FOR A VIDEO SERMON FROM Charles E. Whisnant, go to growbylearning.com or cwhisna.blogspot.com
Charles's Study Notes from Sunday Messages
Expository Genius of John Calvin by Steven J.Lawson, review of the book
John MacArthur delivered an eloquent and poignant testimony of his 50
years of expository preaching, 40 of them at Grace Community church. At the 2009 Shepherd's Conference in Calif.
Initially, he shared the things he was committed to early on;
The church has to get the Gospel right
- His very first sermon at Grace Community was on Lordship salvation
- His second was on the Biblical model for the church
There are three basic elements in the history of the church
- It should bring glory to God
- Salvation is through Jesus Christ alone
- The church functions in and through the revealed Word of God
He also listed the non-negotiables that have governed his ministry:
- The absolute authority of Scripture
- The church is an assembly of believers who are worshippers informed by the Word
- Doctrinal clarity is essential. Clarity translates into conviction.
- Spiritual Discernment is vital to keep the truth from being perverted
- The church is to pursue holiness
- The church needs to develop godly leaders
- There should be a plurality of leaders
- Unity is produced by honest, mutual love and affection
- The church should be marked by prayer
- The church should be marked by sacrificial giving
- All
of the non-negotiables result in evangelism. Evangelism is the people
of the church leading lives that make the Gospel believable
A few choice quotes from the evening:
"We're not trying to reproduce the world in the church."
"We worship an unchanging God who has an unchanging message that comes out of an unchanging Word."
"The Father's Will,"
The following excerpt
is from "The Father's Will," a sermon first published in 1873. We
start with the text Spurgeon was preaching from:
"This is the Father's will which hath sent me, that of all which he
hath given me I should lose nothing, but should raise it up again at the last
day. And this is the will of him that sent me, that every one which seeth the
Son, and believeth on him, may have everlasting life: and I will raise him up
at the last day" (John 6:39-40).
The two
phrases set forth the divine side of salvation and the human side of salvation.
You know,
beloved friends, that the general custom is, with the various sects of
Christians, to take up one part of the Bible and preach that part, and then it
is the duty of all divines on that side of the question not to preach anything
but that. Or if they find a text that looks in rather a different direction,
these gentlemen are expected to twist it round to suit their creed, it being
supposed that only one set of truths can possibly be worth defending, it never
having entered into the heads of some people that there can be two apparently
irreconcilable truths which nevertheless are equally valuable.
Think not that I come here to defend the human side of salvation at the expense
of the divine; nor am I desirous to magnify the divine side of it at the
expense of the human; rather would I beseech you to look at the two texts which
are together before us, and to be prepared to receive both sets of truths. I
think it a very dangerous thing to say that the truth lies between the
two extremes. It does not: the truth lies in the two, in the
comprehension of both; not in taking a part from this and a part from that,
toning down one and modulating the other, as is too much the custom, but in
believing and giving full expression to everything that God reveals whether we
can reconcile the things or not, opening our hearts as children open their
understandings to their father's teaching, feeling that if the gospel were such
that we could make it into a complete system, we might be quite sure it was not
God's gospel, for any system that comes from God must be too grand for the
human brain to grasp at one effort; and any path that he takes must extend too
far beyond the line of our vision for us to make a nice little map of it, and
mark it out in squares.
This world, you know, we can readily enough map. Go and get charts, and you
shall find that men of understanding have indicated almost every rock in the
sea, almost every hamlet on the land; but they cannot map out the heavens in
that way, for albeit that you can buy the celestial atlas, yet as you are well
enough aware there is not one in ten thousand of the stars that can possibly be
put there; when they are resolved by the telescope they become altogether
innumerable, and so far exceed all count that it is impossible for us to reckon
them up in order and say, that is the name of this, and this is the name of
that. We must leave them: they are beyond us. There are deeps into which we
cannot peer; even the strongest glass cannot show us much more than a mere
corner of the starry worlds.
Thus too is it with the doctrines of the gospel: they are too bright for our
weak eyes, too sublime for our finite minds to scan, save at a humble distance.
Be it ours to take all we can of their solemn import, to believe them heartily,
accept them gratefully, and then fall down before the Lord, and pour out our
very souls in worshipping him.
;)