Wednesday, May 06, 2026

 

Tim Keller political ideologies which are idolatries

Every political ideology: 1. Idolizes something that’s good-but-fallen: for Nationalists it’s the people; for Conservatives it’s the market; for Liberals it’s individual freedom and reason; for Progressives (also referred to as Socialists) it’s racial/gender/sexual identity and the State. 2. Demonizes something that’s good-but-fallen: for Nationalists it’s the other races/cultures; for Conservatives it’s the State and big organizations; for Liberals it’s moral authorities like religion and family; for Progressives it’s the free market of money and ideas. 3. Each of them tends to exclude and marginalize classes of people they see as enemies. 4. Each of them tends to idolize people they see as saviors. 5. Each of them fails to see the complexity of evil. The Bible sees the world, the flesh and the devil. Progressives see only the world, systemic evil; Liberals see only the flesh, individual moral evil. Nationalists have some sense of both but only as seen in other cultures. None recognize the demonic aspect of evil in the world. So all offer simplistic solutions not only to society but to individuals. All these secular hopes will fail because they don’t fit the complexity of good-but-fallen reality. Dad wrote this in January 2023 a few months before he died. It shows how Christians should think of our modern political ideologies. Part 2 drops this summer. https://gospelinlife.com/article/a-political-case-study-four-americas-ideologies-idolatries-part-1-of-a-2-part-series/ -Michael Keller


Tuesday, May 05, 2026

 

Rosner Paul and the law

ARTICLES

Volume 51 - Issue 1

The Puzzle of Paul and the Law: A Hermeneutical Solution 

BY BRIAN S. ROSNER 

While the influence of Don Carson extends across many areas, I am especially grateful for his example and encouragement on the topics of the use of the Old Testament in the New Testament and biblical theology. I met and got to know Don at Tyndale House in Cambridge as a young doctoral student at the university in the late 1980s. I am not alone in owing him a debt of gratitude for his support. Don was the editor of three major projects involving numerous scholars, to which I contributed: the ground-breaking NSBT and Pillar commentary series and the Commentary on the Use of the Old Testament in the New Testament. I also had the privilege of co-editing with Don (and two others) the New Dictionary of Biblical Theology.Indeed, Don has played a major role in the flourishing of both disciplines in biblical scholarship in the last forty years.

My Paul and the Law: Keeping the Commandments of God tackled the thorny and sometimes controversial question of Paul’s relationship to the Law of Moses.1Three theological positions have a strong interest in Paul’s view of the law. Each tends to focus on an emphasis in Paul’s letters that is clearly present but plays down other aspects of the subject. Broadly speaking, Lutheranism holds that Paul believed that Christ abolished the law and that the Law is the counterpoint to the gospel. The primary role of the Law is to lead us to despair of any hope of obedience leading to God’s acceptance and to drive us to seek God’s mercy in Christ. For the most part the Law is not seen as playing a big role in the Christian life (although Luther himself made effective use of the law in his catechisms). Second, the Reformed view agrees that salvation is by grace and not by obeying the law, but once saved we are under the moral law and must obey it in order to please God. Third, the so-called New Perspective on Paul, which is really a new perspective on Paul in relation to Judaism, thinks that the problem of the Law for Paul is not that salvation is by grace and not by works, but that Paul’s opposition to the law was simply that it was used by Jews to exclude Gentiles from the people of God; Jewish ethnocentrism is the reason Paul opposed the Law. There is something to learn from each of these perspectives. In my view, the challenge is holding onto their valid insights in a manner that does justice to the full range of evidence and, with important qualifications, does not deny the validity of other perspectives.

How Christians are meant to read the Law of Moses is something of a puzzle. The apostle Paul addresses this question, but his letters present both negative critique and positive approval of the Law. Paul describes the Law as “holy, just and good” (Rom 7:12), a very positive gift of God (9:4), and quotes it when regulating the conduct of believers in Christ (e.g., Deut 25:4 in 1 Cor 9:9). On the other hand, he speaks of the Law as an enslaving power, increasing trespass, and used by sin to bring about death (Gal 4:1–10Rom 5:20; 7:5).

Discussing Paul and the Law is a bit like being watched while you carve a chicken:2 it’s fairly easy to start well, but you quickly have to make some tricky decisions (about which everyone has an opinion), and it’s very easy to end up in a sticky mess with lots of bits left over that no one knows what to do with. Studies of Paul and the law distinguish themselves by whether they face these unmistakable tensions in his letters and how they explain them. The best biblical theology not only has texts to explain its position but also does not have texts that it needs to explain away rather than embrace and incorporate.

1. A Hermeneutical Solution

In Paul and the Law I argue that Paul’s letters are marked by negative and positive statements about the Law, the question to ask is not “which bits” of the Law is he referring to in each case, but the hermeneutical question of “in what sense” or “as what” are we to read the Law? Asking in which capacity or with what force the Law meets the Christian resolves the tension between the negative and positive material. Christians, according to Paul, do not read the Law of Moses as “Law-covenant,” since we are “not under the Law” (Rom 6:14Gal 5:18). Instead, we read the Law “as prophecy” of the gospel and “as wisdom” for Christian living.3

That we are not to read the Law as a binding legal code is implied in that, unlike Jews in Romans 2, Paul never says that believers in Christ do the Law (v. 25), observe the righteous requirements of the Law (v. 26), transgress the Law (vv. 23, 25 and 27), and possess the (Law as a) written code (v. 27). Instead, Paul insists, Christians fulfil the Law (e.g., Rom 13:8–10Gal 5:13).4

Reading the Law as prophecy is signaled in Romans 3:21, where Paul asserts that the disclosure of the righteousness of God in the gospel is attested by “the Law and the prophets;” Romans 16:25–26, where Paul notes the role of “the prophetic writings” in “declaring the gospel beforehand;” and Galatians 3:8, where we are told that the gospel was “announced beforehand to Abraham.” D. A. Carson wrote that Paul does not uphold the Law for Christians “as lex, as ongoing legal demand,” but rather its continuity is sustained in that it points to and anticipates the “new ‘righteousness from God’ that has come in Christ Jesus.”5

Reading the Law as wisdom is supported by 1 Corinthians 10:11, where Paul describes the Law as “instruction,” νουθεσία, and in Romans 15:4, where he says that the Law is a source of moral “teaching,” διδασκαλία. Both νουθεσία and διδασκαλία are terms that have clear wisdom associations. Paul uses the cognate verbs, νουθετέω and διδάσκω, in contexts that indicate that the functions of instructing/admonishing and teaching are undertaken in conjunction with wisdom: “We proclaim him by instructing and teaching all people with all wisdom so that we may present every person mature in Christ” (Col 1:28); “teach and admonishone another in all wisdom” (Col 3:16). Further, in 2 Timothy 3:16–17, where the practical usefulness of Scripture, including the Law, is explained is particularly enlightening: “All scripture is inspired by God and is useful for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness” (2 Tim 3:16–17, NRSV). Three of the four terms in these verses that explicate the usefulness of Scripture, namely, “reproof” (ἐλεγμός), “correction” (ἐπανόρθωσις), and “training” (παιδεία) are wisdom terms.

2. Reception of the Hermeneutical Solution

Most reviews of Paul and the Law have been quite positive, and a few major scholars have indicated agreement with my position. For example, in his Pauline theology Douglas J. Moo writes: “Brian Rosner has highlighted the many ways in which Paul assumes the teaching of the law in his own teaching and comes to a conclusion that I find quite compelling. While not imposing the law as an authoritative norm, Paul reappropriates the law as ‘wisdom,’ integrating its essential core into his own teaching.”6And Thomas R. Schreiner describes my book as “a helpful study on Paul’s understanding of the Law,” concurring that “describing Paul’s view of the law solely in terms of abolition is unsatisfying, however, since we also find the motif of fulfillment in his writings.”7

Some pushbacks have arisen in Reformed circles, fearing that reading the Law as wisdom rather than as legal requirement diminishes its moral authority and usefulness. In the rest of this article, I seek to clarify what I mean by reading the Law as wisdom and show that it can be illustrated not only in Paul’s letters but also in the teaching of Jesus and in Lutheran and Reformed catechisms, taking the laws against stealing and murder as examples. As we will see, reading the Law as wisdom is in fact a higher moral bar than reading it as a legal code to be obeyed and not transgressed.

3. The Law as Wisdom

The seed of the notion of the Law as wisdom is planted in Moses’s description of the purpose of the Law in Deuteronomy 4:6: “You must observe them [the laws] diligently, for this will show your wisdom and discernment to the peoples, who, when they hear all these statutes, will say, ‘Surely this great nation is a wise and discerning people!’” Psalms and Proverbs contain texts that similarly take the Law to be a font of wisdom: “The Law of the LORD is perfect, reviving the soul; the decrees of the LORD are sure, making wise the simple” (Ps 19:7); “Your commandment makes me wiser than my enemies, for it is always with me” (119:98); “Those who keep the Law are wise children” (Prov 28:7a).

The morality of the Mosaic laws is based on the creation’s moral order, the same basis of wisdom taught elsewhere in the Old Testament. As Christopher Wright puts it, in the Law of Moses obedience is not only to the God of covenant purpose and redemptive action but also to the God of created order.8 Genesis 1 presents creation as a place of order, system, and structure, “which provides an objective basis for the exercise of moral freedom and sets limits to moral relativism … . There is a basic shape to the world which we did not invent, and therefore a corresponding shape to the moral response required of us … . Morality, in biblical terms, is preconditioned by the given shape of creation.”9 According to Oliver O’Donovan, the Law is a wise articulation of the created order.10

Paul reads the Law as wisdom for living, in the sense that he internalizes the Law, makes reflective and expansive applications, and takes careful notice of its basis in the order of creation and the character of God. Taking two examples, this can be seen in the way in which Paul makes use of the laws against stealing and murder.

4. The Commandment against Stealing

Paul mentions the subject of stealing three times in his letters. In Romans 2:17–24 he alludes to the Decalogue commandment not to steal and uses the language of legal obligation. Significantly, the context is his challenge to his Jewish opponents as to whether they transgress the commandments. According to Paul, for Jews the Law remains a legal code that must be obeyed and not transgressed.

In Romans 13:8–10 Paul cites the commandment not to steal in a discussion for Christians of how love fulfills the Law. In this passage, it is not that Christians must “keep” the laws listed. Rather, Paul makes the point that not being under the Law does not lead to license; the obligation to love brings the Law to completion. Paul’s point is that loving your neighbor is the goal of keeping the Law. But keeping the laws (even those of the Decalogue, such as Laws against adultery, murder, stealing, and coveting) does not mean that you will love your neighbor. But if you love your neighbor, you will do more than just keep the Law, fulfilling what Paul takes to be their real intent.

The third text is Ephesians 4:28, where Paul addresses Christians and instructs them not to steal: “Thieves must give up stealing; rather let them labor and work honestly with their own hands, so as to have something to share with the needy” (NRSV). Paul reflects on the responsibility to work, established in Genesis 2:15, in order to be able to share with the needy. His reflective application of the law against stealing in Ephesians 4:28 is instruction for living that exemplifies the re-appropriation of the Law as wisdom.

The Heidelberg Catechism makes similar moves in reading the commandment not to steal in Questions 111 and 112. Not content to read the Law as only forbidding “outright theft and robbery,” the catechism explains that “in God’s sight theft also includes all evil tricks and schemes to get our neighbor’s goods for ourselves … such as inaccurate measurements of weight, size, or volume; fraudulent merchandising; counterfeit money; [and] excessive interest. … God forbids all greed.” Further, the catechism teaches that the commandment not to steal, echoing Ephesians 4:28, obliges me to “work faithfully so that I may help the needy in their hardship.”11

Similarly, Luther’s Small Catechism makes an expansive application of the commandment not to steal: “What does this mean? We should fear and love God so that we do not take our neighbor’s money or possessions, or get them in any dishonest way, but help him to improve and protect his possessions and income.”12

5. The Commandment against Murder

How does Paul read the commandment against murder (Exod 20:13Deut 5:17)? The influence of the murder commandment in Romans offers another example of how Paul reads the Law as wisdom.

Romans refers to the commandment not to murder on two occasions, employing the lexeme φόν- “murder,” which is used in the LXX murder commandment. The first is in Romans 1 in a vice list (1:29–31), which includes links to the Decalogue commandments against covetousness and rebellion against parents. The passage demonstrates that Paul continues to use the Law as the means of condemning the conduct of those outside of Christ.

A full appreciation of the influence of the murder commandment in Paul’s moral teaching requires some attention to contemporary Jewish use of the commandment, along with the use of the commandment in the OT.13 In brief, murder was widely regarded as the quintessential anti-social sin, the opposite of love. Other laws overlapped with murder, and the notion of murder was exploited in its capacity as a metaphor for social injustice, including anger and malicious speech.

With this in mind, Paul’s extensive use of other expressions for murder-related activity in Romans is significant. In Romans 3:13–15 he quotes Scripture on murderous speech (“the venom of vipers is under their lips”) and murderous deeds (“feet swift to shed blood”). In Romans 7:11 Paul personifies sin and depicts it as a killer in his discussion of sin and the Law. Romans 8:35–36 refers to being killed and persecuted for God’s sake. In Romans 11:3 Elijah is quoted as pleading to God against Israel: “Lord, they have killed your prophets … and are seeking my life.” In Romans 12:14, 17–21 Paul refers to those who persecute God’s people. And in Romans 14:13, 15, 20, 21Paul warns the strong about destroying those who are weak in faith. The influence of the murder commandment is profound, in spite of Paul nowhere saying or implying that believers are under the Law.

Jesus’s exposition of the commandment not to murder in Matthew 5 is noteworthy for its internalized application. He judges hatred to be tantamount to murder, a surface expression of something deeper: “You have heard that it was said to the people long ago, ‘You shall not murder, and anyone who murders will be subject to judgment.’ But I tell you that anyone who is angry with a brother or sister will be subject to judgment” (5:21–22a). And he warns that God does not accept the worship of those who are angry: “if you are offering your gift at the altar and there remember that your brother or sister has something against you, leave your gift there in front of the altar. First go and be reconciled to them; then come and offer your gift” (5:23–24).

The Heidelberg Catechism similarly undertakes expansive applications of the murder commandment, focusing on the heart motivations: “I am not to belittle, hate, insult, or kill my neighbor—not by my thoughts, my words, my look or gesture, and certainly not by actual deeds.” It teaches that “by forbidding murder God teaches us that he hates the root of murder: envy, hatred, anger, vengefulness. In God’s sight all such are disguised forms of murder.” For the catechism, not to murder is the opposite of love: “By condemning envy, hatred, and anger God wants us to love our neighbor as ourselves, to be patient, peace-loving, gentle, merciful, and friendly toward them, to protect them from harm as much as we can, and to do good even to our enemies.”14

Similarly, Luther’s Small Catechism expands the application of the murder commandment beyond the taking of a life: “You shall not murder. What does this mean? We should fear and love God so that we do not hurt or harm our neighbor in his body, but help and support him in every physical need.”15

6. Written for Our Instruction

Believers in Christ are not under the Law as a legal code. But the Law of Moses is still valid as God’s inspired Word. Reading it makes us wise for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus and equips us for every good work (2 Tim 3:15–16). The Law trains us for righteous living when we read the Law as wisdom. Such a reading strategy is exemplified by Jesus Christ and the apostle Paul and reflected in Lutheran and Reformed catechisms. We do well to read the Law as wisdom for our own moral correction and formation. To quote Paul, the Law of Moses was written “for us” (1 Cor 9:10) and “for our [moral] instruction [διδασκαλία]” (Rom 15:4; cf. 1 Cor 10:11).


Brian S. Rosner 

Brian Rosner is director of research and senior lecturer in New Testament at Ridley College in Melbourne, Australia.


 

Spurgeon I will never leave you or forsake you

But now to come to the promise, itself, "I will never leave you, nor forsake you." I shall
call your attention, first of all, to—
I. THE REMARKABLE CHARACTER OF THIS PROMISE.
Is it not an amazing fact that while others leave us and forsake us, that God never does?
It is to each one of His own redeemed people that He says, "I will never leave you, nor forsake
you." How often do men play false and forsake those whom they call their friends when
those friends fall into poverty Ah, the tragedies of some of these cruel forsakings! May you
never know them! These so-called friends knew their friends when that suit of black was
new, but how sadly their eyesight fails them, now it is turned to a rusty brown! They knew
them extremely well when once a week they sat with their legs under their table and shared
their generous hospitality—but they know them not, now that they knock at their door and
crave help in a time of need!
Matters have changed altogether and friends that once were cherished are now forgotten.
In fact, the man almost pities himself to think that he should have been so unfortunate to
have a friend who has come down so and he has no pity for his friend because he is so much
occupied in pitying himself! In hundreds, thousands and tens of thousands of cases, as soon
as the gold has gone, the pretended love has gone! And when the dwelling has been changed
from the mansion to the cottage, the friendship, which once promised to last forever, has
suddenly disappeared!
But, Brothers and Sisters, God will never leave us on account of poverty! However low
we may be brought, there it always stands—"I will never leave you, nor forsake you." Scant
may be your board. You may have hard work to provide things honest in the sight of all
men. You may sometimes have to look and look again—and wonder by what straits you
will be enabled to escape out of your present difficulty. But when all friends have turned
their backs and when acquaintances have fallen from you like leaves in autumn, He has said,
"I will never leave you, nor forsake you." Then beneath His bounty you shall find a shelter!
Sometimes, and very often, too, men lose all their friends if they fall into any temporary disgrace. They may really have done no wrong—they may even have done right— but
public opinion may condemn the course they took, or slander may be propagated which
casts them into the shade! And then men suddenly grow forgetful. They do not know the
man—how should they? He is not the same man—to them at any rate—and as the world
gives him the cold shoulder, his friends serve him the same. The old proverb, "The devil
take the hindmost," seems to be generally the custom with our friends when we get into
seeming disgrace! They are all off, seeing who can run away first, for they fear that they shall
be left to share in our dishonor. But it is never so with our God. "I will never leave you, nor
forsake you." You may be put into the dungeon, like Paul and Silas, but God will make you
sing there, even at midnight! You may be set in the stocks, but even there God will cause
you to greatly rejoice! You may be cast into the fiery furnace, but He will tread the flames
with you! You may be so dishonored that men shall treat you as they did God's only Son—and
lift you up upon the cross of shame and put you to death—but you shall never ask, "Why
have You forsaken me?" Your Lord said it when He bore your guilt, but you shall never need
to say it, for your guilt is put away forever and Jehovah will stand by you in all your dishonor!
And let me say here that there is never a child in the family that is dearer to the great Father
than the child that is suffering shame and contempt from others! He loves them dearest
when they suffer reproach for His sake! These are nearer to His heart than any other and
He bids them rejoice and be exceedingly glad, for great shall be their reward in Heaven if
thus they bear and endure for His name! "I will never leave you, My persecuted one! I will
pour such joy into your heart that you shall forget all the dishonor. I will send an angel to
minister to you. Yes, I will, Myself, be with you and you shall rejoice in My salvation while
your heart is glad and calm in the midst of the tumult and the strife around."
Blessed be God, all the shame and spitting that men can put upon us can never put our
God away, for, "He has said, I will never leave you, nor forsake you." Alas, sad is it for human
nature that we must say it—how many have been forsaken when they have been no longer
able to minister to the pleasure and comfort of those who admired them while they profited
by them! Some are thus thrown aside just as men throw away household stuff that is worn
out and is of no further use. Depend upon it, men will not forsake us while they can get
anything out of us! But when there is no longer anything to profit by, when the poor woman
becomes so decrepit that she can scarcely move from her bed to her chair, when the man
becomes so laid aside by accident or is so weak that he cannot take his place in the great
march of life—then he is like the soldiers in Napoleon's march—he drops out of the line to
die and thousands either march over him, or if they are a little more merciful, march by and
around him! But few are those who will stop to care for such and attend to them. How often are the incurable forsaken and left! But He has said, "I will never leave you, nor forsake you."
If we should getso old that we cannot serve the Church of God, even by a single word. If we
should become so sick that we are only a burden to those of our house who have to nurse
us. If we should grow so feeble that we could not lift our hand to our lip, yet the eternal love
of Jehovah would not have diminished, no, not so much as by a single jot towards the souls
whom He had loved from before the foundation of the world! However low your condition,
you shall find God's love is always underneath for your uplifting! However weak you are,
His strength shall be revealed in the everlasting arms that will not permit you to sink into
disaster and your soul into Hell. This, then, is a very precious text! Others may forsake us
for different reasons—too many to be mentioned now—but He has said, "I will never leave
you, nor forsake you." Well, then, let the rest go! If the Lord Jehovah stands at our right
hand, we can well afford to see the backs of all our friends, for we shall find Friends enough
in the Triune God whom we delight to serve!
Again, this is a very remarkable promise if we think of our own conduct towards God.
"He has said, I will never leave you, nor forsake you." And have not we often said the same
to Him? We were like Peter—we felt we did love our Savior—we were sure we did and we
did not, could not believe that we could ever be so false or so faithless as to forsake Him.
We almost longed for some temptation to prove how true we would be! We felt very vexed
with other professors, that they should prove so untrue! We felt in our heart that we could
not do like that and that we would stand firm under any imaginable pressure! But what be-
came of us, my Brothers and Sisters? Charge your memories a moment. Did the rooster that
accused Peter never accuse you? Did you never deny your Lord and Master and, at last,
hearing the warning voice, go out and weep bitterly because you had forgotten Him—He
whom you had declared so solemnly you would never forsake? Oh, yes, I fear we, many and
many a time, have said, "I will never leave You, nor forsake You," and yet under some sarcasm,
some ridicule, or some pressing trial, we have been like the children of Ephraim and, though
armed and carrying bows, we have turned our back in the day of battle! If your voice has
never denied Christ, has your heart ever done so? If your tongue has remained silent, has
not your soul sometimes gone back to the old flesh-pots of Egypt and said, "I would gladly
find comfort once again where I did find it with my old companions and in the old ways"?
Ah, well, as you think of this—how unkindly and ungenerously you have treated your
Lord—let this text stand out in bold relief, "He has said, I will never leave you, nor forsake
you." Although you have often forgotten Him, yet, His loving kindness changes not! Though
you have been fickle, He has been firm! Though you have sometimes believed Him not, yet
He has remained faithful—glory be to His name!

Monday, May 04, 2026

 

All the Blessings of Life… Ephesians 1:7 In Him we have redemption


Blessings.. In the deep South  “Well bless your heart!”
And if you don’t like him.. “well Bless his heart”
Adolph Hitler .. “Well Bless his heart!”
Really? We need to get a real understanding of blessings.
In a world of financial trouble where rents keep rising and cost of living is very hard…where are our blessings?
Psalm 73 Asaph had a problem
 2 But as for me, my feet had almost stumbled, my steps had nearly slipped.  3 For I was envious of the arrogant when I saw the prosperity of the wicked.  4 For they have no pangs until death; their bodies are fat and sleek.  5 They are not in trouble as others are;they are not stricken like the rest of mankind.  6 Therefore pride is their necklace; violence covers them as a garment.  7 Their eyes swell out through fatness; their hearts overflow with follies.  8 They scoff and speak with malice; loftily they threaten oppression.  9 They set their mouths against the heavens,
and their tongue struts through the earth.  10 Therefore his people turn back to them,and find no fault in them. 11 And they say, “How can God know?Is there knowledge in the Most High?”  12 Behold, these are the wicked;
always at ease, they increase in riches.  13 All in vain have I kept my heart clean and washed my hands in innocence.
 
Then he got to thinking at church one day.
 21 When my soul was embittered, when I was pricked in heart,  22 I was brutish and ignorant; I was like a beast toward you.  23 Nevertheless, I am continually with you;
you hold my right hand.  24 You guide me with your counsel, and afterward you will receive me to glory.
25 Whom have I in heaven but you? And there is nothing on earth that I desire besides you.  26  My flesh and my heart may fail, but God is the strength of my heart and my portion forever.
 
Do you get overwhelmed with troubles?
Do you get worried and concerned about your financial situation?
Asaph found an anchor.. It was in Spiritual blessings…they anchor his soul when the waves of trouble hit him.
 You need an anchor.
You are already blessed.
Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places,
How to Be Blessed
7 In him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of our trespasses, according to the riches of his grace
Something Purchased  redemption (agorazo) through his blood,  Ransom price.
Something Precious  his blood,  1Peter 1:18 knowing that you were ransomed from the futile ways inherited from your forefathers, not with perishable things such as silver or gold,19 but with the precious blood of Christ, like that of a lamb without blemish or spot.
Something Perpetual 7 In him we have redemption through his blood,   but with the precious blood of Christ, like that of a lamb without blemish or spot.
A Lamb For A Man Genesis 4:4 Abel also brought of the firstborn of his flock and of their fat. And the LORD respected Abel and his offering,  Genesis 22: Then he said, "Look, the fire and the wood, but where is the lamb for a burnt offering?“ 8 And Abraham said, "My son, God will provide for Himself the lamb for a burnt offering." So the two of them went together.
A Lamb For A Family Exodus 12: Then Moses called for all the elders of Israel and said to them, "Pick out and take lambs for yourselves according to your families, and kill the Passover lamb.22 And you shall take a bunch of hyssop, dip it in the blood that is in the basin, and strike the lintel and the two doorposts with the blood that is in the basin.
A Lamb For A Nation Leviticus 23 The feast of firstfruits: 12 And you shall offer on that day, when you wave the sheaf, a male lamb of the first year, without blemish, as a burnt offering to the LORD.
A Lamb For The World John 1:29 The next day John saw Jesus coming toward him, and said, "Behold! The Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world!” Isaiah 53: 5  But he was pierced for our transgressions; …7 He was oppressed, and he was afflicted, yet he opened not his mouth; like a lamb that is led to the slaughter, and like a sheep that before its shearers is silent, so he opened not his mouth.
A Lamb For The Redeemed  Revelation 5: And I looked, and behold, in the midst of the throne and of the four living creatures, and in the midst of the elders, stood a Lamb as though it had been slain, .. " You are worthy to take the scroll, And to open its seals; For You were slain, And have redeemed us to God by Your blood out of every tribe and tongue and people and nation, 
A Lamb For You?  1Peter 1: but with the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot.20 He indeed was foreordained before the foundation of the world, but was manifest in these last times for you
Something Painful  through his blood, Isa 49: 16 Behold, I have engraved you on the palms of my hands; 
See from His head, His hands His feet, Sorrow and love flow mingled down..
Something Personal 7 In him we have redemption
Something Present 7 In him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of our trespasses,
Something Powerful 7 In him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of our trespasses, according to the riches of His grace
What Should You Do?
Rejoice in Him  and Rely upon Him
 -you are blessed!  “He chose us in him before the foundation of the world”
 -you are accepted! “He predestined us to adoption as sons”
 -you are sealed! ”In him you also, when you heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation, and believed in him, were sealed with the promised Holy Spirit,”
You have significance. Ephesians 1:8 which he lavished upon us, in all wisdom and insight 9 making known3  to us the mystery of his will, according to his purpose, which he set forth in Christ 10 as a plan for the fullness of time, to unite all things in him, things in heaven and things on earth.
All of the universe is concerned about you. It revolves around you knowing the riches of blessings you already have in Christ.
Angels stoop longing to look into the blessings you have through our Saviour!


Saturday, May 02, 2026

 

All the blessings of life

The Book of common prayer
The general thanksgiving 
Almighty God, Father of all mercies, we, thine unworthy servants, do give thee most humble and hearty thanks for all thy goodness and loving-kindness to us, and to all men; We bless thee for our creation, preservation, and all the blessings of this life; but above all, for thine inestimable love in the redemption of the world by our Lord Jesus Christ; for the means of grace, and for the hope of glory..."

 

Redress scheme issues. With thoughts from Stefanie Costi workplace lawyer.

A workplace investigation should not be run by the people complained about. I can’t say this enough. If they are running it, it’s not an investigation. It’s a cover-up. Yet, this is exactly what happens in toxic workplaces. They investigate themselves, they protect themselves and then they call it “procedural fairness.” The outcome is already decided and they are just pretending to take a complaint seriously. Is there • A genuinely independent investigator (not their HR, not their mate, not someone on their payroll). • A real response to the allegations with evidence. • Clear information about the process, the scope and who is making the decision. • Protection from retaliation during and after the investigation. • Access to documents, witness statements and what’s actually being said. • Enough time to respond, instead of being rushed. If you don’t get these, it’s not fair. It’s a set-up. Don’t be fooled. Do you agree?


 

Preaching course


Monday, April 27, 2026

 

Psalm 37. What to do in a crisis

These days, many of us are feeling scared. Turmoil at home and abroad has left our economy reeling. Chaos seems to reign in the markets. Prices remain high and household budgets are tight.
 
The economy isn’t in crisis, but it feels unstable, leaving us uncertain and stressed about our financial futures.  
 
Yet we must look to the things that have eternal value: faith, hope, and the treasure that awaits us in heaven.
 
When times are uncertain, what does God have to say that will give us comfort?
 
Psalm 37 speaks to our hearts when fear is stalking us. David wrote this psalm when he was older, reflecting on the great questions of his life.
 
I have been young and now am old;
Yet I have not seen the righteous forsaken,
Nor his descendants begging bread.
Psalm 37:25
 
Let’s discover seven solid principles from Psalm 37 that will increase our reliance on God and anchor us in these days of instability.
 
1. Decide to Trust in the Lord
Trust in the Lord.
Psalm 37:3
 
We find true stability in this unstable world only when we trust in God. To trust is to be confident—to possess a strong sense of security. Trust is not an emotion that just springs up in our hearts as does anger, jealousy, or sadness. It is always a choice based on reason.
 
It’s easy to say we trust God will take care of us, but when financial anxiety looms like an approaching storm, we’re forced to confront our faith level.
 
Trust in God will not make the uncertainty go away; it means we know He will provide what we truly need. In Christ our hope stands tall, solid, and untouchable. In Him we have a home that outshines the sun, an inheritance that can never perish, and treasures that can never be taken from us. The deed to our heavenly home is signed and sealed with the blood of Christ; the contract is ratified by the Resurrection. And no one will ever take that away.


2. Do Things That Honour the Lord
Trust in the Lord, and do good.
Psalm 37:3
 
After trust, David tells us, do good—in other words, trust and obey. Trust is an act of the mind, while obedience is an act of the hands and feet. Once we’ve set our minds on the wisdom of God, we get busy doing the things He would have us do.
 
In 1 Timothy 6:17-19, Paul stresses the idea of both thinking rightly (trust) and then acting rightly (obedience). Right thinking means trusting in an unshakable God instead of in riches that we can’t take with us. And right acting means doing good here on earth, which builds a heavenly nest egg of riches waiting just for us.
 
The great Christian leader John Wesley lived in a time of financial disruption, with collapsing economies due to the Industrial Revolution.
 
Wesley saw the crowds of hurting people as Jesus would see them, and he designed ministries to care for them. His ministry became a financial success, and his annual salary grew. Instead of increasing his own lifestyle, Wesley calculated the small sum that he really needed to live on and gave the rest away. He saw it as investing in the things of God, which never perish.
 
Wesley’s famous words sum it up well: 'Gain all you can, save all you can, give all you can.'1
 
When we do things that honour the Lord, we invest in eternity.

3. Dwell on the Faithfulness of the Lord 
The Lord shall help them and deliver them;
He shall deliver them from the wicked,
And save them,
Because they trust in Him.
Psalm 37:40

 
To trust in the Lord is to respond to His faithfulness. David knew from experience that God rewards faith with blessings. As a young man, David had been anointed as the next king of Israel. Then he spent years living in forests and caves as the reigning king hunted him down. He had to do more than merely assent to the idea of God’s faithfulness—he had to stake his life on it.
 
Life was hard during those long, perilous years. But in time, Saul died, David became king, and he could attest to the fact that God keeps His promises.
 
Timothy George, the dean of Beeson Divinity School, recalls a story from one of his professors, Dr Gardner Taylor. He had been assigned to a poor, rural church with a sanctuary lit by a single lightbulb hanging from the ceiling.
 
One evening he was preaching with gusto when the power went out. He stumbled around in the dark until an elderly deacon cried out, 'Preach on, brother! We can still see Jesus in the dark!'
 
Sometimes, George concludes, we see Him best in the dark. 'And the good news of the gospel is that whether or not we can see him in the dark, he can see us in the dark.'2


4. Delight Yourself in the Lord  
Delight yourself also in the Lord,
And He shall give you the desires of your heart.
Psalm 37:4
 
Although I have many earthly delights, my deepest delight is found in the Lord. I can go to Him no matter what is happening in my world, and the amazing truth is that He finds delight in me!
 
God’s promise to us is that if we delight ourselves in Him, He will give us the desires of our hearts. But this isn’t a shortcut to prosperity. We don’t delight in the Lord so that He will give us what we want. That approach confuses faith with greed.
 
No, when we find true and genuine pleasure in God, we find our own desires coming into alignment with His desires. We begin to live in His will, and we pray accordingly.
 
I will delight myself in Your statutes;
I will not forget Your word.
Psalm 119:16
 
To delight in God means we must delight in His Word, and delighting in God’s Word leads us to delight in God. And delight in God drives away fear.


5. Dedicate Your Life to the Lord  
Commit your way to the Lord,
Trust also in Him,
And He shall bring it to pass.
Psalm 37:5
 
Once we have found our deepest delight in God, we realise that we must give all of our lives to Him. This isn’t a temporary commitment. It’s a choice and a contract of the heart. As in marriage, we commit ourselves to that partnership for the rest of our lives.
 
How can committing to the Lord help us in times of chaos, uncertainty, even loss? In committing to Him, we cast all our burdens upon Him. He becomes our life—the place where we bring our problems, our joys, our marriages, our families, our careers. Life and happiness are no longer dependent on financial success or material possessions. It’s all about Him.
 
When we dedicate ourselves to God, there is no such thing as being helpless. Even when we face burdens too heavy to bear, and feel we can’t take another step, He can carry the weight for us.
 
So, why keep struggling with your anxiety on your own? Why not give the burden to Him? Nothing could be more liberating.

6. Download Your Worry to the Lord 
Do not fret because of him who prospers in his way,
Because of the man who brings wicked schemes to pass.
Psalm 37:7
 
Economic chaos affects everyone. There is a new level of financial anxiety that can present a real challenge to our faith today.
 
We can face our future with fear or with faith. If you’ve decided to follow Christ, that means walking by faith (2 Corinthians 5:7). That does not mean Satan will give up on you. He will try to chip away at your faith by pointing you to the fear of the moment.
 
But fear about money—or about anything, for that matter—is never part of God’s plan for us. As Paul writes, 'God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound mind' (2 Timothy 1:7). Embed this verse in your mind and bring it to the forefront whenever you feel that first pang of fear.
 
Faith in God assures us that He holds our lives in His powerful, loving hand, which means no fears can truly harm us.
 

7. Discipline Yourself to Wait on the Lord  
Rest in the Lord, and wait patiently for Him.
Psalm 37:7
 
Waiting doesn’t come easily for us. In this age of instant gratification, we’re conditioned not to wait for anything.
 
When we face uncertainty, we know we must trust God’s timetable for dealing with it. But what we’d like better is for Him to accede to ours. The fact that we cannot see into the future can convince us that the future is up for grabs. But rest assured, God is completely in control. Though His timing may seem slow to us, from the viewpoint of eternity, it is perfect. God is never early and never late.
 
Waiting is difficult in the face of the unknown, but it’s a discipline with a huge payoff. Those who wait on the Lord will 'inherit the earth' because those pushers and shovers in life’s express line have all burned out, victims of their own impatience (Psalm 37:9). Patient people are happier and healthier, and God will exalt them.
 
We may cry out, but our hope is intact because our losses are only a reminder of the grand gift that, once received, can never be lost. And it’s worth waiting for.

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