lord in His people.

Spiritual beauty is holiness. Nothing unclean is lovely. Character is Christ-like, only when it is beautiful.

All the precepts of the Bible are towards the fashioning of beauty in every redeemed life. We are to put away . . .
  all that is sinful,
  all marring,
  every blot and blemish,
  every unholy desire, feeling and affection,
  everything that would defile--
and put on whatsoever is lovely and Christ-like.

The one great work of Christ in Christian lives--is the fashioning of holiness in them. We are to grow away from . . .
  our deformities,
  our faults,
  our infirmities,
  our poor dwarfed stunted life
--into spiritual beauty!

The mark set before us is the likeness of Christ, which, at last, we shall attain! "We know that when He appears--we will be like Him, because we will see Him as He is! And everyone who has this hope in Him purifies himself--just as He is pure." 1 John 3:2-3

God is One Prayer

God is One

 

The One and Only God,


Creator and Sustainer of the vast universe, we acknowledge that You alone are God and there is none other beside You.

What hope and assurance this provides for us, Your simple creation.

Your knowledge of us is complete and perfect. Your understanding of our needs and desires is clearer than even our own understanding of ourselves.

You provide perfection in care every moment of every day. There is no mistakes or lapses in Your tender care.

Nothing happens of which You were not, are not, nor will not be aware. You are the builder and painter creating a masterpiece.

There is none who provide counsel to You but You alone.

None other can over power You

None can usurp Your authority

None other can override Your will or purpose.

None other can demand our allegiance or service.

None other can define truth.

None other can do what You do.

None other can be what You are.


You alone are God and upon this truth, we place our entire hope, faith, love, and purpose.


One and Only God, our allegiance we give to you for none other has the right or power to claim it. We give it willingly and joyously!


It took the baby out of the young mother's arms the other night!

Today's Scripture Audio Devotional:

Psalm 42   Play Audio!   Download MP3
Pure Scripture, read in a meditative way--with
beautiful background music. Perfect for devotions!

  ~  ~  ~  ~  ~

It took the baby out of the young mother's arms the other night!

(J. R. Miller, "Afterward You Will Understand" 1909)

He came to Simon Peter, who asked Him, "Lord, are You going to wash my feet?"
Jesus answered him,
"What I am doing--you do not understand now; but afterward you will understand." John 13:7

We are assured that God has a plan for each individual life of His redeemed children. Jesus had a purpose in washing the feet of his disciples that night. It was not an idle thing that He was doing. He meant to teach these men a great lesson.

He has a purpose in every smallest thing, in each event in our lives. His plans run on through all the years, and are woven of the threads of the common events of our lives. We do not know the meaning of the small things in our everyday experiences--but the least of them is in some way connected with the great divine plan.

God's plan for each life includes the smallest affairs of that life. The things that come into our experience are not mere chance. 'Chance' is not a good word; at least we may not use it to mean something that broke into our life independently of God. Nothing ever comes into our experience by chance, in the sense that it is outside of God's purpose for our life, and beyond God's control.

Suppose someone wrongs you, treats you unkindly, even cruelly. If you are God's child, your Father takes the evil into His hands, and it becomes thenceforth, a secret of blessing; it will be overruled so as to be among the "all things" that work together for your good.

The purpose of God for His children--is always good, always love. It could not be otherwise, for God is love. This does not mean that His plan for us never involves suffering. Ofttimes it does. It brings death to a mother--and pain and grief to her family. It took the baby out of the young mother's arms the other night! It leaves the young widow broken-hearted, with little children to provide for. It permits loss of property to come, leaving a family to suffer pinching poverty and hard struggle. It allows a man to lose his work in the time of financial depression, and to endure experience of sore need. It brings sickness with its pain and cost. It lets us have bitter days of suffering. Godly people ofttimes have to endure bitter things, which are hard and most trying. Nevertheless, the plan of God for our lives is good. It is a plan of love. "What I am doing"--it is the Master who says this, and what He does must be good.

Is affliction good? Can it be good to endure bereavement, to suffer injustice, to bear pain? Some day we shall know that many of the best things in life--are the fruit of these very bitter experiences. Our redemption--comes from the sorrow and suffering of Jesus Christ. Just so, the best blessings and the holiest beauties of God's saints--are the harvest of pain.

We must not forget that the things which are painful, are also parts of Christ's chosen way for us, and that they are always good. In all our life Christ is making us--making godly people of us, fashioning Christian character, transforming us into His beautiful image.

Let not life's pains and trials dismay you. Submit to God, accept the providences that come as part of His discipline, and take the lessons, the enrichings which He sends. Some day you will know that you have learned many of your sweetest songs--in the darkness.

Sunday, January 17, 2010

A glance into heavenly bliss

Today's Scripture Audio Devotional:

Psalm 32   Play Audio!   Download MP3
Pure Scripture, read in a meditative way--with
beautiful background music. Perfect for devotions!

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A glance into heavenly bliss

("Solitude Sweetened" by James Meikle, 1730-1799)

All at once I find myself in an unbounded flood of bliss, a spacious sea of glory; lost in wonder amidst ineffable delights, and transported with the raptures of seraphic harmony! While all His saints rejoice in His excellent glory--what ardor glows in every soul--what rapture swells in every song! O the adorable displays of His perfections--the manifestations of His goodness--the outlettings of His love!

Here we received out of His fullness--grace upon grace and glory upon glory. Our possession is worthy of our liberal Giver. We have . . .
  a kingdom which cannot be moved,
  an undefiled inheritance, which does not fade away,
  a city with foundations, whose builder and maker is God,
  garments of glory,
  a crown of righteousness,
  the tree of life to feed upon,
  the fountain of life to drink of,
  the garden of God to walk in,
  life above the reach of death,
  health secured from sickness,
  pleasure without pain.

Our bodies are immortal,
our souls immaculate,
our senses sanctified,
our conceptions spiritualized,
our faculties enlarged, and
our whole soul replenished by divinity.

Our past bliss is with us in the sweet remembrance, our present bliss entrances in the enjoyment, and our future bliss is present with us in the full assurance of our eternal felicity.

Thus we are forever blessed to the highest degree.

We are above all fear, beyond anxiety and doubt, and fixed above all change.

Our service is sincere,
our adorations ardent,
our knowledge profound and satisfying.

Rapture rushes in at every part!

Our eyes are ravished with seeing the King in His beauty;
our ears are ravished with hearing the songs of the inner temple;
our nostrils are ravished with the fragrance of the Rose of Sharon, the plant of renown;
our feet are ravished with standing in His holy place;
our hands are ravished with handling of the word of life; and
our mouths are ravished with the wine of our Beloved, which goes down sweetly, causing our souls to shout aloud, and the lips to sing, and never cease.

Our experience of His fullness, our vision of His perfections and glory--constitute our most exalted bliss, and are the heaven of heavens!

O what torrents of eternal love teem from the throne into our souls!

O the pleasure that is in His presence!

O the exuberant rivers of joy that flow at His right hand!

O love! never to be forgotten--which has brought me safely through so many winding labyrinths and crooked paths, in sight of so many enemies--in spite of . . .
  a tempting devil,
  the accusations of my sins,
  the rebellion of my lusts,
  the carnality of my affections, and
  the weakness of all my graces--
to dwell at last forever in heavenly bliss!

O eternity! once the comfort of our longing expectations--now the transport of our enlarged souls! For we are . . .
  forever with the Lord,
  seeing His unclouded face,
  wearing His divine name,
  drinking at the streams of His pleasures,
  eating of His hidden manna,
  sitting beneath the Tree of life,
  basking under the beams of the Sun of righteousness,
  singing hallelujahs to Him who loved us, who washed us from our sins in His blood, and brought us here to be with Him forever!

O state of complete happiness and consummate bliss!

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Ugly corners made beautiful

Today's Scripture Audio Devotional:

Psalm 23   Play Audio!   Download MP3
Pure Scripture, read in a meditative way--with
beautiful background music. Perfect for devotions!

  ~  ~  ~  ~  ~

Ugly corners made beautiful

(J. R. Miller, "Christian Manliness" 1909)

"Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely . . ." Philippians 4:8

Beauty is another quality of true manliness. It is not enough for a man to be true, to live honorably, to be just, to be pure and clean--he must also have in his life, whatever is lovely.

All God's works are beautiful. He never made anything that was not beautiful. It is sin which spoils everything!

There are many lives that are not lovely in every feature. You see things in others which you cannot admire--things which are not beautiful.

Fretting is not beautiful.

Bad temper is unlovely.

Discontent, jealousy, irritability, unkindness, selfishness are unattractive.

It is the work of God's grace--to make lives beautiful. All that grace does in us--is toward the fashioning of beautiful Christian character in us.

On a florist's signboard are the words, "Ugly corners made beautiful". The florist had reference to what he could do to beautify an ugly spot or a piece of landscape. He would trim out the weeds, plant flowers and shrubs, and transform a wilderness into a garden.

That is what grace can do in our lives. Some men seem to think that the fine and graceful things are only for women, not for men. But Christ was a man--a perfect, complete man--and there was not a single unlovely thing in His life.
  He was strong--but also gentle.
  He was just--but kindly.
  He was firm--but patient.
  He was righteous, and his indignation burned like fire against all hypocrisy and injustice--but his tenderness never failed.

Fine manliness is beautiful, like Christ. "Yes, He is altogether lovely! This is my Beloved, and this is my Friend!" Song of Songs 5:16

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We have posted J. R. Miller's insightful article, "
Christian Manliness".