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