THINGS THAT ARE SEEN MADE OF THOSE THAT ARE UNSEEN:
Anglican Orthodox Church Worldwide Communion
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Blog Archive
Friday, July 17, 2026
“Where I am, Thither Ye Cannot Come.”
“Then said the Jews among themselves, Whither will he go, that we shall not find him? will he go unto the dispersed among the Gentiles, and teach the Gentiles? What manner of saying is this that he said, Ye shall seek me, and shall not find me : and where I am, thither ye cannot come? John 7:35-36
“Where I am, Thither Ye Cannot Come.” — Because they did not belong there, and were unwilling to change. Their character was exactly opposite to that which makes heaven what it is. They belonged to the other kingdom. He that knows and loves only savage sounds, cannot sing in the Oratorio of the Messiah. The ignorant man cannot come, while he remains ignorant, where the cultured man is in the love and appreciation of literature.
And the Pharisees had neglected their disease till it was too late to cure it. They had been playing with the fire that was slowly burning up their dwelling, and warming themselves by it, till in spite of all warn- ings it was impossible to save the house.
The Beauty of God.
“And let the beauty of the LORD our God be upon us: and establish thou the work of our hands upon us; yea, the work of our hands establish thou it..” Psa. 90: 17.
There are many wonderful prayers in the Bible. The book is in fact a
storehouse of prayers. We have in the text one of the most remarkable, one of the most glorious that the sacred volume contains. It was the Holy Ghost that filled the writer with the intense yearning that some of the beauty of the Divine nature should adorn his character. Every child of God experiences the same yearning in a greater or less degree. In what then does the beauty of the Divine character consist? I. The Beauty of his holiness. God is glorious in holiness. Every thought, every word, every deed of his is absolutely perfect and holy. We too must seek to be holy and pure. “Be ye holy, for I am holy.” II. The beauty of the Divine self-sacrifice. Each person of the blessed Trinity has sacrificed himself for the
salvation of men. ‘God so loved the world that he gave his Son.” The
Saviour gave himself. The Spirit is ever giving himself by consenting: to dwell in the hearts of men. III. We have the beauty of Divine love. God delights in his children. He regards them as his jewels (Mal. 3:17). He longs for their perfect happiness here and hereafter. Let us rest upon this glorious fact, and may God’s love enable us to love our fellows. “Let the beauty of the Lord our God be upon us.”
THE FAMILY ALTAR
July 17.
"As new-born babes, desire the sincere milk of the Word, that
ye may grow thereby; if so be ye have tasted that the Lord is
gracious." 1 Pet. 2, 2. 3.
By faith we are born again and made blessed children of God.
But we are not to remain "babes/' weak and feeble in faith, but
are to grow in the knowledge of saving truth and to walk securely
and firmly in the ways of God. As new-born babes can thrive
only on pure milk, so our faith can grow strong only through
the "sincere milk of the Word"; and we shall hunger for it and
never grow tired ai it, no matter how old we grow in years, if we
have tasted how gracious the Lord has been to us. Good, pure
milk gives new "life and strength even to old men and women.
Now, there is a precious little book that contains the sincere milk
of the faith-sustaining Word of God in most palatable form.
That book is known as Luther's Small Catechism. Leopold Eanke,
the great historian, writes of this blessed book: "The Catechism
which Luther published in 1529, and of which he says that, as
old a Doctor as he was, he himself used it as his prayer, is as
childlike as it is profound, as easy of grasp as it is unfathomable,
as simple as it is sublime. Happy the man who nourishes his soul
with it, who clings to it ! For every moment he possesses a change-
less consolation; he has under a thin shell that kernel of truth
which is enough for the wisest of the wise." This little book Jbas
proved of inestimable blessing to the Church in the past. It has
been very aptly called the "layman's Bible," for it planted the
knowledge of Christ's saving truth in the hearts of countless
millions of the common people. If things in the Church nowadays
are to change for the better, we shall have to return to a more
devoted use of the Catechism in our homes, in our Sunday-schools,
and in our churches. The prevailing indifference to pure Gospel-
doctrine in many Lutheran church-bodies, the woeful ignorance
of even the simplest Bible-truths we meet with so often are chiefly
due to our sad neglect of the Catechism. We parents, teachers,
and, above ally our pastors must learn to drill the Catechism into
our children and people, as did our Lutheran forefathers who
thought so highly of the precious little book that they made it
one of the Confessions of our Church.
Lord, grant that we e'er pure retain
The catechismal doctrine plain,
As Luther taught the heavenly truth
In simple words to tender youth.
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