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Bread and Wine November 2006
 

 

Bread & Wine

NOVEMBER 2006

BREAD & WINE

BREAD & WINE is a monthly publication by Bethel Community Church of Sarasota, Florida, USA.

Address: 5632 Gantt Road
Sarasota, FL 34232
Tel: 941 922 6007
Email: bw@bethelcomchurch.org

Subscriptions:
Bread & Wine is available free of charge at the church.

Rates: $12:00 per year. All payments should be made to Bethel Community Church.

Address all correspondence to the Editor, Bread & Wine, 5632 Gantt Road, Sarasota, Florida 34233.

Editor: Russ Atmore
Associate Editor - Web: Jim White
Editorial Assistant: Kaitlin Atmore

The Editor welcomes any submitted articles for publication subject to editorial approval.

Additional Resources:
Website: http://bethelcomchurch.org
Pastoral Blog: http://bethelcomchurch.org/blog/

Cover Picture: The resting place of Jonathan Edwards (1703 – 1758), the great New England Puritan theologian at Princeton Cemetery, NJ. His wife, Sarah Edwards, Charles Hodge, B.B. Warfield are all buried here, including Aaron Burr, (Vice-President, US) grandson of Jonathan Edwards, who died not believing in God, but asked to buried at the feet of his grandfather.

Copyright © 2006 by Bethel Community Church.
___________________________________________________

November 2006          ●          Vol. 1   No. 9

Editorial                                                                                         4

Russ Atmore

Labors More Abundant                                                       6

Russ Atmore

The Communion Papers: (1) The Passover            9

Russ Atmore

Everlasting Righteousness (2)                                      13

Horatius Bonar

Applying Holy Scripture                                                   19

Russ Atmore          

The Death of Thomas Bilney                                          21

J. H. Merle d'Aubigné

The Power Behind Jesus’ Preaching                        24

(Mark 1:35 – 39)                                                                                                 

Russ Atmore

Bible Quiz                                                                                   27

Kaitlin Atmore

 

Editorial

Russ Atmore

Following hard on the heels of Halloween are the Elections and then Thanksgiving. All of these require some kind of mental and spiritual fortitude. Halloween continues to present itself in ever increasing darkness. Even Christians feel the power of this pagan observance. The upcoming Elections only reveal the depravity of man as candidates from both sides leave the Christian wondering whether they can vote for anyone without violating their obligation to do right before God. Perhaps Thanksgiving will be more sedate and we can with profound gratitude to God return our thanks to him for this country’s heritage, a heritage that seems to be all but gone.

In this issue of Bread & Wine, we remind ourselves of the selfless labor of others in their service for Jesus. Mission endeavor continues to be necessary in a world that is lost. The cry of who will go and how shall we stay and live among the lost is desperately needed today. The examples provided from Australia in its early days of mission work will stir us all up to think seriously of the cost in missionary enterprise.

We provide the conclusion to Horatius Bonar’s powerful exposition on Christ’s Righteousness. This work has been said to be the very best on the imputation of Jesus’ righteousness to us. I have begun a new, and Lord willing, extended study into the Lord’s Supper called “The Communion Papers.” In this first installment, we consider the Passover for it was in the context of the Passover that Jesus instituted the Lord’s Supper. How we apply Scripture will be related to how we interpret Scripture, and this is something all Christians must learn to do.

We have included the startling account of the death of Thomas Bilney, who read, and was impacted by one of Tyndale’s New Testaments. Those kinds of days may happen again. Are we prepared to be like Thomas Bilney? Our commentary on Mark’s Gospel continues with a look at the power of prayer in Jesus’ life as that which sustained him throughout his life and death. As usual, we have provided a quiz which is creatively designed by Kaitlin Atmore. Look carefully, and always be on the look out for a few surprises.

Russ Atmore

Soli Deo Gloria

 

“The end of study is information, and the end of meditation is practice.”

                                  Thomas Manton

Labors More Abundant[1]

Russ Atmore

Samuel Leigh went out to Australia in the early 1800’s as a missionary. His mission field was a 150 mile circuit that he rode every 10 days. In those 10 days he would preach at 14 stations, and on Sunday he would ride out to preach at 10 o’clock in the morning. He would then take in some food, travel another seven miles and preach at 2 o’clock. After this he would ride another six miles and preach at 5 o’clock, and then he would ride another seven miles and preach at 7 o’clock in the evening. He said that he feared his constitution would not last long under this regimen, but “what can I do?” were his words. While he wept and prayed for the salvation of those who heard him in those remote places he would forget his fatigues and troubles. He said, “with regard to myself, I desire to live every moment to God, and to die in the missionary field.” On one occasion as he was riding he had to work his way through a forest for thirty miles with the sun shining through the trees as his guide. He could say, “I sometimes travel 20 miles, preach to 20 persons, retire to rest with twenty thousand blessings, and go off again in the morning, singing for joy. Pray that I may be filled with faith in Christ, and with a burning zeal for the spread of His gospel.” His life was a life occupied with labors abundant.

Jane Reid went to Tasmania as a 7 year old girl with her parents in 1821. Her mother would teach her the Westminster Shorter Catechism as they sat alone on their tract of land that her father had purchased. At the age of 14 she had attained maturity both spiritual and physical for she was happily married to Lieutenant William Williams of the 57th regiment. His new orders took them to India in 1830. In January 1831 their first child died and in November 1834 her husband died of a fever. The morning after his death, Jane, who was pregnant at the time suffered the loss of their second child due to premature delivery.  To her mother in Tasmania she could write as she sought to return there, “I trust that we have the same hope…I trust that He who has smoothed my path, and who, while He has afflicted me has also given me a heart to bear those afflictions….of my own feelings I might write to you forever without being able to express the half of what I have felt….but, my dear Mamma, He who has seen all and knows them all, who having formed me, understands them all, is ever ready to listen to all which we find it impossible to express to any human being…” In 1837, back home in Tasmania on January 1 she wrote, “all are gone to church, but I have remained at home to commune with my own thoughts and to retrace the steps I have taken this past year, to look back and think of all that forever is past to me in this life; to pray for grace to improve by my afflictions and losses – for support on my entrance into the new year; to thank thee, my righteous God and Savior, for the blessings still spared me, and for the protection and quiet of the past year. I do thank thee for the love still so undeservedly given me. Have mercy on me. O God of my salvation! Keep me near thee. Make me Thine and increase my love to thee. O Lord, take my heart and keep it, for I cannot; it will go astray if thou hast it not – keep it this year. Jane Williams died in 1897 after a long life in labors more abundant for Christ in Tasmania.

We must confess that when we read of these men and women who burned with conviction for Christ, that we ourselves are far from these experiences. The Church today would have you believe that all affliction, all sickness, all suffering is wrong, and yet for nearly 2000 years this has been precisely the experience of God’s people. It is the Church, with her new fangled doctrine, that God owes you only the best of everything, that has contributed to an impoverished Christianity, if indeed a Christianity at all. We now have easy salvation, and a salvation that we are told will make you financially secure. God, we are told, because He is a God of love would never visit His children with affliction and loss. Indeed, such a thought comes from the devil we are told. But this is not true. The people of God, the prophets of God certainly had no life of ease. It was a life of hardship. I am reminded whenever I desire to complain that it is only through much tribulation that I must enter the Kingdom of God. It is significant that our weak theology has left us bereft of any stronghold to lay hold of. It has made the majority of professing Christians miserable and complaining, a never satisfied kind of people. The reason is because they now focus on themselves and not on Christ. As 2007 approaches at a rapid rate, we must learn to walk daily in fellowship with the Living Christ. Only then will we begin to know the meaning of being in labors more abundant.

 

“Meditation will keep your hearts and souls from sinful thoughts.”

                                       William Bridge

The Communion Papers: (1) The Passover

Russ Atmore

There can be no doubt that our Lord instituted the Lord’s Supper within the context of the Old Testament sacrificial feast, which we know as the Passover. The Gospel accounts record for us the initial preparation done by the disciples as they sought to prepare the Passover feast according to Jesus’ instructions (Matt. 26:17; Mark 14:12; Luke 22:7, 8; John 13:1). Three significant and eye-opening events took place between this preparation by the disciples and the actual institution of the Lord’s Supper. The first was the actual Passover itself. This was celebrated and out of this, flows the instituting of the Lord’s Supper. The second major event was the washing of the disciples’ feet in John 13:1 -20. Conversations about who was the greatest had been circulating among the disciples, and Jesus squelches these with his dramatic statements and then with his humble selfless act of washing their feet, even though he was their recognized Lord and Master. The third dramatic event was the betrayal of Judas Iscariot. What is significant about Judas’ betrayal is that it is believed to have occurred prior to the Lord’s Supper being instituted. This is very significant and casts a holy shadow over the celebration of Jesus’ impending death. The disciples were very familiar with the Passover Feast. It was a memorial pointing back to an event in their history when God intervened and delivered them from Pharaoh and redeemed them out of Egypt. What is the Passover and what is its connection to the Lord’s Supper, if any?

Background

Abraham was called of God to be a great nation, but in Genesis 15, God told Abraham that his descendants would be strangers in a foreign land and would suffer and dwell there for four hundred years. God also promised that the nation that afflicted them would be judged, and that Abraham’s descendents would leave their bondage with great possessions.  Genesis records the life of Joseph in Egypt along with Jacob, but in Exodus 1, a new Pharaoh rose up in Egypt who did not know Joseph, and who looked with alarm on the vast group of people called Hebrews. This group he subsequently placed into slavery with severe bondage. Subsequently, God called Moses to deliver his people from their bondage, and God brings upon the land of Egypt, the 10 plagues of his judgment. In the context of the last plague, the death of the firstborn, the Passover Feast is instituted (Exodus 11, 12).

A New Beginning

Exodus 12:1, 2 begins with God instituting a new calendar for Israel. The first month of this new year was to be the month Abib (our March/April). It was a new beginning for Israel, and associated with this is the Passover Feast. Israel’s new calendar begins with the Exodus shrouded in the observance of the Passover. The book of Exodus is about redemption. It is about God’s deliverance of Israel out of their bondage in Egypt.

The Passover Established

Ex. 12:3, 4 tells us that on the tenth day of the month Abib, every household was to obtain a lamb. It was a family act or a communal act. The entire nation was bound to this – not one person was to be excluded. The observance of the Passover was done among the family unit. The altar and priests who would later officiate is revealed in Deut. 16:5 – 7. The words, a “lamb for a household,” (Ex. 12:3) carries with it the implication of representation. We shall see that the idea of substitution is also prevalent in the Passover observance.

A Perfect Lamb

The lamb to be chosen was to be spotless and unblemished. It was to be a male and was to be one year old, and could come from the sheep flock or the goat herd (Ex. 12:5).

Identification & Relationship

The time indicated in Ex. 12:6 points to the fact that for four days, Israel was to keep this lamb in their homes. They would thus develop a relationship with the lamb and identification with it would occur. The loss of the lamb through sacrifice would be sharply felt. It would mean something to the observers.

Sacrifice

The lamb was to be killed at “twilight,” (lit. between the evenings) on the fourteenth day of Abib. Every household was to slay their lambs during the late afternoon or early evening. For four days, the congregation of Israel would have pondered this lamb and what it would signify, and then the magnitude of it would dawn on them when they realized that thousands of lambs were being slain in order to protect them (Ex. 12:7 – 13). Blood was placed on the two pillars of the doors and the lintel above them (vs. 7), and that blood would be a sign to the avenging angel of death and destruction as he moved through the land of Egypt (vs. 13). When the angel of death (cf. vs. 23, the Lord) saw the blood, he would “pass over” them and they would be spared (vs. 13). No-one was to leave the protection of the blood (vs. 22). The Passover is declared by Scripture to be a sacrifice (vs. 27; Ex. 34:25; Deut. 16:2; cf. also 1 Cor. 5:7).

A Communal Feast

Not only were they to shed blood and apply the blood to their homes, but they also were to eat the flesh of the lamb (vs. 8). They were to eat the lamb with unleavened bread and bitter herbs (reminding them of being ready and the bitterness of their bondage). None was to remain left over. They were to eat in readiness with their belts fastened, sandals on their feet, and their staffs in their hands – ready to leave when Moses instructed them. The eating of the Passover would have been a solemn occasion, yet also an anticipatory one. Deliverance from their bondage was associated with the Passover.  God instructs Israel that the Passover was a memorial feast, and they were to observe it regularly in the years ahead. Every subsequent generation forever, was to keep the feast (vs. 14, 24).

Conclusion

What does the Passover teach the believer? We see that it was first of all, a communal feast. All families were involved in preparation and participation. Secondly, the blood provided protection, but at a cost. The life of the lamb was sacrificed in order that Israel might be kept safe and delivered from death. The blood of the lamb distinguished Israel from all other nations in terms of a covenant relationship with God (they were to observe it always). Thirdly, the lamb should properly be viewed as a sacrifice slain for the redemption of the people. Without the lamb slain, death would come to the house. Fourthly, any partaking of the lamb (they were to eat all of it) involved Israel in a corporate act of participation. They were linked to the sacrifice. They were not outside of it, but intimately acquainted with it. Fifthly, by observing the Passover in the years ahead, Israel would remind themselves of the great issues of redemption and substitution. They were not to forget ever what God had done for them. In this perpetual remembrance, God wanted Israel to think in terms of an ongoing present redemption, and not just simply an historical occasion. Every slain lamb pointed forward to the Lamb of God who would be slain for sinners.

The Passover forms the background for the development of a sound biblical doctrine of the Lord’s Supper, and in this first, of what I call the Communion Papers, I hope to discover with you the meaning of the Lord’s Supper for us in our day and age.

 

“All in the Church may hear the Word of Christ, but few hear Christ in the Word.”

                                     George Swinnock

Everlasting Righteousness (2)[2]

Horatius Bonar

Man, in his natural spirit of self-justifying legalism, has tried to get away from the cross of Christ and its perfection, or to erect another cross instead, or to set up a screen of ornaments between himself and it, or to alter its true meaning into something more congenial to his tastes, or to transfer the virtue of it to some act or performance or feeling of its own. Thus the simplicity of the cross is nullified, and its saving power is denied. For the cross saves completely, or not at all. Our faith does not divide the work of salvation between itself and the cross. It is the acknowledgment that the cross alone saves, and that it saves alone. Faith adds nothing to the cross, nor to its healing virtue. It owns the fullness, and sufficiency, and suitableness of the work done there, and bids the toiling spirit cease from its labors and enter into rest. Faith does not come to Calvary to do anything. It comes to see the glorious spectacle of all things done, and to accept this completion without a misgiving as to its efficacy. It listens to the "It is finished!" of the Sin-bearer, and says, "Amen." Where faith begins, there labor ends,-labor, I mean, "for" life and pardon. Faith is rest, not toil. It is the giving up all the former weary efforts to do or feel something good, in order to induce God to love and pardon; and the calm reception of the truth so long rejected, that God is not waiting for any such inducements, but loves and pardons of His own goodwill, and is showing that good will to any sinner who will come to Him on such a footing, casting away his own performances or goodnesses, and relying implicitly upon the free love of Him who so loved the world that He gave His only-begotten Son.

Faith is the acknowledgment of the entire absence of all goodness in us, and the recognition of the cross as the substitute for all the want on our part. Faith saves, because it owns the complete salvation of another, and not because it contributes anything to that salvation. There is no dividing or sharing the work between our own belief and Him in whom we believe. The whole work is His, not ours, from the first to last. Faith does not believe in itself, but in the Son of God. Like the beggar, it receives everything, but gives nothing. It consents to be a debtor for ever to the free love of God. Its resting-place is the foundation laid in Zion. It rejoices in another, not in itself. Its song is, "Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but by His mercy He saved us."

Christ crucified is to be the burden of our preaching, and the substance of our belief, from first to last. At no time in the saint's life does he cease to need the cross; though at times he may feel that his special need, in spiritual perplexity or the exigency of conflict with evil, may be the incarnation, or the agony in the garden, or the resurrection, or the hope of the promised advent, to be glorified in His saints, and admired in all them that believe. But the question is not, "What truths are we to believe?" but, What truths are we to believe FOR JUSTIFICATION?

That Christ is to come again in glory and in majesty, as Judge and King, is an article of the Christian faith, the disbelief of which would almost lead us to doubt the Christianity of him who disbelieves it. Yet we are not in any sense justified by the second advent of our Lord, but solely by His first. We believe in His ascension, yet our justification is not connected with it. So we believe His resurrection, yet we are not justified by faith in it, but by faith in His death,-that death which made Him at once our propitiation and our righteousness. "He was raised again on account of our having been justified" (Rom 4:25) is the clear statement of the word. The resurrection was the visible pledge of a justification already accomplished. "The power of His resurrection" (Phil 3:10) does not refer to atonement, or pardon, or reconciliation; but to our being renewed in the spirit of our minds, to our being "begotten again unto a living hope, by the resurrection from the dead" (1 Pet 1:3). That which is internal, such as our quickening, our strengthening, our renewing, may be connected with resurrection and resurrection power; but that which is external, such as God's pardoning, and justifying, and accepting, must be connected with the cross alone.

The doctrine of our being justified by an infused resurrection-righteousness, or, as it is called, justification in a risen Christ, (1) is a clear subversion of the Surety's work when "He died for our sins, according to the Scriptures," or when "He washed us from our sins in His own blood," or when He gave us the robes "washed white in the blood of the Lamb."

It is the blood that justifies (Rom 5:9). It is the blood that pacifies the conscience, purging it from dead works to serve the living God (Heb 9:14). It is the blood that emboldens us to enter through the veil into the holiest, and go up to the sprinkled mercy-seat. It is the blood that we are to drink for the quenching of our thirst (John 6:55). It is the blood by which we have peace with God (Col 1:20). It is the blood through which we have redemption (Eph 1:7), and by which we are brought nigh (Eph 2:13), by which we are sanctified (Heb 13:12). It is the blood which is the seal of the everlasting covenant (Heb 13:20). It is the blood which cleanses (1 John 1:7), which gives us victory (Rev 12:11), and with which we have communion in the Supper of the Lord (1 Cor 10:16). It is the blood which is the purchase-money or ransom of the church of God (Acts 20:28).

The blood and the resurrection are very different things; for the blood is death, and the resurrection is life. It is remarkable that in the book of Leviticus there is no reference to resurrection in any of the sacrifices. It is death throughout. All that is needed for a sinner's pardon, and justification, and cleansing, and peace, is there fully set forth in symbol,-and that symbol is death upon the altar. Justification by any kind of infused or inherent righteousness is wholly inconsistent with the services of the tabernacle, most of all justification by an infused, resurrection-righteousness.

The sacrifices are God's symbolical exposition of the way of a sinner's approach and acceptance; and in none of these does resurrection hold any place. If justification be in a risen Christ, then assuredly that way was not revealed to Israel; and the manifold offerings so minutely detailed, did not answer the question: How may man be just with God? nor give to the worshippers of old one hint as to the way by which God was to justify the ungodly.  "Christ in us, the hope of glory" (Col 1:27), is a well-known and blessed truth; but Christ IN US, our justification, is a ruinous error, leading man away from a crucified Christ-a Christ crucified FOR US. Christ for us is one truth; Christ in us is quite another. The mingling of these two together, or the transposition of them, is the nullifying of the one finished work of the Substitute. Let it be granted that Christ in us is the source of holiness and fruitfulness (John 15:4); but let it never be overlooked that first of all there be Christ FOR US, as our propitiation, our justification, our righteousness. The risen Christ in us, our justification, is a modern theory which subverts the cross. Washing, pardoning, reconciling, justifying, all come from the one work of the cross, not from resurrection. The dying Christ completed the work for us from which all the above benefits flow. The risen Christ but sealed and applied what, three days before, He had done once for all.

It is somewhat remarkable that in the Lord's Supper (as in the passover) there is no reference to resurrection. The broken body and the shed blood are the Alpha and Omega of that ordinance. In it we have communion (not with Christ as risen and glorified, but) with the body of Christ and the blood of Christ (1 Cor 10:16), that is, Christ upon the cross. "This do in remembrance of me." "As oft as ye eat this bread, and drink this cup, ye do show the Lord's death till He come." If, after we have been at the cross, we are to pass on and leave it behind us, as no longer needed, seeing we are justified by the risen Christ in us, let those who hold that deadly error say why all reference to resurrection should be excluded from the great feast; and why the death of the Lord should be the one object presented to us at the table. "Life in a risen Christ" is another way of expressing the same error. If by this were only meant that resurrection has been made the channel or instrument through which the life and justification are secured for us on and by the cross, as when the apostle speaks of our being begotten again unto a lively hope by the "resurrection of Christ from the dead," or when we are said to be "risen with Christ,"-one would not object to the phraseology. But when we find it used as expressive of dissociation of these benefits from the cross, and derivation of them from resurrection solely, then do we condemn it as untrue and antiscriptural. For concerning this "life" let us hear the words of the Lord: "The bread that I will give is my flesh, which I will give for the life of the world" (John 6:51). "Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of man, and drink His blood, ye have no life in you. Whoso eateth my flesh, and drinketh my blood, hath eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day. For my flesh is meat indeed, and my blood is drink indeed. He that eateth my flesh, and drinketh my blood, dwelleth in me, and I in him" (John 6:53-56). This assuredly is not the doctrine of "life in a risen Christ," or "a risen Christ in us, our justification and life." I do not enter on the exposition of these verses. I simply cite them. They bear witness to the cross. They point to the broken body and shed blood as our daily and hourly food, our life-long feast, from which there comes into us the life which the Son of man, by His death, has obtained for us. That flesh is life-imparting, that blood is life-imparting; and this not once, but for evermore.

It is not incarnation on the one hand, nor is it resurrection on the other, on which we are thus to feed, and out of which this life comes forth; it is that which lies between these two,-death,-the sacrificial death of the Son of God. It is not the personality nor the life-history of the Christ of God which is the special quickener and nourishment of our souls, but the blood-shedding. Not that we are to separate the former from the latter, but still it is on the latter that we are specially to feed, and this all the days of our lives. "Christ, our passover, has been sacrificed for us." Hence we rest, protected by the paschal blood, and feeding on the paschal Iamb, with its unleavened bread and bitter herbs, from day to day. "Let us keep the feast" (1 Cor 5:8). Wherever we are, let us keep it. For we carry our passover with us, always ready, always fresh. With girded loins and staff in hand, as wayfarers, we move along, through the rough or the smooth of the wilderness, our face toward the land of promise.

That paschal lamb is CHRIST CRUCIFIED. As such He is our protection, our pardon, our righteousness, our food, our strength, our peace. Fellowship with Him upon the cross is the secret of a blessed and holy life. We feed on that which has passed through the fire; on that which has come from the altar. No other food can quicken or sustain the spiritual life of a believing man. The unbroken body will not suffice; nor will the risen or glorified body avail. The broken body and shed blood of the Son of God form the viands on which we feast; and it is under the shadow of the cross that we sit down to partake of these, and find refreshment for our daily journey, strength for our hourly warfare. His flesh is meat indeed; His blood is drink indeed. 

 

“God sanctifies the Lord’s Day by consecration, we sanctify it by devotion.”

                                    Ezekiel Hopkins

Applying Holy Scripture

Russ Atmore

Every preacher knows instinctively that the aim of preaching is to effect change, and that the Holy Spirit is the person who brings about change. The art of applying Scripture is no easy task. This is because 2000 years separate us from the original audience. This also means in the majority of cases that the preacher and the congregation must bridge the gap between themselves. The preacher is often clear in his mind as to the issue(s) at hand, yet the congregation is often still in the dark. Christians will find as they read their Bibles that there are different periods of time dealt with in the Bible, different genres (Gospels, Acts, Epistles) and within these various genres you must contend with such things as hyperbole, exaggeration, parables, metaphors, etc. Historical and literary questions are important, and it takes time and effort to put all of these into the right perspective. It is, nevertheless, the responsibility of each one of us to seek to apply Scripture to our own lives. To read the Bible, and then say, it doesn’t apply to me, is just plain foolishness. Of course it applies – it is the eternal Word of God, relevant for all ages and applicable to all situations.

Application is derived from interpretation. If you have the wrong interpretation you will probably end up with the wrong application. The difficulty, however, is that you might have the right interpretation, but come up with the wrong application. We live in an age where there is a proliferation of biblical material available to us. This was not the case in time past. The Dark Ages were indeed very dark. Even the clergy lived in ignorance of the Bible. The Reformation saw the light shine once again. The powerful Martin Luther blazed the way forward out of darkness into the day. His translation of the Bible into German for every German ensured a remarkable transformation in the country and ultimately in Europe. Philip Melancthon was Luther’s right hand man. He was the better scholar and rendered valuable service in understanding the Bible through his interpretative skills. It was John Calvin though, who was the pre-eminent exegete. He expounded nearly every book in the Bible, and the superiority of his skill as an expositor still remains. Calvin believed that the “chief excellency” of an interpreter lay in “lucid brevity”. In other words, let the Apostle Paul say what he does say, and don’t make him say what you think he ought to say.

This is what it means to apply Scripture. Let Scripture speak for itself. Do not force any interpretation on Scripture. Where there is uncertainty, let the Bible interpret itself, and should there still be uncertainty, make no decision until you have more light. Never read anything into Scripture. Above all things, we should seek the Lord as we read the Scriptures. We must ask the Divine Interpreter to give us wisdom and understanding. We need humility in reading the Bible and even more, when we seek to apply it to our own lives and the lives of others. We should not be afraid to apply the Bible to our own hearts, for if we can learn the lessons that God would have us know, only then we can be used by the Lord to teach others. We need much prayer in approaching the Bible. Let us never be casual about the Bible, but rather let us submit our consciences to the Lord and His Word, so that we may be thoroughly equipped for every good work (2 Tim. 3:14 – 17).

 

        “Malice is mental murder”

                       Thomas Watson

The Death of Thomas Bilney[3]

J. H. Merle d'Aubigné

A few of Bilney's friends went to Norwich to bid him farewell: among them was Matthew Parker, later archbishop of Canterbury. It was in the evening, and Bilney was taking his last meal. On the table stood some frugal fare [ale brew], and on his countenance beamed the joy that filled his soul. 'I am surprised', said one of his friends, 'that you can eat so cheerfully'. — 'I only follow the example of the husbandmen of the country', answered Bilney, 'who having a ruinous house to dwell in, yet bestow cost so long as they may hold it up and so do I now with this ruinous house of my body'. With these words he rose from the table, and sat down near his friends, one of whom said to him, 'To-morrow the fire will make you feel its devouring fierceness, but the comfort of God's Holy Spirit will cool it for your everlasting refreshing.'

Bilney, appearing to reflect upon what had been said, stretched out his hand towards the lamp that was burning on the table and placed his finger in the flame. 'What are you doing?' they exclaimed. — 'Nothing', he replied; 'I am only trying my flesh; to-morrow God's rods shall burn my whole body in the fire.' And still keeping his finger in the flame, as if he were making a curious experiment, he continued: 'I feel that fire by God's ordinance is naturally hot; but yet I am persuaded, by God's Holy Word and the experience of the martyrs, that when the flames consume me, I shall not feel them. Howsoever this stubble of my body shall be wasted by it, a pain for the time is followed by joy unspeakable.' He then withdrew his finger, the first joint of which was burnt. He added, 'When thou walkest through the fire, thou shalt not be burned.' These words remained imprinted on the hearts of some who heard them, until the day of their death, says a chronicler.

Beyond the city gate — known as the Bishop's gate — was a low valley, called the Lollards' Pit: it was surrounded by rising ground, forming a sort of amphitheatre. On Saturday, the 19th of August, a body of javelin-men came to fetch Bilney, who met them at the prison gate. One of his friends approaching and exhorting him to be firm, Bilney replied: 'When the sailor goes on board his ship and launches out into the stormy sea, he is tossed to and fro by the waves; but the hope of reaching a peaceful haven makes him bear the danger. My voyage is beginning, but whatever storms I shall feel, my ship will soon reach the port.'

Bilney passed through the streets of Norwich in the midst of a dense crowd: his demeanor was grave, his features calm. His head had been shaved, and he wore a layman's gown. Dr Warner, one of his friends, accompanied him; another distributed alms all along the route. The procession descended into the Lollards' Pit, while the spectators covered the surrounding slopes. On arriving at the place of punishment, Bilney fell on his knees and prayed, and then rising up, warmly embraced the stake and kissed it. Turning his eyes towards heaven, he next repeated the Apostles' Creed, and when he confessed the incarnation and crucifixion of the Savior his emotion was such that even the spectators were moved. Recovering himself, he took off his gown, and ascended the pile, reciting the hundred and forty-third psalm. Thrice he repeated the second verse: 'Enter not into judgment with thy servant, for in thy sight shall no man living be justified.' And then he added: 'I stretch forth my hands unto thee; my soul thirsteth after thee.' Turning towards the officers, he said: 'Are you ready?' — 'Yes', was their reply.

Bilney placed himself against the post, and held up the chain which bound him to it. His friend Warner, with eyes filled with tears, took a last farewell. Bilney smiled kindly at him and said: 'Doctor, pasce gregem tuum (feed your flock), that when the Lord cometh He may find you so doing.' Several monks who had given evidence against him, perceiving the emotion of the spectators, began to tremble, and whispered to the martyr: 'These people will believe that we are the cause of your death, and will withhold their alms.' Upon which Bilney said to them: 'Good folks, be not angry against these men for my sake; as though they be the authors of my death, it is not they.' He knew that his death proceeded from the will of God. The torch was applied to the pile: the fire smoldered for a few minutes, and then suddenly burning up fiercely, the martyr was heard to utter the name of Jesus several times, and sometimes the word 'Credo' ('I believe'). A strong wind which blew the flames on one side prolonged his agony; thrice they seemed to retire from him, and thrice they returned, until at length, the whole pile being kindled, he expired.

 

“Praise shall conclude that work which prayer began.”

                                   William Jenkyn

The Power Behind Jesus’ Preaching (Mark 1:35 – 39)

Russ Atmore

 Scripture  

Mark 1:35 – 39

  Key Verse 

“And rising very early…while it was still dark…he…went out to a desolate place, and there he prayed.” -- Mark 1:35

 Theme   

Jesus establishes the principle of dependence for spiritual power in the discipline of prayer.

  Exposition 

Our Lord Jesus Christ demonstrates in these verses that he is not dependent on the crowd, nor on his disciples as though requires them for spiritual power, but rather that the source of power in his life came from communion with the Father. Jesus has begun a vigorous ministry in Capernaum, (vs. 21). No doubt he feels the exhaustion of what this brought to him. It has been estimated that one single act of preaching is the equivalent of 8 hours of extreme physical labor. How was Jesus able to handle the rigors and demands of sustaining this ministry for three years? The only answer lies in his prayer life.

He begins the day very early (vs. 35) in the dark, (probably very early predawn – see Luke 4:42) by seeking out a solitary and desolate place, and there he prayed. It is apparent that the disciples know nothing of where he has gone or what he has been doing, and the almost behind the scenes insinuation given by Mark is that they were not doing what Jesus was doing.

We do not know what Jesus prayed about. No doubt he thanked God for the beginning of his ministry in Capernaum. Jesus believed in prayer. At his baptism he had prayed (Luke 3:21). He prayed before choosing his twelve disciples (Luke 6:12). The feeding of the five thousand was shrouded in prayer (Mark 6:41, 46. He prayed with his disciples before the Transfiguration experience (Luke 9:28), and after it when he reminded his disciples that their failure to heal the boy with the unclean spirit came about obviously because they were not spending time in prayer (Mark 9:29). Jesus taught his disciples the Lord’s Prayer (Matt. 6:9 -13). He prayed for Peter before his denial (Luke 22:32). Jesus prayed in Gethsemane for strength for what lay ahead as in his humanity he faced the horrors of Golgotha (Mark 14:32, 35, 36, 39). Jesus even prayed on the cross (Luke 23:34; Mark 15:34). We know of certain specific prayers made to the Father (John 11:41, 42; esp. John 17).

Jesus recognized the importance of prayer in the spiritual life. It is the source of power from and communion with God. The usage of the imperfect tense implies that this was prolonged prayer that Jesus engaged in. Mark specifically draws our attention in his Gospel to Jesus praying especially at times of crises (see mark 6:46 & 14:32 – 42).  We see Simon and the others in verse 36 seeking Jesus for he was not to be found at the house (presumably Peter’s from 1:29). When they do find him (vs. 37), a mild rebuke is couched in their words to him, “everyone is looking for you,” as if to suggest that he was not operating a popular preacher should. Jesus needed to pray precisely because the crowd was seeking him. The verb “searched for” in verse 37 implies a pursuit with hostile intent. Mark’s point is that the disciples and the crowd have missed what is important. I don’t think the disciples were looking for Jesus with hostility, but Mark’s usage of the word implied how he viewed the situation, and it seems as if Jesus did in the same way, by desiring to leave. Popularity is not important. The people in Capernaum were only interested in seeing some sign done, and as long as Jesus could continue doing what he had recently done in their midst, he was popular.

Jesus reveals to his disciples that he has other intentions. He plans to leave Capernaum (vs. 38), and go to other towns where he could preach the good news, because this was the reason why he came. The disciples would have found this perplexing. Here is their Master at the height of popularity wanting to leave the scene.

Mark concludes Jesus’ ministry in Galilee by stating that Jesus went throughout all Galilee preaching and casting out demons. Sustained by prayer, he is able to continue bringing the good news of God’s kingdom to Israel (1:14, 15).

  Application 

The power of prayer must never be underestimated by any Christian. It is a vital part of spiritual power. The will of God is accomplished through the means of prayer. Prayer is necessary to bring our requests to God. Prayer sustains us in difficult times. Martin Luther maintained that he required three hours of prayer before the day began to handle his difficulties. He was simply following Jesus. The value we place on prayer will be in direct proportion to the power of our spiritual life. Jesus knew its value, and because he prayed he fulfilled all that God required of him.

 

“I have benefited by praying for others; for in making an errand to God for them, I have gotten something for myself.”

                                Samuel Rutherford

Bible Quiz

Kaitlin Atmore

 

Things to Be Thankful For -

This month, with Thanksgiving approaching, I decided to ask some of my friends to list things that they are most thankful for. 

Below is a list with their answers and the words that appear in the word search are underlined.  

…I’m thankful for my musical saw

…I’m thankful for the hugs I receive throughout the day which make me smile

…I’m thankful for godly parents

…I’m thankful for God’s common grace

…I’m thankful for persecution

…I’m thankful for sports

…I’m thankful for the gift of sleep

…I’m thankful for my education

…I’m thankful for salvation

…I’m thankful for the talents God has given me

…I’m thankful for laughter and joy

…I’m thankful for the time given to me by God because much can be done with it

…I’m thankful for God’s sovereignty

…I’m thankful for having a Bible

…I’m thankful for the work God is doing in my life.  Transforming me into the likeness of His Son, Jesus Christ

Many thanks to:

Stephanie Atmore, Anton Beetge, David Boskovic, Hannah Elizabeth Fox, Caleb Gage, Coie Igarashi, Aaron Johnson, Amy Johnson, David Peyton, and Tim Sweetman


[1] Much of this material is derived from Iain Murray’s superb book, “Australian Christian Life from 1788” (Edinburgh: Banner of Truth Trust, 1988)

[2] This article is the second and concluding part of Mr. Bonar’s, “Not Faith, But Christ” from his book, “The Everlasting Righteousness,” Chapter 7.

[3] (Thomas Bilney, 'whose conversion had begun the Reformation in England' was, in God's hands, the instrument of Hugh Latimer's conversion. The story of his life 'in strength and weakness', leading to his martyrdom in 1531, is eloquently recorded in The Reformation of England, volumes 1 and 2 by J. H. Merle d'Aubigné. These volumes trace the history of the Reformation from its earliest origins to the end of the reign of Henry VIII. )