Good Pastor, Good Book

Many evangelical Christians are familiar with Robert Murray McCheyne, a pastor in Scotland in the mid 1800’s.  He is known to us primarily through the biography written by his good friend, Andrew Bonar.  I have been recently blessed by reading the biography of the biographer – the story of Andrew Bonar.  The Good Pastor, published in 1999 by Ambassador Publications, contains selections of the original version which was edited by Bonar’s daughter, Marjory, and originally published in 1895.

I’ll get right to it.  This book is filled with many quotes that just bless, encourage, and challenge me as a pastor.  Here are a few.  Enjoy.  Then read the book.

Referring to the first sermon he preached, he commented, “I had no heads.”  We call them main points.  He called that a mistake because, “Hearers need pegs on which to hang the truth.”

During a time of revival in his region, “The thirst for the word of God was very great.  Not only did the people walk long distances to hear, but they never seemed to grow tired of listening.”

Regarding creativity in his messages and methods, “There is more originality in a full heart than in anything else.”

Once after listening to a couple of uneducated men preach, his evident enjoyment was observed by someone, and he said, “If you are very thirsty you will not be particular about the dish you drink out of.”

Regarding the Lord’s Table, “Christ’s nearer coming casts deeper solemnity over every Communion.”

To the Sabbath School teachers, he said, “Be sure and aim at the conversion of the children.  They are never too young to come to Jesus.  I hope you pray for each of your scholars by name.”

To an older church member, he said, “You must keep fast hold of the text which was written for you:  ‘Even to your old age I am He; and even to gray hairs will I carry you’ (Isaiah 46:4).  Just as you carried the children when they were young, so the Lord says He will carry you now when you are old.”

In a letter to a friend, he wrote, “We must learn more and more how to suffer.”

He spent two hours in prayer and meditation on God’s Word every morning before going out.  He said, “Persevering prayerfulness – day by day wrestling and pleading – is harder for the flesh than preaching.”

After taking his two daughters to see the Queen when she visited Edinburgh, he told a friend, “We saw her, but we were not changed.  But when we see Him, we shall be like Him.”

He called people who spent too much time by themselves “earthworms.”  “A man can’t meditate when he is always alone.  He needs to have intercourse with others to stir him up to meditation.”

On desiring God’s work, “Pray for blessing, for it is like the dew which Gideon prayed for.  It falls where it is sought.”

Regarding weariness in ministry, he said, “I have great difficulty because of my own soul which cannot stand three successive weeks of giving out.”  “Vessels are not fountains.  Vessels need to be filled as well as to give out to others.”

In a letter of encouragement, “If there were twenty crosses for this year written down for you in God’s book of providence, they will soon be past; ye will soon be at the nineteenth, and then there is but one more, and after than nothing!  For then ye shall lay your head on His bosom, and His own soft hand shall dry your face and wipe away your tears.”

I am reading this book as a devotional right now, and it really helps this pastor’s heart.  I think it will encourage yours too.

Seeing Through Suffering and Pain

Painful experiences are part of life.  During the past few months, I have been close to people as they have gone through some of the most traumatizing events that a human being can face.  In each case, these people have received much comfort and help from those who love them.  But the question arises, “Why would God allow this tragedy?”  In the midst of suffering and pain, the natural question is, “Why?”  If God is in control, why would He allow those He loves to hurt so much?

When you are hurting, that pain is your reality. It’s what you feel.  The suffering and what is causing it is foremost on your mind.  It is hard to think about anything else.  A hurting person needs to be able to see beyond the suffering and pain.  

The BIble contains the story of a man who experienced extreme pain and suffering.  It was so awful he said he wished he had not been born.  He was a believer in God, committed to trusting God even through the hardest of times, but he wrestled with God’s purpose in his suffering and pain.  The man’s name is Job, and his story is in the book of the Bible that bears his name.  Here is his testimony at the end of his ordeal:  “I have heard of You by the hearing of the ear, but now my eye sees You” (Job 42:5).  Job learned to see through his suffering and pain.

I will be preaching at Calvary Baptist Church on Seeing Through Suffering and Pain starting Sunday, September 1.  The truth I will be presenting has potential to help many people.  These messages will be presented and distributed in the following venues:

  • Sunday Mornings during our Lord’s Day Gatherings at 10:30 am, September 1 – November 3
  • Sunday Morning at Calvary, recorded music and message broadcast on WGTK FM94.5 at 8:00 am Sunday mornings.  Also live-streamed at www.calvarysimpsonville.org/radio.  (Messages broadcast 1-2 weeks after originally preached)
  • Available for download at www.calvarysimpsonville.org/sermons

Whoever you are, whatever your pain, I invite you to learn how to change your focus from how you feel and what is causing your suffering to something outside of yourself and your circumstances.  Invite someone to come or listen with you.  People in pain desperately try to find relief.  When time doesn’t heal, the drugs wear off, and the advice of well-meaning friends is insufficient, you need something real, something transformational.  You need to be able to see.  Job did. You can. Come see.

suffering

This Helps Me Pray

One of the most encouraging devotional resources I use is The Valley of Vision.  The subtitle describes what it is:  A Collection of Puritan Prayers & Devotions.  This little volume is edited by Arthur Bennett and published by The Banner of Truth Trust.

The prayers it contains are rich in content, and some contain beautiful prose.  But the most encouraging element for me is that many of them express praise and petition with thoughts that I have but words that I often don’t have.  I am especially blessed and helped by the section on Service and Ministry.  Many times I have used these prayers to cry out to the Lord in preparation for my own preaching.

I have often wondered about the compiler of these prayers and the background of them.  Today I came across an article that fills in some of the details, here.  If you use V of V, this article might interest you.  If you’ve never enjoyed the blessing this little book brings to Christian devotion, I recommend your getting it.