. Good message Mike. You covered a lot of ground. I heard a short talk the other day out of Ephesians 2, about the influence of the World, Satan and the Church in that early Church. Not much changed in 2,000 years! Btw. John 6 is a powerful chapter. Your last quote continue on to… Continue reading The Superiority of Christ and the Cost of Discipleship
Month: October 2022
Secret Prayer Distinguishes Sincerity from Hypocrisy
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Good message Mike!
I guess we all need to work on this.
Interestingly one of the reasons we don’t have many examples of these types of prayer is that they are private. Easy to fall into the gift machine trap.
Often I find a simple… Matthew 6:11 Give us this day our daily bread.Is all we need in that area, and depending on our circumstances, and what we are praying about for others, the bread of the day might have many different forms. Old John Gill described it this way.
“ By “bread” is meant all the necessaries of life, and for the support of it: it is called “our’s”; not that we have a right unto it, much less deserve it, but to distinguish it from that of beasts; and because it is what we need, and cannot do without; what is appointed for us by providence, is our’s by gift, and possessed by labour. It is said to be “daily” bread, and to be asked for “day by day”; which suggests the uncertainty of life; strikes at all anxious and immoderate cares for the morrow; is designed to restrain from covetousness, and to keep up the duty of prayer, and constant dependence on God; whom we must every day ask to “give” us our daily bread: for he is the sole author of all our mercies; which are all his free gifts; we deserve nothing at his hands: wherefore we ought to be thankful for what we have, without murmuring at his providences, or envying at what he bestows on others. All kind of food, everything that is eatable, is with the Jews called לחם, “bread” .”
I tend to see it as a broad spectrum but try to submit to God’s sovereignty in determining what is necessary.
I do think we are encouraged to ASK, I,e Ask, Seek, Knock in our prayer life.
Matthew 7:7-11 Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you: 8 For every one that asketh receiveth; and he that seeketh findeth; and to him that knocketh it shall be opened. 9 Or what man is there of you, whom if his son ask bread, will he give him a stone? 10 Or if he ask a fish, will he give him a serpent? 11 If ye then, being evil, know how to give good gifts unto your children, how much more shall your Father which is in heaven give good things to them that ask him?
by Mike Ratliff
“1 Beware of doing your righteousness before men to be noticed by them; otherwise you have no reward with your Father who is in heaven. Matthew 6:1 (LSB)
Of all of the things Christians do that sets them apart from non-believers, prayer is both practiced heavily and not well understood. There is controversy about what genuine prayer is and isn’t. The Word-Faith people go so far as to use prayer like a vending machine. I could write a post everyday on prayer in this blog from now until the Lord takes me home and never run out of things to write about. Before we go any further in this discussion I want to state here that I am no expert on prayer. My favorite place and time to pray is in my home office in the morning right after showering and dressing before I eat breakfast. I…
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I will meditate in thy precepts
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Good advice. Mike I wonder if you have a clear statement on how God’s word through David in the Psalms and Spurgeon’s exhortation is different from the practices taught by those like Richard Foster on Silence and Solitude or those who teach the monastic practice of Lectio Divina. I still often run into people in churches that promote these. How do they differ from Biblical Meditation? How are they like Eastern Mediation? And how does one explain the distinction to those who practice them, if it truly matters?
C.A. Spurgeon from his Morning by Morning Devotional for October 12.
15 I will meditate in thy precepts,
and have respect unto thy ways.
16 I will delight myself in thy statutes:
I will not forget thy word.Psalms 119:15-16 (KJV)
There are times when solitude is better than society, and silence is wiser than speech. We should be better Christians if we were more alone, waiting upon God, and gathering through meditation on his Word spiritual strength for labour in his service. We ought to muse upon the things of God, because we thus get the real nutriment out of them. Truth is something like the cluster of the vine: if we would have wine from it, we must bruise it; we must press and squeeze it many times. The bruiser’s feet must come down joyfully upon the bunches, or else the juice will not flow; and they must well…
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A Cake Not Turned
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I found Mike’s commentary on the Spurgeon devotion quite useful in it’s description of these two aspects of the current visible church.
Mike concluded..” The reason preachers edit the Gospel this way is to increase their numbers or, in the case of Wokeism, it is to become socially acceptable. They have believed the ideologies of men rather than trusting in the promises from God’s Word. They have compromised the truth in order to please men. They have mixed themselves with the world and have proven that they are cakes not turned whose product is just more half-baked dough like themselves.”
Btw, Mike much like your other Spurgeon posts, maybe 🤔 add the date reference, this one is a little out of the timeline. When I got into reading it though I could definitely tell you were quoting him.
Also maybe your readers would like to check out Acacia’s free 1676 John Bunyan’s book The Strait Gate, or, Great difficulty of going to heaven.
It talks in length about the narrow path, as does Pilgrim’s Progress, and the difficulties along the way.
by Mike Ratliff
8 Ephraim mixes himself with the nations;
Ephraim has become a cake not turned. Hosea 7:8 (NASB)
The Gospel is not something given to us in such a way that gives us the right to edit it. Nor is it our prerogative to change the focus of our local churches from what God intended. Both the Church Growth movement and Wokeism does both. Both of these movements are based on ideologies rooted in pragmatism. These ideologies say that if something produces the desired results then it must be right and, therefore, the will of God. However, there is a major flaw in this because it begins with a false assumption.
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