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« on: February 02, 2017, 01:53:23 AM » |
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_______________________________________________ More Minutes With The Bible From The Berean Bible Society
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The Bible and Us by Pastor Cornelius R. Stam
Ever since my youth there have been four Scripture passages that I have associated together in my mind. They were first pointed out to me by one of the men of God who taught the Word in those days, but which one it was I cannot, for the life of me, recall.
WHAT THE BIBLE SAYS ABOUT ITSELF
The four passages referred to above are James 1:21, Titus 1:9, Philippians 2:16, and II Timothy 2:15. In all of these the Bible is called “the Word.” In each of them some statement is made about the Word which indicates our responsibility to it as such. There is nothing essentially dispensational about them, for some of them, at least, would apply in any dispensation. Together, though, they show the importance of our attitude toward God’s Word and the urgency of dividing it aright. Let us examine them one by one.
JAMES 1:21
“Receive with meekness the engrafted Word, which is able to save your souls.”
In James 1:21 the Bible is called “the engrafted Word.” The Greek word rendered “engrafted” here, and indeed the English word engrafted, have the meaning of planting into. Hence the word has sometimes been rendered implanted - “the implanted Word.” This indicates the tendency of the Word of God to get down underneath, as it were, and prick our consciences. And what should we do with it as the “engrafted” or implanted Word? We should receive it with meekness.
“…receive with meekness the engrafted Word, which is able to save your souls.”
This is not a dispensational matter. Men in all ages have been saved by believing God’s Word to them, and His Word has sometimes been difficult to accept. It is the course of wisdom, however, to “receive with meekness the engrafted Word, which is able to save your souls.”
It was as a young comedian, just arrived from the Netherlands, that the writer’s father first came into contact with the Word of God, and it aroused his enmity. He said, “According to that Book, nobody is any good.”
Seeking to get away from the influence of the Word, he took up lodging in an area in which he did not know one single believer. However, an old lady wisely and graciously gave him a book to help him “learn English” faster! The same reading matter was printed in Dutch in the left-hand column and in English in the column at the right. She pointed out to him how he could read the Dutch and then go across the page and learn to decipher the English.
He began avidly studying when it dawned on him: “It’s that Book again!” It was a Dutch-English New Testament the woman had given him!
He told himself that he didn’t have to be insulted in order to learn to read English and has often told us how nearly he threw that book away. But he did want so badly to learn English, and this would be a great help, so he continued studying the Book until he was gloriously saved and his whole life revolutionized by it.
That book had gotten “under his skin,” as it were. It had been implanted into his mind and heart until, convicted of his lost and sinful condition, he cried to God for help and trusted the Lord Jesus Christ as his Lord and Savior.
Should any read this article who are still strangers to grace and to God, we say to you, “receive with meekness the engrafted Word, which is able to save your souls.” Humbly accept what the Bible says about your desperate condition, about your just condemnation before a holy God. Receive with meekness what it says about God’s love for you and the death of Christ at Calvary - for your sins. “Receive with meekness the implanted Word,” believe what it says about your sin and your Savior, and your soul will be saved.
TITUS 1:9
“Holding fast the faithful Word….”
In Titus 1:9 the Bible is called “the faithful Word.” And what is our responsibility toward it as such? Why, hold it fast, trust it, rely upon it, act upon it, “holding fast the faithful Word.”
It is particularly appropriate that the Bible should be called “the faithful Word” here in Paul’s letter to Titus. Titus had been left by Paul to serve the Lord Jesus Christ on the island of Crete. This was a very difficult assignment, for the Apostle writes:
“One of themselves, even a prophet of their own, said, The Cretians are always liars” (Ver. 12).
And he added, “This witness is true” (Ver. 13).
Some years ago the author looked up the word Cretian, or Cretan, in an old unabridged dictionary to ascertain the proper spelling of the word. In addition to the information we sought, the dictionary explained that in Paul’s day to say, “You’re a Cretian” was the same as saying, “You’re a liar.” The Cretians could not be trusted. Paul says, in effect, “Whether they say `yes’ or `no,’ pay no attention to it. Whether they say `I will’ or `I won’t,’ pay no heed, for they are always lying. You cannot depend upon them.”
In sharp contrast to this trait of the Cretians we have the wonderful truth of Titus 1:2:
“In hope of eternal life, which God, that CANNOT LIE, promised before the world [ages] began.”
“The Cretians are always liars.” “God…cannot lie.” And it was to Titus, on this island where men were so untrustworthy, that “God [who] cannot lie,” wrote, through Paul, about His sure promise of eternal life.
“God is not a man, that He should lie; neither the son of man, that He should repent: hath He said, and shall He not do it? or hath He spoken, and shall He not make it good?” (Num. 23:19).
But to whom did God make this promise about eternal life? Surely not to the angels; there is no indication in Scripture that this might have been the case. Surely not to men, for men were not yet created “before the [ages] began.” To whom then did He make the promise? The answer is - to Himself. In the counsels of the Trinity, in ages past, God promised Himself that He would provide the wonderful salvation by grace which we now enjoy. We sometimes make promises to ourselves, and fail dismally to keep them, but this is not so with the promise that God made to Himself. “God…cannot lie.” His “eternal purpose,” the promise He made before the ages began, could have been made by none greater - it was made by God Himself. It could have been made to none greater. It was made to Himself. And it was vested in Jesus Christ, “in [whom] dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily” (Col. 2:9). This promise will never be broken. Every individual promise fulfilled to us is but a further development of the great eternal promise He made to Himself.
This passage by no means stands alone. In II Timothy 1:1 we read that Paul was “an apostle of Jesus Christ by the will of God, according to the promise of life which is in Christ Jesus.” This was indeed His eternal purpose in Christ, to which the Apostle refers again and again in his epistles.
We may rely completely upon this promise. Indeed we have all reason to rely upon it, “holding fast the faithful Word.” This is why the Apostle writes in I Timothy 1:15:
“This is a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners.”
The Cretians are always liars, but God cannot lie. Surrounded by dishonesty and unfaithfulness on every hand we can, thank God, hold fast the faithful Word, and rejoice that even when we ourselves are unfaithful, “yet He abideth faithful” (II Tim. 2:13).
PHILIPPIANS 2:16
“Holding forth the Word of life….”
Here again the Bible calls itself “the Word.” This time it is “the Word of life.” What is our responsibility toward it as such? We should hold it forth. We should hold it forth because it is “the Word of life.”
Here it may be well to consider the preceding context, Verse 15:
“That ye may be blameless and harmless, the sons of God, without rebuke, in the midst of a crooked and perverse nation [generation], among whom ye shine as lights in the world.”
We once interpreted Verses 15 and 16 to mean that as we hold forth the Word of life we should cast the light of a godly life upon it. It is true, indeed, that our witness for Christ should be “adorned” by a blameless, godly life, but does a blameless life actually cast light upon the Bible? Is it not the Word which gives light to this dark world, light about eternal life? Is it not by “holding forth the Word of life” that we “shine as lights in the world?” This latter interpretation, we feel, makes better sense and is more consistent with the Word of God as a whole. Let us quote it again:
“That ye may be blameless and harmless, the sons of God, without rebuke, in the midst of a crooked and perverse [generation], among whom ye shine as lights in the world, holding forth the Word of life; that I may rejoice in the day of Christ that I have not run in vain neither labored in vain” (Vers. 15,16).
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