We Love God!

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

Our death is just as meticulously planned as the death of Christ. There is no combination of evil men, disease, or accident that can kill us as long as God still has work for us to do. To those who walk with faith in God’s providence, they die according to God’s timetable… The immediate cause of death might be any number of things, but the ultimate cause is God. Yes, wicked men nailed Christ to the cross, yet we read, “But the Lord was pleased to crush Him, putting Him to grief” (Isaiah 53:10).
Erwin Lutzer

The noun [mercy] and its derivatives always deal with what we see of pain, misery, and distress, these results of sin; and grace always with the sin and the guilt itself. The one extends relief, the other pardon; the one cures, heals, helps, the other cleanses and reinstates. With God [grace] is always first and [mercy] is second.
R.C.H. Lenski

CCXLI. Demas.

2 TIM. iv. 10. “For Demas hath for-
saken me, having loved this present world.”

WE know very little of Demas, beyond what may be
gathered from the brief and melancholy notice of the text.
It appears, however, that he stood high in the esteem
of St. Paul, and that, too, through services rendered to
Christianity. It seems very remarkable that it should
have been love of the world, not cowardice or fear,
which made Demas forsake Paul on the eve of his martyr-
dom.
I. Consider Demas, an apostate, after having done and
endured much in the cause of Christ. He became a com-
panion of St. Paul at the very time when that apostle was
hunted down by persecution. Every convert then had a
great cost to count, and his profession was a guarantee
that he expected tribulation. Demas was no hypocrite,
he was no hireling, but he suffered the world to tamper
with his affections, and kept not watch over his heart.
Therefore he was gradually seduced from God. It is not
a world in arms—it is a world in smiles, which it is the
hardest to resist. Be not too sure that you are proof
against its baits. We have no security but in constant
prayer, in constant war.
II. Consider Demas, an apostate, though he had to quit
St. Paul when that apostle was on the verge of martyrdom.
Who could have doubted the truth of Christianity, or re-
fused to adhere to its profession, with the prisoner Paul for
his preacher and his evidence? But Demas did this and
forsook Paul, having loved this present world. “If any
man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him.”
Such is the authoritative decision of St. John: and what
then can come to pass but that, if you allow the world to
gain the ascendency here, you will make yourselves out-
casts from happiness for ever?
Hugh Macmillan, D.D.