30 Aug 2008

Tozer on the Gifts of the Spirit


"For a generation certain evangelical teachers have told us that the gifts of the Spirit ceased at the death of the apostles or at the completion of the New Testament. This, of course, is a doctrine without a syllable of Biblical authority back of it. The result of this erroneous teaching is that spiritually gifted persons are ominously few among us. This frightening hour calls aloud for men with the gift of prophetic insight. Instead we have men who conduct surveys, polls and panel discussions. We need men with the gift of knowledge. In their place we have men with scholarship---nothing more. Thus, we may be preparing ourselves for the tragic hour when God may set us aside as so-called evangelicals and raise up another movement to keep New Testament Christianity alive in the earth.

The truth of the matter is that the Scriptures plainly imply the imperative of possessing the gifts of the Spirit. But I must also add a word of caution. The various spiritual gifts are not equally valuable, as Paul so carefully explains. Certain brethren have magnified one gift out of seventeen out of all proportion. Among these brethren there have been and are many godly souls, but the general moral results of this teaching have nevertheless not been good. In practice it has resulted in much shameless exhibitionism, a tendency to depend upon experiences instead of upon Christ and often a lack of ability to distinguish the works of the flesh from the operations of the Spirit. Those who deny that the gifts are for us today and those who insist upon making a hobby of one gift are both wrong, and we are all suffering the consequences of their error."
-A.W. Tozer

See also: Christianity In The Power Of The Holy Spirit-Kevin Williams.

&:
Intellectualism Without The Holy Spirit-Why Learning Theology Without Living It Is Dangerous-Kevin Williams.

28 Aug 2008

Overcoming Coldness in Prayer - A. W. Pink


"A brother recently asked me what was the best way to overcome coldness of heart and a 'bound' spirit when he sought to pray. I told him to begin praising the Lord as soon as he dropped upon his knees, and if he could think of nothing else, to commence by thanking him that he was not already in Hell. I read recently of a handsome young man who returned from the war minus his right arm. His friends and relatives gathered together to commiserate him and were bewailing his loss. He turned to them and said, 'Help me to praise God that I still have my left arm!'"
-A.W. Pink, Letters of Arthur W. Pink

See also: Prayer-Jonah’s Phenomenal Belief in the Awesome Power of God, A Lesson To Us All -Kevin Williams.

27 Aug 2008

Low-Down Yellow Bellied Blogging - Kevin Swanson

The internet is filling up with more Christians attacking other Christians and their ministries by means of blogs and forums. Many of these offerings are filled with innuendo's, ad hominem attacks, and downright slander. And almost without exception these 'bold' defenders of the faith' refuse to give their own names and any means by which one might contact them.

Kevin Swanson issues a strong warning to the divisive and slanderous bloggers and those who take the time to read such blogs. A great reminder to us all.
Low-Down Yellow Bellied Blogging -28 min.



See also: Lay Down Your Arms, Get On Your Knees, by Samuel Guzman.

26 Aug 2008

Sarcasm is Biblical - Kevin Williams

In many circles today the use of sarcasm has been outlawed. And Unfortunately many Christians are now trained in political correctness and cry "unloving" and “ungracious” at the slightest hint of sarcasm. But the usage of sarcasm IS BIBLICAL. There are many examples I can point to in Scripture:

Jesus said in John 15:7 "there will be more joy in heaven over one sinner who repents than over ninety-nine righteous persons who need no repentance."

Now, the context of the righteous persons there are the Pharisees, and I assure you He’s not teaching they’re perfect there.

Isaiah 45:20b "They have no knowledge who carry about their wooden idols, and keep on praying to a god that cannot save. 21 Declare and present your case; let them take counsel together!"

John 7:22 "Moses gave you circumcision (not that it is from Moses, but from the fathers), and you circumcise a man on the Sabbath."

Paul sarcastically mocks the Corinthians in 1 Cor 4:8 "Already you have all you want! Already you have become rich! Without us you have become kings! And would that you did reign, so that we might share the rule with you! 9 For I think that God has exhibited us apostles as last of all, like men sentenced to death, because we have become a spectacle to the world, to angels, and to men. 10 We are fools for Christ's sake, but you are wise in Christ. We are weak, but you are strong. You are held in honor, but we in disrepute. "

1 Kings 22:15-16 "15 And when he had come to the king, the king said to him, “Micaiah, shall we go to Ramoth-gilead to battle, or shall we refrain?” And he answered him, “Go up and triumph; the Lord will give it into the hand of the king.” 16 But the king said to him, “How many times shall I make you swear that you speak to me nothing but the truth in the name of the Lord?”"

Sarcasm is all over the Bible. So don’t buy into this politically correct worldly philosophy that’s it’s always unloving.

To quote Charles Spurgeon, and he’s speaking here about those who cowardly refuse to speak harshly about sin:

"Men are perishing, and if it be unpolite to tell them so, it can only be so where the devil is the master of the ceremonies. Out upon your soul-destroying politeness; the Lord give us a little honest love to souls, and this superficial gentility will soon vanish. I could with considerable refreshment to myself pour sarcasm after sarcasm upon religious cowardice. I would cheerfully sharpen my knife and dash it into the heart of this mean vice. There is nothing to be said in its favor. It is not even humble; it is only pride of too beggarly a sort to own itself."

May the Lord raise up more people like Spurgeon and John Knox, who are prepared to call a spade a spade without worrying about offending sinners.

See also: Judge Not & You'll Still Be Judged. Clearing Up the Common Misconceptions-Kevin Williams

25 Aug 2008

Dawkins Admits Atheism Is Absurd-Audio Clip

"The refusal to believe in anything you can’t see yourself is absurd. Think about it? I never saw Napoleon with my own eyes, but that doesn’t mean Napoleon didn’t exist."~Richard Dawkins.

In the same British Television program that Dawkins made this admission (audio clip below), he also presented Ernst Haeckel's Embryo drawings, which have been known to be fraudulent for well over 100 years as proof for the fairy tale of evolution. Also Australian John MacKay shows Dawkins that evolution is not science, but a religion of philosophy and blind faith.

3 Min Video - Dawkins Admits Atheism Is Absurd


See also: How I Went From Being An Atheist-Evolutionist To Religious Hypocrite To True Christian Convert. by Kevin Williams.

Judge Not & You'll Still Be Judged. Clearing Up the Common Misconceptions-Kevin Williams

Here we look at the most famous and most quoted verse in all of Scripture: “Judge not that you be not judged.”
As well as examining what this verse does teach, we also clear up some of the many misconceptions about what it does not teach. Some may surprise you. Also in this sermon, we look at, who are the ravenous wolves?

Click on blue link to play or (Right-Click/Save-As to Download mp3).
John 7:24+Mat 7:1-5, 15-20 - Judge Not & You'll Still Be Judged. Clearing Up the Common Misconceptions-Kevin Williams - 48 min

Listen to this and other Middleton Puritan Fellowship sermons through i-tunes:

23 Aug 2008

Who Said....

"The refusal to believe in anything you can’t see yourself is absurd."

Okay no googling allowed! So no cheating. Answer will be posted!

Highly Recommended-Justin Peters 4 hours Teaching DVD

The Martyn Lloyd Jones Trust are now stocking Justin Peters A Call For Discernment DVD which features 4 hours of teaching.

I recommend every church to get Justin Peters to speak at your church, or if you can't do that then watch the 4 DVD sermons which give a Biblical Critique of the Word of Faith Movement, as a church or in groups.

If you have a church book table, then this is an item to add, and pass around your church.

Every Christian should watch this DVD. It is excellent teaching that exposes the dangerous doctrines of demons that heretics like Kenneth & Gloria Copeland, Joyce Meyer, Benny Hinn, Joel Olsteen, Jesse Duplantis, and the rest of TBN/God TV/Word of Faith teach.

Buy 2 Disc DVD 4 hours teaching for just £16.
If you're in the U.S.A then you can buy from Justin Peters website here.

If you're new to Justin Peters then you can watch the 30 min introductory video here.

If you're in Southern England, then Justin Peters is speaking in Kent this Monday at Union Chapel, Bethersden. Get yourself down there!

21 Aug 2008

Martyn Lloyd Jones-Listen For Your Life


"If you want to understand Christianity, do not shut your Bible—open it, read it! Read the books of Moses, the prophets, the Psalms; they all point to Him. Study your Bible. It is ignorance that blinds men and women of this generation and keeps them outside of Christ. So do not have a hurried service at nine o’clock so you can go out and play golf and bathe in the sea—listen for your life! Here is the only message of hope for you."

D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones, Authentic Christianity

20 Aug 2008

Charles Leiter - Fearful Things About Sin

I think this quote from my friend Charles Leiter pretty much says it all. What a vital warning in a day when we find it so easy to minimize sin -- especially our own!
One of the most fearful things about sin is its power to harden the one who practices it. The deeper a man goes in sin, the less sin bothers him. . . . Every sinner finds himself now committing sins that he once despised, and the sins that he now despises, he will someday find himself committing. It should shock us to remember that Adolph Hitler was once a little boy playing with toys just like other little boys. Man knows the beginning of sin, but no man has ever known the end of sin.

~Charles Leiter

Amen.
HT: Radicalee.

19 Aug 2008

C. J. Mahaney - The Soul of Modesty

A must for all Christian Women. C. J. Mahaney gives an excellent sermon on how should women dress in a way that glorifies God, as suppossed to dressing in a way God hates. Your wardrobe reflects your heart.
The Soul of Modesty.

18 Aug 2008

Judging Righteously-Kevin Williams

In this sermon we look at:
-The historical validity of the Bible.
-How Olympic Triple Jumper Jonathan Edwards ‘lost his faith’.
-How often good intensions can turn into burdens.
-Why excommunicating a Presbyterian from the Lord’s Supper, just because he has a different view on Baptism is wrong.
-Avoiding judging according to appearance.
-How many have all their doctrines in order, but not their heart.

Click on blue link to play or (Right-Click/Save-As to Download mp3).
John 7:19-24(3)- Judging Righteously-Kevin Williams - 43 min



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16 Aug 2008

Context of Romans 7- Early Church View

A sermon we highly recommend. Listen with your Bible open. Kevin Williams teaches on the Romans 7 Man.
The Early Church View of the Romans 7 Man in the Often Ignored Context

See also: Romans 7 by Charles Leiter.

15 Aug 2008

Nearness to Jesus - Charles Spurgeon


"...there will be three effects of nearness to Jesus- humility, happiness, and holiness." -Charles Spurgeon

14 Aug 2008

13 Aug 2008

Evangelicals Who Are Really Anti-Evangelical - Charles Spurgeon

We have nowadays around us a class of men who preach Christ, and even preach the gospel; but then they preach a great deal else which is not true, and thus they destroy the good of all that they deliver, and lure men to error. They would be styled "evangelical" and yet be of the school which is really anti-evangelical. Look well to these gentlemen. I have heard that a fox, when close hunted by the dogs, will pretend to be one of them, and run with the pack. That is what certain are aiming at just now: the foxes would seem to be dogs. But in the case of the fox, his strong scent betrays him, and the dogs soon find him out; and even so, the scent of false doctrine is not easily concealed, and the game does not answer for long. There are extant ministers of whom we scarce can tell whether they are dogs or foxes; but all men shall know our quality as long as we live, and they shall be in no doubt as to what we believe and teach. We shall not hesitate to speak in the strongest Saxon words we can find, and in the plainest sentences we can put together, that which we hold as fundamental truth.

12 Aug 2008

Should You Pass on Bad Reports? by Tim Keller & David Powlison

One obvious genius of the internet is that it’s “viral.” Information explodes to the whole world. The old neighborhood grapevine and the postal service seem like ox-carts in a speed-of-light universe. (Do twenty-somethings even know what those antiquities once were? In the old days, people had to talk to each other or stick a stamp on an envelope.) Instantaneous transmission produces some wonderfully good things. Truth, like joy, is infectious. A great idea feeds into a million inboxes. But it also produces some disastrous evils. Lies, rumors, and disinformation travel just as far and just as fast.

So what should you do when you hear “bad reports” about a person or church or ministry? We want to offer a few thoughts on how to remain constructive. To paraphrase Ephesians 4:29, “Let no unwholesome words come out of your computer, but only what is constructive, in order to meet the need of the moment, that what you communicate will give grace to everyone who ever reads it.” That Greek word translated “unwholesome” is sapros. It means something that is inedible, either devoid of nutritional value or rotten and even poisonous. It applies to thorny briars or to fish or fruit that’s gone bad. At best, it’s of no benefit to anyone. At worst, it’s sickening and destructive. Consider three things in how to stay constructive.

What Does James Say about Passing Along Bad Reports?

Humble yourselves before the Lord.
Brothers, don’t slander or attack one another.
(James 4:10-11)

The verb “slander” simply means to “speak against” (Gk. kata-lalein). It is not necessarily a false report, just an “against-report.” The intent is to belittle another. To pour out contempt. To mock. To hurt. To harm. To destroy. To rejoice in purported evil. This can’t mean simple disagreement with ideas—that would mean that we could never have a debate over a point. This isn’t respectful disagreement with ideas. James warns against attacking a person’s motives and character, so that the listeners’ respect and love for the person is undermined. “As the north wind brings rain, so slander brings angry looks” (Prov. 25:23). Everybody gets upset at somebody else: slanderer, slanderee, slander-hearer.

The link of slander to pride in James 4:10 shows that slander is not the humble evaluation of error or fault, which we must constantly be doing. Rather, in slander the speaker speaks as if he never would do the same thing himself. It acts self-righteous and superior toward one’s obviously idiotic inferiors. Non-slanderous evaluation is fair-minded, constructive, gentle, guarded, and always demonstrates that speakers sense how much they share the same frailty, humanity, and sinful nature with the one being criticized. It shows a profound awareness of your own sin. It is never “against-speaking.”

James 5:9 adds a nuance: "Don’t grumble against one another." Literally, it means don’t moan and groan and roll your eyes. This refers to a kind of against-speaking that is not as specific as a focused slander or attack. It hints at others flaws, not only with words, but by body language and tone. In print, such attitudes are communicated by innuendo, guilt by association, sneering, pejorative vocabulary. In person, it means shaking your head, rolling your eyes, and re-enforcing the erosion of love and respect for someone else. For example, “You know how they do things around here. Yadda, yadda. What do you expect?” Such a “groan” accomplishes the same thing as outright slander. It brings “angry looks” to all concerned. Passing on negative stuff always undermines love and respect. It’s never nourishing, never constructive, never timely, never grace-giving.

What Does the Book of Proverbs Say about Receiving Bad Reports?

He who covers over an offense promotes love,
but whoever repeats the matter separates close friends.
(Proverbs 17:9)

The first thing to do when hearing or seeing something negative is to seek to “cover” the offense rather than speak about it to others. That is, rather than let a bad report “pass in” to your heart as truth, and then get “passed along” to others, you should seek to keep the matter from destroying your love and regard for a person. How?

Start by remembering your own sinfulness. "All a man’s ways seem innocent to him, but motives are weighed by the Lord" (Prov. 16:2). To know this automatically keeps you from being too sure of your position and of speaking too strongly against people that you hear about or people on the other side of a conflict. You intuitively realize that you may not be seeing things right. Your motives are never as pure as you think they are. To know this acts to keep you from being too sure of the facts, too sure of your position, and of speaking too quickly and too negatively about other people. Knowing your own sinfulness helps you not make snap judgments that take what you hear too seriously.

When you remember your sinfulness, remember God’s mercies. "Love covers all offenses" (Prov. 10:12). The God who is love has covered all your offenses. He knows everything about you (and the whole story about that other person). He has chosen to forgive you, and life-saving mercy cost Jesus his life. He could write you up with a 100% True Bad Report, but he has chosen to bury your sins in the depths of the ocean. That makes the life and death difference. If your sins are not buried in the ocean of his mercy, then you will be justly exposed and will justly perish. But when you’ve known mercy, then even when you hear report of grievous evil, an instinct toward mercy should arise within you. To savor the tasty morsels of gossip and bad reports is very different from grieving, caring, and wishing nothing less than the mercies of Christ upon all involved. And most bad reports are much more trivial. They are the stuff of busybodies and gossips going “tut-tut-tut.”

Then remember that there is always another side. "The first to present his case seems right, till another comes forward and questions him" (Prov. 18:17). You never have all the facts. And you never have all the facts you need all at once. You are never in a position to see the whole picture, and therefore when you hear the first report, you should assume you have far too little information to draw an immediate conclusion. What you’ve heard from someone else is only “hear-say” evidence. It has no standing or validity unless it is confirmed in other ways.

So when you hear a negative report about another, you must keep it from passing into your heart as though it were true. If you pass judgment based on hear-say, you are a fool. That doesn’t mean you shouldn’t check out the facts. Go to the person. Hear other witnesses. If you’re far away from the scene, wait for more of the story to come out. Suspend judgment. Don’t get panicked or stampeded by mob-psychology and rumors. Be content not to know many things. You don’t need to have an opinion about everything and everyone.

Third, what should you do if you are close enough to the situation to be involved AND you think the injustice or matter is too great or grievous for you to ignore? For starters, notice that you only really need to know something if it touches your sphere of life and relationships. In that case, you should do what will help you to express God’s call upon you to speak Ephesians 4:29 words of wise love.

In Derek Kidner’s commentary on Prov. 25:7–10, he writes that when you think someone has done wrong you should remember, “One seldom knows the full facts (v.8) and one’s motives in spreading a story are seldom as pure as one pretends (v.10). To run to the law or to the neighbors is usually to run away from the duty of personal relationship.” See Christ’s clinching comment in Matthew 18:15: "If your brother sins against you, go and tell him his fault, between you and him alone. If he listens to you, you have gained your brother." In short, if you feel the problem is too great and you can’t keep it from destroying your regard for the person, you must go personally before you go to anyone else.

When Should You Go?

Galatians 6:1 says we are to go when a person is caught in a trespass. That means there should be some kind of "pattern" or the unmistakeable exposure of a wrong. Don’t go the first time you hear a bad report about someone doing wrong. As we said above, there’s another side to most stories, and our motives are never totally pure when we get indignant. Go if the person seems caught—that is, trapped or stuck in a habit pattern of wrong behavior or falsehood.

How Should You Go?

Galatians 6:1 says we are to restore gently and in humility, bearing all the fruit of the Spirit. Beware of your own tendencies to be tempted—perhaps to the same sin, perhaps to reactive sins of self-righteousness or judgmentalism, perhaps to avoidance sins of cover-up and pretending. Galatians 6:2 goes on to say that we actually fulfill the law of Christ by bearing each other’s burdens. We become nothing less than lesser redeemers in the pattern of our Great Redeemer. Jesus in Matthew 18:15ff says we should also go persistently, and not give up in the process. Patience is one fruit of the Spirit because problems don’t always clear up quickly. There is a progression in efforts to get to the bottom of a bad report, to confirm the facts, and to work at bringing restoration.

Who Should Go?

Galatians 6 says you—plural—who are spiritual should go to the straying one. That both defines how you should go and it calls for multiple people to get involved. Similarly Matthew 18:15ff says to bring in other people if matters don’t resolve one to one. The right kind of checking out a bad report is always done in person and often will be done by involving multiple wise persons.

Why Should You Go?

In both Galatians 6 and Matthew 18 the goal is to restore the person and to re-establish sin-broken relationships. You are working to restore people both to God and to others.

Conclusion

In summary, from the Old Testament to the New Testament, the principle is this. If you hear bad reports about other Christians you must either cover it with love or go to them personally before speaking of it to any others.
  • The first thing to do is to simply suspend judgment. Don’t pass on bad reports.
  • The second thing to do is “cover” it in love, reminding yourself that you don’t know all about the heart of the person who may have done evil—and you know your own frailty. Don’t allow bad reports to pass into your own heart.
  • The final thing to do is go and speak to them personally.
What you should never do is rush to judgment, or withdraw from loving another, or pass on the negative report to others. This is challenge enough when you’re dealing with the local grapevine or slow-moving postal service. In a world of instant world-wide communication of information it’s an even bigger challenge, because you can do bigger damage more quickly. Whether the bad report offers true information, or partial information, or disinformation, or false information—it is even more important that you exercise great discretion, and that you take pains to maximize boots-on-the-ground interpersonal relationships.

See also: Testing Rumours-The Damage Gossip Can Do.
(Scott Brown Sermon "The Deadly Tongue" on link.)

11 Aug 2008

Prayer-Jonah’s Phenomenal Belief in the Awesome Power of God, A Lesson To Us All -Kevin Williams

A sermon on believing prayer: Jonah’s Phenomenal Belief in the Awesome Power of God, A Lesson To Us All-Kevin Williams - 45 min

"
When we think of the Prophet Jonah, we normally look at his disobedience, and his rebellion, and we normally use Jonah as a lesson, or many lessons on how not to do things. But what we often miss, is Jonah’s great faith in God. It is phenomenal. His belief, that all things are possible with God. Jonah’s just phenomenal belief in the power of God, is an example for us all.

And you’re probably thinking, what am I talking about.

Well let’s look at it:

Jonah, a prophet of God was commanded by God to go to Nineveh, the most evil nation on the face of the earth and preach repentance. But in his disobedience Jonah went in the opposite direction towards Tarshish. And when God finally turned Jonah around with the use of a great storm and a whale. Jonah then goes to Nineveh, preaches repentance. God opens the Ninevites hearts, they all repent, even the animals are in sack cloth and ashes. This is the greatest gentile revival ever in the history of the world. But then, in Jonah chapter 4:v1 we get the reason why Jonah did not want to go to Nineveh.

When God brought revival and the Nivevites repented and turned to God. It says: “But it displeased Jonah exceedingly, and he became angry. 2 So he prayed to the LORD, and said, “Ah, LORD, was not this what I said when I was still in my country? Therefore I fled previously to Tarshish; for I know that You are a gracious and merciful God, slow to anger and abundant in lovingkindness, One who relents from doing harm.”

In other words, the reason Jonah did not want to go to Nineveh, was not because he feared for his life. He didn’t care for his life. But was because he knew that God would cause them to repent.

Now, Jonah’s obvious uncharitable wrongs aside here, just think about this:
I mean, a modern equivalent would be, a missionary, trying to get out of going to North Korea, not because, he was worried about his life and that he’d suffer horrific torture. But because he knew that God would cause the whole nation of North Korea to repent and believe the Gospel.

Jonah clearly had the type of faith, the belief in the power of God that Jesus told of in Mark 11:23: "Truly, I say to you, whoever says to this mountain, ‘Be taken up and thrown into the sea,’ and does not doubt in his heart, but believes that what he says will come to pass, it will be done for him."

But let me ask you:
How often do you pray, and I can include me in this as well,
And your prayer is nothing opposed to God’s will, it’s not a selfish prayer like asking God to give you a BMW.
It is with the right motive for the advancement of God’s Kingdom. "Thy Kingdom come".
But you pray it with little belief that God will do something?
Or how often do we witness to someone not really believing that God will save them?

When we pray to God, and when we do things for God, sometimes it's like we’re writing with a pen, but we’re not expecting any ink to come out. And we’re not really too concerned if it doesn’t.

Instead of focusing on Jonah's faults, and there are many. And we have many also. I think maybe it’s time we should start to look as his just phenomenal belief in the great and awesome power of God, and let it be an example to us all.

I mean, how many times, do we look at the great and amazing promises that God has given us in His Word for prayer and in evangelism? And then we spend so much time trying to reason within ourselves that it doesn’t really mean what it says it means..."

Click on blue link to play or
(Right-Click/Save-As to Download mp3).
Jonah 4:1-2 - Prayer-Jonah’s Phenomenal Belief in the Awesome Power of God, A Lesson To Us All-Kevin Williams - 45 min

(Back to good sound quality)

Listen to this and other Middleton Puritan Fellowship sermons through i-tunes:

9 Aug 2008

The Early Church View of the Romans 7 Man in the Often Ignored Context -Kevin Williams

In this sermon (Back to good sound quality) we show that:
-The early church view that the Romans 7 man is a lost man (a view also held by Martyn Lloyd-Jones, Paul Washer, Charles Leiter, Tim Conway and the Apostle Paul) is correct.
-That the usage of present tense in Rom 7 is “historical present tense”, and how many claim it isn’t by the usage of circular reasoning, ignoring the context, and making Rom 7:14 into a separate, new section, despite v14 starting with the word “for” which is a conjunction, directly joining it to verse 13.
-How there is a consistent and repeated pattern from Rom 6:1 which goes all the way to Rom 7:25 of: Question, Strong Denial, Short Answer, and fuller explanation of the short answer.
-How many common interpretations of Romans 7 completely ignore the question being asked by Paul in v13, and give an interpretation that has absolutely nothing to do with the question being asked.
-That the Romans 7 man is clearly not a parallel to Galatians 5.
-That the Christian is a life of victory and not of defeat.
-The dangers of the “wretched Christian” view.

Click on blue link to play or (Right-Click/Save-As to Download mp3).

Listen to this and other Middleton Puritan Fellowship sermons through i-tunes:



Recommended Reading: Justification & Regeneration by Charles Leiter.

7 Aug 2008

Depression - Steve Martin

Steve Martin preaches an excellent and very helpful sermon on depression. As well as listening yourself, this is a great sermon to download and put on a CD to give to anyone you know who is, or has been suffering from depression, or alternatively you could email them the link.

The message was preached at Springfield Bible Conference 2006 (other messages on link).

Steve Martin - Depression - Play online (click here).

Or download mp3-high, mp3-med, mp3-low.

6 Aug 2008

Spurgeon - Keep The Altar of Private Prayer Burning

"The fire shall ever be burning upon the altar; it shall never go out." Leviticus 6:13

"Keep the altar of private prayer burning. This is the very life of all piety. The sanctuary and family altars borrow their fires here, therefore let this burn well. Secret devotion is the very essence, evidence, and barometer, of vital and experimental religion.

Burn here the fat of your sacrifices. Let your closet seasons be, if possible, regular, frequent, and undisturbed. Effectual prayer availeth much.
Have you nothing to pray for? Let us suggest the Church, the ministry, your own soul, your children, your relations, your neighbours, your country, and the cause of God and truth throughout the world. Let us examine ourselves on this important matter. Do we engage with lukewarmness in private devotion? Is the fire of devotion burning dimly in our hearts? Do the chariot wheels drag heavily? If so, let us be alarmed at this sign of decay. Let us go with weeping, and ask for the Spirit of grace and of supplications. Let us set apart special seasons for extraordinary prayer. For if this fire should be smothered beneath the ashes of a worldly conformity, it will dim the fire on the family altar, and lessen our influence both in the Church and in the world.

The text will also apply to the altar of the heart. This is a golden altar indeed. God loves to see the hearts of his people glowing towards himself. Let us give to God our hearts, all blazing with love, and seek his grace, that the fire may never be quenched; for it will not burn if the Lord does not keep it burning. Many foes will attempt to extinguish it; but if the unseen hand behind the wall pour thereon the sacred oil, it will blaze higher and higher. Let us use texts of Scripture as fuel for our heart's fire, they are live coals; let us attend sermons, but above all, let us be much alone with Jesus."
-Charles Spurgeon, Morning and Evening, 15th July AM.

5 Aug 2008

JC Ryle-Many Go Down On Their Knees, But Few Pray


Few indeed are to be found who pray: there are many who go down on their knees, and say a form perhaps, but few who pray; few who cry out to God, few who call on the Lord, few who seek as if they wanted to find, few who knock as if they hungered and thirsted, few who wrestle, few who strive with God earnestly for an answer, few who give Him no rest, few who continue in prayer, few who pray always without ceasing and do not grow weak. Yes, few pray! It is just one of the things assumed which is everybody’s business, but in fact hardly anybody performs.
- J.C. Ryle

4 Aug 2008

Justification and Regeneration, Believe Right In Order To Live Right-Kevin Williams

If you hold to some Pagan-Roman Catholic idea that you go in and out of favour with God based on your performance, then you will either be very miserable when you fail or proud when you think you’ve succeeded. In this sermon preached in Workington, we look at two vital and closely tied together doctrines of Justification and Regeneration.
-How God’s love towards the believer does not change with our performance.
-Why the believer is never under condemnation from God ever.
-How God Never justifies a person without changing their heart.
-Why the new birth in John 3, (regeneration) must happen before a man is able to repent and believe the Gospel.
-Why some professing Christians constantly slur others as legalists.
-The difference between true Christianity and all other religions.
-Why Christians still battle with sin.
-That the Christian life is not one of defeat, but one of victory over sin.
-You must believe right in order to live right.

Click on blue link to play or (Right-Click/Save-As to Download mp3).
2 Cor 5:17 - Justification & Regeneration, Believe Right In Order To Live Right-Kevin Williams - 47 min

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Recommended Reading: Justification & Regeneration by Charles Leiter.

1 Aug 2008

Missionaries of Another Gospel

by Kevin Williams

Some time ago I witnessed to a group of teens on the street, and they had no idea of what sin is, what repentance is, who Jesus is, or what the Gospel is. Yet when I explained, they replied "Oh don't worry we met some American missionaries yesterday who we repeated a prayer with and so we know we're going to Heaven."

Is it any wonder, as Paul Washer says, there are Christians in the Third World who pray that God will stop the American missionaries from coming over.

"It was seven years before Carey baptised his first convert in India; it was seven years before Judson won his first disciple in Burma; Morrison toiled seven years before the Chinaman was brought to Christ; Moffat declares that he waited seven years to see the first evident moving of the Holy Spirit upon his Bechuanas of Africa; Henry Richards wrought seven years on the Congo before the first convert was gained at Banza Manteka" -A J Gordon, The Holy Spirit in Missions.

So why do evangelists today ask "Would you like to pray and ask Jesus into your heart now, it will only take three minutes?" (in fact I've heard some say 30 seconds).

Did all those men who were mightily used by God have it wrong, or are many today preaching another Gospel?