Tag Archives: Jesus Christ

He is Risen!

 

One of my favorite authors, Michael Horton of the White Horse Inn sent out the following today. Just want to pass on the good word and helpful resources to all of you. Enjoy! 

Christianity is unique among all the world religions in our dependence upon history. In the Apostles’ Creed, we confess that Jesus “suffered under Pontius Pilate” and in the Nicene Creed, we confess that Jesus was “crucified also for us under Pontius Pilate.” How did a second rate governor of a backwater district of the Roman Empire make it into two of the foundational Creeds of Christianity? Simply because we believe that Jesus lived, died, and was raised in real time and space. History matters to the central tenets of our faith.

As Easter approaches, the historicity of Christianity will come under assault in television specials, magazine cover stories, and perhaps even in casual conversations with your family and friends. I hope that White Horse Inn can be a resource to you in times like these so that you can “know–and share–what you believe and why you believe it.”

Here are several resources for you to read, listen to, and use in the coming days:
  • We recently concluded an important series that is available for streaming from our website: The Messiah. This four-part series unpacks the mission and ministry of Jesus Christ: why did the Second Person of the Trinity need to become Incarnate man and “suffer for us under Pontius Pilate”?
  • Last year, I wrote up a brief list of the facts that help prove that Jesus of Nazareth not only lived and died, but also rose again.
  • The March/April issue of Modern Reformation takes up the tragic stories of individuals leaving evangelicalism for Roman Catholicism, Eastern Orthodoxy, or even atheism and agnosticism. This issue is filled with insights into why people are leaving our churches and how to talk with people who may seem hostile to the truth claims of Christianity.

I hope that these resources are helpful to you. Please feel free to pass them along to other friends and colleagues who may be looking for resources to help them “know what they believe and why they believe it.” You can help bring about a modern reformation just by sharing the information that has been helpful to you!

All the staff and the usual Cast of Characters from the White Horse Inn join me in wishing you and your family a joyous Lord’s Day this Sunday as we celebrate Easter.

The Lord is Risen!

Michael Horton

“Know what you believe and why you believe it.”

Unshakable!

“When once you are rooted in Reality, nothing can shake you. If your faith is in experiences, anything that happens is likely to upset that faith; but nothing can ever upset God or the almighty Reality of Redemption; base your faith on that and you are as eternally secure as God. When once you get into personal contact with Jesus Christ, you will never be moved again.”

Oswald Chambers - My Utmost for His Highest

Our Foundation Of Election – Octavius Winslow

Octavius_WinslowAccording as he has chosen us in him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and without blame before him in love. Ephesians 1:4

THE very election of the believer to eternal life provides for and secures his holiness. There could possibly be no holiness without election, because election provides the means of its attainment. Thus clearly does the Spirit of truth unfold it in our motto, and in 2 Thess. 2:13, “We are bound to give thanks always to God for you, brethren, beloved of the Lord, because God has from the beginning chosen you to salvation through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the truth.” Let us be clearly understood. On the ground of no foreseen holiness in the creature, did God thus purpose to save him; but seeing the indispensable necessity of sanctification in order to eternal glory—the impossibility of the one without the other—He chose us in Christ “that we should be holy.”

Let not the Christian reader turn away from, or treat lightly, this precious revealed truth of God’s word—an election of a people unto holiness here and glory hereafter. The prejudice of education—early modes of thought—a preconceived system—and more than all besides, the neglect of a close and prayerful investigation of God’s word for himself, may lead to the rejection of the doctrine. But He who first cavils, and then renounces it, without a thorough and prayerful sifting of its scriptural claims to belief, stands on solemn ground, and assumes a fearful attitude. What God has revealed. “that call not you common.” What He has commanded, that turn not from, lest you be found to have turned from God Himself. Why it has so pleased the Lord to choose a people, it is not our province to inquire, nor, we believe, would it be for our happiness to know. We attempt not to explain the doctrine, much less to account for it. We simply, and we trust scripturally, state it, leaving God to vindicate and bless it. He is the best defender and apologist of His own sacred truth. “Secret things belong unto the Lord our God: but those things which are revealed belong unto us and to our children forever, that we may do all the words of this law.”

The secret thing in the doctrine of election is, why God has done it—the thing which is revealed is, that He has done it. Let us not, then, seek to be wise above what is written, though it is our duty, as an acute writer has remarked, to be wise up to what is written; leaving the more perfect knowledge of the things that are now seen as “through a glass darkly” to that period of perfect illumination when we shall “know, even as we are known.” But thus much we know, that it is the eternal purpose of God, revealed and provided for in the covenant of grace, that all who are chosen, called, and justified, shall, with a view to their being glorified, be “partakers of his holiness.”

Heaven is a holy place, its inhabitants are a holy people, and He whose glory fills the temple is a holy God. Behold, then, the provision God has made for the sanctification of the believer in the everlasting covenant of grace. The foundation is laid in the death of Christ, it commences in the effectual calling of the Spirit—and by all the precious assurances of grace, and wisdom, and strength, provided in the covenant, it is carried forward to a glorious completion.

God’s Word, Like Honey

Octavius Winslow

How sweet are your words unto my taste! Yes, sweeter than honey to my mouth. Psalm 110:103

This similitude is one of frequent occurrence in the Bible. Moses says, that the Lord made his people to “suck honey out of the rock, and oil out of the flinty rock.” It is quite clear, then, that we may regard this species of food as the symbol of great spiritual blessings. The sources from where the Christian’s nourishment is derived are various. We should be grateful to God that He has not limited us to one secondary source of spiritual nourishment. It was proper, it was wise and gracious in God, that there should be but one Plant of Renown, but one Rose of Sharon, but one Lily of the Valley, but one Living Vine, in other words, that there should be but one Savior and Redeemer, but one Head and Reservoir of the Church. But there are offshoots from this divine plant, there are streams issuing from this sacred fountain-head, from each of which the believer may, by faith, extract the nourishment that strengthens and revives hone?

And what is the word of God but this honey? And from where does this honey fall, but from the heart of God? It is the unfolding of the heart of God. His mind conveys the word, but His heart dictates the word. Take the promises; how “exceeding great and precious” they are. Have you not often found them sweet to your taste as the honey and the honeycomb? When some portion of the word suited to your present need has been brought home to your heart by the sealing power of the Holy Spirit, how have all other sweets become bitter to your taste compared with this! Your Heavenly Father saw your grief, your Divine Captain beheld your conflict and your exhaustion, and bade His Spirit go and drop that sweet promise into your sad heart, and you found the entrance of God’s word gave light and comfort to your sad and gloomy spirit.

The love of God in Christ! Oh, it is sweeter than honey. The love that gave Christ—that chose us in Christ—that has blessed us in Christ—that gives us standing in Christ—surely it passes all knowledge. To see it traveling over all the opposition of our unbelieving minds, and the corruption of our depraved hearts, and meeting us at some peculiar stage of our journey, in some painful crisis of our history, in some bitter lonely trial through which we are passing, how does this exalt our views of its greatness, and bring us into the experience of its sweetness! Such too is the love of the Spirit, His love as tasted in His calling—in His comforting—in His sanctifying—in His witnessing, and in all His effectual and unwearied teaching. “God is love;” and on this truth—sweet in our present experience—we shall be living through eternity, “if so be we have tasted that the Lord is gracious.”