A Guide to Song of Solomon

XAS-24

960512AM

 

A Guide to Song of Solomon

A Guide to Song of Solomon

 

 

  • JESUS CHRIST: Because our Lord Jesus Christ said so!  Over and over we find Him asking those who questioned Him, “Have you never read?”, “It is written” and “Search the Scriptures”. He believed in:
    1. Jesus believed in the Verbal (every word) Inspiration  of the Scriptures [Matthew 5:18]
      1. In His Private Life [Mt 4 quotes Deut]  He uses it in His struggle with Satan
      2. In His Public Ministry [Mt 5-7 quotes Isaiah 61.2] He uses it to teach multitudes by the Sea.
      3. In His Personal world [Mt 24 quotes Dan & prophets] He uses it to explain the future to His disciples.
    1. Jesus believed in the Inerrancy of the Scriptures [John 10:35; 17:17] so much so that one out of every ten recorded words of Jesus are Old Testament quotes![1]
    2. Historical Reliability of Scripture as in
      1. Adam and Eve (Mt. 19:4-5);
      2. Abel  [Mat 23.35]
      3. Noah and flood (Mt. 24:37-38)
      4. Abraham (John 8:56)
      5. Moses and the Bush  {Mk 12.26]
      6. David [Mt 12.3]
      7. Elijah [Lk 4.25]
      8. Daniel [Mt 4.17]
      9. Jonah (Mt. 12:40-41)
  • APOSTLES & PROPHETS: Because all the writers said so thousands of times. They were totally convinced that they were sharing words that were not originating with them.
  • SURVIVAL: Because of its endurance through the ages despite being the target of Empires, armies and infidels the Bible stands like a rock undaunted through the raging storms of time. Its pages burn with the truth eternal and they glow with a light divine. The Bible stands though the hills may tumble it will firmly stand though the Earth may crumble. I will take my stand on its firm foundation for the Bible stands!
  • ABSOLUTE UNITY: Because of its incredible unity demonstrated in the fact that from 40 plus men on 3 continents over 1,600 years and 60 generations comes one unmistakable fabric woven from prison to palace, desert to dungeon, hillside to holy places. There is one common denominator, one shared theme and one united message. There is but one system of doctrine, one system of ethics, one plan of salvation and one rule of faith.
  • PROPHETIC ACCURACY: Because of its fulfilled prophecy (illustration – Logos Esch.)
  • SCIENTIFIC ACCURACY: Because of its scientific accuracy (Mac)
  • HISTORICAL ACCURACY: Because of its archaeological verification (Criswell)

 

960512 AM Transcript

 

 

If you’d open in your Bibles with me please, we’re going to 1 Thessalonians again, as we continue through this magnificent epistle penned by the apostle Paul for the glory of Christ.  As you turn to chapter two, verse 13, I’m reminded that last Sunday, thanks to the prayers of so many of you, as I am so glad the 28 pilgrims that were part of the 40 all arrived safely home from the holy land.  In fact, I think that only about 45 of those rockets landed while we were there.  None of them bothered us at all.  And I think that they’re more in the news here than they are over there.

 

But, all that aside, last Sunday morning we were having our morning worship service outside the great amphitheater in Ephesus sitting actually in the entry on the stones of the foundation of that huge, huge theater.  And as we sat there, we read Christ’s letter to the Ephesians in Revelation chapter two.  What a rich time.  And then we walked down that main street and looked at just a tiny slice of the ruins.  Ephesus of course was the largest of all the cities of the ancient Roman Empire.  It’s the largest of all the ruins of any biblical city, and they’ve only done a slice of it, it’s so massive, so many square miles.  But as we sat there, I thought how the apostle Paul would come to a city and he would just stand in the marketplace and he would be a total nobody that no one knew.  He’s be an unknown commodity.  And he’d walk in and he would start at the top of his voice proclaiming something they’d never heard before, and those people would listen to that and their lives would be utterly transformed.

 

Have you ever thought of it in that sense?  I mean, next time you go to the mall and some wacko is out there, you know, promoting something or somebody is standing on the street corner screaming and raving, that’s what Paul looked like.  And yet what he was speaking was the very word of God.

 

Look at verse 13 of chapter two and I want to show you what I mean.  “For this reason,” 1 Thessalonians 2:13, “we also thank God ceaselessly because when you received the word of God which you heard from us,” when he was speaking he was giving God’s word, “you welcomed it not as the word of men but as it is in truth, the word of God.”

 

Now I want you to do something with me.  We’ll be a little unusual.  Take your Bible and hold it, and I want you all to hold it like this, okay?  I want to talk to you about what you’re holding.  You don’t have to look at it.  I want to tell you what you have here.  Okay?  You got it?  You holding it?  Let me see it, move it a little bit, there we go, you got it.  You all are holding something that is unlike anything else that in 5,000 recorded years of human history has ever been produced on this planet.  Everything else on this planet is just something from the planet that’s been either, you know, painted or built or sculptured or carved or something.  This is not from this planet.  This is the very breath of God breathed out.  This is the very voice of the infinite, endless of days, eternal, all-powerful creator of the universe who has communicated to us and has intercepted, intersected, and invaded time and space and spoken to us.  This book is unlike any book.  It’s unlike any other piece of any part of this civilization of humanity that ever existed.  This is not normal.  This is not like Mary Baker Glover Patterson Eddy Fry’s book of Christian Science.  This is not like the Koran or the writings collected of Joseph Smith.  This is not of this planet.  This is the very breath of God.  I hope you realize when you hold this book it’s different.  It’s special.  I hope you don’t just flip it aside.

 

It really grieves me when I see people they just toss their Bible down.  They use it as a book weight. They use it as something that they put their coffee cup on, you know?  I can’t do that.  When I was a little boy, I was taught that the Bible was always the top book.  I couldn’t even pile it underneath everything and that you didn’t put anything above it because this is God’s word.

 

But what you hold in your hand this morning totally transformed the lives of the Thessalonians.  It says it effectively worked in you who believe.  And you know this morning that book that you were just holding has the power to utterly, totally, radically transform your life and mine.

 

On the back of your bulletins if you want to take them, I’m going to give you seven words or phrases this morning to fill in your little outline just to show you where we’re going, because we have in our progression into this book come to one of the more crucial portions of 1 Thessalonians because we’re coming to the portion that extols the word of God.  And I can’t think of a better time in our history as a church than this to set aside a time to really meditate on this book and what it means and what it is and it’s power.

 

And basically as it says on the back of your bulletin, there are seven reasons why I believe that the Bible is true.  And I’d like to share them with you this morning.  And I would like to share with you why this book is like no other book and why when you hear people attacking it or when you attack it by neglect, which you realize what you’re missing when you don’t make a place in your life for the word of God.  I want to impress upon your hearts that this book that we hold in our hands is unlike any other in the universe.  And with that truth deeply upon our hearts in the days ahead shouldn’t we treat this book differently?  Shouldn’t we read it more diligently?  Shouldn’t we wait before it expectantly and from this book learn to live triumphantly?

 

I noticed in the paper this week on some airplane, some airport, somewhere, that the great gene and genetic DNA mapping that they did… You know they spent more money mapping out the human DNA chain than they did unleashing the atom.  Our government has put more billions into that and they finished it recently.  And now it’s coming out in the papers constantly.  Did you read this week, they found out that people that murder and are violent have defective genes?  Did you know that?  It’s not a sin.  It’s a sickness.  It’s a disease.  They found out a few months ago that all homosexual people have a little variation in their genes so that’s the way they are and it’s not wrong, according to man’s wisdom.

 

This book which comes to us untainted from the very presence of God, breathed out through 40 different men over 60 generations, 1,600 years, on three different continents, this book comes to us as the very word of God.  And you know what God says?  Murder is not a sickness.  It’s a sin.  Homosexuality is not a choice, it’s not a lifestyle, it’s an aberration from the image of God and it’s utter sinfulness.  And drunkenness is not a disease.  It’s a damnable, eternally punishable sin.

 

You say, that’s wrong.  But that’s what God says.

 

Let’s look at this book this morning and on the back of your bulletin you might want to write seven words down, because there are seven reasons why I believe that the Bible is absolutely true.  It’s absolutely true in all 3,566,480 letters.  All 810,697 words, all 31,173 verses, they’re all the very word of God.  Eleven-hundred and 89 chapters and 66 books written by the most unusual group of kings and peasants, philosophers and fishermen, poets, statesmen and scholars, written from the wilderness, from the dungeon, on a rocky hillside, from inside of a prison, from a boat, from an island and from the rigors of military conquest, the book of books, the word of God comes to us.

 

And I like what one author put, “I find my Lord in the book wherever I chance to look.  He’s the theme of the Bible, the center and heart of the book.  He’s the Rose of Sharon, He’s the lily fair.   Wherever I open my Bible, the Lord of the book is there.  He’s at the book’s beginning to give the earth its form, He’s the ark of shelter bearing the brunt of the storm, He’s the burning bush in the desert, the budding of Aaron’s rod.  Wherever I look in the Bible, I can see the son of God.  He’s the ram upon Mount Moriah, He’s the ladder from earth to sky, He’s the scarlet cord in the window, He’s the serpent lifted high.  He’s the smitten rock of the desert, He’s the shepherd with the staff and crook.  The face of my Lord I discover wherever I open this book.  He’s the seed of the woman, He’s the savior, virgin-born, He’s the son of David whom men rejected with scorn, whose garments of grace and beauty, the stately Aaron’s robe, yet He’s a priest forever, He is our High Priest, Lord of eternal glory whom John the apostle saw, light of the golden city, lamb without spot or flaw.  Bridegroom coming at midnight, for whom all us virgins look, whenever I open my Bible, I find the Lord of the book.”

 

Why is this book like no other book?  Why can you trust the Bible?  Seven reasons.  Number one.  (You might want to write next to number one, I think it’s most important.)  The first reason why I believe the Bible is utterly true can be distilled down to one or two words.  Jesus (and the second word is) Christ.  Jesus Christ utterly was convinced that the book you hold in your hand was the word of God.  Now that does it for me.  I mean, I don’t need anybody else’s opinion, but I’ll give you six more reasons.  But Jesus believed this book.  Jesus believed this book, and over and over we find the Lord Jesus asking everyone who questioned Him, He’d say to them, “Haven’t you read?  The scriptures say…”  That’s how He answered those who came to Him.

 

In fact, just this morning as I was reading God’s word and just savoring it, I noticed that at Christ’s birth Micah 5:2 is mentioned in Matthew two in verse six.  As the infants were massacred in chapter two verse 18, Jeremiah 31 is quoted.  Jesus was said to come from Egypt from Numbers 24:8.  The prophet John the Baptist mentioned Isaiah 40 in verse three and that’s just before Christ came on the scene.

 

And after Jesus started His ministry, what’s the first thing He did when He faced Satan?  He quotes Deuteronomy eight, Deuteronomy six, Deuteronomy six.  Jesus believed and used and trusted and prayed from and lived out the scriptures.  You know what’s interesting?  Everything Jesus said was scripture.  And so He didn’t need to use it.  He could have just talked.  But instead, He always hearkened back to the Bible.  He hearkened back to the scriptures.  And when He was pressed with a question, He said the scriptures say… And when He was faced with the adversary, He said the scriptures say… As He knelt in prayer, He prayed the scriptures.  As He spoke by the seaside He spoke from the scriptures.  As He went as a sheep before shears is dumb, He quoted the scriptures.  And when He hung on the cross, his dying words He gasped, words from the scriptures.  Jesus Christ believed that every word of this book was inspired by God.  In his private life He used it.  As his sword against Satan, in his public ministry He uses the word to teach multitudes, in his personal world with his disciples and those near Him, He uses the Bible to explain the future.  Jesus believed that the Bible was true.  He believed it was verbally true, every word.  He believed it was inerrant.  That means in its totality there’s no flaw.  It’s inspired, every word.  It’s the very word of God.  Jesus Christ believed in the historical reliability of Adam and Eve.  And even if some Christians, so-called today, don’t believe in that, Jesus did.  And He based his teaching of the family and marriage on the fact that there was a literal first man on this planet and his name was Adam.  And he was not a humanoid, and he didn’t grunt and groan and hide in caves and look like a monkey.  He was in the image of God, created from the very dust of the ground and breathed into by the very breath of God.  Jesus believed in Adam and Eve.  He believed in Abel.  He believed in Noah and He believed in the flood, even though a great number of our Christian colleges don’t even teach there was a literal flood anymore.  Jesus believed in it.  And Jesus taught it.  And He said just as much as God flooded the earth with water, He said, I will burn the earth with fire.  He believed in Noah and the ark and the flood.  And He said He knew Abraham and Moses and the burning bush, and He said I believe in David and Elijah and Daniel and Jonah.  Jesus believed the Bible you hold.  He read the Bible that you read.  He prayed the words of the word of God that you and I have today.

 

Number two on your little outline.  The second reason why I believe the Bible is true is not only Jesus Christ, but secondly the apostles and the prophets.  Just write apostles and prophets, okay?  The second reason why I believe that the Bible is true is that all the apostles and all the prophets, thousands and thousands of times, over and over repeated that the words that they were saying were not their own.  You know what they said?  What we just read this morning.  What the apostle Paul said, he said, for this cause also thank we God without ceasing because when you receive the word of God, which you heard from us, you welcomed it not as the word of men but what it is in truth.  It’s the word of God.  That’s an apostle speaking.  The prophets said the same thing.  In the Old Testament 8,000 times they say the Lord, the Lord said.  And it comes out.  Did you know that the apostles and prophets believed that this book came from God?  And if Jesus Christ believed it, that settles it for me.  But Jesus and all those who were closest to Him, all those who knew God face-to-face, those who were His emissaries, they say that the book that you hold in your hand is not from God. It was written on golden tablets that were hidden in the dirt, that Meroni came and told Joseph Smith that were written in some funny language that weighed more than any human could ever carry like the book of Mormon was.  That’s stuff for cartoons.  They said this is the breath of God.  And the apostles and the prophets said thousands of times that they were totally convinced that they were sharing the words that were not originating with them, as Peter said, holy men of old spake as they were feromenoi borne along like a sail of a ship being blown in the wind.  They were borne along by the spirit of God.  As the apostle Paul said that every word of God is the breath of God breathing through them.  The apostles and prophets secondly are the second reason why I believe the word of God.

 

The third reason why I believe the word of God, and you can write on your little list, and by the way can you tell that we’re going to go over this again?  I’m just giving you my outline for the next seven weeks, okay?  So don’t worry.  Some of you are writing furiously.  You’re going to hear it again, okay?  I’m just gonna… on Communion Sunday give you the outline.  Number three.  The third reason why I believe the Bible is the word of God is, and you can write this word, survival.  There is no other reason that you can explain why this book exists.  There has never been any book ever more targeted for destruction than this book on this planet.  This book has endured through the ages despite being the target of empires and emperors, despite armies being sent and dispatched to utterly destroy it and to rid the earth from it.  Infidels have waged their war against this book.

 

But, the Bible stands like a rock undaunted through the raging storms of time.  Its pages burn with the truth eternal and they glow with the light divine.  The Bible stands though the earth may crumble.  It will firmly stand though the hills may tumble.  I will take my stand on this firm foundation for the Bible stands.  Remember that song when you were a little kid?  It’s still true.

 

This book has endured.  It’s endured through the ages.  It’s endured through every single attack against it and we’re going to see how God preserved this book,  And when we look at the endurance of the Bible, we’re going to look at how there is more reason to believe the Bible than there is to believe that George Washington or Julius Caesar ever existed ‘cause there’s more verifiable factual information for Christ than there is for Caesar or a whole lot of other historical people you’ve heard of.  And yet people fail to believe in Him to their eternal ignomineous. Shame, yet you and I have the very word of God which endures.

 

Number four.  And number four on your sheets.  The first reason I believe the Bible is true is Jesus Christ believed.  The second reason I believe the Bible is true is all the apostles and all the prophets believed it.  The third reason I believe is because it has endured, because it has remained in spite of all of the attacks against it, it’s survived.  But number four.  You can write down absolute unity.  You say what you do mean by that?

 

Well what I think is neat, and I remember in literary criticism, I remember, do you remember Shakespeare?  Almost killed me going through Elizabethan English.  You know?  I know it’s great stuff, but it didn’t ring my bell at all.  But I remember that we used to study all the metaphors and all the uses of Shakespeare and all this.

 

You know, if you look at the Bible, there is an incredible unity demonstrated in the fact that as I mentioned before, 40 different men, most of whom who never saw each other… Did you think about that?  Those people that wrote the Bible didn’t even know each other.  They were living in three different continents.  They were writing over 60 generations of time, 1,600 years.  Most of them never saw what the other one wrote.  And yet, this book has an absolute unity.  It fits together better than the most machined parts.  It totally unites.  And when you look at this book, you find that there’s an unmistakable fabric that was woven from prison to palace from desert to dungeons, from hillsides to holy places and there’s one common denominator.  There’s one shared theme.  There’s one united message.  There’s only one system of doctrine.  One system of ethics.  And there’s only one plan of salvation.  There is a supernatural, unearthly unity to this book.

 

I pick up the Sunday paper and I find such dissonance in that thing.  You’d think that with all those people getting paid all that money that they could at least get one common theme throughout the paper.  Did you know that a whole bunch of editors can’t even make the paper work, but God, breathing out this book over a 1,600 year period of time, made it fit flawlessly together as one woven fabric with the backdrop being redemption and the blood of Christ.

 

Well, number five.  The first one is Jesus Christ believed.  The second one is the apostles and prophets believed.  The third is that it survived and it’s endured.  The fourth one is it has absolute unity.  Number five is there is prophetic accuracy.  And we’re going to have a fun time.  We’re going to spend a whole service looking at the absolute accuracy of the prophecies of the word of God where God told exactly what was going to happen right down to the nth degree, and every single thing God said happened.

 

Now next time you go to the Enquirer and look at Jeanne Dixon’s accuracy, I mean, if she hits one out of two, I mean, people are clamoring.  I mean wow!  And they’re so vague, you know?  Great earthquake coming in next 10 years.  I mean that’s really a prophecy, you know?  I could say that and you could call me Nostradamus or something.  But God targets the place, the people, the event, the timing with utter accuracy.  Prophetic accuracy is number five.

 

Number six.  Scientific accuracy.  Did you know that every time God speaks of a scientific issue in the Bible it is utterly accurate?  Utterly.  Did you know just in the last decade they’ve come up with the reality of the Bible where it says God separated the light from the darkness, and they found out that over 97% of our universe is made of dark matter.  They just found that out, and God said I separate the light from the darkness.  And darkness and dark matter.  They don’t even know what it is.  And God created it all and he separated it, and we are living in the part of the universe that God has described for us and it’s exactly, scientifically the way God said.  The Bible addresses such things as isostacy and geodacy.   It talks about the hydrological cycle.  We’re going to go through all of that.  And the Bible is 100% scientifically accurate.  And usually it’s about a light year ahead of science.  Because God tells the truth.  And this book, you can trust.

 

Finally, not only did Jesus Christ believe it, and the apostles and prophets believe it, it survived, it’s absolutely united, it’s prophetically accurate, it’s scientifically accurate.  You know what the last thing is?  It’s historically accurate.  There has never been proven one historical error in this book.

 

In fact, when we were on this tour, I was thinking about the fact that Ramsey went out to prove that the Bible was true.  Ramsey was a great historian and also an archaeologist, and the seven churches of the Bible were not ever known in history.  They couldn’t find them anywhere as well as the Hittites and a lot of other things.  And so he decided he’d go out with his spade and he started reading the Bible as Paul landed and walked the whole day.  And then he took, he walked a whole day Ramsey did, and then he took his spade and he started digging and guess what?  He found Pisidia Antioch just where the Bible said it was.  So then it says Paul walked a couple more days and then he put his spade down and started digging.  Why, there was Colossi.  Just like the Bible said.  And Laodicea And he found… and every single historical reference in the Bible that has ever been pressed has found to have been 100% true.

 

Well,  what does that mean?  It means that the book that you hold in your hand this morning, you can trust.  And if you can trust this book, then you ought to read it every day.  In fact as it says in Psalms 132 you shouldn’t find a place for your head to lay at night if you haven’t found a place for God in your life.

 

How do you let God in?  How do you let God into your life?  Well, I’ll just tell you a little secret.  This is the voice of God, the breath of God.  This is the spirit of God, distilled down onto paper and if you want to let God into your life, you ought to open this thing up every day.  And if you open up the morning paper or if you open up the Good Morning America or if you have to start your day with Rush instead of with God, then that’s a mistake.  And if you end your day with the sleazy, slutty, wickedness of the night shows instead of with the glories of the eternal, infinite God, shame on you.  Shame on me.

 

Read it to be wise.  Believe it to be safe.  Practice it to be holy.  This book contains light to direct you, fruit to sustain you, comfort to cheer you.  It is the traveler’s map, the pilgrim’s staff.  It’s the pilot’s compass, the soldier’s sword, it’s the Christian’s chart.  Here paradise is restored, heaven is open, the gates of hell are disclosed.  Read it slowly, frequently, and prayerfully.  It is a mine of wealth, a paradise of glory, and a river of pleasure.  The Bible.  The book you can trust.  Let’s bow for a word of prayer.

 

We thank you for your word, Oh God, forever settled in heaven.  Turn our hearts by way of your word to the cross of Christ.  Where we first met Christ was in your word.  Where we grow with Him is in your word.  And the Christ of the word is the only one we’re ever going to know because your word is forever settled in heaven.  Open our eyes, behold wondrous things from your word for Christ’s sake, Amen.

 

We have a real treat this morning.  When I got up here to do the announcements, I looked up and my eyes caught an old friend sitting out there in the back row.  And I don’t usually do this to visitors, but I’ve asked my old friend, Phil Webb, if he’d come on up here and if he would just acapella sing a song for us to prepare our hearts for communion, and after he gets done with that, we’ll continue with our service.  And I just wish he wasn’t singing in the Tulsa Philharmonic Opera today and could just do a whole concert for us.  But he’s here and he’s a dear brother.  He sang at my installation at Quidnesset.  He used to travel with John and the team and whatever else you want to say and then sing for us, dear brother.

 

“Jesus Paid it All”

 

Amen.

 

Phil has to go to prepare for the opera.  I’m so glad the Lord sent him by, aren’t you?  To prepare our hearts for the Lord’s table, I’m going to be reading from 1 Corinthians chapter 11.  And as the men come forward and prepare the Lord’s table, we are going to focus on Christ, focus on the bread of life that He was come down out of heaven.  Focus on the fact that He gave Himself for us.  And focus on the fact that He didn’t leave us alone.  He left us His word.  And what we’re doing today in celebrating the Lord’s table is just following what the word says.  We’re doing just what the church has done for 20 centuries and we’re doing it exactly according to the book.  And what we’re doing is we’re asking God to break to us the bread of life just like by the lovely shores of the sea of Galilee he broke the bread.  Two thousand years ago.  He’s breaking the bread of life through the word of life.  Through the written word by way of the incarnate word to us today.  Let’s just sing this song as the men pass among us and then we’ll pause and thank the Lord and partake of it together.  Let’s sing together.  Sing this prayerfully, asking Christ to open Himself to you through this communion this morning.

 

And the scriptures tell us that the Lord Jesus Christ has a name that is above all names and that at the name of Jesus Christ every knee is going to bow.  And as I’ve mentioned to you before, if you don’t bow your knee to Christ in repentance, and faith, and contrition, and in calling out to Him for his grace on earth, that you will bow your knee to Him someday before His throne, but it will be too late.  That’s why Jesus’ name is above all names and we have come to worship it.  Let’s sing this before we partake.  Sing triumphantly to Him.

 

The bread you hold in your hand, the scriptures tell us in chapter 11 of 1 Corinthians verse 23, and the apostle Paul said, I receive from the Lord.  I didn’t think this up.  This isn’t some human deal.  That which I also delivered to you that the Lord Jesus on the same night in which He was betrayed, took bread.  And when He had given thanks, He broke it and He said, take, eat. This is my body which is broken for you.  Do this in remembrance of me.  Let’s do this together in remembrance of Him.

 

Thank you, Lord Jesus, for your body.  Thank you that it was broken for us.  And thank you that you have been exalted and that at your name, at the name of the Lord Jesus, every knee shall bow.  Of things in heaven and things on the earth and things under the earth and every tongue will confess that Jesus Christ is Lord.  That you might be glorified, oh Father.  Thank you that we have partaken by faith of the Lord Jesus Christ, our savior because He gave Himself for us.  We thank you also for the cup.  The cup which is the new covenant, the promise you made that we would be new creations.  We would get a new heart.  That we would get your very spirit indwelling us.  Thank you that we can worship you this morning as you have been worshipped throughout the centuries and as you shall be forever for your blood which washed us clean.  We thank you and bless your name this morning, Lord Jesus.  For your glory we pray.  Amen.

 

As the men pass the cup among us, we’re going to sing what comes to my heart and I’m sure to yours every time I approach the Lord’s table is I’m just not worthy of what He did, but I thank Him for it.  Let’s sing of our humble gratitude through this hymn together.

 

You know what’s wonderful is that the Lord Jesus Christ makes us worthy.  We, even being created in the image of God, aren’t worthy because we fall so short of His glory.  And so, He himself comes to dwell within us.  And He makes us living epistles, pictures of Jesus Christ.  Living color, talking, living out the life of Christ in the world.  What an honor, what a privilege, what a blessing.  And all of that because the scriptures say that in the same manner He also took the cup after supper, and He said this cup is the new covenant in my blood.  This do as oft as you drink it in remembrance of me.  And as oft as you eat the bread and drink the cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death until He comes.  Let’s proclaim the Lord’s death together as we partake of this cup.

 

We thank you, dear Lord, that we as a family can come to your table and partake with joy in confidence, triumphantly.  Because we learned about you in the book that we can trust.  Help us to keep learning about you and read it and believe it and obey it.  For Christ’s sake we pray.  Amen.

 

We’re going to sing while the men pass among us to get those cups before any more of them break.  And we’re going to sing …and can it be that I should gain an interest in the savior’s blood.  Let’s sing this as triumphantly as the Wesleys wrote it.

 

Wow!  Lot’s of other good stanzas I’d love to break into, but as we go, I’d like you, let’s see I think we’re almost all done, to stand with me.  Even though I know some of you can’t see the words very well when you stand, but you sing better when you’re standing.  Let’s just go out with the realization of who we are because of what Christ did.  And let’s go out letting the love of God through his spirit enfold us, and when you go to that restaurant if you’re eating out with Mom or when you go home, and as you think about today, let His love enfold you and as Travis said, let His love just bring you right back here tonight to be with the family as we celebrate on this glorious day that Christ is risen and because He’s risen, we have hope.  Let’s sing this wonderful hymn before we go.

 

That’s our prayer, oh Lord Jesus, fill us to overflowing.  And like our beloved and now with you, brother Don Evans, we pray that in our lives, Lord Jesus, you would get all of the attention.  In your precious name we pray.  Amen.  God bless you.

 


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