Vain Pursuits and Solomon’s Mistake

Here are two quotes from Nathan Busenitz Book – Men of The Word.

This is from the section on the life of Solomon, and it would do us good to take heed and learn from his life.

What a reminder for those of us today who life in a world consumed by the American sewam. We are told that we can accomplish anything we want if we just work hard enough, and then we will be happy and fulfilled. But does satisfaction await us at the top of the corporate ladder or in the achievement of our goals and ambitions? Solomon’s answer to that question was an unmistakable NO!  After a lifetime of amazing accomplishments, he came to the end of the rainbow expecting to find a treasure chest of happiness. But, as he himself testified, it was just a mirage.

Solomon’s testimony serves as a somber warning and a timely reminder for us today. As he learned the hard way, the more we search for life outside of God, the more we will experience disappointment and emptiness within our hearts. Life lived apart from God is the height of vanity. But life lived in fellowship with him is the sweetest and most fulfilling experience possible. Ironically, the wisest man who ever lived ended his search at the very place where we should begin ours: with the recognition that the pursuit of true happiness is the pursuit of God Himself!

18 Nov, 2011  Posted by Forgiven   No Comments »
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Quotes on Sin, Life, Death and Love!

Sin is the dare of God’s Justice, the rape of his mercy, the jeer of his patience, the slight of his power, and the contempt of his love. John Bunyan …

Sin hath the devil for its father, shame for its companion, and death for its wages. – Thomas Watson

A holy man knows that all sin strikes at the holiness of God, the glory of God, the nature of God, the being of God, and the Law of God; and therefore his heart rises against all; he looks upon every sin as the scribe and Pharisees that accused Christ; and as that Judas that betrayed Christ, and as those soldiers that scourged Christ; and as those spears that pierced Christ! – Thomas Brooks

Take heed of secret sins. They will undo thee if loved and maintained: one month may spoil the garment; one leak drown the ship; a penknife stab and kill a man as well as a sword; so one sin may damn the soul; nay there is more danger of a secret sin causing the miscarrying of the soul than open profaneness because not so obvious to the reproofs of the world; therefore take heed that secret signings eat not out of good beginnings – Jerimiah Burroughs

He hideth our unrighteousness with his righteousness, he covereth our disobedience with his obedience, he shadoweth our death with his death, that the wrath of God can not find us. – Henry Smith

Mans life is so short, that Austin doubteth weather to call it a dying life or a living death. Man’s life is but the shadow of smoke, the dream of a shadow – Thomas Brooks

Let us keep our eyes steadily upon the goal…For when we hear the shout from the skies, all else will fade into utter nothingness. For the Lord shall descend – from heaven with a shout. Even so, come, Lord Jesus – Dr Jaffray

Francia Gamba, the martyr burned at the stake in 1554, was presented with a wooden cross by a monk but rejected it saying: “My mind is so full of the real merits of Christ as I die that I want not a piece of senseless stick to put me in mind of him.”

Calconis, who died about 108 a.d, had been a pagan but witnessing the martyrdom of two Christians, was so impressed by their wonderful patience under terrible sufferings, that he shouted with admiration “Great is the God of the Christians”

Immediately he, too, was struck down and died.

It is the manner of God, throughout the scriptures, to defer Judgments a long while before they come, and when they come he sends them by degrees.  – Walter Cradock

Life is an excellency added to being – Thomas Goodwin

Christ has not come to possess our brains with some cold opinions that send down a freezing and benumbing influence into our hearts. Christ was a master of the life, not of the school; and he is the best Christian whose heart beats with the purest pulse towards heaven, not he whose head spins the finest cobweb. Ralph Cudworth

We are never nearer Christ than when we find ourselves lost in a holy amazement at his unspeakable Love!- John Owen

Love is the only thing in which we can retaliate with God. If God be angry with us, we must not be angry again; if He Chide us, we must not chide Him again; but if God Loves us, we must Love Him again. There is nothing in which we can answer God again, but love. We must not give him word for word, but we must give him love for love.  – Thomas Watson

A greater hell I would not wish any man, than to Live and not love the beloved of God – Thomas brooks

 

                  As the Father has loved me, so have I loved you. Abide in my love. – Jesus Christ!!

 

17 Nov, 2011  Posted by Forgiven   No Comments »
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Sir…May I go within the veil ?

I really enjoyed this so much that I had to borrow it from Jared’s Blog…Read on and you’ll see why.

This is taken from an illustration in John Phillips’ Exploring Hebrewscommentary that has always moved me.

Imagine with me a Moabite of old gazing down upon the Tabernacle of Israel from some lofty hillside. This Moabite is attracted to what he sees so he descends the hill and makes his way toward the Tabernacle.

He walks around this high wall of dazzling linen until he comes to a gate and at the gate, he sees a man. “May I go in there?” he asks, pointing to the gate where all the bustle of activity in the Tabernacle’s outer court can be seen.

“Who are You?” demands the man suspiciously.

“I’m from Moab,” the stranger replies.

“Well, I’m very sorry, but you can’t go in there. You see, it’s not for you. The Law of Moses has barred the Moabite from any part in the worship of Israel until his tenth generation.”

The Moabite looks so sad and said, “Well, what would I have to do to go in there?”

“You would have to be born again,” the gatekeeper replies. “You would have to be born an Israelite, of the tribe of Judah, or of the tribe of Benjamin or Dan.”

“Oh, I wish I had been born an Israelite,” the Moabite says and as he looks again, he sees one of the priests, having offered a sacrifice at the brazen altar and the priest cleansed himself at the brazen laver and then the Moabite sees the priest enter the Tabernacle’s interior. “What’s in there?” asks the Moabite. “Inside the main building, I mean.”

“Oh,” the gatekeeper says, “That’s the Tabernacle itself. Inside it contains a lampstand, a table, and an altar of gold. The man you saw was a priest. He will trim the lamp, eat of the bread upon the table and burn incense to the living god upon the golden altar.”

“Ah,” sighs the Moabite, “I wish I were an Israelite so that I could do that. I would so love to worship God in there and help to trim the lamp and offer Him incense and eat bread at that table.”

“Oh, no, the gatekeeper hastens to say, “even I could not do that. To worship in the holy place one must not only be born an Israelite, one must be born of the tribe of Levi and of the family of Aaron.”

The man from Moab sighs again, “I wish that I had been born of Israel of the tribe of Levi of the family of Aaron,” and then, as he gazes wistfully at the closed Tabernacle door, he says, “What else is in there?”

“Oh, there’s a veil. It’s a beautiful veil I’m told and it divides the Tabernacle in two. Beyond the veil is what we call ‘the Most Holy Place’… ‘the Holy of Holies.’”

“What’s in the Holy of Holies?” the Moabite asks.

“Well, there’s the sacred chest in there and it’s called the Ark of the Covenant. It contains holy memorials of our past. Its top is gold and we call that the mercy seat because God sits there between the golden cherubim. Do you see that pillar of cloud hovering over the Tabernacle? That’s the Shekinah glory cloud. It rests on the mercy,” said the gatekeeper.

Again, a look of longing comes over the face of the Moabite man. “Oh,” he said, “if only I were a priest! How I would love to go into the Holy of Holies and gaze upon the glory of God and worship Him there in the beauty of His holiness!’

“Oh no!” said the man at the gate. “You couldn’t do that even if you were a priest! Only the high priest can enter the Most Holy Place. Only he can go in there. Nobody else!”

The heart of the man from Moab yearns once more. “Oh,” he cried, “If only I had been born an Israelite, of the tribe of Levi, of the family of Aaron. If only I had been born a high priest! I would go in there every day! I would go in there three times a day! I would worship continually in the Holy of Holies!”

The gatekeeper looked at the man from Moab again and once more shook his head. “Oh now,” he said, “you couldn’t do that! Even the high priest of Israel can go in there only once a year, and then only after the most elaborate preparations and even then only for a little while.”

Sadly, the Moabite turned away. He had no hope in all the world of ever entering there!

. . . Therefore, brothers, since we have confidence to enter the holy places by the blood of Jesus, by the new and living way that he opened for us through the curtain, that is, through his flesh, and since we have a great priest over the house of God, let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith (Hebrews 10:19-22).

Here it is, a tremendous word of welcome, extended to Jew and Gentile alike, to come on in and worship, not in the holiest place of the human tabernacle, but into the Holy of Holies in heaven itself “by the blood of Jesus.”

 

04 Nov, 2011  Posted by Forgiven   No Comments »
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