We Love God!

God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)

Truth renews the mind. Indeed, the truth which would affect the heart, which moves the heart, which changes the heart, must first enter through the vestibule of the mind if it would enter the sanctuary of the heart. The intention of truth preached is to affect the emotions and the will and the heart and the whole of our humanity…and thus preaching must come first through the mind. It makes its appeal through the mind; it enters through the mind – but it doesn’t simply stop with the mind.
John Armstrong

Just because you come to Christ does not mean you will not experience suffering. Christians and non-Christians suffer with similar trials. The difference is not in the nature of the trial, but rather the way in which we respond to the trials. You see, the world needs things in their life to go well to stay happy. Therefore they are continually up and down based upon their circumstances. Christians however know that God is sovereign over the trials they experience. They know the trials are specifically customized to their lives sent from the wise and loving hands of God. They are not sent to rob us of our joy. They are sent to refine us and make us more like Christ. Therefore it is our responsibility to by God’s grace remain under the trials until they perform in us the work designated by God. Knowing and believing this, we can have deep joy even in the worst of times because we know God’s refining process is the best thing we can ask for for spiritual transformation, Christlikeness.
Randy Smith

CCLV. The Pleasures of Sin.

HEB. xi. 25. “The pleasures of sin.”

SlN has pleasures. This must be true, otherwise men
would not commit it. Sin is at first indulged in for
pleasure. But my contention is, that its value is a
negative quantity, that “it costs more than it comes to,”
and I will give you the data from which I have worked
out this result.
I. The pleasures of sin are short lived. There is in them
at best only a temporary thrill which vibrates for a moment,
and needs to be reproduced again and again. Take in-
temperance for example.
Pleasure in sin is external and evanescent, Christian
happiness is internal and permanent.
II. The pleasures of sin leave a sting behind, and will
not bear after reflection. There is guilt in them, and there
never can be happiness in contemplating that.
But the Christian’s happiness will bear reflection. His
yesterdays look backward with a smile, and do not, Par-
thian-like, wound him as they fly.
III. The pleasures of sin are such that the oftener they
are enjoyed there is the less enjoyment in them.
But Jesus keeps the good wine till the end.
IV. The pleasures of sin are expensive. I refer not to
money though that is by no means unimportant, but the
expense of the man’s own nature. The sinner is old before
his time. His physical power is gone. His intellect has
lost its freshness.
Far otherwise is it with the Christian. The more he
knows of Christ, the more does he learn to use his body
as a temple of the Holy Ghost, his intellect as an instru-
ment of serving God, and his will in choosing to run in the
way of the Divine commands.
W. M. Taylor, D.D.