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At the commencement of this worship
service and funeral service, we would appreciate if you could
just check that your mobile phone is either on silent mode or it
is turned off. We would really appreciate that
and we'll see if any embarrassment on your behalf and also respect
even the service for which it has been convened for. It was
God, the Holy Spirit, through the penmanship of Solomon, who
said in Ecclesiastes 7, verse 2, it is better to go to the
house of mourning than to go to the house of feasting, for
that is the end of all men, and the living will lay it to his
heart. Today God, in his providence,
has brought us to the house of mourning. in which we are reminded
of God's sovereignty in death as well as in life. I trust that
the reality of our own day of death, the sureness of the final
judgment, and the greatness of God's unending eternity will
cause every heart to be solemnized in this church today. On behalf
of the Lamont Family Circle, let me thank you for coming to
the funeral for the late Mrs. Nan Lamont. I know that your
presence here today, as well as your expressions of sympathy
and tokens of love in recent days, have been a tremendous
comfort to them as a family circle. And surely the large attendance
at the House of God on a weekday surely evidences the high esteem
that Mrs. Lamont was hailed, as well as
the family circle who are gathered with us today. As the minister
of this congregation here in Portland-Owen Free Presbyterian
Church, I want, on behalf of the eldership, the committee,
and the church family here to extend our sincere Christian
sympathies to Mrs. Lamont's surviving family circle. We extend our sympathies to Mrs. Lamont's son, Brian, and his
wife, Christine, to their children, Oliver and Natalie, to their
spouses, Emily and Mason, and their children, Judah, Elsa,
and Meva. Sympathy is also extended to
Mrs. Jean Wilson, the last surviving
individual within the Logan family, and Mrs. Lamont's only surviving
sister, and also to the family members of the late Mr. Stuart Logan, Margaret, and William. To all who knew Mrs. Lamont,
we assure you, as a church family here, of our prayers in coming
days. May God, the God of all comfort,
may he be pleased to grant unto you beauty for ashes, the oil
of joy for mourning, and the garment of praise for the spirit
of heaviness. I want to turn to our opening
praise, our opening item of worship. It is the Psalm 23, the shepherd's
psalm. The Lord's my shepherd, I'll
not want. He makes me down to lie. We'll
stand and we'll worship God as we sing the psalm together. Let
me encourage you to sing well today, please. The Psalm 23.
Let's stand to sing. The Lord's my shepherd I'll not
want, He makes me down to lie. pasture and staff me comfort
still my table that has furnished In presence of my foes, My head
I doss with oil anoint, And my cup overflows. Goodness and mercy all my life
shall surely follow me, and in God's house forevermore my dwelling
place You may be seated. Can I just say before we come
to the Lord in prayer, that I received a telephone call just before
I came out to go to make my way to the family home, to Brian's
home. It was the Reverend Gordon Ferguson
and the Reverend Gordon Ferguson wanted me to pass on his sympathies. He cannot be here today, his
other engagements to attend to and so I know that Mr. Ferguson,
Reverend Ferguson was a neighbour and also a good friend. and when
he was the student minister here long before our dear friend Mr.
Linden came to the congregation. So he extends sympathies to the
family circle. Let's unite in prayer, please,
together. We'll come to the throne of heavenly grace. Our loving
Father, we come to Thee in the name that is above all other
names, in the name of our blessed Savior, Lord Jesus Christ. We come by faith, Lord. We enter
in, Lord. Into thy presence we come with
boldness, with confidence, not because of anything which we
possess, but because today we find, those of us who know thee,
we find ourselves robed in the righteousness of Christ and covered
in the garments of salvation. We thank thee for that great
exchange that took place when we bowed the knee and humbled
ourselves at the foot of the cross We thank Thee that Christ
took our sin onto His body. He took our sin to Himself. As it were, dear God, He became
sin for us who knew no sin. He bore the wrath of God that
was due our sin in his own sacred and blessed body, and he in turn
gave to us his perfect righteousness. Oh, the wondrous exchange that
it is that Christ would clothe us in his righteousness, having
taken from us the rags of our own self-righteousness. We come,
Lord, and we thank thee for, O God, the opportunity to gather
to worship Thee, we understand, we are aware, Lord, for the occasion
to which we have been brought to this place of public worship.
Lord, we understand the sorrow and the grief, dear God, that
is experienced by the family circle gathered with, oh God,
us today. We understand, Lord, the rending
of the heart, and yet we bless Thee that there's comfort found
in the gospel of Jesus Christ. We thank you for that glad day
when Mrs. Lamont put her faith and trust
in Jesus Christ. Thank you for that moment on
her life's journey where she understood that she was a sinner,
that she was estranged from God, that she knew not God. She was,
Lord, in a standing before God that found her alienated from
God and an enmity with God. And yet we thank you that all
that changed. when she confessed her sin and
repented of it and believed the gospel of Jesus Christ. We thank
Thee, O God, for her life and testimony. Lord, we remember
her fondly. Remember, O God, her faithfulness
in the work of God. and her commitment to the cause
of Jesus Christ, her love for souls, her praying ministry unseen
by many, and yet Lord consistently engaged in down through many,
many years. And we pray, Lord, that thou
wilt come now and comfort those that are left behind. We pray,
dear Father, that they may know the comfort of God in and through
his word today. We pray, dear Father, that you'll
draw near. Grant, dear Father, thy presence
in this house. May thy power be known. May thy
speaking voice be heard. Oh, we understand that there
are many in our community who care not for spiritual things,
who do not concern themselves about the things of death and
of eternity. But we pray, dear God, that in
this house today, they will be confronted, dear God, with these
matters. And they'll come to trust in
man's Savior and in man's Lord and Master. O come, dear God,
by, we pray. Help Brian, we ask, as he gives
tribute to his dear mother. And we pray, dear God, that you'll
assist even in that. And then, in the preaching of
thy word, we thank thee for the God who never dies, him, he who
is immortal, invisible, to the everlasting God, the God who
does not change. And from him we derive all our
comfort today, knowing that those who die in Christ are with Christ,
and therefore for them, as Paul said, it is far better. So answer prayer. And guide,
Lord, throughout the rest of this service. We pray this in
and through the Savior's precious name. These are prayers. Amen
and amen. I would know that many words
of comfort have been expressed to the family over the last number
of days, whether that was through maybe a text message, whether
that was by your presence in the family home. But there is
only really one source of comfort to which we can go to and derive.
Blessed comfort and that is to the scriptures of holy truth
the scriptures are described in the book of Romans in the
chapter number 15 they're described there as The scriptures are the
comfort off the scriptures, and so we're turning to the Word
of God to read a number of portions We're reading first of all from
John chapter 14 These are the words of the Lord Jesus Christ
to his disciples, to his followers, to those who had trusted in him.
You remember that. If you're not a Christian, these
were not written for you, but these were written for those
who have come to trust in Jesus Christ, as our sister Mrs. Lamont
did. Jesus Christ said, let not your
heart be troubled. Ye believe in God, believe also
in me. In my Father's house are many
mansions. it were not so I would have told
you I go to prepare a place for you and if I go and prepare a
place for you I will come again and receive you unto myself that
where I am there ye may be also and whether I go you know and
the way you know Thomas saith unto him Lord, we know not whether
thou goest, and how can we know the way? Jesus saith unto him,
I am the way, the truth, and the life. No man cometh on to
the Father but by me. And then later on in the chapter,
in the verse 27, Jesus Christ said, peace. I leave with you,
my peace I give unto you, not as the world giveth, give I unto
you. Let not your heart be troubled,
neither let it be afraid. And then in 1 Corinthians chapter
15, we read in the verse 51, behold, I show you a mystery.
We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed. In a moment,
in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump. For the trumpet
shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible, and
we shall be changed. For this corruptible must put
on incorruption, and this mortal must put on immortality. So when
this corruptible shall have put on incorruption, and this mortal
shall have put on immortality, then shall be brought to pass
the saying, that is written, death is swallowed up in victory. O death, where is thy sting?
O grave, where is thy victory? The sting of death is sin, the
strength of sin is the law, but thanks be to God, which giveth
us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. And then our third
and final reading is found in the book of the Revelation. John
is given insight into all that happens in heaven, and he comes
to record for us Hear these words beginning at the verse number
nine. After this, I beheld, and though a great multitude, which
no man could number, of all nations and kindreds and people and tongues,
stood before the throne and before the Lamb, clothed with white
robes and palms in their hands, and cried with a loud voice,
saying, Salvation to our God, which sitteth upon the throne
and unto the Lamb. And all the angels stood round
about the throne, and about the elders and the four beasts, and
fell before the throne on their faces, and worshipped God, saying,
Amen, blessing, and glory, and wisdom, and thanksgiving, and
honour, and power, and might, be unto our God for ever and
ever. Amen. One of the elders answered,
saying unto me, What are these which are arrayed in white robes,
and whence came they? And I said unto him, Sir, thou
knowest. And he said unto me, These are
they which come out of great tribulation, and have washed
their robes, and made them white in the blood of the Lamb. Therefore
are they before the throne of God, and serve him day and night
in his temple. And he that sitteth on the throne
shall dwell among them. They shall hunger no more, neither
thirst any more. Neither shall the sun lighten
them, nor any heat. For the lamb which is in the
midst of the throne shall feed them, and shall lead them on
to living fountains of waters. And God shall wipe away all tears
from their eyes. Amen. May God bless the public
reading of his infallible truth. We're going to ask our brother,
Mr. Lamont, our brother Brian, to come and say a few words in
tribute for his mom today. Thank you. Quite a turnout for a 92-year-old
on a Tuesday. I think it says a lot about my
mum. Nancy Logan, or Nan, as she much
preferred, was born in the Craigs, as it was called then, now down
on the road on the 14th of April, 1932. She was the second daughter
of Hugh and Elizabeth Logan. She survived by her younger sister,
Jean, who's here today, She was also referred to as Stuart Logan's
sister in some quarters. Richard mentioned at Stuart's
funeral last year that he was often addressed as Stuart Logan's
son. Well, the association applied
to his sisters as well. As I said, she was born in 1932.
That's a long time ago, seven years before the start of World
War II. She attended Craig School and
Balamina Technical School. She did well at school, and in
a different era would probably have been college or university
material. She had pretensions to be a teacher, and I think
she was made a very good one. She certainly taught me a thing
or two. She worked in the offices of both Hamilton's and Stuart's
stores in Ballymena in their payroll and accounts department.
She was always great with figures, and thankfully she passed that
on to me from an early age. She married Jim Lamont in September
1960, moved a couple of miles down the hill to Maboy Road,
where she remained until August last year, and became a full-time
farmer's wife, cook, baker extraordinaire. Her apple pies and buns were
to die for. I arrived in June 1963, and she
added mother to her many titles. She was a great mom. When you're
a kid, you work out quickly which parent is easier to manipulate
when you need something or want something. In my case, that was
mum. Dad would see through my ploys
fairly quickly. I think mum did as well, but
she was kind to a fault. I'm sure many here today could
echo that. Quite a few people have spoken
to me over the last few days about her kindness and thoughtfulness.
She loved nothing more than gathering a group of us cousins and friends
together and heading off to Poglenone Forest, or the stream behind
the house, with a humper of food. These weren't gourmet picnics,
but a pan, loaf, and butter, plus a few portions of Kearney's
chips. Boy, would they hit the spot. And then there were the
Boxing Night family get-togethers on Maboy Road. All of us who
attended those remember them so fondly, the fun, Laughter
and general mayhem ensued every 26th of December. Great lasting
memories of my father, Uncle William, and Uncle Stuart, who
have all gone to glory. Mum's kindness knew no bounds.
On many occasions, I witnessed her giving up her lunch or dinner
to a workman or some random person who was helping Dad out with
something on the farm. She'd think nothing of it. Not
only was she a loving mum, she became a doting grandmother to
Natalie and Oliver. She travelled over to Manchester
in 2018 to attend Ollie and Emily's wedding at the ripe old age of
86. The photograph on the Order of
Service is actually taken at his wedding. She was there too
when Natalie married Mason in 2020. She really took a shine to Mason. especially after he acted as
her porter and attendant through Belfast and Manchester airports
when she went to Ollie and Emily's wedding. She enjoyed Basin's
sense of humor and they both shared a passion for Viscount
biscuits. She lived to see her great-grandson Judah and two
great-granddaughters, Isla and Maeva, who are both with us today.
Judah's in Belfast with his other granny. She had trouble in recent
times remembering their names, but we'll forgive her for that
in 92. Part of mum died seven years ago when dad passed away.
I don't think she was ever quite the same. They were an inseparable
duo who are now reunited. As old age took hold, she became
a different person from the one I described earlier, but until
a few weeks ago, she could still get around without a walking
aid or a stick, Aunt Gina and I used to tease her that she
was too proud to use a stick, which didn't always go down well.
She had quite a few health issues throughout her life. She also
survived a horrendous bus crash in 1992, where one of her best
friends and next-door neighbour Lily Barclay lost her life. I
think many folk who had an experience like that would never have set
their foot in a bus again, but not Nan Lamont. Her near-death
experience didn't seem to deter her in the slightest. She and
Dad continued to go on coach trips to Scotland once or twice
a year, almost right up until he suffered a stroke in 2017.
I've highlighted her kindness to others and her loving nature
as a sister, wife, mum, aunt, granny, great-granny. But even
though she had all those qualities, that is not what ultimately defined
her. Her personal faith in God was what defined her. And it
was evident from anyone who knew her that this was the case. Up until her eyesight allowed,
her Bible was never far away. She loved hymn singing. And it
was lovely to see her singing along when someone came into
the home in a huckle to sing. It was amazing that even though
she couldn't have told you what she had for her lunch half an
hour earlier, she could remember every word of hymns that she
had learned from her childhood. She was a faithful member of
this church for 50 plus years, I'd imagine. I don't know exactly
how many. And until her health deteriorated in recent years,
she hardly ever missed a service. I describe her as a godly woman
who didn't seek after the limelight, but wasn't afraid to share her
faith with others. Just as an example, when she
attended Ollie's wedding in Manchester, Mason and her shared a taxi from
the airport into the city. Before exiting the taxi, she
reached into her handbag, pulled out a gospel tract, and gave
it to the Asian taxi driver. She often carried a supply of
tracts and leaflets in her handbag. That was mum. She was always
writing down Bible verses and little nuggets from sermons that
impacted her. Natalie picked up this little
notebook from the house the other evening. It's one of many she
kept. It's dated the 1st of January, Healy 7. I had a quick look through
it last night, and this phrase jumped off the page. She wrote
this. It says, what we call life is
a journey to death. What we call death is the gateway
to life. And she just wrote it down sometime
in 1988. And down below it says, those
who leave us remain forever in our hearts. How true that is. We'll miss her so much, even though she hasn't been such
a constant presence in our lives for the last while. On that note,
I'd like to thank the staff at Antrim Erie Hospital who cared
for Mum in the last few weeks. The staff at Carnmoyne Residential
Home, where she lived so contentedly for 14 months before taking unwell. The carers who called with her
when she still lived at Maboy Road. I'd also like to thank
all those who texted and called about her and visited her in
hospital in recent days. Too many to mention just now,
but you know who you are. I'd also like to thank Caldwell
Funeral Services for the efficient and dignified way they've arranged
and conducted the funeral today. And thanks also to Iris Farmhouse
Cuisine for the food which will be served after the service.
I think I've said enough. Mum never did like folk complimenting
her, especially in her old age. She would smile when someone
said, you're looking well, Nan. Often replying, are you joking?
And follow up with, what about all these wrinkles? Her wrinkles
and pain have gone. Her confusion from dementia is
over. She's more alive now than she has ever been. Jim and Nan
have been reunited. I hope and pray that everyone
here today will ensure that they will meet her again someday.
Thank you. We appreciate, Brian, your words
concerning your mummy. We know that you loved her dearly,
and she loved you as a family circle and would often speak
about you, and I would often ask about you, and she's only
too happy to boast about her son and about her grandchildren
and then great-grandchildren as well. You couldn't but love
Nan Lamont. She'd always say, I have no enemies.
That's what she'd always say. She'd always say, I have no enemies.
And I can truly say that that is the case. Nan Lamont had no
enemies. Mrs. Lamont, affectionately known
to us as Nan, was a Stalwart supporter and member of the work
of God here in Portland-Owen Free Presbyterian Church. Over
the last 11 years that I have been here as the minister, there
was hardly a meeting that Mrs. Lamont was not present whenever
her health permitted. Lord's Day services, prayer meetings,
weeks of ministry meetings, gospel missions, children's meeting,
carol services, you name it, one of life's great double acts,
Jim and Nan Lamont were always there. present. You never had
to ask, would Jim and Nan be here? Because you just knew that
they would be here. You knew that they would be in
their place. In fact, you ever rarely saw
them apart. They came as a pair, apart from
session meetings. She wasn't allowed into session
meetings. But you rarely saw them apart. Whenever our daughter,
Abigail, was little, we would have headed up to the north coast
for a walk. And you could be sure that if
there hadn't have been a local funeral taking place, Jim and
Nan were parked in the front row of the East Strand car park,
sleeping in the car while we ducked past in case he saw me
and brought the report back again. There's one word I believe we
could sum up Nan with, faithful, faithful. faithful to her duties
as a mother, faithful in her love to her husband, and faithful
in her devotion to Christ, and faithful in her support of God's
work. She never prayed outwardly at
the prayer meeting, but she was a woman of prayer. She told me
that she had a list of people on her prayer list that she was
praying for. Praying for their salvation. You know, she would always end
our visits, we were able to be with her. I tried to make it
out once a month after our brother Jim passed away, out to see her,
and she would always just have said, thanks for calling, thanks
for calling. And Saturday morning, Nan went
to be with her savior, the one that she trusted in for salvation. Her long race, and it was a long
race, her long race of life, was run, and the crown was won. She entered into the joy of her
Lord. As a reserved and a private lady,
as Brian has said, not wishing ever to seek the limelight, I
know that she wouldn't want me to say anything more about her,
and I don't intend to do that. She would have been very insistent
that I would have preached the gospel to this congregation,
because there may be those whose names are on that prayer list,
and who still know not Jesus Christ as your Savior. And so
I want to do that, I want to read just one verse of scripture.
You'll find it in the book of Jeremiah, and it's a chapter
number 12, and it is the verse number five. And the word of
God says in Jeremiah 12, verse five, if thou hast run with the
footmen, and they have wearied thee, then how canst thou contend
with horses? And if in the land of peace wherein
thou trustest they wearied thee, then how wilt thou do in the
swelling of Jordan? You'll find my text for today
in the form of a question that is asked at the end of the verse
number five. How wilt thou do? in the swelling
of Jordan. A little context might aid in
our understanding of these words. The men of Anahoth, Jeremiah's
hometown, had threatened God's prophet with death if he prophesied
any more in the name of the Lord. Bewildered at such hatred and
aminosity leveled against him, we find God's servant in the
initial verses of this chapter complaining to the Lord, complaining
about what he was experiencing with regard to the hatred that
was being leveled against him as God's servant, as God's prophet. God reminds Jeremiah here in
the verse number five, What he was presently experiencing by
the hatred leveled against him was only but a small trial compared
to a far greater trial that was yet ahead of him. No smaller
trials are pictured here in terms of footmen, and the Lord reminds
the prophet that if he had been wearied with the footmen, well,
how was he ever going to contend with horses? In other words,
how was he ever going to contend with trials that were of a far
greater degree and a far greater intensity than what he was presently
experiencing as men spoke against him? And then God comes to remind
Jeremiah at the end of the verse that the greatest of trials was
yet ahead of him. It's pictured here in terms of
the swelling of Jordan. It's as if the Lord was saying
to Jeremiah, Jeremiah, if you fainted in the day of the smallest
of trials, how will you fare when you come to the greatest
trial of life that is pictured here in terms of the swelling
of Jordan? It brings to our minds a question
that needs asking. What is this great trial that
God is speaking here in terms of the swelling of Jordan. Well,
I believe it's speaking to us of death. When we come to the
scriptures, the River Jordan is often a picture, a type, a
representation of death. I know that there's a number
of Baptists here today, and we don't hold that against any Baptists
here today. I know the pastors here, Brian's
pastors, and we're delighted to have him. But we all like
a nice quote from Charles Spurgeon. We have all adopted him. Mr. Spurgeon, he said this concerning
the River Jordan and the land of Canaan, he says, is generally
used to shadow forth the rest which remains for the people
of God beyond the skies. Heaven is thus frequently described
as corresponding to the earthly inheritance of the Jews. When
this view is taken off the type, then Jordan is not unnaturally
likened on to death. Its dark waters are made to picture
forth in our minds the chill stream through which we weed
in our dying hour. Taking then the swelling of Jordan
to represent death for the purpose of then this funeral message,
the question that then comes to us all is how will we fare?
How will we fare in the swelling waters of death? You see, this
is a question that Mrs. Lamont allowed herself to be
confronted with, a question that she asked herself, and whenever
she asked herself the question, how would she fare in the waters
of death, she came to understand that she needed someone to carry
her through the chilly waters of death and to land her safe
on heaven's fair and happy shore. The one that she entrusted to
do that for her was the Lord Jesus Christ. The one who confronted
and the one who conquered death on her behalf. There are a number
of quick things I want us to notice with regard to this question
that is asked in Jeremiah 12 in the verse number five. Can
I say in the first place that the question that is asked here
is a sensible question. This is a sensible question.
I know that there are times in our lives when people ask us
questions and we ask ourselves the question with regard to them,
well, is that really a sensible question to ask? However, whenever
it comes to this particular question, the question about how we will
fare in the swelling waters of death, this is one that is very
sensible indeed. Because it is a question that
is based on the reality that the journey of life is going
to end for each and every one of us someday. The scriptures
remind us, nature around us reminds us. Even today reminds us, this
funeral service reminds us that someday we are going to die. It reminds us that we are mortal. We are dying. You only have to
go two chapters into the word of God and you hear these words
from the mouth of God himself. But off the tree of the knowledge
of good and evil thou shalt not eat of it, God speaking to Adam,
for in the day that thou eatest her off thou shalt surely die.
God spoke first about death. God was the first speaker about
death. Go forward into Genesis another
two chapters into chapter four and you'll find the first murder
recorded. when Cain kills his brother Abel. Jump into the next chapter, into
chapter five, and you'll find this phrase, and he died, and
he died, and he died. You find it nine times. In chapter
six through to eight, you have the account of the worldwide
flood in Noah's day when death reigned, with the exception of
all those who find themselves safely housed away behind the
door of the ark. And so each account in the opening
eight chapters of the very first book of the Bible reminds us
that from one man, sin's death and sin's reign of death has
passed upon all men and consequently all of us are going to die because
death is the wages of sin. Surely this question about then
your preparedness for death then is a sensible question. Because
in light of the reality that we're all going to die, we must
then be face to face and brought face to face with the question,
how will I fare when I come to die? How will I fare in the swelling
waters of death? I believe that this is a sensible
question for any gospel preacher to ask on an occasion like this. How will you fare in death? I'm
not concerned about how you're faring in life. I know that many
of you are faring well. I know that many of you have
done well in life. You've went through education. You're into
business. You're making plenty of money.
You have your house. You have your car. You have your
annual holidays. But as a gospel preacher, I'm
not really much concerned about how you're faring in life. I
trust you do well. My concern is about how you'll
fare in death. How will you fare when you go
out to meet God? When you go out to meet your
maker, the God that you despise, the God that you have rejected,
and his gospel and his son that you have mocked and ridiculed,
never believed on yourself, how will you fare in the swelling
of Jordan? How will you fare at death? You may have made your
funeral arrangements with the local undertaker. You may have
made your last will and testimony. You may have settled that family
dispute. But I'm asking you, have you
prepared for eternity? Have you prepared to meet your
God? Knowing that the journey from
the sterile corridors of a maternity ward to the cold slab of an undertaker's
funeral parlor is short, I'm convinced that this question
is a most sensible question to be asking today. So let me ask
you, if the swelling waters of death were to roll at your feet,
and were to sweep you away into God's great eternity. Before
this day was over, how will you fare in death's cold flood? Will the chilling waters of death
sweep you out of time into God's great eternity and into hell? Would death's cold river sweep
you into the caverns of the damned? To the place of endless night
and unending torment? I want to warn all who are gathered
here unseathed in this meeting house that with regard to this
matter of your soul's salvation, you've trifled long enough with
it. You've put it off for far too
long. It's about time that you got this matter of your soul
salvation settled once and for all before the swelling waters
of death takes you into eternity. And thus my counsel to you is
the counsel that Isaiah the prophet gave to Hezekiah in Isaiah 38
verse one. Thus saith the Lord, set thine
house in order, for thou shalt die. This is a most sensible
question to ask. This question asked by God's
servant, Jeremiah, or by God to Jeremiah, is not only a sensible
question, it is a solemn question. You'll not hear this question
being asked to you by your hairdresser the next time you go and get
your hair cut. How will you fare in death? The bartender will
not ask you whenever you attend the place of the public house,
he'll not ask you after he has pulled your pint for you, how
are you going to fare in death? The individual who you'll buy
your groceries from, as your groceries are being checked through,
they're not going to ask you this question, how will you fare
in death? But I'm asking you the question.
But more than this, God is asking you the question. It is a solemn
question. How will you fare in death? The matter of death is something
that solemnizes even the giddiest and carefree persons that live.
I have viewed as a minister, I have viewed young men and young
women who are wild in their living and sinful in their practices,
individuals who are indifferent in their thoughts about spiritual
things, but whenever death comes to a family circle, Well, then
things change and the silliness stops and it causes that individual
to think about serious things, solemn things. You know, death
is a solemn thing. Sadly, in society today, it's
not treated as such. We'll talk about everything and
anything, won't we, whenever we walk down behind the coffin
this afternoon, won't you be doing that? You'll talk about
the farm, and you'll talk about the milk prices, and you'll talk
about the weather, but you'll not talk about death. You'll
not talk about eternity. You'll not talk about your soul,
and how that soul of yours is going to go out into God's eternity,
and it must be prepared to do so, and you must make spiritual
preparation. This is a solemn question. How
will thy do in the swelling of Jordan. Oh, the death of a loved
one, the passing away of a neighbor in the local community, the decease
of even some well-known celebrity. And there in the celebrity world,
it solemnizes the heart. It brings to our own mind the
solemn thought that we too must needs die. All of us will die. The wicked, the righteous, the
godly, the ungodly, the friend of God, the foe of God will all
be brought to death. Have you pondered this serious,
solemn question? Ask yourselves these questions
here in the house of God in the stillness. How will it be with
me at death? And then go a little bit further
and ask yourself the question, how will it be with me in death? And then go a little bit further
and ask yourself the question, how will it be with me after
death? Here you are today in the house
of God. We're glad to see you. I know
that Mrs. Lamont prayed for individuals
gathered here today, and yet you still live on in your sin. You have no concern about the
solemn hour that is approaching your day of death, your hour
of death. You have no fear with regard
to give an account of your life before God, your maker. with
no spiritual preparation for death, how, sinner, in all honesty,
in all honesty, sinner, how do you think you will do when the
waters of death lap around your feet? One preacher asked, what will
you do when the cold waters of death are swelling and surging
and deepening around you? What will your rank avail you?
What will your wealth do for you? What will your talents profit
you? What will your pleasure supply at the moment when the
curtain has fallen upon all the false shadows of time and is
rising upon all the dread realities of eternity? I tell you, there
is nothing, nothing that these things will be able to do for
you. Rank and wealth and talent and world's pleasure will be
of no comfort for you in the day of death. as death's river
escorts you from time and into eternity. And yet there is hope
for you in the gospel, of course there is. For death's day has
not yet come, mercy is extended to you in the gospel. Oh, why
not take that sin burden of yours and cast it upon the Savior,
cast it at the foot of the cross? Mrs. Lamont did that many years
ago. She came as a sinner. as a hell-deserving
sinner, understanding her sinful state, she came to trust in the
only Saviour of sinners, the Lord Jesus Christ. Oh, why not
then you do that too? Take your place as a sinner.
Come believing, come repenting, come trusting, come receiving,
and by faith plunge into the fathomless sea of Christ's atoning
blood. If you do that, you'll have no
need to dread the river of death, for Christ will ferry you safely
across to the eternal heaven and to the eternal rest that
is heaven itself. Ah, but very quickly, one final
point. Yes, it is a serious question.
Of course it is. This is a solemn question, but
this is a specific question. This is a personal question. This question that is to be asked,
this question that is to be asked to and answered by every person
in the funeral today. For this question is personal
in its nature. God asks, how wilt thou do? in the swelling of Jordan. He's
not asking here, how will others do? How will the person next
to you in the pew? Maybe you're thinking that today.
How's this individual, the one that's sitting beside me, how
are they going to fare in death? That's not the question. The
question is, how will thou do? You, as an individual, every
individual in every pew, the question is poised to you, put
to you, how will thou do in the swelling of Jordan. Oh, that you'll come to Christ,
come to the Saviour, repent of sin and believe the gospel."
You see, the individual that does that has no fear, no dread
with regard to the swelling of death's waters. Why is that? We read concerning an individual
in Isaiah 43 verse 2, this is God's promise. When thou passest
through the waters, God says, I will be with that person. Who?
The redeemed one. I will be with the redeemed one,
and through the rivers they shall not overflow thee. One preacher
said, when the Christian pilgrim comes to the brink of the last
swelling stream over which they all must pass, Jesus Christ,
the great high priest, goes before and rolls back the swelling,
surging waves that the ransomed soul may pass safely over into
glory. That's what happened on Saturday
morning. In Andrew Marriott Hospital,
a safe crossing was afforded to Mrs. Nan Lamont. She was accompanied
through the swollen waters of death by her savior, her Lord,
her master, and her priest, the priest with the nail-scarred
hands, her great high priest. Let me ask you personally, specifically,
directly, how will thou do in the swelling of Jordan? How will you do? A prominent businessman spoke
one day to a Christian minister who had knocked on his door as
he went about doing a little bit of door-to-door evangelism.
Having conversed with the minister about spiritual matters for some
time, the businessman turned to the minister and said these
words. He says, I am interested in church matters and always
glad to see ministers when they call. But I have thought the
subject long over and carefully, and have come to the deliberate
decision that I have no need of Jesus Christ." The minister
left disappointed. Within one week that man, that
businessman was taken ill. His disease was accompanied with
such inflammation of the throat that he was unable to speak.
This enforced silence, however, continued to this hour of death
when he was unable to utter simply this one despairing whisper,
who shall carry me over the river? Who shall carry me over the river? Unsaved person, who will carry
you over death's river? when the swelling waters of death
encircle you? Will there be anyone to carry
you safely onto heaven's shore? Christ alone, Christ alone is
the one who ferries us safely to heaven. Oh, that today you
would find yourself trusting in him and trusting your safe
arrival there to the one who bled and died and rose again
for sinners just like Mrs. Lamont did. So I asked you, how
will you do in the swelling of Jordan? I tell you it fared well
for Mrs. Lamont. She went through that
river and she was landed safe on heaven's fair and happy shore. Will you be there? You'll only
ever be there through faith alone, in Christ alone. by the grace
of God alone. May today find you trusting in
the Lord Jesus Christ, and may God challenge hearts today in
this funeral service for Christ's sake. Amen. Before we sing our
last order, our hymn on the order of service, I want to make just
some very quick announcements. Could I ask you to remain standing
for a brief word of prayer? after we sing the closing hymn
and continue to stand while the earthly remains of Mrs. Lamont
are taken from this place of worship that she loved so dearly.
We'll then be making our way to the new cemetery on Lovers
Lane. Can I say that we need to be
there at a quarter past or by a quarter past one, so the family
will not be staying to shake hands. We need to make a move
with regard to that. If you're not going to that graveside
service, then tea and refreshments are served here in the church
hall provided by the FAMLI. The family will be then returning
for refreshments and others who have gone to the gravesite. So
please do remember that if you're staying. You have your tea, but
please also remember that the seats in the hall are needed
for them, the returning family. So do that as quickly and as
efficiently as you can. And that'll be served immediately
after this service has concluded. Let's stand to sing when we get
the notes of music. Our last hymn, when my life work
has ended, and I cross the swelling tide. We've been thinking about
that. I shall know him by the print of the nail in his hand.
Let's stand to sing the hymn, please. Let's stand to sing. When my
life's work is ended and I cross this swelling tide, when the
bright and glorious morning I shall see, I shall know my Redeemer
when I reach the other side, and His smile will be the first
to welcome me. I shall know Him, I shall know
Him As redeemed by His side I shall stand I shall know Him, I shall
know Him By the print of the nails in His hand Oh, the soul-thrilling
rapture when I blew his blessed face, and the luster of his kindly
beaming eye, I, my full heart, will praise him for the love
and grace that prepare for me a mansion in this sky I shall
know him I shall know him as redeemed by his side I shall
stand I shall know Him, I shall know Him By the print of the
nails in His hand All the dear ones in glory, how they beckon
me to come and are partying at the river, I recall. To the sweet vales of Eden they
will sing my welcome home, but I long to meet my Saviour first
of all. I shall know Him, I shall know
Him, I shall stand, I shall know Him,
I shall know Him by the print of the nails in His hand. Through the gates to that city
in a robe of spotless white He will lead me where no tears shall
ever fall In the glad song of ages I shall mingle with delight
But I long to meet my Savior first of all I shall know Him,
I shall know Him, as redeemed by His sight I shall stand. I shall know Him, I shall know
Him, by the print of the nails in His hand. Our loving Father, we thank Thee
for the one with the nail-scarred hand, the one who lived and died
and shed His precious blood in order that we might be redeemed,
delivered, rescued from sin, rescued from hell. We thank Thee,
O God, that Mrs. Lamont trusted in Christ. She died as one who was united
to Christ. And therefore, we thank Thee,
dear God, that she is with Christ. Pray, Lord, that thou will bless
as we continue on, as we continue, Lord, to the graveside. And,
Lord, as we have the committal service, we pray that thy hand
will be upon us. And therefore we pray that thou
will part us with thy blessing. May the grace of the Lord Jesus
Christ, the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit
rest and remain and abide upon all of thy believing people until
Christ comes or calls. We offer prayer in and through
Jesus' great name. Amen and amen. Okay. Oh. I have chosen you. Yeah. Yeah.
Funeral of Mrs. Nan Lamont
Series Funeral Service
| Sermon ID | 1126241813377192 |
| Duration | 1:00:55 |
| Date | |
| Category | Funeral Service |
| Bible Text | Jeremiah 12:5 |
| Language | English |
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