We are Poor, Silly Sheep

by Octavius Winslow, 1870

“The Lord is my Shepherd . . . He restores my soul.”  Psalm 23:1, 3.

It is not the least important duty of the Shepherd to go in quest of the stray ones of the flock; the fickle sheep wandering from the fold.

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img credit: publicdomainpictures.net

The spiritual history of the believer is a history . . .
of declension–and revival,
of departure–and return,
of his backsliding–and of the Savior’s restoring.

The regenerate soul is bent upon backsliding from the Lord. The sun does not more naturally decline, than does the believing heart wander from God.

“O Lord, how many and hidden are my soul’s departures from You, You only know! How often my love chills, my faith droops, my zeal flags, and I grow weary, and am ready to halt in Your service. Mine is a sinful, roving heart, as fickle to You as the changing wind; as false to my vows as a broken bow. But You, O Lord, are my Shepherd, and You restore my soul. Pitying my infirmity, knowing my wanderings, and tracking all my steps–You recover, heal, and pardon Your poor, silly sheep, prone to leave Your wounded, sheltering side in quest of that which can be found in Yourself alone.”

Oh, the love of Jesus in . . .
curbing our waywardness,
checking our wanderings,
arresting, healing, and restoring our souls.

He never forsakes His people, though they forsake Him times without number. How can He turn His back upon one bought with His sufferings, groans, and tears? How can He forsake the work of grace wrought in the soul by His Spirit? He may withdraw Himself for a time, gently to awaken us from our slothfulness and slumber–yet He returns again, and our lips gratefully sing, “He restores my soul.”

“I will never desert you, nor will I ever forsake you!” Hebrews 13:5

Jesus sought me when a stranger,
Wandering from the fold of God;
He, to rescue me from danger,
Interposed His precious blood!

O to grace how great a debtor,
Daily I’m constrained to be!
Let Thy goodness, like a fetter,
Bind my wandering heart to Thee.

Prone to wander, Lord, I feel it,
Prone to leave the God I love
;
Here’s my heart, O take and seal it,
Seal it for Thy courts above!

O that day when freed from sinning,
I shall see Thy lovely face;
Clothed then in blood-washed linen
How I’ll sing Thy sovereign grace!

Soli Deo Gloria!

The Scapegoat and Jesus – Dealing with Guilt & Shame

This is a wonderful segment from a sermon by David Ward from Redeemer Bible Church that was featured on Wretched Radio‘s April 1 broadcast. It is an outstanding sermon that touches on the importance of right doctrine and glorifying in propitiation to understand how Christians can Biblically deal with shame and guilt over sin. I highly recommend this sermon to you:


Download the mp3.

Actions Louder Than Words – Almost

Dr. Sinclair Ferguson preached this at our Good Friday service this year. It is, in my humble opinion, one of the greatest sermons I have heard him preach. He preached from Matthew 27:45-54.


Download mp3

What About Pictures of Christ?

Exodus 20:4-6, “” You shall not make for yourself a carved image, or any likeness of anything that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth; you shall not bow down to them nor serve them. For I, the LORD your God, am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children to the third and fourth generations of those who hate Me, but showing mercy to thousands, to those who love Me and keep My commandments.” (cf. Deut. 5:8-10)

“There is no such thing as an innocent religious image,” – John Calvin (Institutes 2.8.17)

“Perhaps more people living today have derived their ideas of Jesus Christ from these typically ‘liberal’ pictures of Jesus than have derived their ideas of Jesus from the Bible itself. Such people inevitably think of Jesus as a human person, rather than thinking of him according to the biblical teaching as a divine person with a human nature. The inevitable effect of the popular acceptance of pictures of Jesus is to overemphasize his humanity and to forget or neglect his deity (which of course no picture can portray).” – Johannes G. Vos, (Johannes G. Vos, The Westminster Larger Catechism: A Commentary (Phillipsburg, NJ: Presbyterian and Reformed, 2002), 292.)

I believe that Scripture clearly teaches that it is sinful to depict God in any way either through sculpture or the paintbrush. It’s impossible to paint God. God has clearly painted Himself in the pages of Scripture and in the person of Christ – and that is His canvas for all humanity to truly know Him. The sacraments in the church are also visible lessons to us.

Since God cannot be drawn (due to the direct commandment of His Law and the sheer logic that God is not a creature and therefore there is absolutely no way to depict Him by artwork), it is also a violation of this commandment to depict the Lord Jesus Christ in any way. While it is true that Christ is fully human and therefore the argument is often made that we can draw His humanity, we run into several serious problems:

  1. The Scriptures give us absolutely no description of Christ. We have not one thing to help us even begin drawing Him. Every picture drawn throughout history of Jesus Christ is horribly inaccurate and nothing but man’s imagination as to how Christ looks. The fact that the Scriptures give absolutely no physical description of Christ demonstrates the utmost care of the Holy Spirit guarding the second commandment!
  2. Jesus Christ is one person who exists in two natures: human and divine. Since it is impossible and strictly forbidden by God to draw the divine nature any attempt at drawing Christ would be the wrong Jesus. It would be an incomplete Jesus and not the Jesus of Scripture. Any drawing or depiction of Christ can only demonstrate His humanity (and poorly at that given point #1) and not His deity. Theology is critical! The hypostatic union (the teaching that Christ is one person who exists in two natures) cannot be depicted in images.

God has clearly painted Himself in the pages of Scripture. Any other way that we attempt to know God will result in gross idolatry and very wrong theology.

I commend an excellent article that Dr. McMahon over at A Puritan’s Mind has put together that gives much support to the error of images of Jesus Christ.

Soli Deo Gloria.

Consider Christ

“Look more at justification than sanctification. In the highest commands consider Christ, not as an exacter to require, but as a debtor, an undertaker, to work in you and for you. If you have looked at your resolutions, endeavors, workings, duties, qualifications, etc., more than at the merits of Christ, it will cost you dear.”

— Thomas Wilcox
Honey out of the Rock
(HT: Of First Importance)

You Must Be Born Again!

“You must be born again.” – John 3:7b

For your conviction, consider these few things: REGENERATION IS ABSOLUTELY necessary to qualify you to do anything really good and acceptable to God. While you are not born again, your best works are but glittering sins; for though the matter of them is good, they are quite marred in the performance.

Consider, that without regeneration there is no faith, and “without faith it is impossible to please God” (Heb 11:6). Faith is a vital act of the new-born soul. The evangelist, showing the different entertainment which our Lord Jesus had from different persons, some receiving Him, some rejecting Him, points at regenerating grace as the true cause of that difference, without which never any one would have received Him. He tells us, that “as many as re- ceived him,” were those “which were born of God” (Joh 1:11-13). Unregenerate men may presume, but true faith they cannot have. Faith is a flower that grows not in the field of nature. As the tree cannot grow without a root, nei- ther can a man believe without the new nature, whereof the principle of believing is a part. Without regeneration a man’s works are dead works. As is the principle, so must the effects be: if the lungs are rotten, the breath will be unsavoury; and he who at best is dead in sin, his works at best will be but dead works. “Unto them that are defiled and unbelieving, is nothing pure being abominable, and disobedient, and unto every good work reprobate” (Ti 1:15- 16). If we could say of a man, that he is more blameless in his life than any other in the world, that he reduces his body with fasting and has made his knees as horns with continual praying, if he is not born again, that exception would mar all. As if one should say, “There is a well-proportioned body, but the soul is gone; it is but a dead lump.” This is a melting consideration. You do many things materially good; but God says, “All these things avail not, as long as I see the old nature reigning in the man,” “For in Jesus Christ neither circumcision availeth anything, nor uncircumcision, but a new creature” (Gal 6:15).

If you are not born again:

(1) All your reformation is naught in the sight of God. You have shut the door, but the thief is still in the house. It may be you are not what once you were; yet you are not what you must be, if ever you see heaven; for “except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God” (Joh 3:3).

(2) Your prayers are an “abomination to the Lord” (Pro 15:8). It may be, others admire your seriousness; you cry as for your life; but God accounts of the opening of your mouth as one would account of the opening of a grave full of rottenness, “Their throat is an open sepulchre” (Rom 3:13). Others are affected with your prayers, which seem to them as if they would rend the heavens; but God accounts them but as the howling of a dog: “They have not cried unto me with their hearts, when they howled upon their beds” (Hos 7:14). Why, because you are yet “in the gall of bitterness, and bond of iniquity!” All your struggles against sin in your own heart and life, are naught. The proud Pharisee afflicted his body with fasting, and God struck his soul, in the meantime with a sentence of condemnation (Luk 18). Balaam struggled with his covetous temper, to that degree, that though he loved the wages of unrighteousness, yet he would not win them by cursing Israel: but he died the death of the wicked (Num 31:8). All you do, while in an unregenerate state, is for yourself: therefore it will fare with you as with a subject, who hav- ing reduced the rebels, puts the crown on his own head, and loses all his good service and his head too.

Be convinced, then, that you must be born again. The Scripture says that the Word is the seed, whereof the new creature is formed: therefore take heed to it, and entertain it, as it is your life. Apply yourself to the reading of the Scripture. You that cannot read, get others to read it to you. Wait diligently on the preaching of the Word, as by divine appointment the special means of conversion; for “it pleased God, by the foolishness of preaching, to save them that believe” (1Co 1:21).

Receive the testimony of the Word of God concerning the misery of an unregenerate state, the sinfulness there- of, and the absolute necessity of regeneration. Receive its testimony concerning God, what a holy and just One He is. Examine your ways by it; namely, the thoughts of your heart, the expressions of your lips, and the tenor of your life. Look back through the several periods of your life; see your sins from the precepts of the Word, and learn, from its threatening, what you are liable to on account of these sins.

By the help of the same Word of God, view the corruption of your nature. Were these things deeply rooted in the heart, they might be the seed of that fear and sorrow, on account of your soul’s state, which are necessary to prepare and stir you up to look after a Saviour. Fix your thoughts upon Him offered to you in the Gospel, as fully suited to your case; having, by His obedience unto death, perfectly satisfied the justice of God, and brought in ever- lasting righteousness. This may prove the seed of humiliation, desire, hope and faith; and move you to stretch out the withered hand unto Him, at His own command.

Let these things sink deeply into your hearts, and improve them diligently. Remember, whatever you are, you must be born again; else it had been better for you that you had never been born. Wherefore, if any of you shall live and die in an unregenerate state, you will be inexcusable, having been fairly warned of your danger.

- Thomas Boston (1676-1732)

Looking Unto Jesus

“It is ever the Holy Spirit’s work to turn our eyes away from self to Jesus; but Satan’s work is just the opposite of this, for he is constantly trying to make us regard ourselves instead of Christ.

He insinuates, “Your sins are too great for pardon; you have no faith; you do not repent enough; you will never be able to continue to the end; you have not the joy of His children; you have such a wavering hold of Jesus.”

All these are thoughts about self, and we shall never find comfort or assurance by looking within. But the Holy Spirit turns our eyes entirely away from self: He tells us that we are nothing, but that “Christ is all in all.””

— Charles Spurgeon

It is Not We Who Save…

“Though we be Pauls and Apolloses we cannot save a soul; though we be as eloquent as Demosthenes, as subtle as Aristotle, as convincing as Plato, as persistent as Socrates, we cannot save. And though we be non of these, but a plain man with lisping lips, that can but let fall the Gospel truth in broken phrases – we need no eloquent Aaron for our prophet. We need only God for our Master. It is not we who save, it is God; and our place is not due to our learning or our rhetoric or our graces, it is due to the honouring of God, who has mercy on whom He will have mercy, and whom He will, He hardens.” – B.B. Warfield