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1. Tis So Sweet to Trust in Jesus, first and last verses (3:28)
2. Confidence (20:42)
3. I Shall Not Be Moved (2:41)
Selected Verses:
Hebrews 10:35. Cast not away therefore your confidence,
which hath great recompence of reward.
Proverbs 28:26. He that trusteth in his own heart is a
fool: but whoso walketh wisely, he shall be delivered.
Ephesians 3:12. In whom we have boldness and access with
confidence by the faith of him. Opening:
“Cast not away therefore your confidence.” Confidence. Can you have confidence in anything at all today?
Everybody lies. “All men are liars.” You might as well put
it down in your notebook. “All men are liars,” but there’s One that’s not a
liar. There’s One in Whom you can safely confide, and you’re commanded to have
confidence in God. The Bible says, “Cast not away therefore your confidence,
which hath great recompence of reward.” But now, my God, who
are You going to reward? Whom are You going to honor like that? Who do You
want to have confidence in You? Me? Poor weak mortal—poor weak thing that
cannot have confidence in himself!
Well that’s our trouble, and that’s our sin. We try to have
confidence in the things of earth—in ourselves. We fish around for someplace
to lean upon, and everything gives way. Everything gives way. Our
self-righteousnesses are as filthy rags. Don’t have any
confidence in them. The Bible says, “He that trusteth in his own heart is a
fool.” Let’s quit it, and let us put our confidence where it
is absolutely safe.
… Selected Quotes:
“And when the Son of man cometh,
shall he find faith upon this earth?” No. Men don’t pray like
that. They don’t pray in faith. They don’t lift up holy
hands. In the first place, they have no holy hands to lift
up… Beloved, shall He find faith upon this earth? That’s for you and me to
decide. “Cast not away therefore your confidence. It hath great recompence
of reward.” It’s the confidence of God’s saints who do not
trust in their own selves that will defeat the devil and put him back into the
pit where he belongs.
…
I’ve said to God some time ago when I
was in a trial, “A thousand fall at my side, ten thousand at my right
hand.” How do I expect to escape? “It shall not come nigh
me!” “Cast not away your confidence.”
…
God had to allow the enemy to come.
God had to allow Hezekiah to come face to face with the worst possible
situation. “We had the sentence of death in ourselves that we might learn
not to trust in ourselves, but in the Living God who raiseth the dead.” And when Paul had learned that lesson, God sent life
through him. And the whole church is drinking from that river of life to this
day because Paul didn’t back down, but he trusted in the Living God who raiseth
the dead.
Beloved, therein lies an eternal lesson for all of us:
“Cast not away your confidence.” Cast it away if your
confidence is in yourself, or in your religious order, or your organization, or
in your own righteousness, or in your own faith even. Then, cast it away
because it’s full of holes. But if your confidence is in the Lord Jesus Christ
“who was delivered for our offenses and was raised again for our
justification,” don’t cast it away, because “He cannot deny
Himself;” He can’t. If we fail to believe, yet He is
faithful. Oh, to learn this lesson! “With confidence I now draw nigh.” Since
when? Why, since God raised Him from the dead.
…
By Him we draw nigh… In His name, I have “boldness and access with confidence.” And that’s why he says, “cast not away therefore your
confidence.” Without that confidence, you’re defeated. “Let
him pray in faith, nothing wavering. For if you waver, don’t expect anything
from the Lord.” You’re not honoring Jesus Christ when you don’t
have that confidence in the Son of God, when you don’t give Him all the glory:
“Not I but Christ.” Hallelujah! And when I
come to God with that confidence, I come in the name of Jesus Christ,
and my God will honor that faith and that confidence.
…
Why this great “Pilot” who calls
these things “that be not as though they were,” and who calls
all the hosts of heaven by name, and they obey Him, He says,
“you little worm, don’t be afraid, I’ll make a ‘threshing instrument’ out of
you that can bite, ‘having teeth.’” “They that wait upon the
Lord shall renew their strength.” Beloved, shall we be
confident? Draw nigh with confidence. Illustrations:
A story of friendship with an airline pilot, and how it
gave unusual privileges. “Your Pilot is not only your friend, that whole
‘airliner’ is yours. ‘All things work together for good.’ ‘If God be for us who can be against us?’ ‘He that
spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not with
Him also…’” (from 14:12) A reference to an illness at 18 years of age. (from 18:53) German at 9:58:
Hymn by Paul Gerhard from 1656, stanzas 1 (second half), 5,
and 6:
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Befiehl
du deine Wege,
Und was dein Herze kränkt,
Der allertreusten Pflege
Des, der den Himmel lenkt!
Der Wolken, Luft und Winden,
Gibt Wege, Lauf und Bahn,
Der wird auch Wege finden,
Da dein Fuß gehen kann.
Und ob
gleich alle Teufel
Hier wollten widerstehn,
(HRW: Dir wollten widerstehn)
So wird doch ohne Zweifel
Gott nicht zurückegehn;
Was er sich vorgenommen,
Und was er haben will,
Das muss doch endlich kommen
Zu seinem Zweck und Ziel.
Hoff, o du arme Seele,
Hoff und sei unverzagt!
Gott wird dich aus der Höhle,
Da dich der Kummer plagt,
Mit großen Gnaden rücken;
Erwarte nur die Zeit,
So wirst du schon erblicken
Die Sonn’ der schönsten Freud’.
(HRW: Die Sonn' der höchsten Freud’)
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Commit
your goings (ways),
And whatever hurts you,
To the most faithful care—
To the one who controls the heavens!
The one who for the clouds, the air, and the winds,
Makes paths, and ways, and tracks,
He will also find ways,
Where your foot can tread.
And even
if all devils
Would want to resist,
(HRW: Would resist you)
Yet without a doubt
God will not go back.
What he has resolved to do,
And what he wills,
That finally has to come
To its purpose and aim.
Hope,
O poor soul!
Hope, and be not discouraged!
Out of the cave, God will
(Where affliction plagues you)
Relocate you with great grace,
Just wait for the time with expectance,
And you will surely see
The sun of the brightest joy.
(HRW: The sun of the highest joy.)
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References:
My Sins Are Blotted Out, I Know, a hymn by Merrill
Dunlop, 1927
My sins are blotted out, I know!
My sins are blotted out, I know!
They are buried in the depths of the deepest sea.
My sins are blotted out, I know!
Arise, My Soul, Arise,
a hymn by Charles Wesley, 1742:
Five bleeding wounds He bears;
received on Calvary;
They pour effectual prayers; they strongly plead for me:
“Forgive him, O forgive,” they cry,
“Forgive him, O forgive,” they cry,
“Nor let that ransomed sinner die!”
My God is reconciled; His pardoning
voice I hear;
He owns me for His child; I can no longer fear.
With confidence I now draw nigh,
With confidence I now draw nigh,
And “Father, Abba, Father,” cry.
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