Remember the Pit

“Remember the hole of the pit from which you were dug” said Isaiah the prophet. It’s a spiritual exercise that the Psalmist models for us in Psalm 40:1-3. Although the exact nature of the pit is not specified – it could be the pit of affliction, of persecution, of mental distress, or of family trouble – it’s most likely it was the pit of sin and guilt. When I look back at that pit I remember it was:

Dirty: I couldn’t see it, feel it, or smell it for many years, but by God’s grace I came to see I was in a filthy, slimy, muddy, miry, disgusting bog of slime and muck.

Deep: Way too deep to climb out of, and getting deeper by the day as the weight of sin and guilt pressed heavier and heavier upon me.

Dark: The Psalmist called it a fearful pit, and full of fear it was, at times horrifying and terrifying with its darkness and hopelessness.

Disabling: Sin and condemnation drained my strength. Repeatedly trying to climb out exhausted and weakened me. I’ve since found out that no one has ever climbed out of it themselves.

Dangerous: There were innumerable unseen dangers in that pit, including spiritual diseases and plagues, meaning the longer in it, the less likely I was to get out of it.

Devilish: Although I couldn’t see him, the devil was always there in the dark, holding me down, pushing me down, pulling my legs away whenever I tried to escape.

Deadly: There were billions of skeletons at the bottom of this pit. Untold numbers perished in it.

Depressing: It was sometimes so awful, so dark, so fearful, so hopeless, I just wanted to give up and give in.

Deceiving: Here’s the scariest thing of all – I was in this pit for 21 years and I never realized it. I was just about over my head in muck, and I thought I was safe and sound. So blinded, so foolish, so deceived!

Damning: Dying in this pit results in the bottomless pit, sinking forever and ever and ever.

Do you remember it?

But what’s the point in going back to such a hideous and ugly place? Why remember the hole of the pit from which we’ve been dug?

So that we can appreciate the solid rock all the more, sing the new song even louder, and enjoy calculating the incalculable sum of God’s mercies towards us (Psalm 40:1-5).


Puritans for Pastors

Puritans for Pastors


Check out

Blogs

40 Questions For Christians Now Waving Rainbow Flags | Kevin DeYoung

3 Unexpected Blessings of Love Wins | True Woman
Maryanne Helms sees increased unity, clarity, and dialogue.

Turning 50: All Uphill From Here | R C Sproul Jr.
A reflection upon aging that prepares me for the BIG 50 next year.

You Don’t Really Know Who Your Friends Are Until… | Tim Challies
…until their relationship with you becomes a liability instead of a benefit.”

Seven Warning Signs of Affairs in Pastors | Thom Rainer
And the most common refrain: “I never thought this would happen to me.”

Kindle Books

Word Pictures in the New Testament by A T Robertson $2.99.

Theologians of the Baptist Tradition by Timothy George $2.99.

Keep It Shut: What to Say, How to Say It, and When to Say Nothing at All by Karen Ehman $2.99. 

Recommended Book

God’s Battle Plan for the Mind: The Puritan Practice of Biblical Meditation by David Saxton $15.54 ($9.99 Kindle)

Video

Bound For Glory

For a limited time, you can stream this teaching series on the family by R C Sproul Jr. for free. Click through to see the first video. Here’s how Ligonier describe it:

Scripture provides a beautiful pattern for the family through clear and transcendent instruction for husbands, wives, children, and the church. Submitting to God through His Word, the family is to be an intimate window into the glory of God. In this updated 9-part teaching series, Dr. R.C. Sproul Jr. provides practical guidance in how to apply this truth.


New Film: Shepherds’ Stories

Shepherds’ Stories is a fundraising DVD for the Gambia Partnership charity, a small Scotland-based mission to Gambia. It includes the testimonies of the following Ministers of the Gospel:

  • Dr Sinclair Ferguson
  • Rev Warren Peel
  • Rev Gavin Beers
  • Rev Shanmugam Partheepan (Sri Lanka)
  • Rev Geoff Thomas

We started watching these testimonies as a family last week and have thoroughly enjoyed them so far. It also brought back many happy memories of my previous pastorate in the Outer Hebrides (The hauntingly beautiful singing you hear at the beginning of the trailer is a sample of Gaelic Psalm singing)

What struck me about these testimonies is that they are all so different, and yet all so similar in that they are all stories of amazing grace. Wonderfully encouraging in these discouraging days. If you click through you can pay $4.99 to rent the video and $9.99 to own it. All the proceeds go to support the mission to Gambia. Here’s the producer’s description:

The gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ is a Shepherd story. It is the story of the Great Shepherd who came to seek and to save that which was lost. It is the story of the One who leaves the ninety and nine to find the sheep who is lost and bear them home upon His shoulder. Each of the men who gives testimony on this DVD are themselves shepherds who preached in the Outer Hebrides of Scotland as visiting ministers. They have been called to preach this gospel to those who are lost and to those who are found. To gather sheep into the fold and keep them there by God’s grace. Each can testify to green pastures and still waters, to the restoration of their souls and to being led along paths of righteousness. Whether delivered from a life of drugs and atheism, a background of Hinduism, a life of godless moralism, converted at a young age, or having served fifty years in the ministry, here are five testimonies to the goodness and mercy of God. Five shepherd stories woven into the great redemptive story of the Good Shepherd, The Lord Jesus Christ who gave His Life for the sheep.


Teaching Outlines From The Westminster Standards

TheChristianLife_Cover

The Christian Faith: Teaching Outlines From The Westminster Standards $2.99

Ever wanted help in learning or in teaching the Westminster Shorter Catechism or the Westminster Confession of Faith? Here’s a book that will do just that by providing you with simple and memorable teaching outlines for each of these historic statements of the Christian faith.

On the Amazon page, you can click “Look Inside” to see a sample of what the outlines look like for the Shorter Catechism. And here’s a sample of the Westminster Confession outlines.

Thanks to Faculty Assistant Marjolein de Blois for all her help with typesetting this book.

May God use this teaching guide to bring these historic documents to life; instructing the head, igniting the heart, and impacting lives for His glory and our enjoyment.


A Bundle of Joy

The Christian Ministry

The Christian Life

God’s Mobile Home


Check out

Blogs

How Should You Talk To Your Children About Same-Sex Marriage | Russell Moore

God’s Purpose For The Supreme Court – And For Everything Else | Desiring God

5 Tips for Families Considering Homeschooling | The Federalist

5 Questions I Wished My Accountability Partner Would Ask Me | Brad Hambrick

When God Flips That Switch| Tim Challies
I loved this. If you read one, read this one.

In An Instant Messaging Age Sometimes It Is Best To Sleep On It | Nathan Bingham
And if you read two, make this the second.

Kindle Books

Perspectives on Family Ministry by Timothy Paul Jones $0.99.

Covenantal Apologetics: Principles and Practice in Defense of Our Faith by K Scott Oliphant $4.99.

Puritan Portraits by J I Packer $3.99.

Recommended Book

The Son of God and the New Creation (Short Studies in Biblical Theology) by Graeme Goldsworthy.

My endorsement: “At last, biblical theology made accessible to the wider church! Goldsworthy gets this much-needed new series of mercifully shorter books on biblical theology off to a wonderful start with an instructive and edifying exploration of the Son of God through the Scriptures. This book cannot but produce greater love of the Bible, greater worship of the Son, and greater anticipation of the new creation.”

Video

How can homosexuality be wrong when it doesn’t harm anyone?


Don’t Expect a Flood of Gay Marriages

Although gay marriage is now legal in all 50 states, don’t expect to see long lines of homosexuals applying for marriage licenses (especially after the initial publicity-seeking flurry is over). After 10 years of same-sex marriage in the Netherlands, it turns out, gay marriage is relatively rare. The central statistics are:

  • Just 20 percent of Dutch homosexual couples are married, compared with 80 percent of heterosexual couples.
  • Dutch survey data suggests that 2.8% of Dutch men and 1.4% of Dutch women are gay or lesbian.
  • About 8% of gay and lesbian people have chosen to marry.

Why so little take-up of same-sex marriage?

Vera Bergkamp, head of a Dutch gay rights organization, says there are three main reasons for the lack of nuptial enthusiasm among gay couples:

Less pressure from family and friends, fewer gay couples marrying to have children than their straight counterparts, and a more individualist, less family‐orientated mindset among many homosexuals.

Why then has so much time, money, and effort been invested in a gay marriage drive that that will only result in a small percent of a tiny percent actually being married?

As I’ve written beforeGay marriage is not primarily about gay marriage, it is mainly about silencing gay consciences. But there’s a second reason. Gay marriage is also about silencing Christians.

Silencing Christians

If I hated God and despised Christians, I’d be an ardent supporter of same-sex marriage. What better way to express enmity against God and His people? That’s a major reason why so many homosexuals who will never marry, and why so many heterosexuals who have no interest in same-sex marriage, wanted it legalized and mandated by the Supreme Court. They wanted a weapon to shove in the face of God and to wield against His faithful people. And the Supreme Court effectively handed our heads to them on a platter. Just watch as this instrument of “equal love” is now wielded against all dissenters. You’re about to see some very unequal hate.

Yes, there will be high-profile cases where pastors and other prominent Christians will be convicted, bankrupted, and imprisoned for so-called hate crimes. Businesses will continue to be targeted and closed down for any explicit or implicit disapproval of same-sex weddings.

But much of the persecution will go largely unnoticed, behind closed doors, in the everyday lives of ordinary Christians: jobs will not be offered, promotions will not be awarded, contracts will be lost, team positions will be forfeited, downsizing will carefully “select” its victims, our children will suffer lost opportunities, our churches will be penalized. All for holding the “wrong view” of marriage; which was the right view in all human civilization until the last few years.

Loving Darkness, Hating Light

We are about to see as we have never seen before in the West in our lifetime: “Light has come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil. For everyone practicing evil hates the light” (John 3:19-20).

Remember what happened to the two angels when they came into Sodom (Genesis 19). A whole city of homosexuals lined up to attack them. And even when God blinded them, they still searched and scrabbled at the door to get to their intended victims.

As they weren’t exactly lacking in opportunities for homosexual sex, what motivated their irrational desire to attack these two particular men? They saw holiness as they had never seen it before, they saw brighter light than ever before, and they were nearer to God than ever before.  And the holiness had to be quashed; the light had to be extinguished; the god-like-ness had to be erased.

That, I believe is what gay marriage is about for many (note, I did not say ALL) homosexuals, and for many heterosexuals too. Yes, it’s about silencing conscience; but it’s also about silencing Christians. And ultimately it’s about silencing God.

(I know there are many “moderate” homosexuals out there who just want to live a quiet life, who don’t want anything to do with persecuting Christians, and who are embarrassed about what bad winners many gay leaders are being. But I’m giving up hope that such moderates will ever have the courage to speak up against their own radicals and fundamentalists.)

So, don’t expect a flood of same-sex marriages. But do expect a flood of “hate-crime” laws and “non-discrimination statutes,” and “conditional government contracts.” And then a flood of Christian victims.

Unless there’s a flood of fire and brimstone first.

Flood of Love

In the meantime, we have an opportunity to love our haters as never before.

No, we will never agree with your same-sex marriage or do anything that in any way expresses approval of same-sex weddings. But if you do marry (and if you don’t), we will love you in every other way possible; we will love you in ways that will surprise and astonish you.

We’ll bless you when you curse us.

We’ll pray for you when you abuse us.

We’ll be kind to you when you are cruel to us.

We’ll not retaliate when you ruin us.

We’ll defend your right to speak and disagree with us even when you want to silence us.

We’ll be a Good Samaritan to you when you are a road-crosser and other-sider to us.

We’ll employ you for non-faith-related jobs if you are the best candidate, even though you want to bankrupt our businesses.

We’ll help you when you’re poor even though you want to impoverish us.

We’ll not insult you when you call us bigots.

We’ll be the best neighbors you’ve ever had.

We’ll love you as much as we love ourselves – and that’s a lot.

And we just have two simple requests of you. Accept that, because of the Bible’s teaching, we will never agree with gay marriage. And please don’t ask us to do anything for your weddings.

That’s it. Is that really too much to ask?