Covenant Protestant Reformed Church
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Covenant Protestant Reformed Church

83 Clarence Street, Ballymena BT43 5DR
Rev. Angus Stewart
Lord’s Day, 4 January, 2015

“But our God is in the heavens: he hath done
whatsoever he hath pleased” (Psalm 115:3)

Morning Service - 11:00 AM

Absalom and His Rebellion (11)
David Ascends Mount Olivet  [download]  [youtube]

Scripture Reading: II Samuel 15:13-37
Text: II Samuel 15:24-37

I. David’s Supporters
II. David’s Piety
III. David’s Plan
Psalms: 132:7-14; 90:1-7; 55:10-17; 3:1-8

Evening Service - 6:00 PM

A Fitting Prayer at the Start of the Year  [download]  [youtube]
Scripture Reading: Ephesians 6
Text: Heidelberg Catechism, Lord’s Day 52

I. A Prayer That Recognizes the Reality of Our Fallen World
II. A Prayer That Admits the Susceptibility of Our Sinful Flesh
III. A Prayer That Trusts the Sovereignty of Our Covenant God
Psalms: 107:1-9; 90:8-12; 81:10-16; 119:129-136

For CDs of the sermons and DVDs of the worship services, contact Stephen Murray
If you desire a pastoral visit, please contact Rev. Stewart or the elders

CPRC Website: www.cprc.co.uk • Live Webcast: www.cprf.co.uk/live.html
CPRC YouTube: www.youtube.com/cprcni
CPRC Facebook: www.facebook.com/CovenantPRC

Quotes to Consider

A. W. Pink: “Various attempts have been made seeking to vindicate David for sending Hushai to become a spy for him in Absalom’s camp. Strategy may be permissible in warfare, but nothing could justify the king in causing Hushai to act and utter a lie. It is true that God overruled, and through Hushai defeated Ahithophel’s counsel, but that no more proves He approved of this deception, than did the flowing of water from the smitten rock show God’s approbation of Moses’ anger” (The Life of David, II:125).

William Blackburn on II Samuel 15:34: “The policy was shrewd and far-seeing, but the principle was not worthy of David. We see no way to defend it. It was proposing a deception, a strategy by fraud. The best that can be made of it is, that David thought the traitor deserved to be betrayed. He went on the principle of fighting Absalom with his own weapons. He would pay the prince in his own coin” (The Rebel Prince, pp. 163-164).

C. H. Spurgeon: “Our time is always now, for we are in selfish haste. But everything happens according to God's divine time-table. Our sovereign God is never before His time and never too late … Our trials come in due season and leave at the appointed moment. Our fretfulness will neither hasten nor delay the purposes of our sovereign God. We are in hot haste to order all our affairs. But the Lord has the leisure of omnipotence and unerring wisdom and it will be well for us to learn to wait … My soul, trust in God, and wait patiently when He says, 'My time is not yet come—but your time is always ready' (John. 7:6)."

A. W. Pink: "'And thou shalt remember all the way which the LORD thy God led thee …' (Deut. 8:2). Most suitable word is this at the beginning of the year. Some are dismally prone to dwell upon the rough parts of the path, others desire to recall only the smooth ones; but we are bidden to remember 'ALL the way.' The places where we distrusted and murmured—that the recollection may humble us. The unpleasant sections when, because we followed a policy of self-will, God hedged up our way with thorns (Hos. 2:6)—that we may profit from His chastenings. Remember, too, the testing parts, when providence so ordered your course that you were brought to wits-end corner, yet in response to your cries, the Lord delivered you. Recall the trying stages of the journey, when visible supplies and outward means failed, and your wonder-working God gave you water out of the smitten Rock, so that you can acknowledge Him 'who remembered us in our low estate' (Ps. 136:23). Let these two things be fixed in your mind at the entrance of the new year: the fact that the Lord will never forget you—and your duty ever to remember Him. See that you are one of those whose holy resolution it is, 'we will remember thy love (Song 1:4). Say, 'Bless the LORD, O my soul, and forget not all his benefits' (Ps. 103:2), realizing that each of them issues from His love.”

Announcements (subject to God’s will)

Monday Catechism:
Taylor, Josh, Corey, Bradley & Samuel (Beginners OT, book 1) - 5:30 PM
Alex, Nathan, Jacob & Joseph (Seniors NT) - 6:15 PM
Timothy & Chris (Essentials of Reformed Doctrine) - 7:00 PM

The Council meets tomorrow evening at 7:45 PM.

The Tuesday Bible study meets at 11 AM to study “The Kingdom of God and Old Testament Prophecy (2).”

The Belgic Confession Class meets this Wednesday at 7:45 PM to study Article 24 on “The Progress of Sanctification (3).”

The church visitors, Prof. Gritters and Dave Kregel, and their wives, Lori and Mary, arrive later this week. A schedule is on the back table with available time slots for those who would like to have them over for dinner.

The Ladies’ Bible Study meets this Friday at 10:30 AM at the church to continue their study of Philippians.

The congregational dinner is this Friday at the Ramble Inn at 7 PM. Sign-up today on the sheet on the back table!

Men’s Bible Study meets this Saturday at 8 PM at the Kennedys to discuss chapter 9 of “Pursuit of Holiness.”

The Reformed Witness Hour broadcast next Lord’s Day (Gospel 846MW at 8:30 AM) by Rev. Bruinsma is entitled “Faith: Strength to Endure (1)” (Hebrews 11:33-39).

Next Lord’s Day, Prof. Gritters will be preaching both services for us. There will be tea after the evening service, provided by Group B on the tea rota.

Ballymena Lecture: Prof. Gritters will speak on “The Prince of Darkness Grim: The Reformed Teaching About Satan” on Wednesday, 14 January at 7:30 PM. Flyers are available on the back table to pass on to family and friends.

Offerings: General Fund - £567.

Website Additions: 2 Hungarian translations.


The Wise and the Fools

Brian D. Dykstra

 

Proverbs 3:35: “The wise shall inherit glory: but shame shall be the promotion of fools.”

Solomon presents us with another contrast. The contrast is stark. In this verse, we do not face a broad spectrum of possibilities. We face an either/or situation. There cannot be anything in between. Glory and shame are the only possibilities, and there is no transferring from one to the other. The wise inherit glory. Fools ascend no higher than shame.

The wise who inherit glory are not the men and women of renown in society. Although God has given some of His people great talent and ability, and although some have even risen to positions of prominence and wealth, such is not the general condition of God’s people. Being wise has nothing to do with one’s standardized test scores or IQ. Wisdom is not the intellect so valued in the world of how to ascend to the higher rungs of the social ladder through the dedicated use of one’s wits and cunning. Wisdom is the fear of God which leads to faithful, diligent study of His Word which the wise recognize as the standard of all truth.

Solomon tells us about who these wise people are in the preceding verses where Solomon has given us instruction by means of other contrasts. The wise are the righteous of verse 32. When God’s people confidently affirm their righteousness, there are spiritual confessions to make. Our righteousness is Christ’s. Just as our sins have all been laid upon Him, His perfect obedience is laid upon us through faith. Because of Christ, we can stand before our heavenly Father as those who have kept His law perfectly.

The wise are the just of verse 33. The just strive to deal with their neighbours as Christ instructs them. The just try to keep God’s law throughout all the interactions of their day-to-day personal relationships. They will not take advantage of people or figure that as long as their behaviour is legal in the eyes of men, everything is fair game. The just live by the higher standard of God’s perfect law.

The wise are the lowly of the verse 34. The lowly know what they are of themselves. They cannot be proud when they examine their innermost hearts in the light of God’s perfect law. There is no boasting from those who know what it means to be the corrupt fruit of a fallen Adam.

The wise know to live according the great reality which is denied, often vehemently, by the wicked. The great reality is that there is a God in heaven who is just and who will not be mocked. There is a God who when He speaks of the consequences of sin, He means it. The wise also confess the reality about themselves, their need of a Saviour and their obligation to live thankfully before their merciful heavenly Father.

The wise inherit glory. Nobody inherits the fruit of their own labour. Someone else has done the work, and in their love for those dear to them, gave others the benefits of what they have earned. That is true regarding the glory we inherit as the children of God.

The wise inherit glory. This glory is not a perishable good. This glory is not subject to the ravages of time. Moths cannot damage it and make it useless. Rust cannot take away its lustre. This is the glory of being with God and experiencing His fellowship without the fear of it ever being lost again because of sin. This is the glory of being a living member of the perfect church of Christ. This is the glory of being perfectly suited for the work which God will give to each of His redeemed children in His everlasting heavenly kingdom.

Fools will not have it so good. The fool says that there is no God. A fool lives life as though there is no sovereign Judge who knows all that the fool does and thinks. This denial of God is made despite the fact of the clear testimony of all of creation, as well as of Scripture and the true church.

The greatest height which can be attained by fools, is shame. That is their promotion, the highest rank they can achieve: shame. This is what they have earned, unlike an inheritance. A promotion is something you have worked for long and hard. You exerted yourself and made sacrifices to earn your promotion. Fools worked hard to achieve shame. Shame makes us want to hide our faces and not be seen by anyone again. You just want to creep away and disappear because now people have come to realize what you really are. There will be no more proud lifting up of the head. Fools will know the shame pronounced upon them by God is the sad condition which they have so richly earned. It takes a fool to work so hard and long for the ultimate rank of shame.

That is quite a contrast. The fool has earned his terrible destiny. The fool’s everlasting shame has been won through hard work. It takes much hard work to convince one’s self that there is no God. Many smart people have earned high-powered engineering degrees to design and build very expensive equipment to try to learn the basic principles of the observable universe, when all the while they deny the most fundamental truth of matter, the fact that God made everything.

The truly wise, those who take God and His Word as truth, receive glory, a glory they inherited because of the hard, sacrificial work of their Saviour on the cross.