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    • Not in Vain: 1 Corinthians Devotional
    • Explore Lamentations
    • eBook: Good News People
    • eBook: Filtered Grace
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    • Explore Ecclesiastes
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    • Evangelicals Now Articles
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That Happy Certainty - Gospel | Culture | Planting
Hebrews, Endurance

Keep on keeping on…


Hey all,
Just a few comments to give you a chance to think through what we looked at last night at Growth Groups. As you’ll know we were in Hebrews 10:19-12:4. It may be that you spend a few mornings this week looking at different parts of the passage, praying it through. As I’m sure you’ll remember from NWA, it’s a massive passage showing us what it looks like to live the Christian life, as we take on board these huge promises we’ve seen over the last few weeks.

10:19-39 – Take on board Jesus’ finished work and keep on taking hold of it with both hands!

As you read through these verses, feel the tone in which it’s written. Hear the loving heart of the guy who’s writing as he begs these Christians to appreciate all that Jesus has done for us (v19-24), and to keep on going, to keep on holding fast to the hope to which God has promised us we’ll get (v23).
The writer clearly sees there’s a danger (v26) – the danger of forgetting what Jesus has done, of effectively trampling over Jesus and all he has done to save us (v29). And the way you do that is by giving up on Jesus, of throwing away our confidence in Jesus, of not enduring (v36), and instead ‘shrinking back’ (v38-39); basically giving up.

11:1-40 – Faith is not some fluffy, blind, abstract thing; it’s taking God at his word, trusting in his promises even when we can’t see what’s been promised yet – that’s what faith is!

Verse 1 gives us a really helpful definition of faith. Faith is trusting God’s promise, even when what we hope for can’t yet be seen. (Please, note that hope = our certain future ‘hope‘, the new creation, rather than a vague ‘I hope tomorrow will be sunny’). We then a massive list of men and women from the Old Testament who themselves exercised this kind of faith. The writer’s saying, ‘Look, this kind of faith has always been what God’s wanted!’ And it’s pretty amazing, crazy stuff. Take Abraham for example, v8! He was told to leave his land and go to a new place where God would bless him; he’d never been there before, yet he trusted God’s promise and left – he acted on the promise. It looks crazy (see Noah, v7… “building a booooat!! – how barmy would that have looked!
Why not spend some time looking at different people listed, thinking over how they demonstrate true faith, taking God at his word.
And yet have a read of v13, 16 and v39-40 – these guys we’re looking forward to something even better that had been promised by God – the new creation! 

12:1-4 – So let’s fix our eyes on Jesus, the one’s guaranteed us our future, and shows us true endurance; get ready for a marathon!

So if trusting God’s promises with our eyes on the future is what the Christian life’s all about, then we should make sure absolutely nothing stops us from doing that. He tells us in these verses to get rid of any sin or distraction that’s gonna hinder us, and fix our eyes on Jesus. Not only is he the author of our faith, the one who guarantees our future. He’s also shows us what it looks like to endure and keep going.

We chatted about what kind of things would stop us from keepin
g going
 in the Christian life – some things we came up with were general weariness, going through suffering which makes us think God’s no longer real or with us, the attractions of this world – maybe a relationship, career, etc. What do you think?

The writer also stresses the real need we have to help each other keep going – have a look at 10v24-25 – keeping going as a Christian is a community project!

Hope that provides some fuel for your prayers and encourages you!

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May 26, 2011by Robin Ham
Romans, Holy Spirit, Hebrews, Conversion, Ezekiel, Revival

"I've lost many arguments, I've never lost a re-run…"

Last night was the CU’s Easter Celebration Service. It marked the final event of the One.Hope

Today’s been a real encouragement. This morning we had the monthly church student prayer meeting, a great way to begin the day, being reminded from Hebrews 4.14-16 that we can approach the throne of grace, and bring our prayers to a High Priest who sympathizes with our day-to-day weaknesses. Also, been trying to nail my final essay of term, looking at the use of the Psalms in the NT to interpret the passion of the Lord Jesus. main event. I’ll blog about that later this week.

Walking here and there I’ve been listening over some Carson on Ezekiel 37 & Romans 8. Great to go over some of the truths we’ve been sinking our minds into at Focus, and see the OT groundings for the desperate need for the Spirit to bring life from death. Carson’s a joy to listen to and really hammered home the fact that for Paul it’s absolutely nonsensical for a Christian to still be living according to the flesh, i.e. always wanting to be number one. ‘Thinking apart from God. Goals and ambitions apart from God. Desires apart from God. Desperately sad and utterly hopeless.‘

Instead we’re called to set our minds on the things of the Spirit. To have the mindset of Christ, as Carson said, ‘someone so touched by the Spirit of God that you can’t deny the effects.’ He had some really practical applications for how we view conversion, sanctification and revival…

Firstly, Biblical conversion has to be life-transforming. It is. Yes, there is a decision. Yes, there is growth by grace. But, from a biblical point of view conversion without life-transformation is a contradiction of terms. The Spirit makes us ashamed and fearful in the presence of a holy God. It makes us love what was previosuly unattractive. It is God’s work. Not pressing a cheap-decision, where one things one has done God a favour. It is the work of the Spirit of God.

Secondly, Biblical ethics turns on keeping in step with the Spirit. God changes your mindset, now work it out. You can’t wander away! It’s unthinkable to strive to be number one – that’s fleshly thinking. It’s theologically ridiculous. It’s biblically ridiculous.

And thirdly, revival is nothing other than a fresh out-pouring of Spirit. Every conversion is the work of the Spirit. Every step in sanctification is the work of the Spirit. When God’s Spirit comes on his people by powerful display, the cheap and the dirty is percieved for what it really is, i.e. it is viewed from God’s perspective. From the Spirit’s perspective, and so we’ll be ashamed. ‘Stop asking stupid questions betraying our desire to know what we can get away with‘. Real guilt. God have mercy on me, as a sinner. There is revival. You cannot organise it, you cannot ape it or whip it up. And biblical revival is achieved by the transforming power of proclamation of the Word empowered by the Spirit.

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March 13, 2007by Robin Ham
Luther, Hebrews, Owen

A Safe Stronghold Our God is Still…

And though they take our life,
Goods, honour, children, wife
Yet is their profit small;
These things shall vanish all
The city of God remaineth.

Martin Luther

Spending time in Hebrews 11 & 12 this morning, with the call to endurance, of eyes fixed on the one whom completes our faith, who makes faith possible, who we have faith in as the completer of the promises. The significance of being promise-aware people is unmistakable – the great roll-call of faith ‘heroes’ in ch11 are those who had faith in the promises despite their present situations. Yet the truth of 12.1-13 is that our Father is disciplining us as we endure, that the situations we go through are forming us, ‘that we may share his holiness’, yielding the ‘peaceful fruit of righteousness’.

The command to lay aside every weight, every constraining factor and unhelpful distraction, and to throw off every sin that clings so closely. Reading Justin Taylor & Kelly Kapic’s foreword to their edited version of John Owen’s ‘Overcoming Sin & Temptation’, with Owen’s tagline ringing in my ears: ‘Be killing sin, or it’ll be killing you‘. Know your enemy, examine yourself, outside and within, so that you are aware of your weakness, of the areas where the creepers are growing up. But they are fleeting pleasures… the blame of Christ will always be of greater wealth than the treasures of Egypt. Father, help me to believe it!

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January 29, 2007by Robin Ham
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About Me

 

Hello, my name is Robin. Welcome to That Happy Certainty, where I write and collate on Christianity, culture, and ministry. I’m based in Barrow-in-Furness in South Cumbria, England, where I serve a church family called St Paul’s Barrow, recently merged together from two existing churches, St Paul’s Church and Grace Church Barrow.

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“If we could be fully persuaded that we are in the good grace of God, that our sins are forgiven, that we have the Spirit of Christ, that we are the beloved children of God, we would be ever so happy and grateful to God. But because we often fear and doubt we cannot come to that happy certainty.”
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