Psalm 23 Devotional:
GNV: 1 Because the Prophet had proved the great mercies of God at divers times, and in sundry manners, he gathereth a certain assurance, fully persuading himself that God will continue the very same goodness towards him forever.
A Psalm of David.
23:1 The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want.
2 He maketh me to lie down in green pastures: he leadeth me beside the still waters.
3 He restoreth my soul: he leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for his name’s sake.
4 Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil: for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff they comfort me.
5 Thou dost prepare a table before me in the presence of mine enemies: thou dost anoint my head with oil; and my cup runneth over.
6 Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life: and I will dwell in the house of the Lord for ever.
We have seen before in this Psalm the wonderful works of God towards His covenant people, how that He watches over us and protects us as a shepherd keeps his sheep. For David as a wise and capable man tended his own sheep with diligence as it is written, “And David said unto Saul, Thy servant kept his father’s sheep, and there came a lion, and a bear, and took a lamb out of the flock: And I went out after him, and smote him, and delivered it out of his mouth: and when he arose against me, I caught him by his beard, and smote him, and slew him. Thy servant slew both the lion and the bear: and this uncircumcised Philistine shall be as one of them, seeing he hath defied the armies of the living God. David said moreover, The Lord that delivered me out of the paw of the lion, and out of the paw of the bear, he will deliver me out of the hand of this Philistine.” Wherein we see the marvelous similarity between David’s own deliverance of the sheep, and God’s own deliverance of himself which he freely acknowledges here to the king. Therefore in all our victories against the enemy, let us say with David, “The Lord delivered them into my hand.” Thus we see the manner in which God watches over His people even Himself being a greater shepherd of His sheep than David. We saw the effect of grace upon the soul, and the peace and stability of conscience that the believer experiences on behalf of the free justification of God by faith. For inasmuch as David confidently saith, “The LORD is my shepherd I shall not want.” This is an expression of faith, and thus by this alone we are led to peace of conscience. We saw also the efficacy of the word, the use of overseers and ministers, the upright paths we are led in, the trials of the Christian overcome by faith, the gifts and graces of the Spirit freely poured out upon us, the great bounty of the LORD, and His righteous chosing of His servants according to His sovereign choice, even so that the believer may say that his cup runneth over and he hath more than he deserveth. Therefore the conclusion of all this is that as we have been justly dealt with, and God hath been so kind to us, so we are convinced by experience that God will continue His goodness towards us forever, and we will dwell forever with God in paradise, as is promised to us in the gospel. For inasmuch as there is a sure reward for the wicked, even everlasting punishment in hell forever, so may the righteous boldly exclaim that all shall be well with them, all their ills and evils shall turn to good and they will inherit eternal felicity with God and Christ in heaven. As it is written, “Say ye to the righteous, that it shall be well with him: for they shall eat the fruit of their doings. Woe unto the wicked! it shall be ill with him: for the reward of his hands shall be given him.” Therefore may the believer look forward to both rewards. To his own which is eternal glory, and to the final judgment of the wicked, which is the vindication of God’s righteous law so long abused by them. For heaven is not defiled by sinners, and it would be none enjoyed by holy persons if it was filled with those who oppose the law of God.
Therefore to him that is watched over by the chief shepherd, he will assuredly be led in the paths of righteousness, and goodness and mercy shall follow him all his days, and he shall dwell in the house of the LORD forever.
Westminster Larger Catechism:
Q. 89. What shall be done to the wicked at the day of judgment?
A. At the day of judgment, the wicked shall be set on Christ’s left hand, and, upon clear evidence, and full conviction of their own consciences, shall have the fearful but just sentence of condemnation pronounced against them; and thereupon shall be cast out from the favorable presence of God, and the glorious fellowship with Christ, his saints, and all his holy angels, into hell, to be punished with unspeakable torments, both of body and soul, with the devil and his angels forever.
Q. 90. What shall be done to the righteous at the day of judgment?
A. At the day of judgment, the righteous, being caught up to Christ in the clouds, shall be set on his right hand, and there openly acknowledged and acquitted, shall join with him in the judging of reprobate angels and men, and shall be received into heaven, where they shall be fully and forever freed from all sin and misery; filled with inconceivable joys, made perfectly holy and happy both in body and soul, in the company of innumerable saints and holy angels, but especially in the immediate vision and fruition of God the Father, of our Lord Jesus Christ, and of the Holy Spirit, to all eternity. And this is the perfect and full communion which the members of the invisible church shall enjoy with Christ in glory, at the resurrection and day of judgment.
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Opening Prayer.
Intro.
Stephen Charnock, Doctrine of Regeneration.
Doct. 1. Man, in all his capacities, is too weak to produce the work of regeneration in himself. It is subjectively in the creature, not efficiently by the creature, neither ourselves nor any other creature, angels, men, ordinances. Doct. 2. God alone is the prime efficient cause of regeneration. Doct. 1. For the first. Man, in all his capacities, is too weak to produce the work of regeneration in himself. This is not the birth of a darkened wisdom and an enslaved will. We affect a kind of divinity, and would centre ourselves in our own strength; therefore it is good to be sensible of our own impotency, that God may have the glory of his own grace, and we the comfort of it in a higher principle and higher power than our own. It is not the bare proposal of grace, and the leaving the will to an indifferent posture, balanced between good and evil, undetermined to the one or the other, to incline and determine itself which way seems best to it. Not one will, in the whole rank of believers, left to themselves. The evangelist excepts not one man among them; for as many as received Christ, as many as believed, were the sons of God, who were born; which believers, every one that had this faith as the means, and this sonship as the privilege, were born not of the will of the flesh nor the will of man. For the proof of this in general, 1. God challenges this work as his own, excluding the creature from any share as a cause: Ezek. xxxvi. 25-27, ‘I will sprinkle clean water upon you, I will cleanse you, I will give you a new heart, I will put a new spirit into you, I will take away the heart of stone, 1 will give you a heart of flesh, I will put my Spirit into you.’ Here I will no less than seven times. Nothing is allowed to man in the production of this work in the least; all that is done by him is the walking in God’s statutes by virtue of this principle. The sanctifying principle, the actual sanctification, the reception of it by the creature, the removal of all the obstructions of it, the principle maintaining it, are not in the least here attributed to the will of man. God appropriates all to himself. He does not say he would be man’s assistant, as many men do, who tell us only of the assistance of the gospel, as if God in the gospel expected the first motions of the will of man to give him a rise for the acting of his grace. You see here he gives not an inch to the creature. To ascribe the first work, in any part, to the will of man, is to deprive God of half his due, to make him but a partner with his creature. The least of it cannot be transferred to man but the right of God will be diminished, and the creature go shares with his Creator. Are we not sufficient of ourselves to do any thing? and are we sufficient to part stakes with God in this divine work? What partner was the creature with God in creation? It is the Father’s traction alone, without the hand of free-will. ‘None can come, except the Father, which has sent me, draw them,’ John vi. 44. The mission of the Mediator, and the traction of the creature, are by the same hand. Our Saviour could not have come unless the Father had sent him, nor can man come to Christ unless the Father draw him. What is that which is drawn? The will. The will, then, is not the agent; it does not draw itself. 2. The titles given to regeneration evidence it. It is a creation. What creature can give itself a being? It is a putting in a law and a new heart. What matter can infuse a soul into itself? It is a new birth. What man did ever beget himself? It is an opening the heart. What man can do this, who neither has the key, nor is acquainted with the wards? Not a man knows the heart; it is deceitful above all things, who can know it? 3. The conveyance of original corruption does in part evidence it. We have no more interest of our wills in regeneration, than we had in corruption. This was first received by the will of Adam, our first head, thence transmitted to us without any actual consent of our wills in the first transmission; that is conveyed to us from the second Adam, without any actual consent of our wills in the first infusion. Yet though the wills of Adam’s posterity are mere passive in the first conveyance of the corrupt habit from him by generation, yet afterwards they are active in the approbations of it, and production of the fruits of it. So the will is merely passive in the first conveyance of the grace of regeneration, though afterwards it is pleased with it, and brings forth fruit meet for it. 4. Scripture represents man exceeding weak, and unable to do any thing spiritually good. ‘So then, they that are in the flesh cannot please God,’ Rom. viii. 8. He concludes it by his so then, as an infallible consequence, from what he had discoursed before. If, as being in the flesh, they cannot please God, therefore not in that which is the highest pleasure to God, a framing themselves to a likeness to him. The very desire and endeavour of the creature after this, is some pleasure to God, to see a creature struggling after holiness; but they that are in the flesh cannot please him. ‘Can any good thing come out of Nazareth?’ was said of our Saviour. So may we better say, Can any good thing come out of the flesh, the enslaved, possessed will of man? If it be free since it was captivated by sin, who set it free? Nothing can, but ‘the law of the Spirit of life,’ Rom. viii. 2. To be ‘sinners,’ and to be ‘without strength,’ is one and the same thing in the apostle’s judgment: Rom. v. 6, 8, ‘While we were yet without strength;’ afterwards, ‘while we were yet sinners;’ he does not say, We are without great strength, but without strength, such an impotence as is in a dead man. Not like a man in a swoon, but a man in a grave. God only is almighty, and man all impotency; God only is all-sufficient, and man all-indigent. It is impossible we can have a strength of our own, since our first father was feeble, and conveyed his weakness to us; by the same reason that it is impossible we can have a righteousness of our own, since our first father sinned: Isa. xliii. 26, 27, ‘Declare, that thou may be justified. Thy first father has sinned.’ 5. This weakness is universal. Sin has made its sickly impressions in every faculty. The mind is dark, Eph. iv. 18, he cannot know, 1 Cor. ii. 14, there is a stoniness in the heart, he cannot bend, Zech. vii. 12; there is enmity in the will, he cannot be subject, Rom. viii. 7. As to faith, he cannot believe, John xii. 89. As to the Spirit, the worker of faith, he cannot receive; that is, of himself, John xiv. 17; acknowledge Christ he cannot, 1 Cor. xii. 3. As to practice, he cannot bring forth fruit, John xv. 4. The unrighteousness introduced by Adam poured a poison into every faculty, and dispossessed it of its strength, as well as of its beauty: what else could be expected from any deadly wound but weakness as well as defilement? The understanding conceives only such thoughts as are pleasing to the law of sin; the memory is employed in preserving the dictates and decrees of it; the imagination full of fancies imprinted by it; the will wholly submitting to its authority; conscience standing with fingers in its mouth, for the most part not to speak against it; the whole man yielding itself and every member to the commands of it, and undertaking nothing but by its motions, Rom. vi. 19. 6. To evince it, there is not one regenerate man but in his first conversion is chiefly sensible of his own insufficiency; and universal consent is a great argument of the truth of a proposition; it is a ground of the belief of a deity, it being the sentiment of all nations. I do not speak of disputes about it from the pride of reason, but of the inward experience of it in any heart. What more frequent in the mouths of those that have some preparations to it by conviction, than I cannot repent, I cannot believe, I find my heart rotten, and base, and unable to any thing that is good! There have been instances of those that would elevate the power of man, and freedom of will in spiritual things, who have been confuted in their reasonings, and acknowledged themselves so, when God has come to work savingly upon them. Indeed, this poverty of spirit, or sense of our own emptiness, insufficiency, and indigence, is the first gospel grace wrought in the soul, and stands in the head of all those noble qualifications in our Saviours sermon, as fitting men for the kingdom of God: ‘Blessed are the poor in spirit; for theirs is the kingdom of heaven,’ Mat. v. 3. And God in the whole progress of this work keeps believers in a sensibleness of their own weakness, thereby to preserve them in a continual dependence on him; and therefore sometimes withdraws his Spirit from them, and lets them fall, that they may adhere more closely to him, and less confide in themselves.
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The Westminster Confession of Faith.
Lesson 7. Introduction. [7] The necessity of spiritual knowledge and the resistance of the flesh.
Were it so with the soul, (as some of the philosophers have vainly imagined,) to come into the world as an abrasa tabula, a mere blank or piece of white paper, on which neither any thing is written, nor any blots, it would then be equally receptive of good and evil, and no more averse to the one than to the other: but how much worse its condition indeed is, were scripture silent, every man’s experience does evidently manifest. For who is there that knows any thing of his own heart, and knows not thus much, that the suggestions of Satan have so easy and free admittance into our hearts, that our utmost watchfulness is too little to guard us from them? whereas the motions of God’s Spirit are so unacceptable to us, that our utmost diligence is too little to get our hearts open to entertain them. Let therefore the excellency, necessity, difficulty of true wisdom stir up endeavours in you somewhat proportionable to such an accomplishment; Above all getting, get understanding, Prov. iv. 7; and search for wisdom as for hidden treasures, Prov. ii. 4. It much concerns you in respect of yourselves. Our second advice concerns heads of families, in respect of their families. Whatever hath been said already, though it concerns every private Christian that hath a soul to look after; yet, upon a double account, it concerns parents and masters, as having themselves and others to look after.
1. The conversion of the soul, and the resistance of the flesh.
The knowledge of God being difficult to acquire.
i. It is impossible for us. (Original sin)
- The natural state of man towards the knowledge of God is not neutral but averse. (Original sin vs. tabula rasa)
Application:
- Therefore, salvation from beginning to end is all of grace. (Titus 3:3)
ii. It is easy for God. (Necessity of faith)
iii. It is difficult according to the weakness of our faith. (Indwelling sin)
- Our hearts are naturally inclined towards the devil’s suggestions.
Application:
- Therefore, we must be vigilant and pray to God for safety.
- Our hearts are naturally averse to the Spirit’s influence.
Application:
- Therefore, humble yourselves and let your life be in continual repentance.
iv. It is conveyed to us by the word of God through preaching. (Regeneration and sanctification)
2. The final section on heads of families in respect of themselves.
- A final warning, a final exhortation:
- The heart is deceitful; the work is great.
- Knowledge is excellent, necessary, and difficult.
- i. Application:
- Therefore, above all things, labor for these jewels.
- ii. If we see the way is difficult and the opposition insurmountable, let it encourage us to labor, not discourage us to doubt.
- God leads His people to the bank of the sea (to test our faith and resolve) before He rips the waters asunder for us to walk safely on. (He fulfills His promises.)
- i. Application:
“Wait on the Lord: be of good courage, and he shall strengthen thine heart: wait, I say, on the Lord.” (Psalm 27:14)
Conclusion.
Closing Prayer.
YouTube Audio: https://youtu.be/2gpe4pSmOZA