The Way of the Cross Leads to Heaven

The Way of the Cross Leads to Heaven
JOHN 14:6 JESUS CHRIST said: I AM THE WAY

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

"DO YOU HAVE A TESTING MINDSET?"

A Testing Mindset‏
by David Cloud

One thing that a Christian must develop if he wants to have spiritual victory is a testing mindset. This means that he must learn to test everything by the Bible to see if it is right or wrong, true or false.

I thank the Lord that the man who led me to Christ taught me this so that I started out my Christian life with a testing mindset. It has protected me from many spiritual pitfalls. Traveling together from south Florida to Mexico, we stopped at a Christian bookstore somewhere on the Gulf Coast. I think it was Mobile, Alabama. He bought me a King James Bible , and then he pointed to all of the books that were for sale and said, “You must be very careful and test everything by God’s Word. You can’t trust man; you can’t trust the “big names.” The Bible warns that there will be many false teachers.”

It was with this wise counsel that I began my Christian life.
The testing mindset is despised today among most professing Christians, even “evangelicals.” I recall the first ecumenical conference I reported on. It was in New Orleans in 1987 and there were tens of thousands of attendees representing 40 different denominations. Roman Catholics formed a large presence. There was even a Roman Catholic mass each morning. One day I was talking with an Episcopalian lay leader and he gave me his testimony of salvation which sounded Scriptural. I then said something to the effect, “If you believe the Bible and know the Lord, how can you be comfortable in the midst of this heretical stew?” He replied, “You need to relax more; you are too afraid of being deceived.”

That is dangerous and very foolish advice in light of the warnings that follow.

Matthew 7:15-17
1. Jesus warned that false prophets will deceive men. We should not be surprised that there are so many false churches today. We must expect that there will be false prophets and we must be careful so we will not be deceived by them.

2. Jesus said that the false prophets will appear as true prophets outwardly and by this means they deceive the unwary. They have Bibles; they talk about Jesus and salvation and good living. They have churches and teach doctrine.

3. False teachers are known by their fruit (vv. 16-20).
a. The fruit is not works; in verses 22-23 Jesus says that false teachers will do “many wonderful works.”
b. The fruit is biblical salvation (v. 23), obedience (v. 21), and doctrinal truth.

The sure fruit of a false teacher is his false doctrine (Acts 20:30; Rom. 16:17; Gal. 1:6-7; 1 Tim. 1:3; 2 Pet. 2:1; 1 John 4:1-2). Consider Mother Teresa. She did many good works in caring for the poor and sick in the neediest parts of the world, but she didn’t know Christ and trusted in a false gospel and taught heresies. The 2007 book Mother Teresa: Come Be My Light contains statements made by the nun to her Catholic confessors and superiors over a period of more than 66 years. She continually referred to her spiritual condition as “my darkness” and to Jesus as “the Absent One.” In March 1953 she wrote, “... there is such terrible darkness within me, as if everything was dead. It has been like this more or less from the time I started ‘the work.’” At the suggestion of one confessor she wrote the following to Jesus: “I call, I cling, I want -- and there is no One to answer -- no One on Whom I can cling -- no, No One. -- Alone ... Where is my Faith -- even deep down right in there is nothing, but emptiness & darkness. ... When I try to raise my thoughts to Heaven -- there is such convicting emptiness that those very thoughts return like sharp knives & hurt my very soul. -- I am told God loves me -- and yet the reality of darkness & coldness & emptiness is so great that nothing touches my soul.”

In 1962 she wrote: “If I ever become a Saint -- I will surely be one of ‘darkness.’”

In 1984 we interviewed Sister Ann of the Missionaries of Charity, which is Mother Teresa’s organization. Ann was working with elderly people in Nepal, and she said that they do not try to convert dying Hindus to Christ but simply instruct them to pray to their gods.

Matthew 24:4-5, 11, 24
1. Jesus warned again that there will be false prophets and they will multiply at the end of the church age. The closer we draw to His return the more spiritual deception we can expect to encounter, and we are seeing that in our day. Most churches are not true to the Bible. False teachers abound.

2. Observe that the deception of the end times will be so effective that “insomuch that, if it were possible, they shall deceive the very elect.” That is powerful deception. How diligent and cautious we must be!

3. It is the believer’s responsibility to protect himself and his loved ones by being cautious and having a testing mindset.

4. Jesus warned that false teachers will deceive through “signs and wonders.” This brings to mind the Pentecostal-Charismatic movement, which has a great emphasis on miracles. In light of Jesus’ warning, we know that just because a preacher’s ministry is accompanied by alleged miracles does not mean it is of God. Every ministry must be tested by the Bible , and by the Bible alone.

5. Jesus warned about false Christs, and the world abounds with them today. The Christ of the Roman Catholic Church is a consecrated wafer and a weak man in strong Mary’s arms. The Christ of Jehovah’s Witnesses and Unitarians is not God. The Christ of the Mormons is a brother to Satan. The Christ of the New Age gained mystical wisdom in India. The Christ of the Da Vinci Code is a married man. The Christ of Liberation Theology is a freedom fighter. The Christ of the Jesus Seminar brand is a confused man that didn’t know what he was doing. The Christ of Christian rockers is a party dude. The Christ of the emerging church is an environmentalist. The Christ of Islam didn’t die on the cross.

John 8:31-32
1. The only way to know the truth and to be set free from sin and error is to continue in Jesus’ Word. Notice that He didn’t say “words” plural but “word” singular. This refers to the inscripturated Word, the Bible . The Word of God has been written under divine inspiration, canonized, and preserved for us in the Bible. Therefore, if we want to know the truth, we need to read it, study it, memorize it, meditate on it, obey it, and test everything by it.

2. This is the only way, and it is also a sure way . Jesus gives His solemn promise that if we continue in His Word we WILL know the truth. This is one of the promises that motivated me to study the Bible diligently as a young Christian and to persist over the past 37 years. I want to know the truth, and Christ has given me His promise. Many voices within Christianity claim that we cannot be certain of what doctrine is correct, so we should just get along, but Jesus gave His promise that we can know. Compare John 7:17.

Acts 17:11
1. The Jews at Berea are commended for testing everything carefully by the Scriptures. This isn’t popular in modern Christianity but it is called “noble” in God’s Word.

2. Notice that they searched the Scripture daily. Before you can test anything by God’s Word you must first study it.

1 Thessalonians 5:21
1. We are admonished to prove all things. This is a far-reaching obligation. We should test everything in our lives by God’s holy Word, not only Christian teaching and “church” things but also job, friends, fashion, entertainment, marriage, child training methods, music, and all other things.

2. We are also admonished to hold fast that which is good, which refers to those things that are in accordance with and approved by God’s Word.

2 Corinthians 10:5
1. God wants the believer to bring every thought into captivity to the truth. What a far-reaching command! .

2. We do this by filling our minds with God’s Word and letting it measure every thought that enters our hearts.

3. The human imagination is a great spiritual battleground and must be guarded jealously. The modern entertainment industry aims its heavy guns at man’s imagination. Satanic-led entertainment creators want to corrupt the imagination through sensuality and turn it from the living God through the creation of vain worlds. There is particular danger for believers in the genres of science fiction and horror.

2 Corinthians 11:3-4
1. There is great spiritual danger for Christians (2 Cor. 11:3-4). Paul was afraid for the Corinthian believers because they were not careful about doctrine.

2. The devil complicates doctrine (“corrupted from the simplicity,” 2 Cor. 11:3). Examples of this are theological modernism, Calvinistic Reformed theology, and emerging church doctrine. The truth of God’s Word is exceedingly deep, but it also has a basic simplicity that is comprehensible to ordinary people (Luke 10:21).

3. Paul warned of false Christs, false gospels, and false spirits. The believer must be careful not to believe someone just because he talks about Christ or the gospel or the Spirit. Everything must be carefully tested by God’s Word.

4. We see in verse 4 that the teaching of the apostles is the standard for the truth (“whom we have not preached”). We have the teaching of the apostles in the New Testament Scriptures. This is the “faith once delivered to the saints” (Jude 3) by which we are to measure teaching and practice.

5. The devil is clever and must be resisted with much wisdom and zeal (2 Cor. 11:3).

6. Broadmindedness in doctrinal matters is evidence of carnality, not spirituality. Because the Corinthians were carnal (1 Cor. 3:1-2), Paul knew they might “well bear with” the false teachers (v. 4). This does not mean they would necessarily follow the false teaching but they would put up with it; they would not resist it properly. Being able to “see both sides” is not a mark of spirituality. There is only one side to the truth! The way of truth is narrow (Mat. 7:14).

7. False teachers imitate true teachers (2 Cor. 11:13-15). They don’t invent new things; they pervert the old things. They have churches and Bibles and preach Jesus. The closer something is to the truth, the more difficult it is to discern its error.

Colossians 2:8
1. Again we are exhorted to beware of false teachers. We must have a testing mindset.

2. Notice that false teachers desire to “spoil.” The idea is to rob. False teachers want to rob believers of their absolute confidence in the truth of God’s Word and in the grace of Christ and to replace this with human tradition and philosophy.

3. The way to defeat these false teachers is to hold fast to the Bible as the divinely-inspired Word of God and as the sole authority for faith and practice (2 Timothy 3:16-17).

Revelation 2:2, 6
1. The church at Ephesus was commended for testing false teachers and for rejecting them. Jesus was pleased with this. It is something that every individual believer and every church should emulate.

2. Observe that the church felt very strongly about this matter. They labeled the false teachers “liars” and hated their deeds.

Proverbs 14:15
The book of Proverbs contrasts the wise with the foolish. In this proverb, the foolish person is said to be gullible and easily deceived because he doesn’t carefully test everything by God’s Word. The word “simple” here does not refer to simple-minded; it refers to gullible. The “simple” reads Christian books and hears sermons and attends conferences and takes everything in without testing it.

Psalms 119:128
1. The Psalmist gives the example of loving God’s Word and hating everything that is false. That is a testing mindset. The Bible is the absolute standard for truth, and by comparing everything in life with this Standard we can be protected from error.

2. We see that the believer should be passionate about the truth. The Psalmist was not neutral or half-hearted in this matter. He held God’s Word in great esteem and hated every false way.
________________________________________Distributed by Way of Life Literature

Thursday, August 26, 2010

EIGHT GLIMPSES OF THE GENUIS OF CHARLES SPURGEON

Eight Glimpses of the Genius of Charles Spurgeon
by Mike Ross — last modified May 29, 2010 11:55 PM
Spurgeon's genius sprang from his latent gifts enhanced by the ministry of the Holy Spirit.

Eight Glimpses of the Genius of Charles Spurgeon
by J. J. Brown

J. J. Brown is the former Chairman of Spurgeon's College Council, and Secretary of Spurgeon's College (London). He still serves at the Spurgeon's College Archives, where memorabilia, artifacts, and other materials from Spurgeon's era are housed for viewing.

#1 - His Spiritual Depth
He was utterly dependent on the Holy Spirit — "If we have not the Spirit which Jesus promised, we cannot perform the commission which Jesus gave." His simple trust in God which enabled him to face the eventualities and tasks of a demanding life was sustained by earnest prayer. "Prayer has become as essential to me as the heaving of my lungs."

#2 - His Preaching Power
He was acclaimed as "the greatest preacher in an age of great preachers." At the age of 17 he drew hundreds to churches in Cambridgeshire. At 19, thousands attended his ministry in London. Congregations were spellbound as with his bell-like voice he expounded Scripture in plain and memorable language. His preaching was accompanied by pastoral care and philanthropic work. The Stockwell Orphanage, which accommodated 500 children, was said to be his greatest sermon.

#3 - His Uncompromising Stance
"If a minister is not sure about his message let him keep quiet until he is." The Bible is to be expounded, not criticised. The Gospel is a message to be proclaimed, not debated. His strong assertions let loose some painful controversies. But he stood his ground and refused to betray his conscience.

#4 - His Reading Talent
As a young child his toys were books. He learned to read them early and quickly. Eventually he could read six ordinary books at a sitting, and as many substantial volumes in a week. A retentive memory and a computer-like recall system provided grist for the mill of preparation for sermons, lectures, and books. Spurgeon's magazine The Sword and the Trowel often contained as many as fifty book reviews from his pen — sufficient proof of his capacity.

#5 - His Generous Giving
Much of his personal money was used for the support of his College, his Orphan Homes, and other institutions which he founded. In addition, many individuals benefited from his benevolence.

#6 - His Evangelistic Passion
"If I had worlds to buy one of your souls, I would readily give them if I might but bring one of you to Christ." The front cover of the earliest volumes of his published sermons carried the motif of Moses with the serpent of brass to which poisoned people looked to find life. The motif is surrounded with the text — "We Preach Christ and Him Crucified." Spurgeon thus remembered his own conversion experience when he was urged to look to Christ. His whole ministry was designed to point people to his Saviour. He founded his Seminary in order to equip preachers to be evangelists as well as pastors.

#7 - His Observant Faculties
His eyes were open and his ears attuned to the sights and sounds of the world around him. Many of his sermons are illuminated by the things he saw and heard. The rural environment in which he spent much of his boyhood coloured his thought and speech. He developed the character of "John Ploughman," and preached a series of "Farm Sermons." He was also a shrewd observer of human nature, sharpened by his experience of interviewing prospective ministerial students. He was quick to see human need and equally ready to provide practical help.

#8 - His Nonconformist Mould
Among his ancestors were those who suffered in the cause of religious freedom. His father and grandfather were Independent (Congregationalist) Ministers. Their churches were self-governing, free from State control. Spurgeon's nonconformity bred innovation — he rejected clerical attire, and he refused ecclesiastical titles. He preferred a platform to a pulpit. He was not averse to preaching in secular buildings. He published a sermon every week from the year 1855 until he died in 1892 [and previously unpublished sermons from Sunday & Thursday evenings continued to be printed weekly until 1917, finally ceasing during World War I].

Conclusion
Spurgeon's genius sprang from his latent gifts enhanced by the ministry of the Holy Spirit. His voice, his command of language, his inimitable style, his sensitivity, imagination, passion and intellect were all at the disposal of his Lord and Saviour. Through his College, his Child Care Charity, his churches, his printed sermons and published books...
"He being dead yet speaketh."

Listen for his word through the book you hold in your hand.

J. J. BROWN is the author of The Adventures of Charles ($4.00),
an excellent new children's biography about C. H. Spurgeon (Pilgrim Publications).

NOTES OF INTEREST
A Message For Today
by Dr. Raymond Brown
— Former Principal, Spurgeon's College

It is an immense delight to me to know that Spurgeon's sermons are still in demand and that these masterly expositions originally published as The Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit are available to modern readers.

Spurgeon's sermons are so utterly BIBLICAL. He had an intense desire to let Scripture speak for itself, and time and again in reading the sermons one rejoices in their expository character. He was deeply influenced by the English Puritan tradition and shared their desire to make the message of Scripture absolutely clear and deeply convincing.

Spurgeon's sermons are so utterly CHRISTOCENTRIC. He had a passion to exalt Christ, and time and again he focuses our attention on the Person and Work of Christ. He is not interested in marginal issues or peripheral concerns. Whatever his subject, in the end the reader is brought face to face with the Saviour of mankind.

Spurgeon's sermons are so utterly RELEVANT. To read them in our own decade is not to take a journey into the archaic past, or to study an outdated style peculiar to Victorian England. His masterly analysis of man's sad condition and his rich exposition of man's only Hope brings the modern reader face to face with reality.

Anyone who reads these sermons cannot fail to be helped. A preacher who studies them with care will derive inspiration and insight from any time he devotes to them. I am glad that the ministry of this great preacher lives on.
— Brown's comments here are from the
Jacket Cover for MTP Vol 49, Year 1903

(Note: Raymond Brown is not related to J. J. Brown, above)

PILGRIM PUBLICATIONS

Sunday, August 22, 2010

The Life and Ministry of the Prince of Preachers

Introduction to C H Spurgeon (1834-1892)
by Mike Ross — last modified Jul 05, 2010 08:34 PM
"We Preach Christ and Him Crucified." -- The motto of Spurgeon's ministry and Metropolitan Tabernacle church (based on 1st Cor. 1:23-24 and John 3:14)


"I take my text, and make a bee-line to the CROSS." - Spurgeon
"The best preacher is the man who charges his gun with all he knows, and then - before he fires - puts himself in." (from W. Y. Fullerton's Biography of Spurgeon - page 197)

C. H. Spurgeon's blessed ministry was grounded in the holy scripture of 1st Corinthians 1:23-24 "But we preach CHRIST CRUCIFIED, unto the Jews a stumblingblock, and unto the Greeks foolishness; but unto them which are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God, and the wisdom of God."

Based on the Biblical declaration of John 3:14, "And As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of man be lifted up," the striking emblem was his motto and appeared on the cloth-binding spines of the original New Park Street and Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit Sermon Series volumes.

Charles Haddon Spurgeon (1834-1892) was a noted British Baptist minister who preached to throngs of souls at the Metropolitan Tabernacle in London, England (which held a total capacity of 6000 people, including Standing Room only). Greatly blessed by the Holy Spirit, his success and worldwide popularity were due in large measure to a genius intellect, natural gift of oratory, thoroughly biblical expository messages, along with the fervant prayers of his congregational Tabernacle members.

In 1854, just four years after his conversion, Spurgeon, then only 20, became pastor of London’s famed New Park Street Church. The congregation quickly outgrew their building, moved to Exeter Hall, then to Surrey Music Hall. In these venues Spurgeon frequently preached to audiences numbering more than 10,000—all in the days before electronic amplification. In 1861 the congregation moved permanently to the newly constructed Metropolitan Tabernacle. Spurgeon's many writings and brilliant sermons are still widely published today, testifying to his timeless appeal.

How C. H. Spurgeon found Christ --
"I looked to Him; He looked to me;
and we were ONE forever." (CHS)
Isaiah 45:22 --
"Look unto me and be ye saved all the ends of the earth,
for I am God, and there is none else."

Who is on the Lord's side? Who? Wounded on the battlefield, I raise myself on my arm and cry to those around me, and urge them to espouse my Master's cause, for if we were wounded or dead for His sake all would be gain. By the splendour of redeeming love, I charge each believer to confess his Lord, and live wholly to him. Yours for Christ's sake, - C.H. SPURGEON

Excerpt from C. H. Spurgeon's Letter
read to his congregation on January 17, 1875
-- Published in the Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit
(Vol 21, Year 1875, pg. 48)