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tisdag 18 juni 2019

Sing hallelujah to the Lord!

Sing!
- The Christians worldwide will never stop singing, despite whatever...


1 Chron. 16:23 (ESV) "Sing to the Lord, all the earth! Tell of his salvation from day to day."

1 Krön. 16:23 (Folkbibeln) "Sjung till HERRENS ära alla länder! Kungör hans frälsning från dag till dag!"

Ps. 66:1-2 "Höj jubel till Gud, alla länder! Lovsjung hans namns ära, ge honom ära och pris."

Ps. 66:1-2 (ESV) "Shout for joy to God, all the earth; sing the glory of his name; give to him glorious praise!"



"Sing hallelujah to the Lord" (3:06)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-gN6A13V3EI



"Sing hallelujah to the Lord" (3:10)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RY5hlccmmZw







Foton i juni 2019 (KL)

Våra rhododendron och Korset,  1 Krön. 16:7-36, Ps. 67:1-8
Han (Jesus) på korset, Han allena, den Uppståndne.

fredag 14 juni 2019

Memorial Moment - "Grace is Gratis" - one baptism!

2 b. Basic biblical facts on baptism and God's grace. (Eph. 4:5 ESV)  "...one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all, who is over all and through all and in all."


"Baptism is not a human accomplishment but a divine gift. You are not proving anything to God by being baptized. God is proving something to you in baptism. He is proving His unchanging mercy in that He is immersing you into the death and life of Christ our Lord in it. You are receiving something that could not be yours except on the initiative of the gracious God. Again, this is why no one can boast, at least not before God (Eph 2:9). If grace is grace, it is free."

Grace is Gratis

"When I was a child I would sullenly read the cereal box during breakfast. Because I was raised in Canada it meant that I learned a few words of French in those sullen moments (it's no wonder my French was so poor!). The word that most firmly stuck in my head was "gratis." Every children's cereal promised a "free" gift in the box. Only later did I realize that the French word was related to the English word for grace. However, the gift given gratis in the box of cereal was not really free, as my mother pointed out to me on many occasions while shopping for groceries. The gift was only there to motivate you to buy a product you wouldn't normally have purchased. The gratis gift was to get you to do what you wouldn't normally do.

Some people treat God's grace like it's the free gift in the cereal box, as though grace would get you to be inclined toward God or open your heart to the Holy Spirit. But grace is given by God not for the sake of anything else but out of absolute love and compassion toward fallen humans on God's part. Grace doesn't coax something out of us; it changes our status in the presence of the God who gives it.

Infants are the test case for grace. Infants become believers, and thus part of the church, through the gift of grace bestowed on them by baptism. Grace is the divine act of compassion given to those who are weak and unable to find God by their own efforts or works. What would better describe a newborn infant than that he or she is weak and incapacitated? Yet, exactly such as these are the ones whom the God of all grace has determined to save through the work of His only begotten Son. Sometimes moderns think that adults are the paradigmatic case for grace. This presupposition arises not from an understanding of grace as a gratuitous gift from God, but from the presupposition that humans need to provide God some sign of their inclination toward Him, that they are seeking Him, that they are worthy of grace, or that have opened their hearts to Him. Such views are prevalent in American evangelicalism, and yet have more in common with classic doctrines of prevenient grace as taught by the Roman Catholic Church. Prevenient grace is the grace, which disposes the person toward God. Prevenient grace is a contradiction of grace. Earned grace is never grace (Rm 4:4).

Those who are in the light of Christ are in the church and are believers. Those who have not the light of Christ are not believers and remain under the wrath of God. There is no middle ground. This is true for all persons, young, old, and infant. All persons are under the grace of God irrespective of their age. Age is no impediment to the grace that saves. If age were an impediment, grace would no longer be grace. Grace is God's. Grace is the attitude of God's heart toward fallen humans. If grace is truly God's how could age hinder it?

Baptism then, is not a human accomplishment but a divine gift. You are not proving anything to God by being baptized. God is proving something to you in baptism. He is proving His unchanging mercy in that He is immersing you into the death and life of Christ our Lord in it. You are receiving something that could not be yours except on the initiative of the gracious God. Again, this is why no one can boast, at least not before God (Eph 2:9). If grace is grace, it is free."



Rev. Dr. Scott R. Murray
Memorial Lutheran Church


John 12:44-50 (ESV) 
https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=John+12%3A44-50&version=ESV


Augustine of Hippo:

"Christ says, 'I have come into the world as light, so that whoever believes in me may not remain in darkness.' (Jn 12:46). Now what does this passage show us, but that every person is in darkness who does not believe in Him, and that it is by believing in Him that anyone escapes from this permanent state of darkness? What do we understand by the darkness but sin? And whatever else it may include in its meaning, at any rate he who does not believe in Christ will 'abide in darkness,' which, of course, is a penal state, not, as the darkness of the night, which is necessary for the refreshment of living beings. Consequently, infants, unless they join the number of believers through the sacrament which was divinely instituted for this purpose, will certainly remain in this darkness.

"However, some think that as soon as children are born they are enlightened; and they derive this opinion from the passage: 'The true light, which enlightens everyone, was coming into the world.' (Jn 1:9). Well, if this be the case, it is quite astonishing how it can be that those who are thus enlightened by the only-begotten Son, who was in the beginning the Word with God, and [Himself] God, are not admitted into the kingdom of God, nor are heirs of God and joint-heirs with Christ. Such an inheritance is not bestowed upon them except through baptism, as even those who hold the opinion in question acknowledge. Then, again, if they are (though already illuminated) unfit for entrance into the kingdom of God, they at all events ought gladly to receive the baptism, by which they are fitted for it. But, strange to say, we see how reluctant infants are to submit to baptism, resisting even with great crying. And this ignorance of theirs we think lightly of at their time of life, so that we fully administer the sacraments, which we know to be beneficial to them, even although they struggle against them."

Augustine, On the Merits and Forgiveness of Sins and the Baptism of Infants, 1.35-36



Prayer:

"Lord Jesus, I have not merited Your mercy toward me. Help me to live in that grace that I might never doubt Your compassion for poor sinners. Amen."

Memorial Moment
Rev. Dr Scott R. Murray
Memorial Lutheran Church


onsdag 12 juni 2019

Memorial Moment - "Baptism is grace for all" - one baptism

2 a. Basic biblical facts on baptism, God's grace. (Eph. 4:5 ESV)  "...one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all, who is over all and through all and in all."


"I desire to become a little one, that I too might receive the kingdom of God. If we are to become childlike in our faith, it would be odd if those whom Jesus says we should imitate in that respect would be incapable of receiving the gift of faith! In the end, Jesus is generously gracious to all sinners, young, old, infant. All who believe will be saved. Baptism, God's gift, both gives and presumes the faith that it promises. God has done it all."

Baptism is grace for all

"Those who refuse to baptize infants do not understand grace. The debate about the baptism of infants then is not just an argument about some obscure and unimportant church rite, but about the meaning and applicability of divine mercy. To whom does the divine mercy apply? To all. Who benefits from it? Those who believe. This is the sticking point for many people who deny baptismal regeneration. How can an infant believe? The problem for American evangelicals is that they have turned faith into a human action initiated and sustained by the human will.

The Bible portrays faith as a gift of God (Eph 2:8-10), which is given and sustained by God the Holy Spirit through the Word of God (1Co 12:3; Acts 4:4; Rm 10:17; Titus 3:5, etc.). Faith is not our work, or else we could boast (Rm 4:4-5). But boasting in ourselves is specifically excluded to those who have faith. Faith is not our commitment to God, as American evangelicals often portray it, but rather saving faith is trust in Christ the only Redeemer from sin and our true Mediator before God. Faith receives the work and merit of another, namely Christ. Since it is a gift from God and not a human achievement faith is able to be attributed to all persons, no matter their mental condition or capacity. An infant is incapable of speech and yet many adults are likewise unable to speak or communicate, yet who would say that such an adult is unable to be touched by God through His holy Word or in the sacrament of baptism and granted the gift of faith? Indeed, such persons, both infants and the mentally challenged are what the Bible portrays as the most humble persons and thus most under the grace of God, who lifts up the humble and casts down the mighty from their thrones (Lk 1:52).

Jesus specifically points to little children as paradigmatic of those who enter the kingdom of God (Mk 10:14-15). They are the very model of faith, because they have no apparent capacity in themselves for believing. And as we saw yesterday, only those who are sinners forgiven by the divine grace are able to enter that kingdom (God at Work). All this must come as a gift from God. This is why we pray with Jeremiah, "Turn me, and I will be turned" (Jer 31:18). Of course, Jesus is correct when He attributes faith to the smallest child (Gk; micrõn). These little ones believe in Him. And He promises harsh punishments against those who would deny them their faith in Him as their Savior (Mt 18:6-7). If the Lord says that the little ones have faith, who are we to say otherwise? I desire to become a little one of just this sort, that I too might receive the kingdom of God. If we are to become childlike in our faith, it would be odd if those whom Jesus says we should imitate in that respect would be incapable of receiving the gift of faith! In the end, Jesus is generously gracious to all sinners, young, old, infant. All who believe will be saved. Baptism, God's gift, both gives and presumes the faith that it promises. God has done it all."



Rev. Dr. Scott R. Murray
Memorial Lutheran Church


Matt. 18:1-14 (ESV)
https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Matthew+18%3A1-14&version=ESV


 Augustine of Hippo:

"Some say: How are mere infants called to repentance? How can such as they repent of anything? The answer to this is: If they must not be called repentant because they would not have the sense of repenting, neither should they be called believers, because they likewise would not have the sense of believing. But if they are rightly called believers (Mt 18:6), because they in a certain sense profess faith by the words of their parents, why are they not also held to be repentant when they are shown to renounce the devil and this world by the profession again of the same parents? The whole of this is done in hope, in the strength of the sacrament and of the divine grace which the Lord has bestowed upon the Church. But yet who is not aware that the baptized infant fails to be benefited from what he received as a little child, if on coming to years of reason he fails to believe and to abstain from unlawful desires? If, however, the infant departs from the present life after he has received baptism, the guilt in which he was involved by original sin being done away, he shall be made perfect in that light of truth, which, remaining unchangeable forever, illumines the justified in the presence of their Creator. For sins alone separate between men and God; and these are done away by Christ's grace, through whom, as Mediator, we are reconciled, when He justifies the ungodly."

 Augustine, On the Merits and Forgiveness of Sins and the Baptism of Infants, 1.25



Prayer:

"Lord Christ, You have said that we should become child-like in our faith. Just as you have granted faith even to the little ones, also grant that we receive that same gift through Your gracious means. Keep us from the pride that treats faith as a meritorious work in Your presence rather than a gift from Your gracious hand. Amen."

1000's of roots - Encouragement

1. Basic biblical facts on justification.

- A very special vlog. Watch and listen!

- More than conquerors. Heirs. Justified.







1000's of roots (vlog 10:56) BIG "Encouragement and BIG Announcement":
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C8L8ZhgmrfQ
"Welcome to our channel and thank you for taking the time to watch our vlog.  We are a family of 8 living in a 500 sq. ft. off grid home on 20 acres in the Ozarks.  We are endeavoring to put in "1000's of roots" on our land through permaculture design principles.  We try to upload videos Tuesdays and Thursdays."

"More than conquerors - Romans 8:37
Heirs - Romans 8:14-17, Galatians 3:29
Justified - Luke 18:14
More on the topic - Acts 13:39, 1 Corinthians 6:11, Galatians 2:16, Titus 3:7"


(Photo: Lindén family)

söndag 9 juni 2019

Remember who you are - Minns vem du är och vem du tillhör

Just a small reminder. I dag påmindes jag om några bibelverser från Ef. 2:19-22.

"Alltså är ni inte längre gäster och främlingar utan medborgare tillsammans med de heliga och tillhör Guds familj. Ni är uppbyggda på apostlarnas och profeternas grund, där hörnstenen är Kristus Jesus själv. Genom honom fogas hela byggnaden samman och växer upp till ett heligt tempel i Herren. I honom blir också ni uppbyggda till en Guds boning genom Anden." (Från Paulus, genom Guds vilja Kristi Jesu apostel)

Eph. 2:19-22 (ESV) "So then you are no longer strangers and aliens, but you are fellow citizens with the saints and members of the household of God, built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Christ Jesus himself being the cornerstone, in whom the whole structure, being joined together, grows into a holy temple in the Lord. In him you also are being built together into a dwelling place for God by the Spirit."

"Remember who we are" (Krista Branch):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RHtVxDz43KY




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The roots:

"Lead me on" (Krista Branch)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_gxZbihvY4I


***


"Nun bitten wir den heiligen Geist":
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dONSLnMGU0I


***

"Hallelujah, salvation and glory":
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cU8ymxpqgOg




Foto: Juni 2019 (KL)