The Pilgrim Christian
Notes
Transcript
Questions to answer in this Equipping Hour
1. Who exactly were the Puritans?
2. What can they contribute to your everyday walk with
the Lord?
John Owen
(1616-1683)
“Watch and pray that you may not enter into
temptation.”
—Matthew 26:41
Of Temptation: the Nature & Power of it
(Matt. 26:41)
1. The evil cautioned against — Temptation
2. The means of its prevalency — Our entering into it
3. The way of preventing it — Watch and Pray
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“Temptation, then, in general, is any thing, state,
way, or condition that, upon any account
whatever, has a force or ef cacy to seduce, to
draw the mind and heart of a man from its
obedience, which God requires of him, into any
sin, in any degree whatever.”
—John Owen
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“So I nd it to be a law that when I want to do
right, evil lies close at hand.”
—Romans 7:21
Indwelling Sin in Believers
(Rom. 7:21)
1. The Power & Ef cacy of indwelling sin — Paul calls it “a
law”
2. The way of discovering this law — Paul “found” it
3. The frame of his soul — “I want to do right”
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4. The state and activity of indwelling sin — “evil lies close
at hand”
The Believer’s Standing in Christ
1. Union with Christ (Rom. 6:1-11)
2. Temple of the Holy Spirit (1 Cor. 3:16, 6:18-20)
3. People of the New Covenant (Jer. 31:31-34)
4. A New Creation (2 Cor. 5:17; Eph. 4:22-24)
“…put off your old self, which belongs to your
former manner of life and is corrupt through
deceitful desires, and to be renewed in the spirit of
your minds, and to put on the new self, created
after the likeness of God in true righteousness and
holiness.”
—Ephesians 4:22-24
The Relationship between Positional &
Progressive Sancti cation
1. Positional — We are Sancti ed (1 Cor. 1:2; Heb.
10:10; 1 Cor. 6:11)
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2. Progressive —We ought to pursue Sancti cation
(Rom. 6:19; 1 Thess. 4:3)
The Relationship between Justi cation & Sancti cation
1. Obedience is necessary for salvation (Luke 6:46;
Rom. 2:6; Rev. 20:12)
2. Obedience isn’t necessary as the meritorious cause
(Rom. 5:1)
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3. Obedience is necessary as the demonstrable evidence
(Eph. 2:8-10; Titus 2:11-14)
“In effect God says to us, ‘Because you believe in
Christ, by the Holy Spirit I have joined you to Christ.
When he died, you died. When he rose, you rose. He’s
in heaven, so you’re in heaven. He’s holy, so you’re
holy. Your position right now, objectively and
factually, is as a holy, beloved, child of God, dead to
sin, alive to righteousness, and seated in my holy
heaven — now live like it.’”
—Kevin DeYoung
The Causes of Sancti cation
1. The Father (Rom. 8:29-30, 1 Thess. 5:23-24)
2. The Son (John 15:4-5, Eph. 5:25-27)
3. The Spirit (Rom. 7:6, 8:3-4)
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4. The Individual (Rom. 6:11-13, Eph. 4:11-16)
The Means of Sancti cation
1. A Consecrated Life
2. A Renewed Mind
3. A Transformed Heart
4. Treasuring the Word
5. Cherishing Prayer
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6. Devoting oneself to the Church
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“Q. What are the outward and ordinary means
whereby Christ communicates to us the bene ts of
redemption?
A. The outward and ordinary means whereby Christ
communicates to us the bene ts of redemption are, his
ordinances, especially the Word, sacraments, and prayer;
all which are made effectual to the elect for salvation.”
— Westminster Shorter Catechism (1648)
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“Ordinances are conduit pipes whereby the water of
life is derived from Christ in the hearts of Christians.
As the light and beams of the sun is the chariot to
convey the heat and in uence of the sun to the world,
so the ordinances of God are the chariots whereby
God conveys the heat of his grace, and the in uences
of His spirit to men and women.”
— George Swinnock
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“Before you go to hear (or read), labor to affect your
heart with the necessity, excellency, and ef cacy of
the word… Urge your soul with this: The word which
I am going to hear… is absolutely necessary to my
spiritual and eternal good. I am dead, and it is the
word which must enliven me; I am blind, and it is the
word that must enlighten me.”
— George Swinnock
“My soul is sinful, and it is the word that must
sanctify it; my soul is sick, it is the word that must
heal it; my soul is hungry, and it is the word that must
feed it, or I shall starve; my soul is thirsty, and it is the
word that must satisfy it, or I shall die for thirst.”
— George Swinnock
“It is a contempt both of God’s majesty and
mercy for you to throw down your prayers
before him, and then to run away, not caring
what becomes of it.”
— George Swinnock
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“If you pray for your daily bread, be diligent in your
calling, or else expect a crop out of the ocean. If you pray
against some particular sin, avoid the occasion of those
sins. If it be against drunkenness, avoid evil company. If
it be against pride, avoid and discourage such as will
atter you, for otherwise you do as he that runs into the
re, and prays to God that it may not burn him…
“Such a man mocks God, but himself most. If
you pray for holiness and grace, hear, read,
meditate, watch, use the means, and expect a
good issue from God.”
— George Swinnock
“Make preparation for the day… Truly, friend, it is so
with us in matters of higher moment; hearts, like soil,
must be prepared for the seed of the word—how
many a sermon has been lost because this was
wanting!—and the violins of our souls must be tuned
to praise God, or otherwise they will sound but
harshly in his ears.”
— George Swinnock
“They that come to duty merely for duty, know not
what it means to meet with God… Reader, when you
go to the ordinances of God, go to meet God in the
ordinances… Go to view the beauty of his face when
you inquiry into his holy temple. When you go to
prayer, let it be in hope to get your heart nearer to
heaven.”
— George Swinnock
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“True believers may in various ways have the assurance of
their salvation shaken, decreased, or temporarily lost. This
may happen because they neglect to preserve it or fall into
some speci c sin that wounds their conscience and grieves
the Spirit. It may happen through some unexpected or
forceful temptation or when God withdraws the light of
his face and allows even those who fear him to walk in
darkness and to have no light…
“Yet they are never completely lacking the seed of God,
the life of faith, love of Christ and the brethren, sincerity
of heart, or conscience concerning their duty. Out of these
graces, through the work of the Spirit, this assurance may
at the proper time be revived. In the meantime, they are
kept from utter despair through them.”
— 2nd LBCF Chapter 18.4 (1689)