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Six Weapons to Fight Sin | 5. Love

May 25, 2023 Filed Under: Stuff I Wanna Say - Podcast for Men

The most powerful way to fight sin is love!

5—Sin is Spiritual Adultery—Fight it With Intimacy With God. 

5—Sin is Spiritual Adultery. Fight it with LOVE—AFFECTION FOR GOD. (Mark 12:28-31)

Luke 7 she loves me much because she has been forgiven much

John 21 do you love me? Three times… one for each denial.

James—spiritual adultery.

The Greatest Weapon Against Sin is Intimacy With Christ

 

 

Training children: Relationship with us: fear-favor-fellowship. Relationship with God: fear-favor-fellowship. The stongest incentive for obedience is love-intimacy. 

The Central truth and it’s placement: in my personal experience and my opinion, the most powerful way to defeat temptation is to see sin as a threat to my fellowship with God and displace it with communion.

 

Psalms 4:7  You have put gladness in my heart, More than in the season that their grain and wine increased.(abound)

Psalm 16

Psalm 27

Psalm 42

Psalm 63 

Psalm 73

Psalm 91

John 15:4  Abide in Me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself, unless it abides in the vine, neither can you, unless you abide in Me.

1 Corinthians 1:9  God is faithful, by whom you were called into the fellowship of his Son, Jesus Christ our Lord.

2 Cor 6:14-7:1

Philippians 3:10  that I may know him and the power of his resurrection, and may share his sufferings, becoming like him in his death

1 John 3:6  Whoever abides in Him does not sin. Whoever sins has neither seen Him nor known Him.

 

The Language of Devotion/Intimacy in Christian History. Saints of God—lovers of God through the centuries.

Augustine ‘Thou movest us to delight in praising Thee; for Thou hast formed us for Thyself, and our hearts are restless till they find rest in Thee?’

Paschal “There once was in man a true happiness of which now remain to him only the mark and empty trace, which he in vain tries to fill from all his surroundings, seeking from things absent the help he does not obtain in things present. But these are all inadequate, because the infinite abyss can only be filled by an infinite and immutable object, that is to say, only by God Himself.” Maybe you have heard that expressed like this: “There is a God-shaped vacuum in the heart of every man.”

J.I. Packer says that the Puritans differ from evangelicals today because, with them: communion with God was a great thing; to evangelicals today it is a comparatively small thing. The Puritans were concerned about communion with God in a way we are not. The measure of our unconcern is the little that we say about it. When Christians meet, they talk to each other about their Christian work and Christian interests, their Christian acquaintances, the state of the churches, and the problems of theology – but rarely of their daily experience of God.

Owen  (Communion with God). The Holy Spirit produces joy in the hearts of believers directly by himself without using any other means. As in sanctification he is a well of water springing up in the soul, so in comforting he fills the souls and minds of men with spiritual joy. When he pours out the love of God in our hearts, he fills them with joy, just as he caused John to leap for joy in Elizabeth’s womb when the mother of Jesus  approached. This joy, the Holy Spirit works when and how he wills. He secretly injects this joy in to the soul, driving away all fear and sorrow filling it with gladness and causing it to exult, sometimes with unspeakable raptures of the mind.  –John Owen

Charles Spurgeon, When a man pants after God, it is a secret life within which makes him do it: he would not long after God by nature. No man thirsts for God while he is left in his carnal [i.e., unconverted] state. The unrenewed man pants after anything sooner than God: . . . It proves a renewed nature when you long after God; it is a work of grace in your soul, and you may be thankful for it.

 

Ken Pierpont
Ken Pierpont
Six Weapons to Fight Sin | 5. Love
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Do Any of Us Really Know the Thanks We Owe?

May 24, 2023 Filed Under: Current Thoughts

We are visiting our daughter Holly and her family on the Oregon coast. Holly, Lois and the kids just left for town to get some things. I was left alone here to think in the quiet. I sat down in a chair and picked up my daughter’s worn Bible and thumbed through it. I looked at the parts especially worn and marked. It moved my heart.

I’m filled with deep gratitude now over a conversation we just had before she left and I mouth and quiet prayer to the Lord.

“Lord, I want to thank you from the depths of my soul today for something I did not know until today that would have devastated our lives and maybe even destroyed our family.”

We flew out to the coast yesterday to visit our oldest daughter, Holly.

Just before they left for town Holly told us about an incident neither of us knew, something that happened in about 1993 or 1994. Our son Daniel was born in November of 1991 in a farmhouse we were leasing on a dead end road in Knox County, Ohio. The house was a wonderful answer to prayer. We have always been grateful for the years we were able to enjoy with our growing family there. Daniel is the sixth of eight children. I was starting a church. Lois was a homemaker. Lois made crafts and dolls non-stop and I drove Amish to help pay the bills. We were busy trying to make it all work.

We were having a conversation today and Lois said, “I have not heard anything from the children for a while, should we check on them?”

Holly chuckled and said, “They are fine, I’m sure. Sometimes we just let them play around the house outside. They are safe. They know not to go past the end of the drive. Then she said something that made us all laugh.

“Do you have any idea the crazy, dangerous things we did out on that old farm on Rutledge Road?”

It sounded to me like she had a story to tell.

I knee off some of the dangerous things they did. I was involved in some of them myself. I remembered that the kids would take a toboggan or sled to the top of a long, steep hill and careen down when the snow fell. God protected us from trips to the ER during those times. In warmer months the kids would take their big wagon with the pneumatic tires to the top of the hill and ride it down. That was dangerous, but God protected them.

I remember Kyle mentioning that he and Chuk played in the barn loft, and that was dangerous. We didn’t really know it at the time. There were things done with the BB guns and the canoe that could have ended badly. Heidi had a some emergency attention at the doctor’s office one Saturday evening. Kyle jumped on a nail in the barn that was hidden in some old manure. The nail punctured his shoe and made a deep, clean puncture wound in his foot. Miraculously no tetanus.

Holly was a little thing and she was swinging from a bar in the closet once. It broke and hurt her head. A clear-thinking friend talked us out of running to the ER on that one. Holly healed up fine. I remember some scraped knees, a few bike crashes and yellow-jacket stings, but no broken bones for hospitalizations, and thank God, no serious injuries or tragedies, even with Kyle and Chuk playing baseball every year. There were some heavy farm implements we were not particularly good at operating on the dangerous hills, tractors with PTO’s, wagons, and dangerous mowers. I lost control of a big International “H” on a hill and had to bail off of it. It came to rest when it slammed head-on into a tree a hundred yards down hill but I was not hurt. I ran over an oil line on one occasion but God spared us from injury. Once I caught a wicker wastebasket on fire and that was really not safe. I burned on old couch that could have reduced the house to hot ashes, but we avoided tragedy. Once the hood on my van blew up and smashed my windshield when Chuk pulled the latch. I had hit a deer, so there was no safety latch. Still no one died.

“Do you have something to tell me, Holly?” I said.

“I just remember having Danny back at the creek playing one afternoon. It was way back the lane from the house. I don’t know how old he was but he was in a diaper.”

Well, I said, “He was born in 1991 and we were living on Apple Valley Road in December 1994 when Wesley was born, so he had to be about 2 and half years old.

Holly continued, “He fell into the creek and Kyle was there. Kyle jumped in to get him. Danny was drifting down toward a tangle of branches. Kyle was always horsing around and joking but that day he was very, very serious. He grabbed Danny and got out of the water.”

Holly said, “I remember that he was shaken and he was very, very sober and right away he took him back to the house. That could have been tragic.”

Lois said, “This is the first time I ever heard that story.” My blood ran cold at the thought.

Shortly after that conversation the family left for own and I sat down quietly and began to page though Holly’s Bible and think about what she had said. Dan is a strapping specimen of a man now, a married father of three boys in robust good health, living and working in West Texas, but he could have drowned that day. What would have become of us? I shook my head as if to shake the thought from my mind. How would his brothers and sister have ever processed his loss under those circumstances? How would his mother have ever dealt with just a tragedy. What would I have done?

I quietly and sincerely thanked the Lord for the first time for something I did not know until today. I thanked him for Danny, for the mercy of God on us, for his protection and care. I wonder how many things I have to thank him for that I will not know until all the stories are told on earth and then in heaven.

 

 

 

 

The Church is God’s Plan for the Age

May 22, 2023 Filed Under: Bethel Church-Jackson, Current Thoughts

Are you participating in church this morning? There are ages to come, but the church is God’s plan for our age. The local church is the hope of the world.

It is popular to criticize the church and church people. Pastors are fair game, too. Let’s be honest we could all tell our “scary church stories…” We have all known leaders who fell short of their high calling, but still it is true that “Like a mighty army moves the church of God…”

C. S. Lewis in Screwtape Letters imagines a correspondence between demons warning not to let people see the church as it really is…

“One of our great allies at present is the Church itself. Do not misunderstand me. I do not mean the Church as we see her spread but through all time and space and rooted in eternity, terrible as an army with banners.”

The old demon encourages the young demon to tempt the person he is tormenting with the silliness or imperfections of the people around him in church. Demons are still working the same angle today, but the church before God is like a mighty army of God in spiritual reality.

The church is God’s plan for this age. She is the temple of the Living God in our day. The church is the place and people of his glory/presence. The local church is the hope of the world, even in it’s simplest and most organic expression.

Rise up Oh Church of God, have done with lesser things. Give heart and soul and strength and might to serve the King of Kings!

6. Why Church? (Part 2) Ephesians 3:12-22 (Audio)

May 21, 2023 Filed Under: Sermons

Why Church? (Part 2)

Bethel Church | Jackson, Michigan

Ken Pierpont, Lead Pastor

May 21, 2023 AM

 

Ken Pierpont
Ken Pierpont - Sermons
6. Why Church? (Part 2) Ephesians 3:12-22 (Audio)
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6. Why Church? Part 2 Eph. 3:12-22 (Video)

May 21, 2023 Filed Under: Current Thoughts

Why Church? (Part 2)

Bethel Church | Jackson, Michigan

Ken Pierpont, Lead Pastor

May 21, 2023 AM

 

 

Six Weapons to Fight Sin | 4. Worship

May 19, 2023 Filed Under: Stuff I Wanna Say - Podcast for Men

1-Pray

2-Obey

3-Meditate

4-Worship

Ken Pierpont
Ken Pierpont
Six Weapons to Fight Sin | 4. Worship
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  • Ken Pierpont on Cobbler on the Porch | Bittersweet Farm Journal | July 16, 2023
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