Author Thread: "Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! According to his great mercy, he has caused us to be born again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead" (1 Pet. 1:3).
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"Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! According to his great mercy, he has caused us to be born again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead" (1 Pet. 1:3).
Posted : 26 Nov, 2011 05:09 AM

To be conscious of this amazing power in the soul is to be born again. It is to be raised from the grave of corruption. It is to live on earth a heavenly, a resurrection-life. It is to have the heart daily ascending in the sweet incense of love and prayer and praise, where its risen Treasure is.



It also possesses a most comforting power. What except this sustained the disciples in the early struggles of Christianity, amid the storms of persecution, which otherwise would have swept them from the earth? They felt that their Master was alive. They needed no external proof of the fact. They possessed God's witness in their souls. The truth authenticated itself.



The three days of his entombment were to them days of sadness, desertion, and gloom. Their sun had set in darkness and in blood, and with it every ray of hope had vanished. All they loved, or cared to live for, had gone down into the grave. They had now no arm to strengthen them in their weakness, no bosom to sympathize with them in sorrow, no eye to which they could unveil each hidden thought and struggling emotion.



But the resurrection of their Lord was the resurrection of all their buried joys. They now traveled to him as to a living Savior, conscious of a power new-born within them, the power of their Lord's resurrection. "Then were the disciples glad when they saw the Lord."



But is this truth less vivifying and precious to us? Has it lost anything of its vitality to quicken, or its power to soothe? Oh, no! truth is eternal and immutable. Years do not impair its strength. Circumstances do not change its character. The same truths which distilled as dew from the lips of Moses, which awoke the seraphic lyre of David, which winged the heaven-soaring spirit of Isaiah, which inspired the manly eloquence of Paul, which floated in visions of sublimity before the eye of John, and which in all ages have fed, animated, and sanctified the people of God, guiding their counsels, soothing their sorrows, and animating their hopes, still are vital and potent in the checkered experiences of the saints, hastening to swell the cloud of witnesses to their divinity and their might. Of such is the doctrine of Christ's resurrection.



Oh, what consolation flows to the church of God from the truth of a living Savior�a Savior alive to know and to heal our sorrows, to inspire and sanctify our joys, to sympathize with and supply our need!�a Savior alive to every cloud that shades the mind, to every cross that chafes the spirit, to every grief that saddens the heart, to every evil that threatens our safety or imperils our happiness!



What power, too, do the promises of the gospel derive from this truth! When Jesus speaks by these promises, we feel that there is life and spirit in his word, for it is the spoken word of the living Savior. And when he invites us to himself for rest, and bids us look to his cross for peace, and asks us to deposit our burdens at his feet, and drink the words that flow from his lips, we feel a living influence stealing over the soul, inspiriting and soothing as that of which the trembling evangelist was conscious when the glorified Savior gently laid his right hand upon him, and said, "Fear not, I am the first and the last, and the living one. I died, and behold I am alive forevermore, and I have the keys of Death and Hades" (Rev. 1:17�18).



Is Jesus alive? Then let what else die, our life, with all its supports, consolations, and hopes, is secure in him. "Because I live, you also will live" (John 14:19). He is a living spring. Seasons vary, circumstances change, feelings fluctuate, friendships cool, friends die, but Christ is ever the same.



Oh, the blessedness of dealing with a risen, a living Redeemer! We take our needs to him. They are instantly supplied. We take our sins to him. They are immediately pardoned. We take our griefs to him. They are in a moment assuaged.

by Octavius Winslow, 1856 (edited for

today's reader by Larry E. Wilson, 2010)





Jesus lives, and so shall I.

Death! thy sting is gone forever!

He who deigned for me to die,

lives, the bands of death to sever.

He shall raise me from the dust:

Jesus is my Hope and Trust.



Jesus lives, and reigns supreme,

and, his kingdom still remaining,

I shall also be with him,

ever living, ever reigning.

God has promised: be it must:

Jesus is my Hope and Trust.



Jesus lives, and by his grace,

vict'ry o'er my passions giving,

I will cleanse my heart and ways,

ever to his glory living.

Me he raises from the dust.

Jesus is my Hope and Trust.



Jesus lives, I know full well

nought from him my heart can sever,

life nor death nor powers of hell,

joy nor grief, henceforth forever.

None of all his saints is lost;

Jesus is my Hope and Trust.



Jesus lives, and death is now

but my entrance into glory.

Courage, then, my soul, for thou

hast a crown of life before thee;

thou shalt find thy hopes were just;

Jesus is the Christian's Trust.



(Christian F. Gellert, 1757; tr. by J. D. Lang, 1826)

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"Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! According to his great mercy, he has caused us to be born again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead" (1 Pet. 1:3).
Posted : 26 Nov, 2011 04:11 PM

"he has caused us to be born again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead"..



Yes, you are 100% CORRECT, He caused us to be born again, not we ourselves!



How could you ever think that Cauvin could be right in the case of Servetus, when Servetus' righteousness was not of himself..?



It is Christ which causeth a man to be born again, and that grace even overcomes our errors..



Why can't you see that the same grace is applied to even the Servetus' of the world, if they are selected to be recipients of mercy?



no need to answer..



awm

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