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There is Danger in the Land of Plenty!
Releasing our Rights
The Savior's Prayer
True to Our Word
Honoring the Sacred Bond
A Process of Holy Humbling
Hidden Lust
Heart Murder
Lessons by the Pool
God's Law Abides!
God's Cure for Our Anxieties
Salt and Light
The Blessedness of the Persecuted
End Times Preparations
God's Will and Man's Will
Care for the Body
The Peacemakers' Blessing
Pure Hearts See God
Mercy to the Merciful
Hungry for Holiness
Men Spoke from God
The Meek Inherit
Blessed Mourners
Rich Are the Poor
The Disciple's Portrait
The Character of the Teacher
A Call to Fight
O Woman, Great Is Your Faith
God Will Provide the Offering
In All Points Tempted As We Are
The Definitive Sign
He Came!
Preparing the Way for the King
Our Redeemer - Preserved!
Take It To Heart
God's Way of Growing a Ministry
The Lineage of Our King
God's Provision for a Successful Life
First Be Reconciled!
The "Big Idea" of the Law
Body-Building
Do Not Covet
Who Cannot Be Jesus' Disciple
Protecting Our Neighbor's Name
Keeping the Charge of the Lord
Why Christmas Had To Be
The Present Value of Past Help
It's Harvest Time!
Thanks for No?
What Belongs To Our Neighbor
Do Not Worry
A Faith That Amazes the Savior
Keeping Marriage Sacred
Heaven, A World of Charity or Love
The Great Value of Human Life
Prepared to Proclaim
Honor Father and Mother
Call The Day A Delight
Hallowed Be Thy Name
Gospel Confidence
First Love
Jesus' Word on The Word
God's Holy Name
The Cure for Stagnant Christianity
God's Holy Jealousy
Heaven's Citizens on Earth
No Other Before Him
Having God as Our God
We Preach Christ
The Adventure of Obedience
The Law From God
Walk in the Spirit
Jesus' Mercy to a Mother
Keeping the Law Through Love
Easter Encounters
Our Savior's Triumphant
By Grace to Good Works
No Condemnation
Made Guilty Enough for Grace
God at Work in Desperate Times
The Blessings of Justification
How To Be Inexpressibly Happy
Friends Together in Jesus
Drawn to the Savior
A Godly Resume
Bullies in the Body
Valued by God
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Some men spoke the truth of God so powerfully in their own day, that their message became timeless. This week's guest to our 'internet pulpit' was just such a man. He was, to his day, what Charles Colson is to our own; or what Francis Schaeffer was to the generation just past.
Born in 1881 in Baltimore, J. Gresham Machen attended Johns Hopkins and
Princeton. He also studied in Marburg and Gottingen Universities. He was
exposed early to German criticism of the New Testament, and became
well-acquainted with - and even swayed by - its arguments; but he later rejected
them and clung faithfully to the truth of God's word. He was ordained in
the Presbyterian church in 1914; and he came to be (an still is) considered
a premier authority of New Testament Greek, which he taught (along with
instruction in New Testament studies) at Princeton.
Then came the "great fight" of the 1920s - the liberalism / fundamentalism controversy. Dr. Machen was forced to leave Princeton because of his opposition to the growing liberalism of the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions. He was eventually charged by the church with insubordination and suspended from the Presbyterian ministry because of his uncompromising stance. But in the providence of God, he was then set free to found Westminster Theological Seminary with a thoroughly biblical (and we'd even have to say "legendary") faculty; and in 1936, went on to form the Orthodox Presbyterian Church. He went to be with the Lord in 1937; and just before he slipped into a final coma, he turned to a friend at his bedside and said, "Isn't the Reformed faith grand?" How are those for dying words?!! What conviction!! Rarely has the church seen as much theological brilliance and doctrinal steadfastness in so humble and gracious a man as it saw in Dr. Machen.
He came to be very controversial because of his unwavering insistence on the divine inspiration, authority and reliability of God's word. Often, his speaking engagements and conferences were accompanied by a hounding, theologically liberal press. One reporter from such a crowd once asked him if he could really be so intolerant as to believe - in a modern day - that Christianity was the only true faith, and that everyone else was in error. And in response - before all the reporters and critics - he boldly leaned across the podium, looked the reporter in the eye, and simply quoted from John 3:36; "He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life: and he that believeth not the Son shall not see life; but the wrath of God abideth on him." What an answer!! Wouldn't you agree that we need to hear such conviction in our own day? Wouldn't the cause of the gospel be greatly advanced if we did?
* * * * * * * * * *
The sermon below is a great example of Dr. Machen's bold adherence to the
authority of God's message in the Bible. It's found in "God Transcendent" (a
collection of Dr. Machen's sermons, published by Banner of Truth Trust). It
was a message that he preached to a group of his seminary students - many of
whom would soon begin preaching ministries of their own; and it was a call
for them "to be faithful to Him who is Judge and Ruler of all, and to speak
His word for the salvation of dying men." When you read it, you'll agree
that no period of time needed to hear it as much as ours! As relevant now as
when it was first preached, please welcome our 'internet preacher' to the
platform, as he speaks on the subject of . . .
"Prophets False and True"
By
J. GRESHAM MACHEN
And Micaiah said, As the Lord liveth, what the Lord saith unto me, that will
I speak. I Kings 22:14.
The text is a great text and it is taken from a great chapter. Some chapters
of the Bible are certainly greater than others, and it is by no means
derogatory to the authority of Scripture to recognize their special
greatness. The doctrine of plenary inspiration does not mean, as its
opponents often represent it as meaning, that all parts of the Bible are
equally valuable - it only means that all parts of the Bible are equally true.
Even the least valuable parts of the Bible have, indeed, their place. Lovers
of poetry love the level lines of Shakespeare; so we Christians cherish the
great level, prose chapters of the Word of God. Even in the level pathways
of Scripture we can walk with God and learn of Him. But then when we have
passed through such a stretch in our reading of the Bible, where distant
scenes are concealed, suddenly we emerge sometimes as we read, as upon the
brow of some hill, and discern before us with wondering eyes a wide, free
prospect of the world and destiny and human duty. And there, through the
great expanse stretched out before, may be seen a narrow path that leads
over hill and dale until in the dim distance it loses itself in the
mysterious brightness of the city of God.
Such a great chapter of the Bible, such a Pisgah height of vision, is found
in the twenty-second chapter of the First Book of Kings. The two kings sat
on their thrones at the gate of Samaria; the armies were marshalled before
them for the battle. But before they went forth Jehoshaphat said unto the
king of Israel: "Enquire, I pray thee, at the word of the Lord today." And
the king of Israel gathered the prophets together, about four hundred men,
and said unto them: "Shall I go against Ramoth-Gilead to battle, or shall I
forbear?" And they said: "Go up; for the Lord shall deliver it into the hand
of the king."
But Jehoshaphat was not satisfied. Why he was not satisfied I do not know.
Perhaps it was because of conscience. He was doing that which he knew in his
heart of hearts to be wrong - what part had he with the wicked Ahab? Perhaps,
as men will do when conscience speaks, he sought ever further confirmation
of that thing, really wrong, that he desired to do. Four hundred prophets
had spoken, but their hubbub had not quite succeeded in drowning the inner
voice. So Jehoshaphat said: "Is there not here a prophet of the Lord
besides, that we might enquire of him?" And Ahab said: "There is yet one
man, Micaiah the son of Imlah, by whom we may enquire of the Lord; but I
hate him; for he doth not prophesy good concerning me, but evil." And
Jehoshaphat said, "Let not the king say so."
So Micaiah was brought and stood before the king. The messenger who brought
him was his friend, and coached him as to what he should say. "Behold now,
the words of the prophets declare good unto the king with one mouth; let thy
word, I pray thee, be like the word of one of them, and speak that which is
good." But Micaiah said: "As the Lord liveth, what the Lord saith unto me,
that will I speak." So he came and stood before the king. And the king said
unto him: "Micaiah, shall we go against Ramoth-Gilead to battle, or shall we
forbear?" And he answered him: "Go and prosper: for the Lord shall deliver
it into the hand of the king."
Do you think that Micaiah was untrue to the word of the Lord that was in
him; do you think that he belied the brave words that he has just spoken to
the officer who had brought him to the king? Oh no, my friends; the words of
Micaiah were no denial of his sacred trust, but they were the words of a
devastating scorn. "I will give you," he said in effect, "the only prophecy
that you deserve, the prophecy of a parrot that speaks only what others
speak, the prophecy of a courtier who speaks only what will win the favor of
men. Go and prosper: for the Lord shall deliver it into the hand of the
king." Ahab agreed with our exegesis; Ahab knew well enough that he was
being mocked. "How many times shall I adjure thee," he said, "that thou tell
me nothing but that which is true in the name of the Lord?"
And then came a surprising thing; then came, when it was least to be
expected, in that unfavorable atmosphere, a true word of the Lord. Even in
form it was quite different from the words that had gone before. There was
no more parrot-like repetition of optimistic words; there was no more vulgar
shoving of imaginary Syrians with horns of iron. Instead, in the answer of
Micaiah, we suddenly find ourselves in the region of high poetry where the
great prophets move. "I saw all Israel," said Micaiah, "scattered upon the
hills, as sheep that have not a shepherd, and the Lord said, These have no
master, let them return every man to his house in peace."
The rest of the story is quickly told. The word of the Lord was unheeded;
Micaiah went back to partake of the bread of affliction and the water of
affliction; the kings went up into the battle; and the dogs soon licked the
blood of Ahab by the pool of Samaria. Which kind of prophets will you be as
you go out from this place? Will you be like Zedekiah the son of Chenaanah,
pushing imaginary Syrians with horns of iron, speaking the word that others
are speaking, speaking the word that men want you to speak? Or will you be
prophets after the order of Micaiah?
In one sense, I admit, you cannot be prophets at all. A prophet was a man to
whom God had directly spoken, who appealed to no external authority, but
said simply, "Thus saith the Lord." There are those who claim to be such
prophets today. But few of us, I think, will be inclined to accept their
claims. True prophecy, in the supernatural, biblical sense does not exist
today; like other miracles it has ceased. Why it has ceased we may not
perhaps be able to say; the ways of God with men in the Christian religion
constitute not a scheme that we can work out according to principles of our
own, but, as Chesterton says, for us at least, a story, a romance, full of
strange, unexpected things. Perhaps, indeed, we may see a little way at this
point into the purposes of God; we may perhaps understand a little of the
reason why prophecy has ceased. There is a wonderful completeness in the
revelation that the Bible contains. We have in the Bible an account of the
great presuppositions that should underlie all our thinking - the
righteousness and holiness of God and the sinfulness of man. And then we
have an account of the way in which God saved man once for all by the
redeeming work of Christ. That redeeming work was not partial but complete.
It needs to be applied, indeed, by the Holy Spirit; but the redemption that
is to be applied was accomplished once for all by Christ. It is hard to see,
therefore, what need there is of supernatural revelation until that great
day when the Lord shall come again to usher in His kingdom in final power.
But although no fresh supernatural revelation is given in the present age,
it would be a great mistake to disparage the dispensation under which we are
living. That dispensation is the dispensation of the Holy Spirit: even the
absence of new revelations is itself in one sense a mark of glory; it is an
indication of the wondrous completeness of God's initial gift to His Church.
In Old Testament times there was prophecy, because then God's redemptive
plan was still in the process of unfolding; but we are the heirs of the ages
and have the Saviour Himself. Only one great act remains in the drama of
redemption - the mighty catastrophic coming of our Lord in glory.
Meanwhile we have the Holy Spirit, and we have the Scripture of the Old and
New Testaments that the Holy Spirit uses. Much mischief has been wrought in
the Church by false notions of "the witness of the Spirit"; it has sometimes
been supposed that the Holy Spirit makes us independent of the Bible. Just
the opposite is the case. The Holy Spirit is the Spirit of truth. He does
not contradict in one generation what He has said in another. He does not
contradict the Scriptures that He Himself has given. On the contrary, what
He really does is to make the words of Scripture glow with a heavenly light
and burn in the hearts of men. Those Scriptures are placed in your hands.
You may not say with the prophets of old: "God has spoken directly and
independently to me; I appeal to no external authority; when I speak it is
'Thus saith the Lord.'" But you can do something else. You can mount your
pulpit stairs; open reverently the Bible on the desk; pray to the gracious
Spirit to make plain the words that He has spoken; and so unfold to needy
people the Word of God.
Do you think that that is a low function? Do you think that it involves a
slavish kind of dependence on a book? Do you think that it means that
advance and freedom are to be checked? The history of the Church should be
the answer. Again and again history has shown that the Bible, when accepted
in the very highest sense as the Word of God, does not stifle life but gives
life birth; does not enslave men, but sets them free. Those who talk about
emancipating themselves from the slavish doctrine of what they call "verbal"
inspiration are not really emancipating themselves from a tyranny, but they
are tearing up the charter upon which all human liberty depends.
And so, after all, you can say in a high, true sense, as you draw upon the
rich store of revelation in the Bible: "Thus saith the Lord." If you accept
the Bible as the Word of God you will have one qualification of a preacher.
Whatever be the limitations of your gifts, you will at least have a message.
You will be, in one respect at least, unlike most persons who love to talk
in public at the present time; you will have one qualification of a
speaker - you will at least have something to say. But what is it that you
will have to say? What will be the kind of message that God has given you to
proclaim?
In the first place, it will unquestionably be a message of warning; you will
be called upon to tell men of evil that is to come. That will no doubt make
you unpopular. Men like encouragement; they like to be told, with regard to
the Ramoth-Gilead of their pet projects, to go up and prosper, for the Lord
will deliver it into the hand of the king; they do not like to see gloomy
visions of all Israel scattered upon the hills as sheep that have not a
shepherd. It is not Micaiah the son of Imlah but Zedekiah the son of
Chenaanah that often has the favor of the crowd.
I am going to venture, however, to say a brief word in defense of pessimism.
There are times when pessimism is a very encouraging thing. Last summer I
took a voyage down the New England coast one foggy afternoon and night; it
was one of the thickest nights that I have ever seen even on those fog-bound
waters. Now I am glad to say that the captain of each of the two boats on
which I traveled was a thorough pessimist. For a time the boat would plow
along at full speed; but then, for no apparent reason, she would stop and
rock quietly upon the gentle swells, and then proceed at a snail's pace.
Presently the mournful sound of a buoy would be heard and then the buoy
would come into sight. The buoys were usually exactly where the captain
expected them to be; but unless he saw them he took a thoroughly pessimistic
view as to their whereabouts. The result of such pessimism was good. The
sound of the fog-horn was, indeed, lugubrious and hardly conducive to
repose; but at least we got safely into Boston in the morning.
There are ship-captains who are less pessimistic than the captain of that
boat. Such an one, for example, was the captain of the ill-fated Titanic. He
hoped that all was well, and kept the engines going at full speed. I am
certainly not presuming to blame him. Perhaps every other captain not gifted
with superhuman vision would have been as optimistic as he. But, whether
excusably or not, optimistic he certainly was; and his optimism was fatal to
many hundreds of human lives. The great ship plowed onward through the
night; and now she lies at the bottom of the sea. Oh, that no mere weak
mortal but some true prophet of God had been upon the bridge that night!
That disaster is a figure of what will come of optimism in the churches of
today. Superficially our ecclesiastical life seems to be progressing as it
always did: the cabins are full of comfortable passengers; the orchestra is
playing a lively air; the rows of lighted windows shine cheerfully out into
the night. But all the time death is lurking beneath. In this time of deadly
peril there are leaders who say that all is well; there are leaders who
decry controversy and urge peace, declaring that the Church is all perfectly
loyal and true. God forgive them, brethren! I say it with all my heart: may
God forgive them for their terrible guilt; may God forgive them for the evil
that they are doing to Christ's little ones; may the Holy Spirit open their
eyes while yet there is time! Meanwhile, in the case of many of the
churches, the great ship rushes onward to the risk, at least, of doom.
Yes, my friends, if you be true prophets like Micaiah, you will be called
upon to warn the Church. But you will also be called upon to warn individual
men and women. And the thing about which you will be called upon to warn
them is sin. In warning men of sin you will of course often have to cast
popularity aside. Like some good physicians, you will be laughed at as
alarmists and hated as those who take the pleasure out of life. Men love to
be encouraged by false hopes; the world is full of quack remedies for sin.
In this spiritual sphere, moreover, there is no protection against quacks;
there is no paternalistic state legislature to regulate medical practice and
protect the unwary from their fate. In such a world of quackery and of false
optimism you will have to come forward with your terrible diagnosis of sin.
You will come, indeed, not merely with a diagnosis but also with a cure.
Only, the cure is no light, merely palliative, thing, but one that enters
into the very depths:
There is a fountain filled with blood
Drawn from Emmanuel's veins;
And sinners plunged beneath that flood,
Lose all their guilty stains.
I am perfectly well aware that many men do not like that hymn; it offends
their sensibilities; they are omitting it, I believe, from their hymn-books.
Now I am perfectly ready to confess that I myself do not like it so much as
I do some other hymns. Possibly its imagery is too bold and too fully
carried out; possibly it spreads a little too unreservedly in the light of
day what would better remain hidden in the depths of the Christian heart. I
do not know. I prefer to it, I think, that hymn of Isaac Watts:
When I survey the wondrous cross
On which the Prince of glory died,
My richest gain I count but loss,
And pour contempt on all my pride.
And if I want bold imagery I turn to the original fourth verse of that hymn:
His dying crimson like a robe
Spreads o'er his body on the tree,
Then am I dead to all the globe,
And all the globe is dead to me.
I quite agree with Matthew Arnold in holding that that hymn is the greatest
of all. But I love Cowper's hymn too; I love all those hymns that go to the
depths in presenting the remedy for sin.
There are those, I know, who tell us that we ought not to place such
emphasis upon the cross. They talk to us - these men who belittle the cross of
Christ, these men who trouble its divine simplicity with the wisdom, or
rather the folly, of this world - they talk to us about having a living Christ
and not a dead Christ. Well, my friends, I think we certainly ought to have
a living Christ. Without a sweet, intimate communion with Him there is no
Christian experience; without service of Him as a present Companion and
Helper and Judge, as we go about our labors from day to day, there is no
Christian life. Yes, we certainly ought to have a living Christ. But let us
never forget one thing - that living Christ with whom we have communion bore
in His hands the print of the nails. Oh, no, my friends; only at the foot of
the cross is there a remedy for sin; there only is peace; there only do we
find our first communion with the Christ with whom then we shall live
forevermore.
Certainly if you preach this gospel of the cross, you will have to bear
reproach. If you preach this gospel faithfully, you will see men whom you
have called your friends, men whom you have served in the hour of need, turn
against you and join the general hue and cry; you will be subjected to
misrepresentation and slander of all kinds; you will bear both ridicule and
abuse; you will be attacked behind and before. But there are some
compensations in the prophet's life. Many will speak ill of you; but there
is One who will say: "Well done, good and faithful servant."
Men sometimes think that the day of Christian heroism is over. I do not
believe it. There may come, sooner than we think, even physical
persecutions. Around us there is slowly closing in the tyranny of a
democratic collectivism which is far more inimical to liberty of conscience
than the comparatively ineffective despotisms of the past. But however that
may be, even now you will be called upon to endure hardness for the cross of
Christ. You will face in subtle forms the age-long temptation to mitigate
the exclusiveness of the gospel - to preach it as one way of salvation without
denying that other ways may lead to the same end, to make your preaching, as
Satan persuasively puts it, "positive and not negative," to be "tolerant of
opposing views," to work contentedly in the Church with those who reject the
cross of Christ, to preach Christ boldly in your pulpit (where preaching Him
may cost you nothing) and then deny Him by your vote in Church councils and
courts. But God grant that you may resist the Tempter's voice; God save you
from the sin of paring down the gospel to suit the pride of men; God grant
that you may deliver your message straight and full and plain. Only so,
whatever else you may sacrifice, will you have one thing - the favor of the
Lord Jesus Christ.
And only so will you be the instrument in saving souls. Do you think men's
souls are satisfied by the current preaching of the day, with its
encouragement of human pride? It might seem so. The churches are crowded
where Zedekiah the son of Chenaanah and his associates hold forth; one can
sometimes in those churches scarcely obtain a seat; hundreds are turned away
at the doors. But let us not be deceived by appearances. Among those
crowds - contented though they may seem to a superficial observer to be - there
are many hungry hearts. Despite all the apparent satisfaction of the world
with this "other gospel" of a non-doctrinal Christianity, this "other
gospel" that is dictated by human pride, there is deep down in the human
heart a hunger for the Word of God. Despite all the efforts of modern
prophets to promote confidence in human resources, despite all that Zedekiah
and his far more than four hundred associates can do, despite the hubbub of
modern optimism, you will find, here and there at least, in this modern
world, listening to these modern preachers, those who say, after listening
to it all: "Is there not here a prophet of the Lord besides, that we might
enquire of him?"
And then, when you find such persons, you will have your chance; then, while
angels look on, you will have your moment of glorious opportunity - the moment
when you can speak the word that God has given you to speak. It will be a
word of warning; false hopes must be ruthlessly destroyed. But it will also
be a word of wondrous joy. What can be compared, brethren, to the privilege
of proclaiming to needy souls the exuberant joy of the gospel of Christ? Can
all the plaudits of the world, the false reputation of breadth and
tolerance, the praise of those who know not Christ? I think not, my
brethren. I think that those things, when we come to face the great issues
of life and death, will seem more worthless than the dust of the streets.
There is one thing and one thing only that is worth while; it is to be
faithful to Him who loved us and gave Himself for us; it is to be faithful
to Him who is Judge and Ruler of all, and to speak His word for the
salvation of dying men.
Pray God that you, whom we have come during your stay here to know and love,
may be thus faithful; pray God that you may be true prophets after the order
of Micaiah; pray God that you may say to those who would persuasively turn
you aside from your true calling, who would urge you to trust in human
influences for the success of your labors, who would urge you to speak the
words that others speak, who would say: "Behold now, the words of the
prophets declare good unto the king with one mouth; let thy word, I pray
thee, be like the word of one of them, and speak that which is good" - pray
God that you may say to them, with Micaiah, after you have been at the foot
of the cross: "As the Lord liveth, what the Lord saith unto me, that will I
speak."
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