The Preacher’s Prayer

Always respond to every impulse to pray. The impulse to pray may come when you are reading or when you are battling with a text. I would make an absolute law of this – always obey such an impulse. Where does it come from? It is the work of the Holy Spirit; it is a part of the meaning of ‘Work out your salvation with fear and trembling, for it is God which worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure’ (Phil 2:12-13). This often leads to some of the most remarkable experiences in the life of the minister. So never resist, never postpone it, never push it aside because you are busy. Give yourself to it, yield to it; and you will find not only that you have not been wasting time with respect to the matter with which you are dealing but that actually it has helped you greatly in that respect. You will experience an ease and a facility in understanding what you were reading, in thinking, in ordering matter for a sermon, in writing, in everything which is quite astonishing. Such a call to prayer must never be regarded as a distraction; always respond to it immediately, and thank God if it happens to you frequently.

Martyn Lloyd-Jones, Preaching and Preachers, p. 170-171

HT: Expositor’s Quote of the Week

In the Bleak Midwinter

This is one of my favorite Christmas hymns.

I also enjoy the British observance of the men singing a stanza and the women another.  This adds such a richness to the vocalization that we miss in many churches today.

Playing with a Feather

Would a king take it well at our hands, if, when speaking to us, we should be playing with a feather? When God is speaking to us in His Word, and our hearts are taken up with thoughts about the world, is not this playing with a feather? Oh, how should this humble most of us, that we do not make God to be a God to us! We do not believe in Him, love Him, worship Him as God. Many heathens have worshiped their false gods with more seriousness and devotion than some Christians do the true God. O let us chide ourselves; did I say chide? Let us abhor ourselves for our deadness and formality in religion; how we have professed God, and yet have not worshipped Him as God.

Thomas Watson, The Ten Commandments, p. 54