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Wednesday, March 22, 2023

Satisfying the Hunger and Thirst for Righteousness– Lent with Bonhoeffer Day 25– Purity 997

Satisfying the Hunger and Thirst for Righteousness– Lent with Bonhoeffer Day 25– Purity 997    

Purity 997 03/21/2023 Purity 997 Podcast

Purity 997 on YouTube:



Good morning,

Today’s spectacular photo of the first sunset of Spring over Lake Ontario comes to us from Celestial Blue Photography as Rocco Saya shared this scene on social media on Monday pointing out that it was “A good first day of spring!: and that “It brought some beautiful light to end the day” that revealed that despite the change of season there was still “ice on the boulders lining Sheldon beach.”

Well, it’s Wednesday, and even though most of us have arrived at Hump Day, I have arrived at a one day weekend as my employer shifts our schedules to cover Saturdays and this week is my turn. So I have off today, work Saturday, and will have another “one day weekend” come Sunday. A man’s got to do what a man’s got to do and although I am not thrilled with “End Days” (or is in N-Days – as in NOBODY wants to work on Saturday)- I know they are a part of the job and as long as I want to receive the pay benefits that provide for me and my family, I accept them for what they are and try to make the most of the day off today and Sunday.

As for today, I have another Freedom Appointment scheduled this morning so shortly after posting this message, I will be doing the work of ministry as I will encourage another man from the Freedom in Christ course through the Steps to Freedom in Christ.  So, if its before or between 9am & 12pm, I’d appreciate your prayers for support as we will be going before the Lord in this guided process of repentance that seeks to resolve spiritual and personal conflicts to assist our brother to experience or deepen his freedom in Christ through this encounter in God’s presence.

Speaking of coming into God’s presence, those of us who have put their faith in God can draw close to the Lord any time we want because we are one with Him in Spirit (1 Cor 6:17) and we have direct access to God through the Holy Spirit (Eph 2:18). God is available to us.   But the question is: are we making ourselves available to God?

Well, let’s not worry about it. Let’s make ourselves available now by drawing close to God on this 25th day of Lent by continuing in our current series, the 40 Day Journey with Dietrich Bonhoeffer, with Day 25.  

As a reminder, and as we will say each day of this journey, we take this path to mark the season of Lent and to draw closer to God in anticipation of the celebration of Easter, knowing that if we take this journey of repentance seriously, we will not only see the days and seasons change, the Lord will use it to change us too. 

You can sign up to get this devotional yourself by going to the Biblegateway link on the blog ((https://www.biblegateway.com/devotionals/40-Day-Journey-Dietrich-Bonhoeffer/today)) . 

Day 25

Bonhoeffer writes:

“Christians are persons who no longer seek their salvation, their deliverance, their justification in themselves, but in Jesus Christ alone.

They know that God’s Word in Jesus Christ pronounces them guilty, even when they feel nothing of their own guilt, and that God’s Word in Jesus Christ pronounces them free and righteous even when they feel nothing of their own righteousness…

Because they daily hunger and thirst for righteousness, they long for the redeeming Word again and again.

It can only come from the outside. In themselves they are destitute and dead. Help must come from the outside; and it has come and comes daily and anew in the Word of Jesus Christ, bringing us redemption, righteousness, innocence, and blessedness.

But God put this Word into the mouth of human beings so that it may be passed on to others.

When people are deeply affected by the Word, they tell it to other people.

God has willed that we should seek and find God’s living Word in the testimony of other Christians, in the mouths of human beings.

Therefore, Christians need other Christians who speak God’s Word to them. They need them again and again when they become uncertain and disheartened.”

Biblical Wisdom

Remember your leaders, those who spoke the word of God to you; consider the outcome of their way of life, and imitate their faith. Hebrews 13:7

Questions to Ponder

  • Where do disciples go to satisfy their daily hunger and thirst for righteousness?

M.T. Clark: Disciples are students of God’s word and the place that we should go to satisfy our daily hunger and thirst for righteousness is in the Bible.  Personal Bible study should be a part of our day. It is where we are to find our daily bread.  

Of course, this bread, the word of God can be found many different forms – in daily devotionals like the one we are doing now, in Christian podcasts and sermons, Christian books, Christian music, Bible Studies, Bible commentaries, and Christian videos. Believe me when I tell you that those who have access to the internet have virtually unlimited ways to be encouraged in their faith and to receive the things that will satisfy our hunger and thirst for righteousness.  However, as much as the various resources mentioned here can help us in our faith, I would still encourage you to go straight to the source of God’s wisdom personally by reading the Bible and asking God to reveal what He wants you to know in prayer.  

Because just like processed foods are not as good for us as raw foods, reading the Bible for ourselves is free from any “additives” that may be more another man’s opinion than the word that God has for you personally.  

  • If Christians find their salvation, deliverance, and justification not in them­selves but in Jesus Christ, how should they use their resulting freedom?

M.T. Clark:  Since we find our salvation, deliverance, and justification in Jesus Christ, we should use our resulting freedom to give God glory by encouraging others to put their faith in Jesus so they can be saved, delivered and justified.  Of course, we should enjoy our freedom in Christ, but part of our enjoyment should be realizing our purpose in Christ, to be an ambassador to God’s kingdom and to allow the Lord to use us in the ministry of reconciliation.  If we know God’s love, have experienced our freedom in Christ, our hearts should be full of the desire to share the love and joy that we have found in Christ alone.

  • If God has put God’s word into the “mouth of human beings,” who is responsible to speak the word? Only pastors or church workers? Why?

M.T. Clark: If God has given us His word personally, which He has if we are saved, it is our honor and duty to speak it to ourselves, to remind us of what we have received and to live our our life in Christ, and to speak it to others, to share the love of God and in the hope that the words we share will be used by God to bring others to peace with God through faith in Jesus Christ.   It is not only pastors or church workers responsibility to share the word. Everyone who has received God’s word is commanded to share it by Christ Himself, who told us all to go and make disciples and to teach them everything He has taught us.

Psalm Fragment

On the glorious splendor of your majesty,
   and on your wondrous works, I will meditate.
The might of your awesome deeds shall be proclaimed,
   and I will declare your greatness.
They shall celebrate the fame of your abundant goodness,
   and shall sing aloud of your righteousness. 
Psalm 145:5-7

Journal Reflections

  • Write about specific Christians who have spoken a word from God to you when you needed it.

M.T. Clark: I have countless examples. Pastor Bob Costello mentored me and led through recovery. He spoke the words of truth to me that gave me hope that I could actually overcome my addictions and gave me the training I needed to be bold and courageous in encouraging others to walk by faith in the power of the Holy Spirit.   I have also received a timely word from the Lord  through pastors, teachers and “plain old Christians” – in person and through various forms of media – when I needed it.  So we should seek out community with other Christians and continually seek to know the Lord more through personal study because we never know who or what will be used by the Lord to speak to us.

  • Write about people to whom you have spoken God’s word.

M.T. Clark:  Well, this should give glory to God. I have answered the call to speak the word of God and following is a list of some of the people or situations in which I have spoken God’s word: 

·       Messages, prayers, and encouraging words at my local churches

·       Praying for people at work and in public  

·       Gospel Message at the 7th Street Park in Hudson NY

·       Street evangelism with Pastor Bob on the streets of Hudson NY

·       Street evangelism on the streets of a village in Zambia with a mission team in 2016

·       Delivering a personal testimony of God’s faithfulness and power at 3 churches and 2 schools in Zambia and Zimbabwe in 2016

·       Jail Ministry at the Columbia County Jail

·       Celebrate Freedom – recovery ministry from 2015 to 2020

·       Community Freedom – CFM – 2021 – where I met and proposed to my wife

·       This is blog and this podcast – has had listeners and web page views from all over the world – what people are receiving or how much, I will never know but if this message of encouragement reaches EVEN 1 person, I will continue to “bring it” as much as I can.

So, there are ways to share the word of God. You don’t have to be a pastor to be used by God. You just have to say “Yes” when God responds to your prayer to “send me”.

Intercessions

Think of someone you would like to be a spiritual friend with and ask God to help you build a mutually supportive spiritual relationship with him or her.

M.T. Clark:  

Lord God,  

There  is no one that I would like to be spiritual friends with more than my children and my step children. They have all been exposed to gospel and I would like to believe that they all have their names written in the Lamb’s book of life but Lord only know their hearts and only you can give them the revelation of the truth and the richness of a relationship with you.  So, I pray that you will use me, my wife, or someone else to speak a word that will cause them to confirm their faith,  to zealously follow you, and seek to be a spiritual friend with me.  So I pray for Haley, Brennan, AnneMarie, Rachel, Jakob, Elisabeth, Benjamin, and Jeanette.

In Jesus Name, I pray. Amen.

Prayer for Today

O Holy Spirit, send the people I need to bring me the word of God, and send the people I need to speak the word of God to.

In Jesus’ name, I pray. Amen. 

 

(40-Day Journey with Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Copyright © 2007 Augsburg Books, imprint of Augsburg Fortress.)

***As we are being provided with Bible verses from the 40 Day Journey with Dietrich Bonhoeffer, we will are taking a break from sharing a verse of the day from “The NLT Bible Promise Book for Men”. We plan on resuming that normal installment of the blog following Easter.*** 

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As always, I invite all to go to mt4christ.org where I always share insights from prominent Christian theologians and counselors to assist my brothers and sisters in Christ with their walk.

Today we continue sharing from A.W. Pink’s “The Sovereignty of God.”

As always, I share this information for educational purposes and encourage all to purchase A.W. Pink’s books for your own private study and to support his work.  This resource is available on many websites for less than $20.00.

THE SOVEREIGNTY OF GOD

By  ARTHUR W. PINK

CHAPTER ELEVEN

DIFFICULTIES AND OBJECTIONS

“Yet ye say, The way of the Lord is not equal. Hear now, O house of Israel; Is not My way equal? are not your ways unequal?” (Ezek. 18:25).

A convenient point has been reached when we may now examine, more definitely, some of the difficulties encountered and the objections which might be advanced against what we have written in previous pages. The author deemed it better to reserve these for a separate consideration rather than deal with them as he went along, requiring as that would have done the breaking of the course of thought and destroying the strict unity of each chapter, or else cumbering our pages with numerous and lengthy footnotes.

That there are difficulties involved in an attempt to set forth the truth of God’s sovereignty is readily acknowledged. The hardest thing of all, perhaps, is to maintain the balance of truth. It is largely a matter of perspective. That God is sovereign is explicitly declared in Scripture: that man is a responsible creature is also expressly affirmed in Holy Writ. To define the relationship of these two truths, to fix the dividing line betwixt them, to show exactly where they meet, to exhibit the perfect consistency of the one with the other, is the weightiest task of all. Many have openly declared that it is impossible for the finite mind to harmonize them. Others tell us it is not necessary or even wise to attempt it. But, as we have remarked in an earlier chapter, it seems to us more honoring to God to seek in His Word the solution to every problem. What is impossible to man is possible with God, and while we grant that the finite mind is limited in its reach, yet, we remember that the Scriptures are given to us that the man of God may be “thoroughly furnished,” and if we approach their study in the spirit of humility and of expectancy, then, according unto our faith will it be unto us.

As remarked above, the hardest task in this connection is to preserve the balance of truth while insisting on both the sovereignty of God and the responsibility of the creature. To some of our readers it may appear that in pressing the sovereignty of God to the lengths we have man is reduced to a mere puppet. Hence, to guard against this, they would modify their definitions and statements relating to God’s sovereignty, and thus seek to blunt the keen edge of what is so offensive to the carnal mind. Others, while refusing to weigh the evidence that we have adduced in support of our assertions, may raise objections which to their minds are sufficient to dispose of the whole subject. We would not waste time in the effort to refute objections made in a carping and contentious spirit but we are desirous of meeting fairly the difficulties experienced by those who are anxious to obtain a fuller knowledge of the truth. Not that we deem ourselves able to give a satisfactory and final answer to every question that might be asked. Like the reader, the writer knows but “in part” and sees through a glass “darkly.” All that we can do is to examine these difficulties in the light we now have, in dependence upon the Spirit of God that we may follow on to know the Lord better.

We propose now to retrace our steps and pursue the same order of thought as that followed up to this point. As a part of our “definition” of God’s sovereignty we affirmed: “To say that God is sovereign is to declare that He is the Almighty, the Possessor of all power in heaven and earth, so that none can defeat His counsels, thwart His purpose, or resist His will.… The sovereignty of the God of Scripture is absolute, irresistible, infinite.” To put it now in its strongest form, we insist that God does as He pleases, only as He pleases, always as He pleases; that whatever takes place in time is but the outworking of that which He decreed in eternity. In proof of this assertion we appeal to the following scripture: “But our God is in the heavens: He hath done whatsoever He hath pleased” (Psa. 115:3). “For the Lord of hosts hath purposed, and who shall disannul it? and His hand is stretched out, and who shall turn it back?” (Isa. 14:27). “And all the inhabitants of the earth are reputed as nothing: and He doeth according to His will in the army of heaven, and among the inhabitants of the earth: and none can stay His hand or say unto Him, What doest thou?” (Dan. 4:35). “For of Him, and through Him, and to Him, are all things: to whom be glory for ever. Amen” (Rom. 11:36).

The above declarations are so plain and positive that any comments of ours upon them would simply be darkening counsel by words without knowledge. Such express statements as those just quoted are so sweeping and so dogmatic that all controversy concerning the subject of which they treat ought for ever to be at an end. Yet, rather than receive them at their face value, every device of carnal ingenuity is resorted to so as to neutralize their force. For example, it has been asked, If what we see in the world today is but the outworking of God’s eternal purpose, if God’s counsel is NOW being accomplished, then why did our Lord teach His disciples to pray, “Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven”? Is it not a clear implication from these words that God’s will is not now being done on earth? The answer is very simple. The emphatic word in the above clause is “as.” God’s will is being done on earth today, if it is not, then our earth is not subject to God’s rule, and if it is not subject to His rule then He is not, as Scripture proclaims Him to be, “The Lord of all the earth” (Josh. 3:13). But God’s will is not being done on earth as it is in heaven. How is God’s will “done in heaven”?—consciously and joyfully. How is it “done on earth”? for the most part, unconsciously and sullenly. In heaven the angels perform the bidding of their Creator intelligently and gladly, but on earth the unsaved among men accomplish His will blindly and in ignorance. As we have said in earlier pages, when Judas betrayed the Lord Jesus and when Pilate sentenced Him to be crucified they had no conscious intentions of fulfilling God’s decrees yet, nevertheless, unknown to themselves they did do so!

But again. It has been objected: If everything that happens on earth is the fulfilling of the Almighty’s pleasure, if God has foreordained—before the foundation of the world—everything which comes to pass in human history, then why do we read in Gen. 6:6 “It repented the Lord that He had made man on the earth, and it grieved Him at His heart”? Does not this language intimate that the antediluvians had followed a course which their Maker had not marked out for them, and that in view of the fact they had “corrupted” their way upon the earth the Lord regretted that He had ever brought such a creature into existence? Ere drawing such a conclusion let us note what is involved in such an inference. If the words “It repented the Lord that He had made man” are regarded in an absolute sense, then God’s omniscience would be denied, for in such a case the course followed by man must have been un-foreseen by God in the day that He created him. Therefore it must be evident to every reverent soul that this language bears some other meaning. We submit that the words “It repented the Lord” is an accommodation to our finite intelligence, and in saying this we are not seeking to escape a difficulty or cut a knot, but are advancing an interpretation which we shall seek to show is in perfect accord with the general trend of Scripture.[1]

---------------------------more tomorrow------------------------

Join our “Victory over the Darkness”, “The Bondage Breaker”, "Freedom in Christ" series of Discipleship Classes via the mt4christ247 podcast!

at https://mt4christ247.podbean.com, You can also find it on Apple podcasts

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These teachings are also available on the MT4Christ247 You Tube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@MT4Christ247

Email me at mt4christ247@gmail.com to receive the class materials, share your progress, and to be encouraged.

My wife, TammyLyn, also offers Christian encouragement via her Ask Seek Knock blog (https://tammylynask.blogspot.com/ ),  her Facebook Group: Ask, Seek, Knock (https://www.facebook.com/groups/529047851449098 ) and her podcast Ask, Seek, and Knock on Podbean (https://feed.podbean.com/tammalyn78/feed.xml)

“The views, opinions, and commentary of this publication are those of the author, M.T. Clark, only, and do not purport to reflect the opinions or views of any of the photographers, artists, ministries, or other authors of the other works that may be included in this publication, and do not necessarily reflect the views or positions of any entities the author may represent.”

Encouragement for the Path of Christian Discipleship



[1] Arthur W. Pink, The Sovereignty of God (Swengel, PA: Bible Truth Depot, 1949), 203–206.

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