A Right View of the Lord’s Day

“Tomorrow is the Lord’s Day. What a blessing it is each week for the Lord’s Day to finally come. Sometimes we come to the Lord’s Day weary. Sometimes we come feeling great. But every week we come, we come knowing our God will meet us there. We want to be fresh and energetic and well-prepared for every Sunday—it is good for us to be so—but in some ways the weeks when we are the most worn out may be those that speak most clearly to us of our condition and need as we assemble for worship. Weekly worship has been historically known as The Divine Service, because it is God’s service to us, preeminently, and not our service to him. We gather not because we have energy and gifts to bring but because we need the strength and grace he brings to us.

We come weary, but the Lord brings his fullness. We come sinful, but he comes to cleanse us. We come worried, and he comes to comfort. We come haughty, and he comes to humble us. We come discouraged, and he comes to build us up.

Whatever your week has been like, wherever you are coming from on Sunday, remember that the Lord knows your needs better than you do. He knows your weakness. He knows your emptiness apart from his grace. And he is ready, willing, and eager to meet you in worship and to minister to you there. Come to the means of grace. Come to the ministry of the Word. Come to the Table. Come and welcome to Jesus Christ.”

– Pastor Joel Ellis

Quotes on the Word

“When the canon closed on the OT [Old Testament] after the time of Ezra and Nehemiah, there followed four hundred ‘silent years’ when no prophet spoke God’s revelation in any form. That silence was broken by John the Baptist as God spoke once more prior to the NT [New Testament] age. God then moved various men to record the books of the NT, and the last of these was Revelation, also the last book in our Bibles. By the second century A.D., the complete canon, exactly as we have it today was popularly recognized. Church councils in the fourth century verified and made official what the church has universally affirmed: that the sixty-six books in our Bible are the only true Scripture inspired by God. The canon is complete. Just as the close of the OT canon was followed by silence, so the close of the NT has been followed by the utter absence of new revelation in any form. Since the book of Revelation was completed, no new written or verbal prophecy has ever been universally recognized by Christians as divine truth from God.” – John MacArthur, Does God Still Give Revelation, TMS Journal

“An ambassador is not a man who voices his own thoughts or his own opinions or views, or his own desires. The very essence of the position of the ambassador is that he is a man who has been sent to speak for somebody else. He is the speaker for his Government or his President or his King or Emperor, or whatever form of government his country may have. He is not a man who speculates and gives his own views and ideas. He is the bearer of a message, he is commissioned to do this, he is sent to do this; and that is what he must do. In other words, the content of the sermon is what is called in the New Testament ‘The Word’. ‘Preach the word’, or ‘preach the Gospel’, or ‘the whole counsel of God.’ That being interpreted means the message of the Bible, the message of the Scriptures.” – Martyn Lloyd Jones

“Let the man who would hear God speak read Holy Scripture.” – Martin Luther

“The Word of God can take care of itself, and will do so if we preach it, and cease defending it. See you that lion. They have caged him for his preservation; shut him up behind iron bars to secure him from his foes! See how a band of armed men have gathered together to protect the lion. What a clatter they make with their swords and spears! These mighty men are intent upon defending a lion. O fools, and slow of heart! Open that door! Let the lord of the forest come forth free. Who will dare to encounter him? What does he want with your guardian care? Let the pure gospel go forth in all its lion-like majesty, and it will soon clear its own way and ease itself of its adversaries.” – C. H. Spurgeon