Joining the Church Triumphant

June 14, 2009 · Posted in Salvation, Worship

Right now we Christians are, by God’s grace, members of the church militant.  We struggle with the cares of life that so easily distract us from the business of worshipping our great God.  The promotion to glory of dear saints reminds us that we have a glorious future awaiting us.  And that is not all.  We have a great resurrection awaiting us!   I cannot imagine a greater incentive to perseverance and holy living.  And I want to practice now what I will be doing for all eternity, worshipping the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.  Right now I want to experience a dry run at being a member of the church triumphant.  Reader, there is only one way to become a denizen of the New Jerusalem, to be in the church triumphant.  And that is by grace alone trusting alone in Christ alone for your salvation.  Another way to say it is that you need to wash your sin stained garments in blood of the Lamb.  Come with me and let’s journey toward the celestial city together…

—Jeffrey C. Waddington

Via: Feeding on Christ

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Pursue Righteousness

June 14, 2009 · Posted in Scripture

So flee youthful passions and pursue righteousness, faith, love, and peace, along with those who call on the Lord from a pure heart.

—2 Timothy 2:22

Via: ESV Daily Verse

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Have you ever wondered why there’s a universal phenomenon of religion? You can go anywhere on the globe and you’ll find evidence of cultic practices of sacrifice. Why is that? I suggest that it is because the original program and prescription for the worship of the living God was sacrifice. Adam told it to Cain, Abel, and Seth. Seth told it to Enoch, and he told it to his sons and they to their sons and so on. It was taught to Abraham. It was taught to Isaac. It was taught to Jacob. It was taught to Joseph. It was taught to Moses. It was also taught to Ishmael and to Esau, and so the idea of the requirement of sacrifice in faith pervaded the whole human race.

But today the need for sacrifices to be made in faith is forgotten – we hear that it doesn’t matter what you believe as long as you’re sincere. In fact, the basic requirement of sacrifice is unknown – it doesn’t matter what your religious practices are. It doesn’t matter what you worship. It only matters that you do worship. It’s said that the Jews worship God in their way, the Muslims worship God in their way, the Buddhists worship in their way. The unspoken assumption is God is obligated to receive, honor, and respect any kind of worship that people bring.

God didn’t respect all of the worship in Genesis 4. He had no respect for the worship of Cain. And Cain responded in anger when he saw that his worship was unacceptable to God. A faithful man, a righteous man, would have said, “O my God. I’m heartily sorry for having sinned against You. Teach me Your statutes, O Lord, show me the more excellent way. Change my heart, so that the offering that I bring You next Sabbath day will honor you. I’m glad, at least, Holy Father, that You were pleased with my brother’s offering. Father, give me an attitude by which I can learn from my brother, because my brother lives by faith and is trying to obey You.” But that was not Cain’s response.

In reality, that is never the response of the godless to the godly. Which of the prophets did they not kill? Which of the reformers in church history was not despised by the organized church? Like Cain, who rose up and slew his brother Abel, wicked churches have spilled the blood of true Christians. In fact, it was the church that rose up to kill Jesus because He did not respect their sacrifices.

—R.C. Sproul
A Taste of Heaven

Via: Ligonier Ministries Blog

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Cal.vini.st First Anniversary Giveaway

June 12, 2009 · Posted in Weblogs

The fine folks at Cal.vini.st are celebrating their first anniversary by giving away two copies of Bibleworks 8.0.

On the 12th of July 2008, I posted for the first time here at Cal.vini.st. Leading up to our first anniversary next month, I thought it fitting to have some celebrations. Several things will be happening here over the next month, not the least of which is that I am launching the Cal.vini.st First Anniversary Giveaway. Over the next month (June 12th – July 12th 2009) you have the opportunity to enter to win one of two major prizes.

You can read more about the giveaway at their website.

Via: Cal.vini.st

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Finding God

June 10, 2009 · Posted in Salvation, Sproul

We have all heard evangelists quote from Revelation: “Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears My voice and opens the door, I will come in to him and dine with him, and he with Me” (Rev. 3:20). Usually the evangelist applies this text as an appeal to the unconverted, saying: “Jesus is knocking at the door of your heart. If you open the door, then He will come in.” In the original saying, however, Jesus directed His remarks to the church. It was not an evangelistic appeal.

So what? The point is that seeking is something that unbelievers do not do on their own. The unbeliever will not seek. The unbeliever will not knock. Seeking is the business of believers. Jonathan Edwards said, “The seeking of the Kingdom of God is the chief business of the Christian life.” Seeking is the result of faith, not the cause of it.

When we are converted to Christ, we use language of discovery to express our conversion. We speak of finding Christ. We may have bumper sticker that read, “I Found It.” These statements are indeed true. The irony is this: Once we have found Christ it is not the end of our seeking but the beginning. Usually, when we find what we are looking for, it signals the end of our searching. But when we “find” Christ, it is the beginning of our search.

The Christian life begins at conversion; it does not end where it begins. It grows; it moves from faith to faith, from grace to grace, from life to life. This movement of growth is prodded by continual seeking after God.

In your spiritual walk, are you moving from faith to faith, from grace to grace, from life to life? Are you continually seeking after God?

—R.C. Sproul

Via: Ligonier Ministries Blog

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Here We Stand

June 5, 2009 · Posted in Sproul, Video

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Sing with Us in Worship

June 5, 2009 · Posted in Missions, Piper

Missions is bidding the nations sing with us in worship.

—John Piper
Advance 09

Via: Twitter

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Grace Alone

June 5, 2009 · Posted in Salvation, Sproul

Soli Deo gloria is the motto that grew out of the Protestant Reformation and was used on every composition by Johann Sebastian Bach. He affixed the initials SDG at the bottom of each manuscript to communicate the idea that it is God and God alone who is to receive the glory for the wonders of His work of creation and of redemption. At the heart of the sixteenth-century controversy over salvation was the issue of grace.

—R.C. Sproul
Tabletalk, June 2009

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The Prayer of the Lord

June 5, 2009 · Posted in Prayer, Sproul

There are really only two rules that you have to keep in mind when you’re in prayer, two things that should drive and govern and control your prayer life with the Almighty. You should remember who is being addressed and who is doing the speaking. That is, the first thing you are to remember in prayer is who it is you’re talking to, because nothing will condition your prayer life more deeply than remembering that you’re in conversation with God, the sovereign Creator and ruler of the universe. Second, you are to remember who you are. You are not God. You are a creature. So prayer is not a conversation between peers; it is not a fireside chat among equals. This is the creature speaking to his sovereign Creator.

—R.C. Sproul
The Prayer of the Lord

Via: Ligonier Ministries Blog

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Seeking After God

June 3, 2009 · Posted in Sproul

People do not seek God. They seek after the benefits that only God can give them. The sin of fallen man is this: Man seeks the benefits of God while fleeing from God Himself. We are, by nature, fugitives.

The Bible tells us repeatedly to seek after God. The conclusion we draw from these texts is that since we are called to seek after God it must mean that we, even in our fallen state, have the moral capacity to do that seeking. But who is being addressed in these texts? In the case of the Old Testament, it is the people of Israel who are called to seek the Lord. In the New Testament, it is believers who are called to seek the kingdom.

Are you seeking the benefits God can give you or seeking after God alone?

—R.C. Sproul

Via: Ligonier Ministries Blog

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