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If you are a first-time visitor
or have visited a few times and would like more information about
our church, if you would raise your hand, we'll have one of
the ushers bring you a packet of information about our church. We have a few announcements this
morning. You might have heard it said that there's something
fishy going on at Grace Church. And you're right, there is. There
was a fish fry yesterday. And if you go into the fellowship
hall, you'll know for sure that there was a fish fry in there.
So that's a segue to say that we are having our missions conference
this weekend. And so that will conclude tonight. Andrew Holbrook will be preaching
in the service tonight and we'll be having communion tonight. So after the service today, we're
gonna have a fellowship meal. So you're all welcome to come
and stay for the fellowship meal. We got plenty of food to share.
And on Wednesday night at 7 p.m. we have services, time of prayer
and Bible study. And also, for the missions conference,
when we had the fish fry, we were taking donations to raise
funds for men going to serve in Alaska with vassal ministries
serving missions in Alaska. So it's not too late to give
to that. There's a basket in the fellowship hall you can put
funds in, or you can write a check to Grace Church with the memo
line, Alaska team trip. And then also as a reminder,
a congregational meeting will be held on Sunday, February 23rd,
immediately following the worship service for the purpose of electing
Eugene Oldham as a senior pastor of Grace Church and approving
his call. And secondly, to establish a
new search committee comprised of Decession, Jerome Diggs, and
Bev Nolan to find an associate pastor to serve at Grace Church.
So that's our announcements for today. Let's take time now to
prayer our hearts and minds for worship. and and you you you you Would you please stand for the
call to worship? The call to worship comes from Psalm 46,
verse 10. Hear the word of God. Be still
and know that I am God. I will be exalted among the nations.
I will be exalted in the earth. Please join with me in prayer. Father in heaven, we thank you
for your tender mercies for us that you give us each day. They
are new every morning. And we pray that during this
worship service that your spirit would be strong in us, that you
would work the word of God into our hearts, that we would hide
that word in our hearts that we might not sin against you,
and that we would rejoice in the work that you have done in
making us a new creation, sealing us with your Holy Spirit, giving
us your word, and renewing us each day into holiness. We pray
that we would, in our fellowship here, confess our sins to you,
knowing that we are weak people and that you are our strength.
We pray that as you remind us this weekend that I have a focus
on missions, Your mission was to save us, and your mission
is to use us to reach out to others in our home, in our community,
in the world, to seek and save those that are lost. Through
that power of your Holy Spirit, only can that be done, and through
your willing servants. And we pray you would make us
willing to do that. We rejoice in the fact that There is only
one way of salvation, and that is through the work of our Lord
and Savior, Jesus Christ, who died on the cross to take upon
the penalty of our sins and to give us his righteousness. What a wonderful, wonderful gift
that is, and we pray that as we meditate upon that now, that
would bring joy to our hearts and we reflect that in praise
and adoration for you, the only holy one, the only wise God,
eternal, Almighty, our Lord, and we pray that you would be
pleased with our worship. And we pray this in Jesus' name,
amen. Well, we're thinking about missions
this weekend, and missions, quite simply, is the task of taking
sinners and making them saints, of calling all peoples to worship
our triune God. That's why we've gathered this
morning, to worship our triune God, to make much of Him. All
creatures of our God and King, lift up your voice, and with
us, sing hallelujah, praise to the Lord. Let's do that in sincerity
as we worship our God today. All creatures of our God and
King, Lift up your voice and with us sing, Alleluia, Alleluia! Thou burning sun with golden
beam, Thou silver moon with golden beam, O praise Him, O praise
Him, Alleluia, Alleluia, Alleluia. ♪ Thou rushing wind that art so
strong ♪ ♪ Ye clouds that sail in cantaloupe ♪ ♪ O praise Him,
Alleluia ♪ ♪ Thou rising morn in praise rejoice ♪ ♪ Ye lights
of evening, find the voice ♪ ♪ O praise Him, O praise Him, Alleluia ♪
Hallelujah! Hallelujah! Hallelujah! And all ye men of tender heart,
Forgiving others take your part, O sing ye, Alleluia! Ye who long
pain and sorrow bear, Praise God and on him cast your care,
O praise him! O praise Him, hallelujah, hallelujah,
hallelujah. Let all things their Creator
bless and worship Him Oh, praise Him! Hallelujah! Praise, praise the Father, praise
the Son, and praise the Spirit, three in one. Oh, praise Him! Oh, praise Him! Hallelujah! Amen. You may be seated. We are called
to praise God. We exist to praise God. We exist
to glorify Him and enjoy Him forever. And yet how often we
fall short of that chief end. We fail to praise Him. We praise
Him imperfectly. We run after idols instead of
the true God. And it is good and right because
of this reality that we run to Him for mercy. And confess our
sin trusting in faith that he will faithfully forgive Those
who come to him in faith through the blood of his son Jesus Christ
So church, let's do that together as we pray our prayer of confession
to the Lord Almost great just and gracious God you are of purer
eyes than to behold iniquity but you have promised mercy through
Jesus Christ and to all who repent and believe in him. Therefore,
we confess that we are sinful by nature and that we have all
sinned and come short of the glory of God. We have neglected
and abused your holy worship and your holy name. We have dealt
unjustly and uncharitably with our neighbors. We have not sought
first your kingdom and righteousness. We have not been content with
our daily bread. You have revealed your wonderful
love to us in Christ and offered us pardon and salvation in him,
but we have turned away. We have run into temptation and
the sin that we should have hated, we have committed. Have mercy
upon us, most merciful Father. We confess that you alone are
our hope. Make us your children and give
us the spirit of your Son, our only Savior. Amen. Take a few moments now to silently
confess your particular sins to the Lord. Listen now, believer, to these
beautiful words from Psalm 86. Scripture says, for you, O Lord,
are good and forgiving, abounding in steadfast love to all who
call upon you. God is a merciful God, and we
who have experienced that forgiveness, that mercy, that saving grace,
are called to offer that saving grace to others who don't yet
know of the salvation that can be found in Christ alone. Our
New Testament reading this morning is a clear exhortation for us
to be missionaries, to herald this gospel, this good news of
Jesus Christ. It's Romans chapter 10. I'll
read verses 12 through 17. Romans 10 beginning at verse
12. For there is no distinction between
Jew and Greek, for the same Lord is Lord of all, bestowing His
riches on all who call on Him. For everyone who calls on the
name of the Lord will be saved. How then will they call on him
in whom they have not believed? And how are they to believe in
him of whom they have never heard? And how are they to hear without
someone preaching? And how are they to preach unless
they are sent? As it is written, how beautiful
are the feet of those who preach the good news. But they have
not all obeyed the gospel. For Isaiah says, Lord, who has
believed what he has heard from us? So faith comes from hearing
and hearing through the word of Christ. The word of the Lord. Thanks be to God. We're gonna
sing a psalm this morning, Psalm 22. It's a psalm that looks forward
to Christ. It's a psalm that highlights
the fact that as the gospel goes forth, sinners become saints.
Sinners are saved through the grace of Christ. Let's stand
together as we sing Psalm 22. so ♪ Hear the Lord sing praise to
him in glory now ♪ ♪ Of Jacob's seed or of Israel's seed ♪ ♪
Hear all before him now ♪ ♪ For he did not despise nor stir the
grave upon the breast ♪ ♪ Nor did he shun his cry for help
but heard and gave him rest ♪ ♪ And all the church will hear
♪ ♪ And I will play my vows in full ♪ ♪ Where men won't even
fear ♪ ♪ The weak and poor will eat their fill ♪ ♪ And thus be
satisfied ♪ ♪ O sing in hymn of praise the Lord so loud ♪ the Lord. All families of the earth shall
come and worship and adore. To obeying unto the Lord be those
he rules the nations well. A crown of ♪ Ignore Him where He dwells ♪
All those whose souls He sent to God's people ♪ Fall before
His throne ♪ They cannot keep themselves alive ♪ When they
rush from Him alone All can be seated. Let us pray. Dear God, we just
come before you now we thank you for the Sabbath. We thank
you for your mercy and your grace. We thank you for your word. We
thank you for prayer. We thank you for the sacraments.
We just thank you for all that you give us God and we just come
now to our time where we give back to you and money is just
such a small thing is nothing in comparison to the. your salvation,
Lord, that you give us. And that is eternal and can never
be taken away. And we just bless you for that.
And I pray that we grow in gratitude through that. And so through
that, Lord, I pray that we would give back joyfully. And I pray
that we would give back generously back to you for all that you
do for us. And I just pray this now in Jesus'
name, amen. Where does the wind come from? Where does it go? Going north and south, how does
it go? Where does the wind come from? Where does it go? Going north and south, how does
it grow? The rain falls gently to the
sea. How can these things be? How can these things be? How can they be? Humanity works hard to make a
name. Toiling in the sun, yet nothing
gained. We all return to dust from whence
we came. ♪ All is empty ♪ ♪ All is vain
♪ To love our God, the reason we
live. To love our God. Nothing satisfies our soul His
life meaning makes us whole For this purpose we are made To love
our God To love our God To God our God. To God our God.
For reason we live. To God our God. Nothing satisfies our soul. It
is life leading makes us whole. For this purpose we were made. To love our God. To love our
God. To love our God. Let's go to our God in prayer
this morning. Lord, through no merit of our
own, you have chosen to bless us with your favor and grace.
Though we should have received everlasting judgment, you have
given us everlasting life. And not just any life, but the
life in your presence with a mediator. And through that mediator, we
have peace with our God, both now and forever. So Lord, because
of that peace through the blood of Christ, we ask that you be
gracious to us when we sin and restore us to a steadfast spirit. When we fall into temptation,
and are led away from you by the evil passions and desires
in us that have not yet been mortified. Please bless us with
the conviction, with the convicting power of your Holy Spirit calling
us out of darkness and into your marvelous light. When we falsely
believe ourselves to be slaves of sin rather than reckoning
ourselves to be dead to sin, change our minds, steer us back
to the peace and the hope and the joy and the self-control
and the faith that come as we draw near to you, our Redeemer
and Lord. Oh God, be gracious to us and
bless us and cause your face, your attention, your favor to
shine upon us. And Lord, as You bless us in
these ways, may the world see that You are a God who gives
grace to sinners, and in seeing that grace, might desire the
same grace for themselves. Bless us, Lord, that others might
run to You, the fountain of all blessing, and find acceptance
and mercy and forgiveness and favor. Lord, may all the peoples
praise you, the father of lights, the giver of every good and perfect
gift, the faithful one in whom there is no shadow of turning.
Father, we look at our world today and we see incredible spiritual
blindness and hardness. We see disregard for you and
your ways. We see people who are made in
your image loving that which is not good, believing that which
is not true, being drawn to that which is not beautiful. And Lord,
we can't change their hearts, but you can. You are the God
who judges righteously. You are the God who guides people
away from destruction and towards salvation. You are the God who
saves. And so I pray that as we, Grace Church, proclaim the
gospel of Jesus Christ, that you would save the lost. we pray
for and support and send missionaries across town and across oceans
that the good news of your favor toward repentant sinners would
bear fruit and would even bear much fruit that the earth and
all the peoples therein would yield its increase. Lord we pray
this day, not only for the stranger on the other side of the world,
but for those closest to us, for our own families, for our
covenant children. Rescue them from the condemnation
of the sin that we've passed down to them, a sin that originated
in Adam. Lord, transfer them from the
headship of the first Adam to the headship of the second Adam
that they too with us might praise you and rejoice and be glad and
sing for joy because you are the mighty God who saves. Lord,
may the gospel be preached in this place long after we have
gone on to our eternal reward. May our children grow up to raise
children of their own who love you and serve you, that a people
yet to be born might still be praising you and might still
be calling all peoples everywhere to praise you. And so, Lord,
to that end, we pray together this morning in accordance with
what your Son, our Savior, has taught us saying. Our Father,
which art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come,
thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this
day our daily bread. And forgive us our debts as we
forgive our debtors. And lead us not into temptation,
but deliver us from evil. For thine is the kingdom and
the power and the glory forever. Amen. Let's stand again as we
prayerfully sing, ask God the fount of every blessing to come
and bless us even this morning as we go to his word. Come thou
fount of every blessing. Come, Thou Fount of every blessing,
To my heart to sing Thy praise. Streams of mercy never ceasing,
Offer songs of loudest praise. Teach me some melodious sonnet
sung by flaming tongues above. Praise the mount I'm fixed upon
it, mount of God's unchanging love. Here I'm raised by heaven
and earth, hither by thy help I'm come, and I know safely to arrive at home. Jesus saw me when a stranger,
wandering from the fold of God, came to rescue me from danger,
interposed his precious blood. ♪ Home to grace how great a debtor
♪ ♪ May the eye constrain to be ♪ ♪ Let that grace now like
a feather ♪ ♪ By my wandering heart to be ♪ ♪ From to wonder,
Lord, I feel it, from to wonder ♪ You can be seated. Global missions is not a new
concept that somehow just spontaneously began in the 18th century. Maybe
we think of it that way sometimes. In fact, it's not even a New
Testament innovation. The idea that the good news of
salvation needs to be heralded to the four corners of the earth
has its origin in the mind of God. And because of that, we
see glimpses of it throughout the Old Testament, prior to the
great missionary expansion movement of 300 years ago, prior to the
day of Pentecost, prior to Christ's earthly ministry. Before there
were ever missions conferences and mission agencies sending
people to foreign nations, there was the Old Testament church
asking God to make God-fearing worshipers out of heathen people.
Psalm 67 is just such a prayer. It's a prayer about global missions.
So we're going to spend a few moments this morning reflecting
on this ancient hymn of the church, Psalm 67, and we'll begin by
reading the psalm in its entirety. The psalmist says, to the choir
master with stringed instruments, a psalm, a song. May God be gracious
to us and bless us and make his face to shine upon us that your
way may be known on earth, your saving power among all nations. Let the peoples praise you, oh
God, let all the peoples praise you. Let the nations be glad
and sing for joy. For you judge the peoples with
equity and guide the nations upon earth. Let the peoples praise
you, O God. Let all the peoples praise you. The earth has yielded its increase.
God, our God, shall bless us. God shall bless us. Let all the
ends of the earth fear him. Let's pray. Father, we come again
to your word. needing the illuminating power
of your Holy Spirit to open our minds and give us understanding,
to quicken our souls to believe what you've said, to soften our
wills to obey what you have said, and to even stir our affections
to love what you've said. Thank you, Lord, that there is
a gospel for us to proclaim, that there is good news for sinners
like us who would otherwise be lost for all eternity. So what
grace is ours in Christ. And so we thank you and we pray
in Jesus name. Amen. Well, it's always helpful to
begin the study of any psalm in the Psalter with a consideration
of the historical setting of the psalm and look for any background
information that can be gleaned from the psalm. Sometimes that
background information shows up in the content of the psalm
itself. Sometimes we discover helpful clues in the headings
that appear at the start of many of the psalms. This background
information, these historical clues often provide a sort of
interpretive guide for us as we study the Psalms. Now, not
every psalm provides us with substantial background information,
but some do. In the case of Psalm 67, one
of the features we notice is the fact that the style of the
psalm, its language, its meter, is very clearly from before the
period of Israel's exile. This is an important detail.
This psalm would have been composed and used in corporate worship
long before Israel's exile into foreign lands. Now, many scholars
insist, wrongly, any sort of missionary emphasis in a psalm
indicates that the psalm must have been after the exile because
why else would Israel care about reaching other nations if she
hadn't seen and experienced first hand how ungodly these other
nations really were. And obviously Israel would not
have known about the ungodliness of other nations without having
been exiled in these other nations, so the scholars say. But the
style undeniably originates in from before the exile occurred
in Psalm 67. And that's interesting. It suggests
that Israel's enthusiasm for global missions was not just
some reaction to the horrific paganism that they encountered
while in exile. It suggests that their enthusiasm
for bringing light to the nations sprang from their adoration of
a God who had blessed them with such incredible blessings that
they longed for others to experience those same blessings. Their missionary
enthusiasm on display here in Psalm 67 is not so much a reaction
against paganism as it is an expression of worship to God. They don't seem to be saying
to themselves, oh no, the world is so bad, we better go be missionaries
and fix the badness. No, their motivation is God is
so good to us that we ought to enjoy that goodness and share
it with as many people as we can so they can enjoy His goodness
too and give Him praise for His goodness. This is simply Israel
being Israel. It's the church being what God
has called the church to be, which is spreaders of the good
news of the gracious and sovereign blessings of God. So the focus
of the psalm, which we see both in the content of the psalm and
in the historical setting, is primarily on God and his goodness,
not on the nations and their wickedness. Another interesting
feature that we can take note of before we jump into the psalm
itself is the heading. And I just read it a few moments
ago, the heading of Psalm 67. Now scholars differ on whether
these headings at the start of most psalms were present in the
original and thus part of the inspired text. or whether they
were added later and thus just merely contain some interesting
historical, liturgical, or musical information, I'll just say that
the scholars that I trust the most, and not to mention the
New Testament itself, seems to assert that the headings are
original and thus inspired. We should pay attention to them.
In our psalm today, the heading makes reference to stringed instruments. It says to the choir master with
stringed instruments. Many Hebrew scholars believe
that this designation referred to the fact that the other instruments
that would typically play are excluded. The horns, the percussion,
the cymbals and high-sounding cymbals, the drums, the wind
instruments, they were to be omitted. Just the strings were
to play. And this would suggest that when
Psalm 67 was sung in corporate worship in the Old Testament
church, it was a rather subdued, meditative sort of hymn. It was
not an Easter Sunday morning kind of an anthem, energetic
and loud and vigorous. No, this was apparently just
a rather plainly accompanied song without pump, without hype,
without brass and cymbals, just simple strings and the voices
of the congregation asking God to make himself known to the
world. Now that's interesting to me.
It seems counterintuitive. As a musician, it strikes me
as a rather understated way to specify that only the quietest
instruments in the ensemble should be used to accompany a psalm
about the whole world praising God for His goodness. Perhaps
the liturgist who specified this accompaniment was simply reinforcing
the point that the focus of missions should be on God and His glory,
not on the missionary and his efforts. Now that's speculation
on my part, but what's not speculation is the fact that this entire
psalm is focused on God and His goodness, and on man's response
to that goodness, not on man's performance. It's truly a God-centered
prayer for missions. Now, to be sure, there is a time
and a place to strategize and analyze and talk about the missionary
and his methods, or about the unbelieving masses and their
needs, but we need to insist on keeping a right priority. Missionary endeavors, mercy ministry,
evangelism, these are all means to an end. The end is worship
and adoration and knowledge of God. If in our missionary labors
we aren't laboring for that, we're laboring for the wrong
things. So the consistent focal point throughout Psalm 67 is
God. Yes, our proclaiming of the gospel
will affect mankind in positive ways. It will improve the condition
of sinners who are caught in the death trap of sin, but the
ultimate aim, the chief end, if you will, in missions, as
in all of life, is the glory and greatness and fame and praise
of God. What we're gonna see from Psalm
67 is this. Effective missions springs from a passion for the
glory of God. Effective missions comes from
a passion for the glory of God. Hebrew poetry is often written
in such a way that it resembles a mirror, a reflection. The first
part of a Hebrew poem reflects or echoes the last part oftentimes. The second part echoes the second
to last part and so on until you reach the middle of the poem
and the middle is the central point or tenant or emphasis of
the whole poem. In the case of Psalm 67, verses
one and two are reflected and expounded by verses six and seven. You can quickly look at that
and see that very obviously. Verse three is reflected in or
echoed in verse five and they're identical. And then verse four
stands alone as the center and primary thrust of the psalm. So with that structure in mind
and with the theme of God's glory being the driving impetus behind
global missions, let's take a look at the content of Psalm 67. Effective
missions springs from a passion for the glory of God and this
begins with a passion for God to be known. For God to be known. Right off the bat, we should
notice how similar verse one sounds to that familiar benediction
found in number six. The Lord bless you and keep you.
The Lord make his face to shine upon you and be gracious to you.
This was a Levitical priest's blessing for the covenant community. It was for the church. Psalm
67 turns the prayer of number six into a personal prayer in
the first person. The Lord be gracious to us and
bless us and make His face to shine upon us. And so immediately,
a line in the sand is drawn. There is an us and a them. There
are the members of the covenant community and there are the nations
the the peoples of the earth the gentiles As they're called
in the new testament These are the people who are outside of
the covenant outside of any sort of saving relationship with god
the prayer of psalm 67 then begins with a request for god to bless
the church in order that the earth, the nations out there
and disconnected from the church and its blessings, might come
to know God and His ways. Lord, bless us so that the world
will take notice of those blessings and come to know something of
who you are. That's the prayer. You remember
how God initiated the covenant of grace with Abraham? What did
he say to Abraham? He said, I will make of you a
great nation. I will bless you and make your
name great so that you will be a blessing. It's Genesis 12. Abraham, and by extension the
whole church, is blessed by God, and that blessing in turn extends
to the whole world as the world comes to know God through the
favor he bestows on the church. So let's think about the task
of global missions in light of this process. The first request
of God in this prayer is a request that benefits the church. It
has the church in mind. It's not a selfish thing then
to want God to pour out good things on the church. No, it's
a biblical prayer. Missions, evangelism, ministry
to the lost and the non-religious is not something we choose to
engage in in opposition to the church. It's not as if we're
faced with either loving Christians or loving the lost, and the higher,
more self-sacrificial road is loving the lost. So get out of
these four walls and start doing the real work of the kingdom.
No, the real work of the kingdom is pursuing the health and depth
and strength and growth and blessing of the church. In fact, there
is no effective global mission effort apart from God's covenant
community. There is no effective global
mission effort apart from God's covenant community. We ought
never to pit the blessing and health of the church against
the evangelistic task of the church. And this is something
that's upheld throughout scripture. There is an essential priority
to be observed in regard to the task of making disciples. We
do not bypass, ignore, or disregard the institution of the church.
It is the beginning place of God's saving grace. This was
true when the church was comprised of Abraham's family. It was true
of the old covenant community of Israel. It was true of the
New Testament church. Mission efforts that function
in a vacuum separate from the church are not grounded in God's
ordinary way of blessing the world with the knowledge of God. No, we are called to be missionaries
by being an integral and faithful participant in the bride of Christ. And it's as we fulfill that role
that the world is blessed. Much is said these days of contextualizing
the gospel for the purpose of reaching the oppressed, reaching
foreign nations, reaching other cultures. But the contextualizing
that must take place, according to Psalm 67, and according to
the Abrahamic covenants, and according to Aaron's blessing
of number six, and according to the Great Commission, is one
in which people out there see God's gracious character in here,
and are consequently drawn to that blessing. Making disciples
is the process of bringing the nations into the context of this
body, the church. That's what true missionary work
is about. We're not called to conform the church and its message
to all cultures. We're called to conform all cultures
to the knowledge of God and his ways. Lord, bless your church
that the world might watch and learn that you are a gracious
God and in watching and learning of your grace might be drawn
to that same grace themselves. It's a biblical prayer. So our
preoccupation is not with sinners, it's with God's gracious dealings
with sinners. Effective missions then springs
from a passion for God to be known as the gracious God that
he is. But not only does effective disciple
making spring from a passion for God to be known, it springs
secondly from a passion for God to be known widely. Verse three. And it's echo, verse five, speak
to the scope of the knowledge of God. Verse three, let the
peoples praise you, oh God, let all the peoples praise you. Not just the Israelites, not
just the Americans, not just the people in my social category,
whatever that category may be, but all people. Revelation seven
puts it this way, people from every nation, from all tribes
and peoples and languages. It's not all for 150 or so tongues
in this room to sing, but all for 1,000 tongues to sing my
great Redeemer's praise. Why stop at 1,000, Charles Wesley?
Why not a million tongues to sing my great Redeemer's praise?
Why not a billion? In fact, let's just be biblical
about it. Let all the peoples praise you. He is worthy of being
known and praised to the ends of the earth by all peoples.
Yes, the church is the context of God's greatest blessings of
grace, and we should love and preserve those blessings, but
there is no place in the heart of Christians for wanting, as
Matthew Henry put it, to monopolize the privileges of the church.
We are to desire earnestly to throw open the door and to scatter
everyone, to everyone, the blessings that we have been graciously
given. Global missions is about God
coming to be known and known widely, even to the ends of the
earth. You know, there is some irony. in this prayer of Psalm
67. Here we have the Old Testament
church, which is Israel, praying for the evangelization of the
Gentiles. That's us. Lord, make the Gentiles
jealous of the wonderful blessings of divine grace that we enjoy
so that they might come to seek those blessings and find them
and enjoy them with us. But what did Israel eventually
do with these precious promises and graces of the gospel? They
despised them. They rejected them when they rejected the Messiah
who came to fulfill those promises. And so in an unexpected plot
twist, God, who had flung open the door of salvation to the
Gentiles, saw fit to harden Israel, the natural branch, so that as
they watched the Gentiles, the engrafted branch, flourish and
be blessed with God's grace and favor and experience God's face
shining on them As Israel saw this coming true for the Gentiles,
they would be made jealous and they would be driven back to
God by a longing for the very divine blessings that they had
rejected. It's a shocking reversal of Psalm
67, isn't it? As now the church prays for the
salvation of Israel, as Gentiles pray that God would be gracious
and bless this newly engrafted group of people so that those
out there, including now the natural branch of Israel, might
come to know and praise the God of Abraham and Isaac and Jacob. I think it's wise for us to remind
ourselves of our place as Gentiles, as outsiders who have been brought
near by the blood of Christ through this very prayer. Psalm 67, which
the Old Covenant community prayed for us. Paul describes our place
in the grand story of redemption with somber warnings against
pride. Romans 11, 17 through 22 says
this. Paul says, but if some of the
branches were broken off and you, Gentiles, although a wild
olive shoot were grafted in among others and now share in the nourishing
root of the olive tree, do not be arrogant toward the branches. Verse 20, they were broken off
because of their unbelief, but you stand fast through faith.
So do not become proud, but fear. For if God did not spare the
natural branches, neither will He spare you. Note then the kindness
and the severity of God. The kindness and the severity
of God. Severity towards those who have
fallen, but God's kindness to you, provided you continue in
his kindness. Church, we have no reason to
boast or be arrogant. Rather, we ought to rejoice that
God has dealt graciously with us, and we ought to long for
and pray for all peoples to experience that same grace. Well, this brings
us then to the center of Psalm 67, verse four, that middle verse
to which everything around it points. And we see in this center
of the Psalm that effectiveness in missions is driven not only
by a passion for God to be known, and not only by a passion for
God to be known widely, but ultimately by a passion for God to be known
widely and rejoiced in. Verse four. Let the nations be
glad and sing for joy. So this prayer is not about the
nations just dispassionately bowing the knee before an all-powerful
God simply because He's too strong for them to resist, even though
they would resist Him if they could. No, this prayer is about
the nations bowing the knee to God in joy, in delight, with
singing, willingly, happily. Now what is it about the knowledge
of God that makes the nations glad to praise Him? Verse 4 tells
us. First, it's because God is the
only one who judges with equity, with fairness, with justice. And secondly, God is the one
who guides the nations on earth. All the peoples praise God and
are glad and even sing for joy because God is judge and God
is guide. As judge, God is to be feared.
In fact, that's the last statement of this prayer. Let all the ends
of the earth fear Him. Why? Because He's judge. And
as judge, He will rule with justice. With perfect equity. There's
no getting off the hook with this judge. There's no false
pardon. There's no leniency or compromise.
There's no blackmailing Him or manipulating Him. No, He is the
equitable judge. The righteous judge He is to
be feared. It would seem, would it not, that this knowledge of
God's just judgment would not result in joy, but in running
and hiding from this God. So how is this reality a source
of gladness and joy and singing? Well, it's a source of gladness
and joy and singing because God is not only a just judge, he
is also a guide, a leader, a helper to any and all who will follow
him. If God were only a judge, we would all be undone, wouldn't
we? A judge who rules with perfect justice but has no interest in
the accused, no capacity for grace, is a judge who would incite
terror in lawbreakers like us, and that would be the end of
it. If God were only a gracious guide who couldn't care less
about just judgment, how could he be trusted? He would never
punish true wickedness. He would never protect the powerless
from evil people. Love without justice is just
as destructive as justice without love. But God is both. He is severe, and that severity
makes us fear him and beg him for mercy, but church, he is
also good, and that goodness grants us grace and protection
from his righteous judgment. That's why the nations who have
come in the psalm to truly know him are singing and rejoicing. It's because he is both judge
and guide. And this is the goal of missions.
to bring people who previously were far off, running, hiding
from God, separated from God, with no interest in Him, to bring
them close enough to see His gracious favor upon the redeemed. And in seeing that favor, to
desire it, and to seek it, and to come to know it, and even
rejoice in the fact that this same favor is available to any
soul that seeks refuge in the gracious hands of divine mercy. And so the conclusion of the
psalm, verse six, is a declaration that the earth has yielded its
increase. A harvest reference. The church
has prayed that God would reveal himself to the world and God
has answered their prayer. He has been revealed. The earth
has yielded its increase. A crop of countless souls has
been harvested even to the ends of the earth. Effectiveness in
missions springs from a passion for the glory of God. You know,
we've rubbed shoulders with a lot of missionaries this weekend,
and what a privilege that's been. But as we come away from a weekend
like this, we need to ask ourselves, is my own zeal for making disciples
driven by a motivation of promoting the glory of God, or is it some
other, some lesser thing? Do I love mission work because
it makes me feel needed, or useful, or accomplished? Do I engage
in kingdom work simply because I'm fascinated with other cultures?
or intrigued by other languages? Do I pretend to make disciples
because secretly I'd rather just be hanging out with unbelievers
in the world than with half-sanctified believers in the church? What
is my underlying motivation in evangelizing the lost, or serving
unbelievers, or helping the poor, or standing up for truth in my
various spheres of influence? Because if my underlying motive
is anything less than the glory and the fame of God, it's the
wrong motive, and it will not yield its increase. Jesus said
in John 435, the fields are white for harvest. They're ready to
be harvested. In other words, the world needs
desperately to taste and see that the Lord is good. Brothers
and sisters, the church needs desperately to taste and see
that the Lord is good, and so the call Psalm 67 is a call to
be a missionary, to be one who makes disciples who follow Christ. And how do we go about this noble
task? We begin by first praying for God to bless his church with
grace and favor. And as God answers this prayer,
we pray that the world would stop and take notice of God's
divine favor on us, on the church, and in taking notice to long
for that favor themselves. then we proclaim to them how
they too can experience God's favor. We proclaim that God is
both judge and guide. He's severe in his justice but
graciously good to all who come to him in faith. And the glorious
end result will be that throne room scene in the book of Revelation
at which angels and elders and people from every tongue and
tribe are falling on their faces before the throne of God, worshiping
Him and saying, blessing and glory and wisdom and thanksgiving
and honor and power and might be to our God forever and ever. Amen. Effectiveness in this truly
great commission that Christ has given us comes from a church
that stands in awe of God's glory and longs to see the whole world
in equal awe of that glory. Let's pray. Lord, how magnificently glorious
you are. You who have no beginning and
no end. You who are perfectly sufficient and complete in yourself
in need of nothing. You have stooped to us and rescued
us from hell. You have adopted us into your
family. You treat us as sons. You bless us every day with good
things, with life and breath, with family, with purpose, with
peace, with forgiveness, with victory over sin, with instruction,
with the comforting presence of your Holy Spirit, even with
the intercessory prayers of your Son. Lord, we could pray for
boldness to speak of these amazing graces to the world, and we need
boldness, but rather this morning, we would pray for gratitude.
Make us so grateful for your goodness to us, so delighted
in your daily graces that timidity is not even a question, that
we will not be able to help but speak to the world of your goodness
and grace to us. And Lord, as we herald your glory
by telling others of the grace we've been given, would you save
the lost? Would you convert the Gentile
and the Jew? Bring the nations into the church
that indeed thousands upon thousands of tongues would sing our great
Redeemer's praise. And it is in the name of that
great Redeemer that we pray, amen. Let's stand together as we respond
this morning to the truth of God's word. O church, arise and put your
armor on. Hear the call of Christ our captain. For now we can say that they
are strong in the strength that God has given. With shield of faith and belt
of truth, we'll stand against the devil's lies. An army bold,
whose battle cry is loved, reaching out to those in need. Our call to war, to love the
captive soul, but to rage against the captor. And with the sword
that makes the wounded whole, we will fight with faith and
valor. When faced with trials on every
side, We know the outcome is secure, And Christ will have
the prize for which He died, An inheritance of nations. Lift your eyes. We are His radiant
bride. Arise, O Church, arise. As the Son of God is stricken,
then see His foes. ♪ Has crushed beneath his feet
♪ For the conqueror has risen ♪ And as the stone is rolled
away ♪ And Christ emerges from the grave ♪ His victory march
continues till the day ♪ Every eye and heart shall see him So Spirit come, strengthen every
stride, give grace for every hurdle, that we may run with
faith to win the prize of a servant good and faithful. As saints of old still guide
the way, retelling triumphs of His grace, We hear their calls
and hunger for the day, when with Christ we stand. Arise! Arise! Arise! Arise! Arise! Arise! Arise! Arise! Arise! We are His rage and pride. Arise, O church, arise. Amen. Thank you for being here this
morning. I encourage you to come back tonight as we conclude this
weekend's focus on missions. A seminary buddy of mine is gonna
be preaching. Andrew Holbrook planted some
churches up in New England and is back now in this area, so
we welcome him. Six o'clock tonight. Also, there's
some booths and some of the missionaries still lingering around that have
been with us this weekend. We thank you guys for just sharing
your vision of what the Lord's called you to do. And you can
go rub shoulders with them, I see there are tables out there. Dan?
Oh, yes, we are. Have a seat. We've got some new
members. Thank you, Dan. Let me quickly
pull up the vowels that I forgot to have on hand. Awkward. If anybody has a BCO in their
back pocket, Of course you do. Thank you, Dan. As he pulls that
up, let me just share with the church body that we've had a
couple of saints associated with our body who have gone on to
their reward this last week. And I want to share the details
of their memorial services. Betty West is a charter member
of this church. She passed away in her 90s this
past week. And the funeral will be today
at 5 o'clock at Core Community Church over on Lower Rocky River
Road. And then Kim Udy, I've been struggling
with sickness for 18, 24 months now, and her suffering is over
with, but we are gonna be celebrating her life here at Grace Church
tomorrow at two o'clock, is that right, guys? Two o'clock here,
memorial service in the sanctuary, and then the visitation will
follow up in the fellowship hall. So Courtney, Alexis, family,
we're praying for you guys, we love y'all. Kim was a sweet,
sweet lady. She was a lady that would come
in in a wheelchair towards the end of her life and worship with
us to the best of her ability, given the disease she was fighting. And now her voice is released
to praise the Lord without any impediment. And what a sweet
life, sweet testimony. So that'll be tomorrow at 2 o'clock
here at Grace Church. Couple Sundays ago. We had the
privilege of interviewing some new members who had gone through
our most recent new members class But didn't join with the group
and they're gonna join today It's the Sheffer family now Scott
if you would come on up with his girls Elizabeth and Hannah
We've loved having this sweet family with us for several months
now here at Grace Church and we have the privilege today of
hearing them affirm their membership bowels No, it's going to be admission
to the, we're so sorry, I'm so sorry. Scott, you probably know
where it is in the BCO, don't you? Admission. We. We're ready, I'm sorry. So all three of these members
of this family are joining us today. They've been baptized,
they've gone through our new members class, and so I'll just ask you
to affirm by saying yes to these questions. Do you acknowledge
yourselves to be sinners in the sight of God, justly deserving
His displeasure, and without hope save in His sovereign mercy?
Do you believe in the Lord Jesus Christ as the Son of God and
Savior of sinners? And do you receive and rest upon
him alone for salvation as he is offered in the gospel? Do
you now resolve and promise in humble reliance upon the grace
of the Holy Spirit that you will endeavor to live as becomes the
followers of Christ? Do you promise to support the
church in its worship and work to the best of your ability?
And then finally, do you submit yourselves to the government
and discipline of the church and promise to study its purity
and peace? Amen. Well, welcome Scott, Hannah,
Elizabeth. I'm gonna get Scott Starcher
to come and pray for you guys, but let me welcome you. We're
so glad you're here. Are y'all staying for lunch?
Yes. Put you on the spot, good. Make sure you hug their necks.
We're gonna dismiss here and go up for a meal here in just
a moment, but Scott, can I get you to pray for them? Amen. Would you stand now as
we conclude with our benediction? Again, booths out in the foyer,
and a meal is prepared in the fellowship hall if you're able
to stay. All are welcome. Receive now the Lord's benediction.
May God be gracious to us and bless us and make his face to
shine upon us. God, our God, shall bless us.
God shall bless us. Let all the ends of the earth
fear him. And all God's people said,
Let All the Peoples Praise You
Series Proverbs
Join us as we worship our Triune God! For more information about Grace Church, please visit www.graceharrisburg.org.
| Sermon ID | 21625134015390 |
| Duration | 1:18:34 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - AM |
| Bible Text | Psalm 67 |
| Language | English |
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