Archive for Affection

Jonathan Edwards’ Ministry and Lifestyle

// April 4th, 2010 // No Comments » // Affection, Life

An excerpt from The Private Life of a Modern Evangelical, by John Piper (1997):

During his pastorate at Northampton, Edwards delivered the usual two two-hour messages each week, catechized the children, and counseled people in his study. He did not visit from house to house except when called. This meant that he could spend thirteen or fourteen hours a day in his study. He said, “I think Christ has commended rising early in the morning by his rising from the grave very early.” So he rose between 4:00 and 5:00 to study, always with pen in hand, thinking out every flash of insight to its full and recording it in his notebooks. Even on his travels he would pin pieces of paper to his coat to remind himself at home of an insight he had had on the way. In the evening he would spend an hour with his family after dinner before retiring to his study. None of his children rebelled or went astray, but held their father in highest regard all his life.

Edwards’ six-foot-one frame was not robust and his health was always precarious. He could maintain the rigor of his study schedule only with strict attention to diet and exercise. Everything was calculated to optimizing his efficiency and power in study. He abstained from every quantity and kind of food that made him sick or sleepy. His exercise in the winter was to chop firewood half an hour each day, and in the summer he would ride into the fields and walk alone in meditation. In other words, for all his rationalism, Edwards had a healthy dose of the romantic and mystic in him. He wrote in his diary: “Sometimes on fair days I find myself more particularly disposed to regard the glories of the world than to betake myself to the study of serious religion.” Edwards describes one of these field trips as follows:

Once as I rode out into the woods for my health in 1737, having alighted from my horse in a retired place, as my manner commonly has been, to walk for divine contemplation and prayer, I had a view, that for me was extraordinary, of the glory of the Son of God, as Mediator between God and man, and his wonderful, great, full, pure and sweet grace and love and meek, gentle condescension. This grace that appeared so calm and sweet appeared also great above the heavens. The person of Christ appeared ineffably excellent, with an excellency, great enough to swallow up all thought and conception – which continued, as near as I can judge, about an hour; which kept me the greater part of the time in a flood of tears, and weeping aloud.

Stories of Change

// April 3rd, 2010 // No Comments » // Affection, Life

Sojourn Church in Louisville has been showing this video at their Vision Catalyst Meetings.

I was deeply affected by this. The stories of lives changed by the gospel are beautiful, and the art direction in the film is amazing as well.

Video Description:

We’re grateful for the Sojourners who participated in this video and let us show their stories of how Christ can overcome any obstacle or sin. No circumstance is too great for God, and no gulf is too wide for Him to bring His people home.

Gustave Dore – The Passion

// April 3rd, 2010 // No Comments » // Affection, Doctrine, Life

Jesus and the disciples at the Last Supper. -John 13

The Last Supper

Jesus prays in the Garden of Gethsemane while the disciples sleep. -Matthew 26

Jesus in the garden

Jesus suffers agony in the garden of Gethsemane. -Luke 22

The agony of Jesus

Judas betrays Jesus with a kiss. -Mark 14

Judas betrays Jesus

Peter denies that he is one of Jesus’ disciples. -John 18

Peter’s denial of Christ

Jesus is scourged. -John 19

Jesus is scourged

A crown of thorns is placed on Jesus’ head and a purple robe placed on him. -John 19

The crown of thorns

The crowd mocks Jesus, saying “Hail to the King of the Jews!” -Matthew 27

The crowd mocks Jesus

Pontius Pilate presents Jesus to the people and asks if he should be crucified. -John 19

Pilate and Jesus

Jesus stumbles while carrying the cross. Simon the Cyrene is compelled to carry the cross. -Mark 15

Jesus stumbles with the cross

Jesus arrives at Calvary with the soldiers. -Luke 23

Jesus at Calvary

Jesus is nailed to the cross. -John 19

Jesus on the cross

Jesus is crucified. -Matthew 27

The crucifixion of Jesus

Jesus cries out “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do!” -Luke 23

Jesus cries out from the cross

A darkness falls over the earth from the sixth hour to the ninth hour. -Luke 23

A darkness over the Earth

Joseph of Arimathea brings brings Jesus down from the cross. -Mark 15

Jesus down from the cross

The women bind up and anoint Jesus’ body for burial. -John 19

Preparing Jesus for burial

Jesus is buried in the sepulcher. -John 19

The burial of Jesus

Breaking Our Addiction To Success

// March 27th, 2010 // No Comments » // Affection

success_failure“How can we break our heart’s fixation on doing ’some great thing’ in order to heal ourselves of our sense of inadequacy, in order to give our lives meaning? Only when we see what Jesus, our great Suffering Servant, has done for us will we finally understand why God’s salvation does not require us to do ’some great thing.’ We don’t have to do it, because Jesus has. . . . Jesus did it all for us, and he loves us — that is how we know our existence is justified. When we believe in what he accomplished for us with our minds, and when we are moved by what he did for us in our hearts, it begins to kill off the addiction, the need for success at all costs.”

- Timothy Keller, Counterfeit Gods (New York, NY: Dutton, 2009), 93-94.

HT: OFI

“Huswifery” – by Edward Taylor

// March 24th, 2010 // No Comments » // Affection

artistrichardneuman-art-prints_2071_9026389

Make me, O Lord, thy Spinning Wheel complete;
Thy Holy Word my Distaff make for me.
Make mine Affections thy Swift Flyers neat,
And make my Soul thy holy Spool to be.
My Conversation make to be thy Reel,
And reel the yarn thereon spun of thy Wheel.

Make me thy Loom then, knit therein this Twine:
And make thy Holy Spirit, Lord, wind quills:
Then weave the Web thyself. The yarn is fine.
Thine Ordinances make my Fulling Mills.
Then dye the same in Heavenly Colours Choice,
All pink with Varnished Flowers of Paradise.

Then clothe therewith mine Understanding, Will,
Affections, Judgment, Conscience, Memory;
My Words and Actions, that their shine may fill
My ways with glory and thee glorify.
Then mine apparel shall display before ye
That I am Clothed in Holy robes for glory.

Analysis:

Edward Taylor’s “Huswifery” stands as an early-American example of metaphysical poetry and the use of the poetic conceit. The title is a word that was commonplace in the 17th century but has since disappeared from use except for a remnant in the negative term “hussy” that denotes a lewd or brazen woman. In Taylor’s time, his title was pronounced with a silent “w” and a short “i” and sounded like “hussifry.” It denoted the full range of domestic tasks performed by Puritan housewives. In the poem, those tasks are narrowed to spinning and weaving.

The tone of the opening sentence is prayerful. The poet says, “Make me, O Lord, Thy spinning wheel complete.” The succession of interrelated metaphors explains the poet’s intention in this odd-sounding request. Gradually we see spinning and cloth-making as a figurative expression of the activity of the Master Weaver, who clothes people in grace.

Each part of the spinning wheel is equated with an aspect of spiritual life. The distaff is a piece of wood on which is wound flax or wool that is spun into thread. It is metaphorically equated with the Word of God – the Bible – from which we extract grace. The “affections” or emotional feelings are the “flyers” that twist and make thread from the raw material on the distaff.

The “spool” onto which the thread is wound is the soul of the speaker. The “reel” that holds the finished thread is referred to as the speaker’s “conversation,” by which he means his social exchanges with others. Thus, in stanza one we see the mechanical progression of the word of God becoming the grace necessary for salvation.

In the next stanza we proceed from spinning wheel to loom. On the loom the thread of God’s word is woven into cloth. God, who operates the loom, winds or turns the “quills” (hollow tubes onto which the yarn is wound) and produces a web of cloth from the myriad threads. God’s ordinances (laws and sacraments) act as “fulling mills” that cleanse the cloth and prepare it for dyeing and decorating with designIn the concluding stanza the speaker asks God to garb or outfit him in raiment made from the newly spun and woven cloth. Once attired in this glorious garment, the speaker will be able to give God glory in return.

HT: Helium

God’s Wonderful Surprise

// March 23rd, 2010 // No Comments » // Affection

The story of the Resurrection of Jesus Christ as it is found in the Jesus Storybook Bible, by Sally Lloyd-Jones:

http://www.jesusstorybookbible.com

Christian Happiness

// March 19th, 2010 // No Comments » // Affection, Doctrine, Life

When Jonathan Edwards was 18 years old he preached his first formal sermon, titled, “Christian Happiness”.

The thesis of the sermon is simple and large:

Christians should be happy.

Why should Christians be happy? The sermon answers this question in 3 points.

Point 1: Our bad things will turn out for good.

Point 2: Our good things can never be taken away from us.

Point 3: The best things are yet to come.

You can read the whole sermon [here].

Here’s an extended quote from point #2 that encouraged me this morning (paragraph breaks added):

The godly man is happy in whatever circumstances he is placed because of the spiritual privileges and advantages, joys and satisfactions, he actually enjoys while in this life. How great a happiness must needs [it] be to a man to have all his sins pardoned and to stand guilty of nothing in God’s presence: to be washed clean from all his pollutions; to have the great and eternal and almighty Jehovah, who rules and governs the whole universe, and doth whatsoever he pleases in the armies of heaven and amongst the inhabitants of the earth, reconciled to him and perfectly at peace with him.

How great a pleasure and satisfaction must it be to him to think of it, and not only that God is reconciled to him or has nothing against [him], inasmuch as all is pardoned; but also that this same almighty being who created him, who keeps him in being and who disposes of him and all other things every moment, loves him, and that with a great and transcendent love; and that He has adopted him and taken him to be His child, and given Himself to him to be his father and his portion, and that takes care of him as one that is very dear to Him, continually guides and directs him, and will lead him to the fountain of living waters.

And how joyful and gladsome must the thoughts of Jesus Christ be to him, to think with how great a love Christ has loved him, even to lay down His life and suffer the most bitter torments for his sake, Who also now continually intercedes for him at the throne of grace; to consider that so great a person as the eternal Son of God, who also made the worlds, is his lord and master, and is not ashamed to call us brethren, Who will come in and sup with him, and He with him, and to see His arms expanded to embrace him and offering Himself to be embraced by him. And beside, what a satisfaction and pleasure must it give to his mind to think that he is now sanctified and made holy, adorned and beautified with those lovely graces that make him lovely in the sight of God and excellent in the sight of saints and angels; to reflect on himself and consider that he acts rationally and doth that which the best of beings has commanded, that he in some measure acts worthy of the nature of a man, in some measure answers the end of his coming into the world in glorifying God and doing good to his fellow creatures, and that he has not lived altogether in vain: not as it is with many; they live in the world and burthen the same, and had better be dead than alive for all the good they do in it, or any they do towards manifesting the glory of him that made them.

The reflection on these things affords such a peace and pleasantness to the mind, as far exceeds and is immensely above all outward delights. What there is no wicked man doth know, neither; neither hath it entered into their hearts to conceive how great are the comforts and pleasures of the godly, and how great [the] things God hath prepared for all those that love [him], even in this life; their pleasures are of vastly a more refined, higher and more noble kind than those of the wicked, besides the many other advantages that this has above that, but especially that taken notice of in the Doctrine: that no worldly afflictions in the world are able to deprive them of them, but they, as rightly improved, do only serve to give them a quicker and more lively sense of spiritual enjoyments.

HT: Justin Buzzard

“Upon a Spider Catching a Fly” – Edward Taylor

// March 16th, 2010 // No Comments » // Affection

Wasp killing a spider

Wasp killing a spider

Here is another wonderful poem by Edward Taylor:

Thou sorrow, venom elf.
Is this thy play,
To spin a web out of thyself
To catch a fly?

For why?
I saw a pettish wasp
Fall foul therein,
Whom yet thy whorl pins did not clasp
Lest he should fling
His sting.

But as afraid, remote
Didst stand hereat
And with thy little fingers stroke
And gently tap
His back.

Thus gently him didst treat
Lest he should pet,
And in a froppish waspish heat
Should greatly fret
Thy net.

Whereas the silly fly,
Caught by its leg,
Thou by the throat took’st hastily
And ‘hind the head
Bite dead.

This goes to pot, that not
Nature doth call.
Strive not above what strength hath got
Lest in the brawl
Thou fall.

This fray seems thus to us:
Hell’s spider gets
His entrails spun to whipcords’ thus,
And wove to nets
And sets,

To tangle Adam’s race
In’s stratagems
To their destructions, spoiled, made base
By venom things,
Damned sins.

But mighty, gracious Lord,
Communicate
Thy grace to break the cord; afford
Us glory’s gate
And state.

We’l Nightingaile sing like
When pearcht on high
In Glories Cage, thy glory, bright,
And thankfully,
For joy.

Analysis: In “Upon a Spider Catching a Fly” Edward Taylor portrays the “dance of death” between a spider, a fly, and a wasp. The poem symbolizes the human predicament: the sinner (the “silly fly”) risks being caught by Satan (“Hell’s spider”), while the person who is saved (the wasp) has the strength to escape Satan’s web. The spider sits and waits for sinners; it attacks. The fly is the sinner, weak without faith. The wasp is strong in the faith. The wasp can always veer off into temptation, but the Spider has no power over him.  The spider is afraid of the wasp, but acting like it is not. The spider tries to calm the wasp. He knows he can break away. If he can lull the wasp into  a sense of complacency, the longer it will stay in the web, and the more the web can subdue it. The lukewarm wasp doesn’t recognize the danger until it is too late. But God’s grace sets the wasp free, by His strength, it is set free to sing and soar for God’s glory, “and thankfully, for joy”.