Tag Archives: Issue WOT52-2

Sweet To Look Back

Sweet to look back, and see my name
In life’s fair book set down!
Sweet to look forward, and behold
Eternal joys my own!

Sweet to reflect how grace divine
My sins on Jesus laid!
Sweet to remember how His blood
My debt of suffering paid!

Sweet to look upward to the place
Where Jesus pleads above!
Sweet to behold Him, and attend
The whispers of His love!

Sweet on His faithfulness to rest,
Whose love can never end!
Sweet on His covenant of grace
For all things to depend!

Sweet, in the confidence of faith,
To trust His firm decrees!
Sweet to lie passive in His hands,
And know no will but His!

From Hymns of Grace and Truth, Horizon Press, San Diego.

  Author: A. M. Toplady         Publication: Issue WOT52-2

How Sweet the Name of Jesus Sounds

How sweet the name of Jesus sounds
In a believer’s ear!
It soothes his sorrows, heals his wounds,
And drives away his fear.

It makes the wounded spirit whole,
And calms the troubled breast;
’Tis manna to the hungry soul,
And to the weary, rest.

Dear Name! the Rock on which we build
Our Shield and Hiding-place!
Our never-failing Treasure, filled
With boundless stores of grace!

Jesus, our Saviour, Shepherd, Friend!
Thou Prophet, Priest and King!
Our Lord, our Life, our Way, our End!
Accept the praise we bring.

From Hymns of Grace and Truth, Horizon Press, San Diego.

  Author: John W. Newton         Publication: Issue WOT52-2

O Taste and See That the Lord Is Good (Psalm 34)

We are told distinctly who wrote Psalm 34:“A Psalm of David, when he changed his behavior before Abimelech; who drove him away, and he departed.” Do you remember that incident in David’s life? He was afraid he was going to be slain by King Saul and fled to the court of the Philistines and waited on the king of the Philistines. Just think, David who had overcome the giant Goliath became so discouraged that instead of trusting God he fled to the enemies of his people. He was even ready to go with the Philistine king to battle and would have gone out with them against his own people. How terribly David had fallen! There is no telling how far a saint of God will fall if he gets his eyes off the Lord, if unbelief triumphs instead of faith. Of course it will be only a temporary thing.

      The Philistines themselves said to Achish, King of Gath, “What are you doing with this fellow? This is the man who slew Goliath.” But Achish said, “Oh, Saul has turned against him, and he is going to be my keeper now; he is going to fight for us.” But they said, “We do not want this fellow around. If we go to battle he will turn against us.” They knew that his heart was really with his own people, and they said, no, he cannot go. David was afraid, and we read, He “feigned himself mad in their hands, and scrabbled on the doors of the gate” (1 Sam. 21:13). What a picture! David, the man after God’s own heart, God’s anointed, feigning himself to be crazy because he was now afraid of the Philistines. What a disgusting picture! But no more disgusting than for you or me to go off with the world and act like the world—we who have been called out from it to glorify the Lord Jesus. God came in grace and delivered David from all that, and when he got back among his own people again he wrote this Psalm. David was delivered because Achish would not have him. He was feeling better now; he was back in the right place; he was delivered from the association of the Philistines.

      Verses 1 to 4 are an ascription of praise. “I will bless the LORD at all times; His praise shall continually be in my mouth. My soul shall make her boast in the LORD; the humble shall hear thereof and be glad. O magnify the LORD with me, and let us exalt His name together. I sought the LORD and He heard me, and delivered me from all my fears.” If only he had done that in the beginning he would not have failed so dreadfully in the palace of the king of the Philistines; but he had to have that bitter experience to bring him to an end of himself and to thrust him upon God. How often that happens to children of God.

      In verses 5 to 10 you have a wonderful story of his own personal experience of the delivering power of God. That fifth verse has a marvelous lesson, “They looked unto Him and were lightened; and their faces were not ashamed.” “They looked unto Him.” Unto whom? Unto the LORD. And what happened? “They were lightened:and their faces were not ashamed.” Literally it means, “they became radiant.” “They looked unto Him, and became radiant:and their faces were not ashamed.” Remember what the apostle tells us in 2 Corinthians:“But we all, with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord, are changed into the same image from glory to glory, even as by the Spirit of the Lord” (3:18). Do you want to become a radiant Christian? Do you want to be a Christlike believer? Then do not be self-occupied; do not be looking in all the time trying to see how you are getting along. If you are occupied with your bad self only, you will get discouraged; if occupied with your fancied goodness, you will get puffed up; but if you look away to Him, “Looking unto Jesus the author and finisher of our faith” (Heb. 12:2), what happens? “They looked unto Him, and became radiant.” They not only received light themselves, but also they gave out light. Moses went into the presence of God, and when He came from the mount he was radiant; the people could not stand it. What made him radiant? He had been gazing on the face of God. If you want to be a radiant believer, fix your eyes upon Christ. “We all, [reflecting as in a mirror] the glory of the Lord, are changed into the same image from glory to glory.” There is not a great deal of radiancy about some of us. We are so grumpy; we are so dull. The Scots have a good word for that:it is “dour,” just glum, and it only tells the story that we are not looking unto Jesus. As we gaze upon His face we become like Him, and the loveliness of Christ shines out in our lives. “They looked unto Him, and became radiant:and their faces were not ashamed.” David says, as it were, “I know, for I remember when I was not radiant.” But he proceeds, “This poor man cried, and the LORD heard him, and saved him out of all his troubles” (34:6). Can you say that?

      And now David learned that he did not need to go to the Philistines for protection. God had a protector for him. “The angel of the LORD encamps round about those who fear Him, and delivers them” (34:7). And he is so delighted at what he has found that he wants everybody else to share it with him and exclaims, “O taste and see that the LORD is good; blessed is the man who trusts in Him. O fear the Lord, you His saints” (34:8,9). When he speaks of fearing the LORD he does not mean to be afraid of Him, but he means that reverent godly fear that should characterize us. “For there is no want to those who fear Him” (34:9). If you are going about with head drooping all the time, it tells the story that you are not living in His presence, for “there is no want to those who fear Him. The young lions do lack and suffer hunger; but those who seek the LORD shall not want any good thing” (34:9,10). There are many things that you and I think we want that are not good for us, but if we seek Him, if the Lord withholds something that we wanted very much, we can be sure it would not be a good thing for us.

      It is a great thing to learn to depend on Him. That verse we quote so often does not promise that He will do every thing we ask:“Be careful [or anxious] for nothing; but in every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto God” (Phil. 4:6). And then what? And you will get everything for which you ask? No, “And the peace of God, that passes all understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus” (4:7). If you have told Him about it you can leave it with Him and be at perfect peace, and say, “I know that He will do the right thing.” “Those who seek the LORD shall not want any good thing.”       The next group of verses, from 11 to 16, give us the path of life for the believer. “Come, children, hearken unto Me:I will teach you the fear of the LORD. What man is he who desires life, and loves many days, that he may see good? Keep your tongue from evil, and your lips from speaking guile” (34:11-13). What had David been doing in the court of Achish? He had been speaking guile, and he got nothing but misery out of it. Now he is saying that if you want happiness and peace, “Keep your tongue from evil, and your lips from speaking guile. Depart from evil, and do good; seek peace, and pursue it. The eyes of the LORD are upon the righteous, and His ears are open unto their cry. The face of the Lord is against those who do evil” (34:13-16).

      Part of this passage (34:12-16)is quoted in 1 Peter 3:10-12. Notice that Peter stops at “The face of the Lord is against those who do evil” (3:12), but the psalmist continues, “to cut off the remembrance of them from the earth.” Why does Peter not quote that? Because this is not the day when God is cutting off the wicked; this is the day of grace. While the face of the LORD is against those who do evil, He is still dealing with them in mercy, giving them a chance to be saved. The day of judgment has not yet come.

      The next verses give us the experience of the trusting soul:“The righteous cry, and the LORD hears, and delivers them out of all their troubles. The Lord is nigh unto those who are of a broken heart, and saves such as be of a contrite spirit” (34:17,18). What a lot of sad hearts there are in the world, and how the Lord loves to heal those hearts! “He heals the broken in heart, and binds up their wounds” (Psa. 147:3). The world is full of people with broken hearts and shattered hopes, but what a wonderful thing that “the LORD is nigh unto those who are of a broken heart.”

            (From Studies on the Psalms, Horizon Press, San Diego, CA.)

  Author: H. A. Ironside         Publication: Issue WOT52-2

Bitterness

What is bitterness? Let us look at some people in the Bible who were bitter.

      Esau “cried with a great and exceeding bitter cry” when he learned that his twin brother Jacob had cheated him out of his father’s blessing (Gen. 27:30-35; also Heb. 12:15-17).

      The Egyptians made the lives of the children of Israel “bitter with hard bondage, in mortar, and in brick” (Exod. 1:13,14). Later, an even greater load was laid upon the Israelites when they were required to gather the straw to make brick as well as making the bricks, with no reduction in the daily output of finished product (Exod. 5:6-14).

      After losing her husband Elimelech and both her sons, Mahlon and Chilion, Naomi said, “Call me Mara, for the Almighty has dealt very bitterly with me” (Ruth 1:3-5,20,21).

      Hannah “was in bitterness of soul” because of being childless and the constant provocations by her husband’s other wife, Peninnah (1 Sam. 1:2-10).

      Mordecai “cried with a loud and a bitter cry” when he learned that the king had signed a decree to exterminate the Jews from the land (Esth. 3:12-4:3).

      Job complained, “God … breaks me with a tempest, and multiplies my wounds without cause. He will not suffer me to take my breath, but fills me with bitterness” (Job 9:13-18; also 10:1; 13:26; 23:2).

      Peter “went out and wept bitterly” after denying His Lord three times (Matt. 26:69-75).

      That same Peter later diagnosed in Simon the sorcerer “the gall of bitterness, and in the bond of iniquity” after Simon had sought to purchase the power to give the Holy Spirit to people (Acts 8:17-23). 

Causes of Bitterness

      What were the causes of these people’s bitterness? Perhaps the predominant reason was their perception (rightly or wrongly) of being treated unfairly. Esau, the children of Israel in Egypt, Naomi, Hannah, Mordecai, and Job all chafed under the intense injustice of their situation. One can just hear them crying, “Why me?” Of course, we are allowed to view each of these situations from God’s perspective and can see that in each case God was testing His people and in most cases preparing them for a blessed outcome to their trial. Some of these instances of unfair treatment could have been avoided by more godly treatment on the part of the antagonist (such as Esau’s father and brother, Egypt’s Pharaoh, and Hannah’s husband).

      The cause of Simon Peter’s bitter weeping was just the opposite—the realization of how horribly and unfairly he had treated His Lord.

      What about Simon the sorcerer (sometimes referred to as Simon Magus in extra-biblical literature)? Why did Peter label him as having “the gall of bitterness”? Wasn’t Simon simply being covetous and proud? The earlier description of Simon may shed some light on this:“There was a certain man, called Simon, who beforetime in the same city used sorcery, and bewitched the people of Samaria, giving out that himself was some great one:to whom they all gave heed, from the least to the greatest, saying, This man is the great power of God. And to him they had regard, because that of long time he had bewitched them with sorceries” (Acts 8:9-11). So it wasn’t that Simon wanted something he didn’t have. When the apostles came to Samaria and demonstrated far greater power than he possessed, Simon became bitter about losing the adulation and worship of the people of Samaria who were turning to Christ and receiving the gift of the Holy Spirit. No doubt there was also “bitter envying” in Simon’s heart (Jas. 3:14) that carried over from the underlying animosity between the Samaritans and the Jews. 

Exhortations Concerning Bitterness

      With these examples in mind, let us see what the inspired apostolic writers of Scripture have to say about bitterness.

      The apostle Paul writes, “Let all bitterness, and wrath, and anger, and clamor, and evil speaking be put away from you, with all malice; and be kind one to another, tender-hearted, forgiving one another, even as God for Christ’s sake has forgiven you” (Eph. 4:31,32). It may be difficult to tease distinct meanings out of the words bitterness, wrath, anger, clamor, evil speaking, and malice. He uses all of them, along with their opposites in the following verse, to make sure the reader gets the point. However, “bitterness” seems to have the quality of sharpness or harshness, making biting comments, nasty putdowns, and cruel gossip.

      The apostle Paul also writes, “Husbands, love your wives and be not bitter against them” (Col. 3:19). What would cause a husband to be bitter toward his wife? Solomon suggests some possibilities:“It is better to dwell in a corner of the housetop, than with a brawling woman in a wide house” (Prov. 21:9; 25:24). “It is better to dwell in the wilderness, than with a contentious and an angry woman” (Prov. 21:19). “A continual dropping in a very rainy day and a contentious woman are alike” (Prov. 27:15; 19:13). In addition, a husband who has a difficult time with his boss or fellow employees may tend to take it out on his wife. He doesn’t dare say anything to his boss for risk of losing his job, and he comes home expecting compassion and sympathy from his wife. However, if his wife has had a difficult day at home and greets her husband with, “Honey, would you please change junior’s diaper and entertain him while I fix supper?” that might throw him over the edge if he is not careful.

      The exhortation of Scripture is for husbands not to be bitter against their wives.  Do wives ever have reason to be bitter toward their husbands? Hannah certainly did, and so do many other wives. But the admonition that the apostle gives to husbands must certainly apply to wives as well:“Be not bitter against them.”

      What if we are treated unfairly or unjustly. Do we have a right to be bitter? No doubt the best thing to do in this situation is to consider the One who was treated more unfairly and unjustly by far than anyone in the history of man. How did this Man respond to such treatment? He prayed, “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do” (Luke 23:34). 

A Root of Bitterness

      I have encountered personally or heard of a number of professed Christians who have been totally consumed with bitterness for years and years. One woman continued to be bitter toward her husband for many years after he died because of the way he had treated her. What a physical, emotional, and spiritual toll that woman’s bitterness took on her!  Another woman was bitter toward her sister because she perceived that her sister had received a larger share of their parents’ inheritance. It wasn’t that the woman was impoverished and her sister wealthy. Far from it. It was simply the perceived unfairness of it all that consumed her with bitterness. I cannot help but think that if she had simply cast that burden upon the Lord (Psa. 55:22) she would have ended up infinitely more wealthy materially, emotionally, and spiritually. Also, she would have had more friends.

      Just a couple of weeks ago as I write this, in November 2008, an inmate at the Baltimore City Detention Center told me that he had come to realize that a root of bitterness in him was the underlying cause of his criminal activity and incarceration. Since I had never heard an inmate express such an insight in my 24 years of prison ministry, I asked him to tell me more about it.  He said that he had been bitter toward his mother for many years (I did not ask him to elaborate). When he got married, he transferred his bitterness to his wife. That ultimately led to adultery, divorce, substance abuse, other kinds of criminal activity, and incarceration.

      What a horrible bondage it is to be enmeshed in a root of bitterness! It is hurtful to everyone around. It totally destroys the Christian’s testimony for the Lord. And the one who is filled with bitterness is hurt most of all—among the most miserable persons on the planet. 

Deliverance from Bitterness

      Can one ever be delivered from bitterness? Let us look at the rest of the stories of Naomi, Hannah, Mordecai, and Job.

      The Lord gave Naomi’s daughter-in-law Ruth to her as a gentle encourager. Ruth, by going about her business of providing a living for herself and her mother-in-law, and by sharing with Naomi the ways the Lord was blessing her each day, helped to restore to Naomi an appreciation of the grace of God (Ruth 2:20-22). Ultimately, great honor came to Naomi as the mother-in-law of the great-grandmother of King David.

      Hannah simply committed her cause to the Lord:“If Thou wilt … give unto Thine handmaid a man child, then I will give him unto the LORD all the days of his life” (1 Sam. 1:11). Before long we hear Hannah exulting, “My heart rejoices in the LORD, my horn is exalted in the LORD … I rejoice in Thy salvation” (1 Sam. 2:1), and her son Samuel ultimately became one of the most renowned leaders in the history of the children of Israel.

      Mordecai marshaled all of the Jews living in Shushan to engage in a three day fast that the LORD might change the heart of the king (Esth. 4:16). In the end, we find not only the cause for Mordecai’s bitterness removed but Mordecai himself promoted to be “next unto King Ahasuerus and great among the Jews” (Esth. 10:2,3).

      Job, after losing his children, his wealth, and his health, became bitter toward God for the seeming injustice of these losses. However, the LORD worked with him and revealed Himself more fully to Job so that Job could say in the end, “I abhor myself and repent in dust and ashes” (Job 43:6). “So the LORD blessed the latter end of Job more than his beginning” (43:12).

      My dear reader, are you nursing bitterness, resentment, or a grudge in your heart toward God or another person. You may be placing an inordinate focus on a loss that you have experienced or an injustice you have endured. However, the Lord has something far better in mind for you, something that will cause you totally to forget your loss or injustice. He may even now be using another believer to encourage you to get your focus off yourself and onto the Lord (as Ruth did with Naomi). He may be speaking to you directly (as He did with Job). Or He may want you to turn to Himself in prayer and fasting (as did Hannah and Mordecai) as you seek a reversal of the cause of your bitterness or else deliverance from the bitterness itself.

      Of one thing you can be sure:if you continue nursing and pampering your bitterness, you will never discover the blessing the Lord had in mind for you when he sent you the trial in the first place.

            “Cast your burden upon the LORD, and He shall sustain you:He shall never suffer the righteous to be moved” (Psa. 55:22).

  Author: Paul L. Canner         Publication: Issue WOT52-2

From Bitter to Sweet

Desert sorrows, hard and bitter,

Turn to music, sweet and soft:

Groan and cry yield joyful singing—

Songs of Christ that mount aloft!

 

Ill they spake, “Can God provide us

Cheer amidst the wilderness?”

He a feast of joy has furnished—

Feast of sweetness, love and bliss!

 

In the desert Bread He giveth

Till we nought can ask beside—

Raineth down delight from heaven

Till the heart is satisfied!

 

’Tis Thy love, O Christ, that fills us,

And from out our hearts doth bring

Songs of joy, as sweet, as wondrous,

As in heaven the blessed sing!

 

Thus our sorrow turns to music,

Thus our cry to sweetest song,

Weeping to eternal gladness,

Night to day, vast ages long!

 

      (From Hymns of Grace and Truth, Horizon Press, San Diego, CA.)

  Author: Richard Rolle         Publication: Issue WOT52-2

“The Salt of the Earth”

This is a wretched world, and the reason is not difficult to find. Sin and disobedience to God, with its attendant corruption ending in death, has turned this world, which should have been an Eden of delight, into a scene of wretchedness and woe. And yet for these 6,000 years the world has been preserved from absolute ruin and chaos. Why did not God destroy the entire human family in the flood? Why did He not overthrow the whole world at the time of Sodom’s doom? Why, above all, when His beloved Son was rejected and crucified, did He not smite finally the whole guilty race of Adam? His infinite patience, mercy, and love are the answer. His purposes of grace and blessing, for those who would hear His voice of mercy, were not to be thwarted by Satan’s plots and man’s sin. So, with each signal act of sparing mercy, He continued to work:in the family of Noah, in the nation of Israel, and now through believers in the Lord Jesus Christ throughout the world.

      During all this time He has had fruit in souls brought to know and to trust in Him. These have in turn become “the salt of the earth” by their lives and testimony, may we say, justifying the forbearance of God, and preserving the earth from complete self-destruction by the awful power of evil. Thus from Seth to Noah there was this testimony. From Abraham onward there has been the same. Yet God is manifestly the One who has wrought; for He has begun a fresh work when, for instance, some time after the flood there seems to have been no testimony until the call of Abraham.

So it is after all His work, and the glory will be all His.

      Does not this fact of a preservative element in the earth emphasize the responsibility of those who take the place of being God’s witnesses? “If the salt have lost its savor, wherewith shall it be seasoned?” It is this feebleness of testimony to the truth that marks the lukewarm Laodicean state of the professing Church (Rev. 3:15-17); it is an indication of the near coming of the Lord Jesus to remove His own to heaven, and leaving the world for judgment. Then let those who know the Lord see that the salt of divine grace and truth is not wanting in their lives and testimony. For this, as for all else, the grace of our Lord Jesus is alone sufficient.

            (From Help and Food, Vol. 40.)

  Author: Samuel Ridout         Publication: Issue WOT52-2

“My Meditation of Him Shall Be Sweet” (Psa. 104:34)

“My meditation of Him shall be sweet,”

His name is like ointment poured forth;

No seraph or angel of light,

Ever whispered a name of such worth.

I gaze with deep wonder and joy

In the manger of yon lowly stall,

And praise Him for coming to earth

To save from the curse of the fall.

 

I ponder and muse on the cross,

Where He suffered and died in His love,

To save from the doom of God’s wrath,

And fit us for dwelling above.

 

In muteness and sorrow I sit

On the brink of the dark silent grave,

And think of His measureless love—

His life for my ransom He gave.

 

Through tear-drops that well up and fall,

I behold that blest Man of the tomb

Come forth in His glory and power,

Dispelling all darkness and gloom.

 

I scan the deep blue of the skies

And see Him recede in the air;

He mounts to the court of all worlds—

In God’s presence, to plead for me there.

 

And in the bright visions of hope

I see Him descending the sky,

To rapture His loved ones away

To mansions of infinite joy.

 

Then, in the glad strain of the Seer,

I see Him returning to reign:

To set up His kingdom on earth

Where He was derided and slain.

 

His redeemed ones in millions shall come

And bask in the bliss of His reign,

Creation shall own Him as King.

And join in redemption’s sweet strain.

 

Beyond the swift passing of years

The end of time’s ages I see,               

When He’ll reign through the cycles beyond—

Though undated, unmeasured, they be.

 

Then, ponder and muse, O my soul,

On themes which His glories embrace;

And seek with deep fervence of love,

His greatness more fully to trace.

 

Read daily the leaves of the Book

Whose pages are gilded with light;

Rejoice in the One it unfolds—

May He be thy constant delight.

 

      (From Help and Food, Vol. 41.)

  Author: C. C. Crowston         Publication: Issue WOT52-2

“How Sweet Are Thy Words”

“How sweet are thy words unto my taste! Yes, sweeter than honey to my mouth” (Psa. 119:103). The psalmist had not only heard the words of God, but fed upon them:they affected his palate as well as his ear. God’s words are many and varied, and the whole of them make up what we call “the Word.” The psalmist loved them each one individually as well as the whole of them; he tasted an indescribable sweetness in them. He expresses the fact of their sweetness, but as he cannot express the degree of their sweetness he exclaims, “How sweet!” Being God’s words they were divinely sweet to God’s servant; he who put the sweetness into them had prepared the taste of his servant to discern and enjoy it. The psalmist makes no distinction between promises and precepts, doctrines and threatenings; they are all included in God’s words, and all are precious in his esteem. Oh, for a deep love for all that the Lord has revealed, whatever form it may take.

            “Yes, sweeter than honey to my mouth.” When he did not only eat but also speak the word by instructing others, he felt an increased delight in it. The sweetest of all temporal things fall short of the infinite deliciousness of the eternal word; honey itself is outstripped in sweetness by the Word of the Lord. When the psalmist fed on it he found it sweet; but when he bore witness of it, it became sweeter still. How wise it will be on our part to keep the Word on our palate by meditation and on our tongue by confession. It must be sweet to our taste when we think of it, or it will not be sweet to our mouth when we talk of it.

  Author: C. H. Spurgeon         Publication: Issue WOT52-2