Hudsonville Protestant Reformed Church
5101 Beechtree
Hudsonville, Michigan 49426
Services: 9:30 a.m. and 6:00 p.m.
Homepage on Internet: http://www.prca.org
Vol. 8, No. 20
Contents:
Gods
Hammer (9): God-breathed Scripture (Part 4)
Seeking the Unity of the Church (4)
Was Saul Saved?
God-breathed
Scripture (Part 4)
II Timothy 3:16-17 expresses the goal of the Bible: All Scripture is [God-breathed], and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness: that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good works.
These verses speak especially of the Christian minister. II Timothy was written to a minister (Timothy). He is addressed as thou (15) and called a man of God (17). The true minister is a man of God because he is shaped by and proclaims God-breathed Scripture. Yet it is evident that these verses also apply to all Gods children.
The argument of the text is easily grasped. First, Scripture teaches, reproves, corrects and disciplines us. Second, this makes us perfect, capable and complete. Third, the complete Christian is thoroughly furnished (totally equipped) unto all good works.
This teaches us the sufficiency of Scripture. All Scripture is profitable for four key things (doctrine, reproof, correction, discipline) making Christians complete and thoroughly equipped unto all good works. The sufficiency of Scripture does not mean that it is sufficient as a history of Britain or a recipe book, though this does not mean that the Bible is in some way deficient. It is sufficient for the task for which God has appointed it. The Bibles purpose is to make us wise unto salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus (15) and to teach, reprove, correct and discipline us in righteous living. Thus it enables us to do all good works so that we bring glory to God. As Westminster Confession 1:6 states, The whole counsel of God, concerning all things necessary for his own glory, mans salvation, faith and life, is either expressly set down in scripture, or by good and necessary consequence may be deduced from scripture.
This means,
first, that the minister must preach nothing more and nothing less than the whole counsel
of God set forth in sacred Scripture. Second, the people of God must want Scripture preached to them with the specific
purposes and goals God assigns to it. It will not do to say, I do not like doctrine, or I dont want to be reproved in the preaching, or I
dont like the discipline of the
Word. God has given Scripture (and the preaching of Scripture) in order to teach, rebuke and discipline us. You
must not only want to be taught and to be
exhorted to live godly in Christ Jesus, but you must require that
sound doctrine and the warnings of Scripture be proclaimed. Thus you must seek out a
faithful church where the Word is explained and applied the way II Timothy 3:16-17
directs. Remember, it is as you are taught, rebuked, corrected and disciplined by the
preaching of God-breathed Scripture that you are more and more fitted to all good works
and experience Gods love, joy and peace. Rev.
Angus Stewart
In the last three issues, we noted the following ideas expressed in this text: 1 ) In various ways, the Holy Spirit has made this admonition an extremely urgent one, one, therefore, to which we ought to give our careful attention. 2) The unity of the church is on the foreground here, that is, the unity of the church as it is manifested in the world in the local congregation and denomination. 3) This unity is not the false unity of modern ecumenism which seeks a unity on the lowest doctrinal level; it is a unity in Christ the Head of the church, and is, therefore, a unity of the mind of Christ and the will of Christ. 4) This unity is further defined in the text by pointing out that it is characterized by love and peace. 5) We do nor create this unity; it is created by the Holy Spirit of Christ who works in the hearts of all the elect and who makes the church one in Christ as He leads into all truth and enables the saints to perform the will of Christ. Unity is therefore a gift that is given to us, a gift more precious than silver and gold. Our calling is to keep the unity of the Spirit.
The calling we have to keep the unity of the Spirit involves several spiritual virtues. We are, says the apostle, to keep this unity with all lowliness and meekness, with longsuffering, forbearing one another.
These virtues are crucial. Without them it is impossible to keep the unity of the church. It is essential that we understand this, for these virtues to which the apostle calls attention are contrary to our natural inclinations and selfish tendencies to seek and exalt ourselves and to promote our own well-being as much as possible.
To seek the unity of the Spirit as manifested in the church requires of us that we recognize that the church is the most important institution in our lives, and that, therefore, it ought to be the very centre of our entire life in the world. The church is, to use a figure common among the Reformers, our mother. She gives us our spiritual birth into the family of God. She nourishes us, as infants and children, at her breasts, giving to us such food as is essential to our growth. She cares for us throughout all the days of our earthly pilgrimage, keeping watch over us, disciplining us when we stray, comforting us in our sorrows, strengthening us in our weaknesses, assuring us repeatedly that the end of our sojourn will bring us to the house of our heavenly Father. Without our spiritual mother we would never be able to make the spiritual journey of this life to heaven.
We are seeking the welfare of our own spiritual mother when we keep the unity of the Spirit revealed in the church. How foolish it is to disparage our own mother. How bent on spiritual destruction we are when we forsake mother, speak evil of her, do all in our power to make her work impossible. We do harm to our own spiritual life.
So frequently the church lies at the periphery of our life. It is an institution towards which we tip our hats on occasion. It is handy to have around when we need a baby baptized, or when we wish to marry, or when we are ready to be buried. We might even attend church with some regularity thinking in this way to maintain our tenuous ties with God and slipping into heaven by the back door at the last moment. We may use the church as a safety net so that we have something to fall back on when the going is difficult. But all this will not do. It is really rooted in selfishness. We seek ourselves, our own purposes, our own pleasures, our own name and honor. We set ourselves up above the church and, if we recognize the church at all, we do so to make the church serve our goals in life.
But the Lord requires something quite different from us. The church is far, far more important than any one of us. What happens to us personally is of little account; what happens to the church is more important than anything. The church must be at the centre of our lives so that all we do revolves around the church. To it we must devote our lives. For its good we must deny ourselves. What will benefit the church is far more important than what benefits us.
There are times when things do not go as we think they should in the church. There are events that disturb us. There are decisions taken which we consider less than wise. There are people who irritate us. There are sermons that we consider less than desirable. There are imperfections that we, in our own self-righteousness, cannot tolerate. But it remains our calling to put aside our own personal likes and wishes for the greater welfare of the church. For the peace of Jerusalem is far more important than any one of us and our own personal comforts or pleasures.
This does not mean that we overlook unconfessed sin, or tolerate false doctrine. The welfare of the church ought to be so much our concern that we seek the holiness of our fellow saints and the purity of the doctrine of our Lord Jesus Christ. But when we help those entrapped in sin, we go with them to the cross, kneeling there at their side. When we pursue purity of doctrine, we do so with the desire to see mother remain or become the institution we need for ourselves and our children. We do so fully aware of the fact that every one of us is a great sinner, saved by grace, and that not one of us is capable of knowing fully the great, towering truths of Gods Word. Prof. Herman Hanko
Was Saul a saved man? asks one of our readers. That is, was Saul a deeply backslidden believer or was he of the seed of the serpent? Augustine rightly states that Saul certainly was reprobated (City of God, 17.6). As Israels first king. Sauls iniquity is especially evident in his sins against Gods kingdom. Two sins early in Sauls reign led to his forfeiting the kingdom. Prior to a battle with the Philistines, Saul offered the sacrifice before Samuels return, contrary to Gods command (I Sam. 13:8-14). Later he disobeyed Jehovah by refusing to slay all the Amalekites and their beasts (ch. 15). Saul would not rule according to Gods word, therefore God took the throne from him to give it to the man after His own heart, David (13:14).
Saul was Davids enemy continually (lit. all his days; 18:29) for he knew he would succeed him as king. Twice Saul tried to smite David with his spear (18:11; 19:10). He contrived to have the Philistines kill him in battle (18:17, 25). He planned to seize David on leaving his house and execute him (19:11-17). David escaped to Samuel and then hid in forests and in caves (19:18ff.). Even then Saul pursued David and sought to kill him. So great was Sauls hatred that anyone seen to favor David was suspect. Thus Saul ordered Doeg the Edomite to slay 85 priests and their families at Nob (22:17-19) and Saul even attempted to take Jonathans life (20:33). Jonathan pleaded with his father for David (19:4-7) and David twice spared Sauls life (ch. 24, 26) but after a brief cessation Saul resumed his efforts to assassinate David.
Saul lived and died hating David, the man after Gods heart. I John 3:15 reads, Whosoever hateth his brother is a murderer: and ye know that no murderer hath eternal life abiding in him. One of Sauls last acts was to consult a witch (1 Sam. 28) which is forbidden in Gods law (Deut. 18:14). He exited this world a suicide like Ahithophel, Zimri and Judas Iscariot, with Gods judgment upon him (1 Chron. 10:13).
But did not God give Saul another heart and thereby make him another man (I Sam. 10:6-9)? Yes, but another heart is different from the new heart. Those whom God gives a new heart He causes to walk in His statutes and keep His judgments (Eze. 36:26-27). Saul did not keep Gods statutes. Thus he never received a new heart. God gave another heart to Saul to equip him to rule in his office as king. Saul began life a mere Israelite citizen but with the Spirit upon him he prophesied (I Sam. 10:6-13) and was empowered to lead an army to victory thus consolidating his kingdom (11:6-15).
That Saul was
an unbeliever is important for a right understanding of the narrative in I Samuel 9-31,
ruling out the misapplication of Sauls life to backsliding Christians. It is also
important for the typology involved. In Sauls continual murderous assaults on David
we see Satans hellish attack on Christ and His kingdom. But God defends and
preserves His church! This preservation also keeps even the weakest believer from living
like Saul in hatred of Christ whom David typifies. Rev.
Angus Stewart