Luke 2 (The Angel’s song)
By Lance Moore in podcasts on December 30, 2018
Sunday morning service: Glyn Williams, 30 Dec 2018
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Sunday morning service: Glyn Williams, 30 Dec 2018
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This Child is God (Galatians 4:1 – 11)
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Sunday morning service: 16/12/2018 (Glyn Williams)
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Sunday evening Bible study
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We come this morning for the first time to the Seventh Commandment. A
commandment containing far-reaching implications. A commandment that speaks to
an epidemic that holds our culture in its vicious clutches. A sin that destroys marriages,
that ruins children in the covenant family, that disrupts society, yet sadly is largely no
longer frowned upon. A sin from God’s perspective; a convenience and a pleasure
from mans’.
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The book of Ruth tells of a young Moabite widow who, out of love for her widowed Israelite mother-in-law, abandoned her own culture, declaring, “Your people shall be my people, and your God my God” (1:16). Though she was destitute and needing to rely on the kindness of others, Ruth’s disposition and character captured the attention of Boaz, a close relative of her deceased husband. Boaz fulfilled the role of kinsman-redeemer and took Ruth as his wife. Ruth serves as a wonderful example of God’s providential care of His people, and of His willingness to accept Gentiles who seek Him. Ruth was an ancestor of Christ, and that effectively is what this redemptive story points us to.
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We find ourselves this morning for the second time in one of the most intense recordings
in Mark’s Gospel pertaining to opposition arising against Christ in His Ministry. We see in
this context how Christ had been reviled by family members and blasphemed by
members of the Scribes of the Pharisees. First, they called Him insane and after that, they
accused him of being possessed by Satan himself and doing all His “so-called miracles”
by the power of the prince of darkness.
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As we have worked our way through the Sixth Commandment and considered the
implications pertaining to murder and how the violation of this command is a breach of
God’s Law, I thought it would be helpful to briefly pause our expositions on the Ten
Commandments and consider an aspect that I alluded to on numerous occasions
during our expositions of the Sixth Commandment.
We saw very clearly that murder in all of its forms, whether it be suicide, or euthanasia
or abortion or any other form, is a sin that God forgives upon repentance. In other words,
murder is not the unpardonable sin. That though, begs the question: what is the
unpardonable sin? I feel this is a question we need to answer even in light of the Ten
Commandments and I think this is the perfect time to do so. I plan on doing this by
spending time in this text for the next two Lord’s Days after which we will Lord willing
return to our study of the Ten Commandments.
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Psalms 119:105 | Glyn Williams
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