David Westerfield

Gospel. Culture. Technology. Music.


Is the Gospel Message an Offer or a Command?

http://www.reformationtheology.com/2005 … mand_1.php

Excellent response!

“Truly these times of ignorance God overlooked, but now commands all men everywhere to repent.” –Acts 17:30

“And this is his commandment, that we believe in the name of his Son Jesus Christ…” – 1 John 3:23

SysInternals – Excellent System Tools for Windows

Sysinternals.com was originally a site run by Mark Russinovich and Bryce Cogswell that had a collection of tools used to administer Windows machines. It was then purchased by Microsoft and is now located at http://www.microsoft.com/technet/sysint … fault.mspx . These are unbelievably helpful when trying to troubleshoot a problem with your system. In particular, you can watch processes run in real time, watch the individual execution of certain calls within the operating system, watch TCP connections made out to the internet, and host of other things. Check it out.

Hackers: Social networking sites flawed – Really?

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070806/ap_ … rabilities

And this is new information?

Excellent Quote from R.C. Sproul … Right On

“Loving a holy God is beyond our moral power. The only kind of God we can love by our sinful nature is an unholy god, an idol made by our own hands. Unless we are born of the Spirit of God, unless God sheds His holy love in our hearts, unless He stoops in His grace to change our hearts, we will not love Him . . . To love a holy God requires grace, grace strong enough to pierce our hardened hearts and awaken our moribound souls.”

The Effectual Calling of Andrew and Peter

“While walking by the Sea of Galilee, [Jesus] saw two brothers, Simon (who is called Peter) and Andrew his brother, casting a net into the sea, for they were fishermen. And he said to them, ‘Follow me, and I will make you fishers of men.’ Immediately they left their nets and followed him.”

Some “random guy” comes up to Peter and Andrew, someone they have never met, and tells them to stop all they are doing and follow him. Fishing is their livelihood, how they make their living. Rationally speaking, when you look at this situation, it makes utterly no sense why you would just stop your job in the middle of the day and follow someone for, well, the rest of your life, without any real prior knowledge about who this guy was, what his motives were, etc. Think of some guy coming up to you at your cubicle at work, in the middle of a meeting, or on a construction work site, and he tells you to stop what you are doing (making a living!) and follow him. And on top of that, the random guy is someone the world would despise, someone your company or office would cast out on the street if they even set foot on the premises. From the prophetic indications we have in Isaiah 53:2-3, this is exactly who Jesus was in the eyes of the world. He “had no form or majesty that we should look at him, and no beauty that we should desire him. He was despised and rejected by men; a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief; and as one from whom men hide their faces he was despised, and we esteemed him not.” “One from whom men hide their faces?” From the world’s eyes, Jesus was nothing, a nobody, a misfit, an outcast from society, rejected by the world. Even His family thought He was nuts!

So why do Andrew and Peter respond the way they do to a stranger? Were they naturally inclined more than others to see Christ as valuable? How is it they saw this “random guy” as someone worthy to follow, someone who was despised in the world? The only answer is Jesus’ call to follow Him was uniquely divine and effected this response in them, otherwise, like others in the world, like that of their kindred (the Pharisees) they would have despised Him. Their response resulted from a cause. The very reason they saw something in Jesus that was irresistibly beautiful, was by a work of the Holy Spirit, that only could have been granted by divine knowledge outside of themselves. God gave them spiritual eyes to see and ears to hear the call of Christ. A work was done in their hearts to make them see Christ as valuable, so valuable, in fact, that they dropped everything to follow Him. The Father revealed Jesus to them as uniquely greater than all others, for, as Augustine has said, “Christ is not valued at all unless He is valued above all.” Clearly they valued Him above all! They left everything! In Matthew 15:16-17, Jesus says this very thing, that God grants eyes to see and spiritual renewal first. “‘But who do you say that I am?’ Simon Peter replied, ‘You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.’ And Jesus answered him, ‘Blessed are you, Simon Bar-Jonah! For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but my Father who is in heaven.’” The only reason Peter confesses that Jesus is the Christ is because the Father has revealed this divine knowledge to him, otherwise Peter would have seen Jesus as just a fool and a madman. And the same rule applies: Andrew and Peter, the rest of the disciples, and all who call upon Christ for salvation, follow Him because they were granted the very desire and faith necessary for salvation. God specially grants what He requires by a divine, supernatural work and then accepts what He grants.

Without this special, effectual, divine revelation of the Father by the Holy Spirit to see Christ as infinitely valuable, no one comes to Jesus, no one believes in Jesus, no one sees Him as worthy of anything, because we naturally despise Him. Jesus says, “No one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws him. And I will raise him up on the last day.” (John 6:44) And also, “For everyone who does wicked things hates the light and does not come to the light, lest his works should be exposed. But whoever does what is true comes to the light, so that it may be clearly seen that his works have been carried out in God.” (John 3:20-21) Unless the nature is first reversed from the fall by a divine work of God (regeneration), no one comes to Christ, because they willingly hate Him. But rather, those who do what is true (like repenting of unbelief, believing, and turning to Christ in faith) do so that it may be clearly shown that God has born them anew. The reason they came to Christ to begin with was because God first changed their entire disposition. “We love because he first loved us.” (1 John 4:19) Regeneration precedes or immediately gives rise to faith in Christ. Regeneration is the cause of our change, and faith in Christ is the result. And those whom the Father sets out to save, He continues to sustain by supplying them the faith necessary to persevere to the end. “And I am sure of this, that he who began a good work in you will bring it to completion at the day of Jesus Christ.” (Philippians 1:6) The Lord God is the Alpha and the Omega of our salvation, and indeed our entire lives.

So what is the point of this story? Is it about how great Peter and Andrew are for following Jesus and how we should imitate them? No not really. Sure, okay, we should imitate them and follow Jesus, absolutely! But unfortunately, if that is all we take away from this passage, it is just not enough to effect change at the level Andrew and Peter experienced. The Holy Spirit has revealed so much more in this amongst many other places in Scripture, that is worthy of our attention. Did Peter and Andrew seek out Jesus in any manner? No. They were doing their jobs, fishing. In fact, Jesus says to the disciples in John 15:16, “You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you that you should go and bear fruit and that your fruit should abide.” Jesus came to them where they were and called them outwardly. Yet there was another calling, inwardly, that does not just sit and wait, but a calling, a divine calling, by the Holy Spirit, that gets the job done and is not dependant on man’s frail, deficient, wavering, sinful will. Instead God regenerates the will from the bondage of sin. In this effectual calling, the Holy Spirit gave Andrew and Peter eyes to see Christ as someone uniquely and infinitely valuable above all. This story is about God and His work (not ours) to bring sinners to Himself through the Gospel. Jesus comes up to them, and the only reason Andrew and Peter do not respond as the Pharisees do (in hatred and scorn) is because of something God does to effect a positive response in them. Jesus does not believe for them, we may note as well, they follow Him willingly and trust Him. But they follow Him willingly because of the work of God before and underneath their willing and believing. This is effectual calling. The Pharisees response is one of hatred toward Jesus. They were not granted this saving faith. Andrew and Peter’s response is dropping everything and following Him. As Jesus said, “For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but my Father who is in heaven.”

By way of application, what can we take away from this?

As it pertains to us as believers in our own experiences:

1) It is God alone, by His grace, we are saved from the bondage sin has had on our entire lives. There was no cooperation on Andrew and Peter’s part in coming to Christ. Jesus comes to them, grants them eyes to see Him for who He is (the Son of God), and then in response (as a result of this singular work of God in their hearts), they cannot help but follow Him, because Jesus is irresistible and draws those He reveals Himself to. Same with us. This quote from C.H. Spurgeon sums up what our attitude should be about our salvation: “The thought struck me, How did you come to be a Christian? I sought the Lord. But how did you come to seek the Lord? The truth flashed across my mind in a moment—I should not have sought Him unless there had been some previous influence in my mind to make me seek Him. I prayed, thought I, but then I asked myself, How came I to pray? I was induced to pray by reading the Scriptures. How came I to read the Scriptures? I did read them, but what led me to do so? Then, in a moment, I saw that God was at the bottom of it all, and that He was the Author of my faith, and so the whole doctrine of grace opened up to me, and from that doctrine I have not departed to this day, and I desire to make this my constant confession, ‘I ascribe my change wholly to God.’”

2) When God saves someone, He makes it happen. “God saves sinners.” So many times, salvation is presented as God just sitting there twiddling His thumbs, eagerly waiting for us to respond to His cries, as if He is helpless, lest He violate our human will. I praise God He went underneath my will and regenerated it that I may love Him, because oh how He knows I was bent on destruction if He let me go! No, rather, the way Scripture speaks of salvation is that when God saves someone, He gets it done. “The Lord opened [Lydia’s] heart to pay attention to what was said by Paul.” (Acts 16:14) “And when the Gentiles heard this, they began rejoicing and glorifying the word of the Lord, and as many as were appointed to eternal life believed.” (Acts 13:48)

3) This truth of God’s effectual calling should humble us to think that God did not have to grant faith and repentance to us that we may be saved. In seeing the depths of what God did to save us through Christ, tears should stream down our faces in wonder and amazement that He chose us for salvation from all eternity. And it should cause us to tremble before His mighty throne. He could have let you go your own way, and yet He had mercy on you! Just like Isaiah, even though he was one of the most righteous men in Israel, he fell flat on his face before the sight of God, stating, “Woe is me! For I am lost; for I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips; for my eyes have seen the King, the LORD of hosts!” (Isaiah 6:5) And Ezekiel in Ezekiel 1:28, “Such was the appearance of the likeness of the glory of the LORD. And when I saw it, I fell on my face…” May God shine His light in our hearts through the work of the cross that this may be our response in all areas of life, all to His glory!

Pertaining to others we relate to:

1) As far as witnessing is concerned, this should not hinder us (as many allege it does), but rather do the opposite: it should embolden us, making us even more courageous to witness, because it is God alone who grants salvation to whom He pleases, we are just commanded to preach the Word, and God will do what He pleases with those whom the Gospel is preached to. All the weight is off! Either people will accept and believe (by a work of God first) or left to their natural, sin-laden resources that are bent toward destruction, reject the message of their own choice.

2) God has a people from all eternity He has chosen to save; we have no clue who they are, nor can we tell; we simply go out and preach His divinely inspired Word to all, persuading with loving acts and words, with the assured hope that God is sending us to find His lost, chosen sheep who are out there. That is the hope of evangelism! God has people out there He will save, and by His mercy and grace, we get to be apart of it! We save no one, God merely uses us as conduits and saves effectually by the work of His Holy Spirit alone. What a wonder that God uses broken sinners like us to proclaim His message of salvation, and He infallibly saves His people!

3) Because we know we were saved by sheer grace and mercy in the cross, we should not approach those engrossed in sin as people below us, as those who are inferior, as if we are better than them. Rather we should sympathize with them in their bondage, because we were in bondage. This reality should make us tremble that we did not go down the same path, but were spared by God’s sheer grace, because we would have jumped head first straight into hell. Our hearts are so wickedly deceitful, we absolutely would have done the same things, were it not for the grace of God alone intervening and turning us from our natural bent toward hell. May we humbly love and persuade people into the kingdom with loving words and deeds done in the hopes that God will have mercy on many!

Heart Corruptions – From The Valley of Vision

O God, may Thy Spirit speak in me that I may speak to thee. I have no merit, let the merit of Jesus stand for me. I am undeserving, but I look to Thy tender mercy. I am full of infirmities, wants, sin; Thou art full of grace.

I confess my sin, my frequent sin, my willful sin; all my powers of body and soul are defiled: a fountain of pollution is deep within my nature. There are chambers of foul images within my being; I have gone from one odious room to another, walked in a no-man’s-land of dangerous imaginations, pried into the secrets of my fallen nature.

I am utterly ashamed that I am what I am in myself; I have no green shoot in me nor fruit, but thorns and thistles; I am a fading leaf that the wind drives away; I live bare and barren as a winter tree, unprofitable, fit to be hewn down and burnt. Lord, dost Thou have mercy on me?

Thou hast struck a heavy blow at my pride, at the false god of self, and I lie in pieces before Thee. But Thou hast given me another master and lord, Thy Son, Jesus, and now my heart is turned towards holiness, my life speeds as an arrow from a bow towards complete obedience to Thee. Help me in all my doings to put down sin and to humble pride. Save me from the love of the world and the pride of life, from everything that is natural to fallen man, and let Christ’s nature be seen in me day by day. Grant me grace to bear Thy will without repining, and delight to be not only chiseled, squared, or fashioned, but separated from the old rock where I have been embedded so long, and lifted from the quarry to the upper air, where I may be built in Christ for ever.

The Wrath of God is Worse Than Any Form of Torture Devised by Man

Just consider this thought. Jesus himself said essentially the same thing in Matthew 10:28: “And do not fear those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul. Rather fear him who can destroy both soul and body in hell.” Fear the wrath of God more than man. Why? Because if man, at his worst, in devising ways of torturing and killing people can come up with such awful ways to go about achieving this end, how much greater is the infinite wrath of the Creator toward those who oppose Him who extends His hand in mercy through Christ and allows them to live, breath, eat, drink, day in and day out, all the while slapping Him in the face over and over again? The wrath of the Creator who breathed out all things in existence ex nihilo (from nothing) is so much worse than anything man can do to us. This is a frightening thought, as it should be. And consider how awful human torture is! And then to consider the ways in which God can inflict pain at this level and at the spiritual level forever for the way we trample on His glory!

And yet God in His mercy has sent a Savior to take this eternal torture, eternal shame, spiritual torment, utter darkness, that we all earned for our rebellion, and bear it on the cross on behalf of those who believe in Him. Jesus willingly, out of His infinite love, suffered the eternal torture and wrath of God for those who believe. This Jesus, who from eternity has always existed, gave up His creator rights, uniting Himself to man, so that He could live the perfect life none of us could ever live, and do so on our behalf. And in so doing, He became the perfect sacrifice for any who would believe in Him. And upon suffering the wrath of God on the cross, those who believe in Him now inherit His perfect record freely through faith in His blood. Turn to Christ that you may escape the wrath to come, and even better than that, that you may be reconciled to the only Being worthy of all honor, praise and glory, that you might find the greatest joy ever in Him! There is no joy or pleasure greater than what the Creator of all things can bring. He is the Joy of joys, the Pleasure of pleasures, the source from which all good things come.

“Fear him who can destroy both soul and body in hell.” And how much none of us fear as we should, even as believers. If I feared God for His power and might as I should, and at the same time knowing all that power was now for me (not against me), man how I would be changed and live to His glory more than I do! And yet I cannot see God as I ought by my own reason, strength, will or intellect. The Holy Spirit must come in and awaken my dead soul through communion with Christ and through the application of His Word. I am a sinner, and as such, my sin has rendered me spiritually blind, deaf, and without knowledge of Him. I am in a desperate condition everyday. How quickly do I desert Him who loved me with His blood! How quickly do I forget the price that was paid at the cross. And how quickly do I forget His mighty, terrifying, eternal strength and power that should have destroyed both my body and soul in hell forever, and yet Jesus stepped in the way and took the blow! What amazing mercy … I must cry out day in and day out that God reveal Himself to me in greater and mightier ways through Christ who was given for me. I must pursue Him that I may know Him through His Scriptures, and in knowing Him, fear Him as I ought, as in Isaiah 6, Ezekiel 1 and Job 40.

And in relation to others, if I feared God properly more than man (not a fear that runs from Him but rather submits to Him under His sovereign grace), how much would the fear of man just fizzle out? May God turn our hearts by His sovereign grace to see His holiness and wrath, as well as His love and mercy. May this unbelievable love that bore infinite wrath and torture be the overarching theme for change in our hearts everyday, both in relation to God and others.

John Hendryx on Many Young Calvinists Treatment of Arminians

John Hendryx, founder of Monergism.com responds to interview questions pertaining to young Calvinists and their “I’m more reformed than anyone else” attitude toward others and especially their terrible treatment of Arminian brothers and sisters in Christ. These attitudes fly in the face of the point of Calvinistic theology: humbleness before the throne of God and others, to the glory of God.

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7. How much cooperation can there be between Calvinists and strongly Arminian evangelicals?

I have worked side-by side with them overseas in missionary activity for years. It can be done. These are our brothers and sisters. Some Calvinists who don’t think so need to get out more.

8. My own interaction with young Calvinists has made me less enthusiastic for Reformed Christianity. In my essay “I Hate Theology” I catalog some of the negative by-products of what often amounts to an obsession with theological minutiae at the expense of kindness and charity. Am I off base?

No, I think you are right on the mark, Michael. I have had my share of battles with many of the type of people you are describing. However, perhaps you should try to distinguish those persons who consider themselves “Truly Reformed” from the average Reformed believer. There are vocal groups out there that have an “I am more Reformed than anyone else” type attitude, but I would argue that such persons constitute a minority in Reformed circles. Their activism and vocal nature has made them appear more influential than they are, and many of these groups also have prolific writers. While I will not mention them by name I find their arrogance equally as repulsive as you do, Michael, especially since they claim to represent my brand of theology. But the existence of such groups, I believe, should not discourage you from the biblical clarity and rich heritage that Reformed Theology has brought to the Church. God has truly blessed the Church with such preachers and theologians as Augustine, John Calvin, Peter Martyr Vermigli, John Owen, Jonathan Edwards, C.H. Spurgeon, Herman Witsius, Thomas Watson, Martyn Lloyd-Jones, Richard Sibbes and J.C. Ryle. It would be a truly tragic event if the existence of the “Truly Reformed” troublemakers would turn people aside from such theological treasure that the Holy Spirit has given the church.

– Excerpt taken from http://www.internetmonk.com/articles/J/ … dryx1.html

Guatemala Email 8

Hello!

Good Morning (for the last time) from Santiago. We finished up working yesterday. Over the course of the week we roofed and cemented floors at the church at Panabaj, held a VBS and played with lots of kids at La Colonia, dug ditches and laid cement for a child’s play area/basketball court at La Colonia, helped cement floors and roof and build walls for homes at La Colonia, painted a lot at the main church downtown, moved rocks and cleared lots of land at Camp David. It’s been a good week. And to God’s glory, no one missed a day of work due to illness or injury!!

This morning we are having breakfast and then loading the boat to head back to Panajachel. We’ll eat lunch there and then load the buses to drive to Guatemala City. We’ll eat dinner at Pollo Campero and spend the night at the Pan American Hotel. Then it’s off to the airport really early Saturday morning to get on planes. We would appreciate your prayers for safe travel. Additionally, a couple girls were feeling a little sick last night; pray that they feel better for the trip and that no one else gets sick.

Also, this year for the first two weeks we’re back in Fort Worth we are going to meet for about an hour three days a week (MWF) at 10:30 at the Outback to pray together, talk about the trip, and consider ways we can continue serving and hopefully make an impact in Fort Worth. Please pray for these times together and that what God has shown students and done in their lives will permanently impact and change them.

I need to go to pray with the girls and then our day gets really busy. Hence this final email to you is brief. Again, thanks for partnering with us in praying for this trip. May God be glorified in what has happened and what will continue to happen in Santiago, Tomball, and Fort Worth.

Soli Deo Gloria,
Kathy Harrelson
High School Director at Christ Chapel Bible Church in Fort Worth, Texas

Guatemala Email 7

Good Morning!

It is our last day out at the work sites. It’s hard to believe that we leave Santiago tomorrow morning. This morning we are out at all 4 work sites. Thanks for your prayers yesterday. Things went really well on every site. A lot of work was completed, and students were positive and encouraging. Please continue praying today. By the way, both Sam and Colin’s luggage arrived yesterday. Praise God!

Late yesterday afternoon some of our students played a soccer game against some guys from Alfa y Omega. After a defeat last year, we bounced back and won this year 3-1! Everyone had a really good time. We had our group meeting (Sunni taught on Biblical community). And then folks stayed around and played games, which is usually what we do at night.

My email today needs to be a little brief. I am getting ready to go with Wayne to survey some sites and be thinking about future trips. I do want to thank Richard Yantis; he coordinates our email list every year and makes life very easy for me. Thanks Richard!

In our daily devotional books we create we include some prayers at the end of each day, usually from The Valley of Vision (a book of Puritan prayers). The one from yesterday made me think of all of you who have prayed for us. I hope this has been your experience this week as you’ve prayed for us…

O Lord, in prayer I feel close to your eternal world.
When I pray my soul gains victories over all the evils I find in the temporary world.
In prayer I see myself as nothing; I find my heart running towards You with intensity and I am filled with a passionate desire to live for You. I am blessed by the strong winds of Your Spirit that fills my sails and moves me towards Heaven.
In prayer all the things in this world disappear and nothing seems important but the holiness of my heart and the salvation of others.
In prayer all the cares, fears, and worries I find in this world fade away like a puff of smoke.
In prayer my mind rejoices with thoughts about what You are doing for Your people.
I long for sinners to say Your name is great.
In prayer I am lifted above the sad and insincere praises of this world and I taste heavenly joys from You; longing to enter into eternity with You so I can give myself to You with all my heart and belong to You forever.
In prayer I can place all my burdens in Your hands for You to do with them as You desire.
In prayer I can plead for my friends, for those who don’t know You, for your church, and for Christ’s return.
I pray with great freedom and an even greater hope because of Your character.
Help me to continually pray to You for and about all things.

Soli Deo Gloria,
Kathy Harrelson
High School Director at Christ Chapel Bible Church in Fort Worth, Texas

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