It’s been a hectic and busy beginning of a very busy week. With the special worship services for Advent and Christmas this week and next, plus a funeral in the middle of the week, I am already well behind where I need to be. My already packed to do list just got really long.
It all made me stop, in the midst of the frenzy, and pray: “Dear God, I know I haven’t the strength or capacity to successfully deal with all of this this week. Thank you for reminding me that I don’t face all of this alone.”
I heard a message a couple of weeks ago in which the pastor said if you are a new creation in Christ Jesus, if Jesus is dwelling in you by the power of the Holy Spirit, your “to do” list is not yours; it’s His. The things that you have to accomplish are the things that Jesus is dealing with in your life.
This doesn’t just apply to pastors. That business meeting you have to prepare for, how will Jesus work in your midst to bring truth and equality to light? That paper your writing, how will it bring glory to the Father? As you raise your children, how is Jesus guiding you and showing the the love of God to them?
In everything we do as Christians, Christ is present, and is redeeming every moment of your life unto himself. Don’t be overwhelmed by the busy-ness of the day, know that He has overcome!
Grace and peace!
Author Archives: reveds
On the Authority of Scripture
After a week’s worth of musings on the Authority of Scripture, my reading plan from Calvin’s Institutes of the Christian Religion brought me to chapters 6 and 7. Here are some particularly relevant quotes.
The first step is to reverently embrace the testimony of God with obedience:
If true religion is to beam upon us, our principle must be, that it is necessary to begin with heavenly teaching, and that it is impossible for any man to obtain even the minutest portion of right and sound doctrine without being a disciple of Scripture. Hence, the first step in true knowledge is taken, when we reverently embrace the testimony which God has been pleased therein to give of himself. For not only does faith, full and perfect faith, but all correct knowledge of God, originate in obedience. And surely in this respect God has with singular Providence provided for mankind in all ages.
The authority of Scripture does not depend on the consent of man. Instead, Scripture derives its authority because it comes from God, and is attested by the power of God’s Holy Spirit.
If, then, we would consult most effectually for our consciences, and save them from being driven about in a whirl of uncertainty, from wavering, and even stumbling at the smallest obstacle, our conviction of the truth of Scripture must be derived from a higher source than human conjectures, Judgments, or reasons; namely, the secret testimony of the Spirit.
For as God alone can properly bear witness to his own words, so these words will not obtain full credit in the hearts of men, until they are sealed by the inward testimony of the Spirit. The same Spirit, therefore, who spoke by the mouth of the prophets, must penetrate our hearts, in order to convince us that they faithfully delivered the message with which they were divinely entrusted.
The rest needs no summary, its just beautiful.
Let it therefore be held as fixed, that those who are inwardly taught by the Holy Spirit acquiesce implicitly in Scripture; that Scripture, carrying its own evidence along with it, deigns not to submit to proofs and arguments, but owes the full conviction with which we ought to receive it to the testimony of the Spirit. Enlightened by him, we no longer believe, either on our own Judgment or that of others, that the Scriptures are from God; but, in a way superior to human Judgment, feel perfectly assured—as much so as if we beheld the divine image visibly impressed on it—that it came to us, by the instrumentality of men, from the very mouth of God. We ask not for proofs or probabilities on which to rest our Judgment, but we subject our intellect and Judgment to it as too transcendent for us to estimate.
Such, then, is a conviction which asks not for reasons; such a knowledge which accords with the highest reason, namely knowledge in which the mind rests more firmly and securely than in any reasons; such in fine, the conviction which revelation from heaven alone can produce. I say nothing more than every believer experiences in himself, though my words fall far short of the reality. The only true faith is that which the Spirit of God seals on our hearts. Nay, the modest and teachable reader will find a sufficient reason in the promise contained in Isaiah, that all the children of the renovated Church “shall be taught of the Lord,” (Isaiah 54:13).
Amen!
SDG