2020 Puritan Reformed Conference — 10% Discount Ends Today

Today is the last day to register for the 2020 Puritan Reformed Conference at the discounted rate of only $135. The goal of this annual event is to foster a robust Reformed Christian worldview that is biblical, confessional, experiential, and practical

This year, the seminary’s conference committee is delighted to be hosting this event at the Heritage Reformed Congregation in Grand Rapids, MI. This year’s theme, The Grace of Law, will be examined from various vantage points in eight plenary addresses. You won’t want to miss it!
For more information, or to register, click here: https://conference.prts.edu

An Introduction to John Owen: A Christian Vision for Every Stage of Life

I had the privilege of perusing and endorsing Crawford Gribben’s new, fascinating book, “An Introduction to John Owen: A Christian Vision for Every Stage of Life” (Crossway), which arrived today. This is a great intro to “the prince of the Puritans” and a healthy enticement to feed on Owen’s writings for a lifetime!

https://bit.ly/2OMOkkd

Ligonier Daily Video — Personal Evidences

God’s promises, inward evidences in the Christian’s life, and the work of the Holy Spirit are the three sources of assurance outlined in Westminster Confession of Faith 18.2. Previously, we examined the first—God’s promises. In this lesson, we will look at the second—evidences of grace in us—and the Puritan beliefs about the necessity of these subjective evidence as marks of faith in God’s objective promises.

Watch the video here: https://bit.ly/2Wc4Dey 

What Should Holiness Look Like in Your Life?

What Should Holiness Look Like in Your Life? from NCFIC on Vimeo.

Godward Focus – The Puritans Got it Right

Godward Focus – The Puritans Got it Right from NCFIC on Vimeo.

Cramming Life With Too Many Good Things

Cramming Life With Too Many Good Things from NCFIC on Vimeo.

What Does a Holy Man or Woman Look Like?

What Does a Holy Man or Woman Look Like from NCFIC on Vimeo.

The Family Worship Bible Guide

 

FAMILY WORSHIP BIBLE GUIDE from Puritan Seminary on Vimeo.

Hiking the trails of our national parks can be an experience of exhilarating beauty, or utter frustration when you get lost in the woods. A good guide can make all the difference. In the same way, the Family Worship Bible Guide will lead your family down the trails of the Bible to see the glory of the Lord—and avoiding getting frustrated. Who among us has not known what it is like to read a chapter of the Bible to our children or for our devotions, and have no idea what it has to do with our lives today? Here is help.

This book offers brief, major takeaway thoughts for personal application for every chapter of the Bible. Whereas most devotional books address only select parts of God’s Word, this book is unique in that it walks you through the whole Word of God and shows how to apply it to your life, one chapter at a time. Yet its emphasis on application is not man-centered, but God-centered, for it builds upon the foundational truth that all the Scriptures testify to the glory of God in the grace of Jesus Christ.

Whether you are looking for help with your personal devotions, or desire to lead family worship in the home, are reading the Bible with a friend, or need wisdom as you prepare to teach or preach in church, this is a great tool, regardless of what Bible translation you read.

The Family Worship Bible Guide also includes an eight-page introductory essay on how to do family worship, an excellent starter course for those who have never done it before, and a helpful refresher for the experienced Christian parent.

The Fear of God and a Sense of Sin

The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom. Below is a short video where I explain how a sense of God’s majesty transforms how we view sin, Christ, and everything. To learn more about the fear of God, join us at the NCFIC national conference, October 27–29.

The Fear of God and A Sense of Sin from NCFIC on Vimeo.

 

End the Year Well by Meditating on Glory

The closing curtain of this year reminds us that our end is drawing near on earth. When the true believer bids farewell to the house of God below, he finds another home above. The departed saint reaches the summit of Mount Zion and enters the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem (Heb. 12:22–24). He joins the innumerable company of angels and saints, whose names are written in heaven. He appears in peace and reconciliation before God, the Judge of all, and forms an everlasting fellowship with the spirits of the just made perfect. He comes to Jesus “the mediator of the new covenant, and to the blood of sprinkling, that speaketh better things than that of Abel” (Heb. 12:24).

Oh, how blessed is a believer’s translation from the church on earth to the church in heaven! Goodness and mercy have followed him throughout life, and now goodness and mercy surround him on every side. Who shall describe the unspeakable joy of his soul as he enters into glory? How satisfied he will be with all he sees and hears! With grateful adoration he will worship his faithful God who has fulfilled all His promises and surpassed even the believer’s highest expectations. Who can conceive of the joy and gratitude with which he will join in the song of his redeemed brethren: “Unto him that loved us, and washed us from our sins in his own blood, and hath made us kings and priests unto God and his Father; to him be glory and dominion for ever and ever. Amen” (Rev. 1:5–6)!

How imperfect are our highest conceptions of the beauty, blessedness, holiness, and glory of God’s eternal house. To know it as it is, we must be caught up, as Paul was, into the “third heaven,” but even then its realities cannot be described in earthly language (2 Cor. 12:2, 4). As great as is the happiness and glory that the departed saint enjoys in his purely spiritual condition, there is more to come. His mortal body will be raised out of the dust and no longer be natural and corruptible, but be transformed into a Spirit-dominated and immortal body, made fit for heaven (1 Cor. 15:44). Gathered from the dust of the grave by the hand of the Creator, it will become a pure and crystal vessel prepared to receive the believer’s glorified soul. Joy will abound in the house of the Lord on resurrection morning, when the souls of the saints are joined with their resurrected, glorified bodies. They will be delivered from the bondage of corruption and be introduced into the glorious liberty of the children of God (Rom. 8:21). “So shall we ever be with the Lord” (1 Thess. 4:17).

When the Great Shepherd appears in the heavens, there will be joy unequalled in heaven and earth. The “times of the restitution of all things” will gladden all the holy angels and every redeemed human being (Acts 3:21). The trumpet will sound to proclaim that “the year of my redeemed has come” (Isa. 63:4). Universal liberty will be granted to all God’s elect. The bond slaves of corruption will finally be emancipated. The prison house of the grave will be thrown open, and its bodies resurrected. There will be a continuous season of spiritual peace, harmony, joy, brotherhood, happiness, and prosperity. All the saints will be arrayed in white and shining garments; as victors, they will wave palm branches and wear crowns of life and righteousness received from the hand of Christ.

The dead in Christ will rise first, and the saints who are still alive will be changed into the likeness of their Lord. Then in one blessed company they will all be caught up in the air to meet their glorious Redeemer (1 Thess. 4:13–18). He has already changed their vile bodies into the likeness of His glorious body—incorruptible, powerful, spiritual, and heavenly (Phil. 3:21; 1 Cor. 15:42–44, 49). So in soul and body the redeemed saints will now be the perfect possession of their Lord. Their names will be confessed before the angels of God (Luke 12:8), and they will possess their everlasting inheritance. They will forever dwell in the house of the Lord and surround the throne of the Lamb!

The pilgrims will rest in their true home (Heb. 11:13). As good and faithful servants, they have completed their work, which the Lord declares to be well done. They are then invited to enter into their Master’s joy (Matt. 25:21). The runners of the race have finished their course and have won the prize of their high calling (Phil. 3:14; 2 Tim. 4:7). The soldiers of Christ have fought the good fight of faith, secured victory by grace, and received the crown of righteousness (2 Tim. 4:7–8).
The little flock of sheep need not fear anymore, for they see that their Father’s good pleasure was to give them the kingdom (Luke 12:32). They were poor but now find treasure in heaven, inheritance in light, fullness of joy, and an eternal weight of glory (Ps. 16:11; Matt. 6:20; 2 Cor. 4:17). All doubts of their acceptance are gone. Faith has given way to sight; hope has given way to fruition. They see that the One who went before them has indeed prepared a place for them (John 14:2). They are safe within their fold. They are welcomed at the table that their gracious Host has prepared for them. They behold the King in His beauty (Isa. 33:17) and live in the enjoyment of His love. The reigning Lamb leads them to fountains of living water and wipes away all their tears (Rev. 7:17). The Lord God Almighty is their unfading portion, their ever-open temple, their everlasting light, and their eternal glory (Rev. 21: 22–23).

As believers, we will dwell in heaven in a perfected state; all good will be walled in, all evil, walled out. There we can do no wrong, see no iniquity, hear no evil, and receive no spiritual harm. The Redeemer, then seen in His glorified human form, will fill our thoughts, and will be the theme of our conversation and the object of our adoration. Our soul will burn within itself while Christ reveals what He has suffered and the glory that is now His. In beatific vision, we will experience inexpressible delight in Christ’s presence and praise the Triune God forever in high, holy, and celestial strains. “Even so, come, Lord Jesus” (Rev. 22:20).