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It is a privilege for me to be
able to introduce to you Pastor Jeff Thomas. He comes to us today
from the Alfred Place Baptist Church in Aberystwyth, Wales. And he has been pastoring that
church since 1965. And that is longer than some
of us, probably many of us, have even been alive. And I don't
point this out to embarrass our brother with reference to his
age. but rather to highlight the fact that God has privileged
us very greatly in giving us a seasoned and a proven brother
to come and minister the word. And it is a great privilege for
me to be able to introduce Pastor Jeff Thomas. I was wondering where the volume
of sound was coming from and was too shy to turn around and
look at you. I know I'd see you soon. Thank you very much for
the invitation to come here and speak on this Lord's Day morning. I'm very much at home. See the
leaflets in the rack there at the back, the very same ones
that we put on display in our book rack in Aberystwyth. and
also sell in our Christian bookshop and friends of mine like John
Blanchard, Peter Jeffrey, you've got them there. I'm delighted
to be with you today and trust that what I say will be a means
of grace to you. I want to draw your attention
to the letter to the Romans chapter 15 and verse 13, Romans 15 and
verse 13. Now may the God of hope fill
you with all joy and peace. in believing, that you may abound
in hope by the power of the Holy Spirit. One of the great verses
in scripture, isn't it? Let's get the great verses right in our lives. You've been traveling
in a state, Wyoming, Montana, Saskatchewan, lots of empty space
there, you've been travelling far north in British Columbia,
you don't know where the gas stations are, you're going on
a family trip, you've got your camping equipment with you, children
in the back seat and the needle is on empty and you're going
along there and you're hoping no one else has noticed it and
you sing some hymns and turn the radio on, put a CD so that
your wife doesn't spot that you're on empty, that she doesn't see
the flashing light. You come to one community, there
are no gas stations there, and you're on. You're talking heartily
and jovially, but your heart is sinking. You're on empty.
You're just wondering, what will you do now if you run out of
gas and you're miles from anywhere? What will you do? Who will come?
The dangers and the worries. of it all. And then you go round
the bend and you see a sign and the light is there, oh you've
never been so glad to see a filling station in your life. You fill
it up. You're so glad. You're so thankful. Our civilisation is on empty. People are having music and loud
singing and constant laughter on the media, radio, TV, something
to dull the pain of knowing that they're on empty and not knowing
where they're going to get filled up again. People are out of joy
and they're out of peace and they're trying the narcotics
and the alcohol and the popping the pills just somewhere to find
joy and peace. Men without God Amen without
hope. And then one day you were in
work and you meet a girl and you say to her, so how do you
weekend go? Lovely, great time, she said.
We were in church yesterday. I found the message so helpful.
Oh, you go to church. And she begins to talk to you.
Always when you're together then you somehow find her and you
talking about Christianity and the Bible. And one day she says,
we've got a baptismal service in our church on Sunday, would
you like to come along? And you come along. And your
life has never been the same since that time when you heard
the gospel preached and you were welcomed in a believing fellowship
of men and women. And you began to discover then
in the message of Jesus Christ the source of joy and peace. Now I can tell people that God
is light and in Him is no darkness at all. I can tell you that God
is a consuming fire, that it's a fearful thing to fall into
the hands of the living God. I must say those things to you
because that's what the Bible says. I can bring to you the
great solemn sanctions of judgement and eternity. But the unique
distinctive of the Christian faith is that it contains a message
of hope. That Jesus Christ didn't say
to the church, you are the headmaster, you are the principal of the
world. He doesn't say, you are the traffic
warden. of the traffic police of the
world. He told them that they were the
light of the world. And I can speak to you of a God
who is love and joy and peace and long-suffering and gentleness
and goodness and faithfulness and meekness and self-control. That this God of hope can fill
despairing men and women with all joy and peace. It's possible for your burden
to be lifted, for your heaviness to evaporate, for your discouragement
to be turned to acceptance and for you to be influenced so that
you are filled to the brims of your lives with joy and peace. That's what the text says. Isn't
this what the text says? Belonging for the Apostle, for
the whole congregation there in Rome, the God of hope fill
you with all joy and peace in believing that you may abound
in hope by the power of the Holy Spirit. He's writing to the entire
congregation in Rome. He's writing to the illiterates.
that were there, the slaves, the poor beggars that have come
there, the women, the slaves, the soldiers that have come down
from the palace, he's writing to them all. And he's praying
this, he's longing for this, for all of them, that every one
of them may be filled with all joy and peace in believing that
they may overflow, that they may abound in hope through this
living God. The great question on the lips
of this me generation in which we live is, what's in it for
me? What's in Christianity if I came back on another Sunday
morning to this congregation? If I got seriously involved now
in the Christian faith, what's in it for me? Well, what's in
it for you? is you being filled with all joy and peace as you
trust in God. That's what's in it for you,
isn't that marvellous? That you will never, never in
your lives hear such an offer made to you as you are hearing
now. The first thing I want to say
to you is that the Bible tells us how such hope can be ours. And it begins by focusing on
the God of hope. The God we worship is the God
of hope. He's not twisting his hands in
frustration as he looks from heaven on the earth today and
he sees turmoil in northern Africa and Afghanistan. He's not frustrated
as he looks through the history of the last hundred years and
world wars and Korea and Vietnam and 9-11. He is the God of hope. He's the God of the future, the
God of the rolling years. a God who makes promises and
fulfills every single one of them. He says if you come to
Jesus Christ, you will have rest. He is the God of hope for the
most despairing, for the most despised men and women in society,
for the child abusers and the torturers and the rapists. There is hope for you because
God is a God of hope. If you turn to Him, He says,
though your sins are scarlet sins, they shall become as white
as snow. He assures you that if you entrust
yourselves to His loving care, He will freely pardon you for
the worst things you have ever done. He will clothe you with
the righteousness of His Son, Jesus Christ. He will adopt you
into His family. He will make you His sons. He
will give you all the privileges of access to this great Creator
and you can say to Him, Abba, Father. He will become your teacher. He will give you ever increasing
understanding and knowledge of who you are and how you should
live what this world is all about and what your purpose in life
is and how to handle the various pressures which mortality and
a groaning creation bring into our lives. He will work all things
together for your good. He will never leave you. When
you are walking through the valley of the shadow of death, He will
be with you then comforting and support you. He will take you
to Himself in heaven and you will dwell in the house of the
Lord forever. Isn't that a marvelous message
of hope? Sigmund Freud hasn't got a message
like that. Charles Darwin didn't have a
message like that. Karl Marx doesn't have a message
like that. Only God can say such things,
because He is not the God of the humanists or the God of the
stoics. He is not the God of the veil
worshippers in their despair, cutting themselves and dancing
and shouting and crying and hearing nothing. God has given us certainty that
what I have said to you is true. You say, how is that? You Christians
are always talking about love and joy and peace and they're
words, they're just words. No, God has given us assurance
that what I have said in your hearing is true because of the
resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. Peter was a companion,
he was an eyewitness. of the Lord Jesus Christ. He
said, blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. He's begotten us again to a lively
hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. He'd been
a know-all. Not even Jesus could tell him
everything. He didn't need warnings. He didn't
need the peril to be made spectacularly clear to him. He didn't believe
in the necessity of Jesus dying? He didn't believe in the resurrection
of the dead, and he was now in despair. He'd given three years
of his life to following a healing rabbi. But now it was all gone. Jesus was dead. Another good
man put to death. But on the third day, he ran
after John to the tomb. and found the stone rolled away
and the tomb empty and then he met, he met Jesus. He met him. He met him in the
upper room. He met him in a private re-commissioning when the Saviour
gave him then restoration of the privileges of serving Him
and working for Him, feeding His sheep and feeding His lambs. His life was reborn. He was a
new creation. He had a living hope. He spent
the rest of His days in joy and peace because He knew God. And He knew that Jesus Christ
was more powerful than death. That absolute reality was not
death. But absolute reality was the
preacher of the Sermon on the Mount. And the glory of the resurrection
is that it didn't take place in the world of hypotheses or
the realm of ideas. It didn't belong to the sphere
of theology, that it belongs to the realm of facts. An empty
tomb, a folded napkin, grave clothes laid there. The great
word of the angel, behold the place where they laid him. He
is not here, he is risen. The empty tomb, the triumph of
Christ over death and the forces of evil. Hours in which love
incarnate lay in a tomb. Wisdom incarnate, power incarnate
seems to have been overthrown by death and the powers of evil. And then God raises Him from
the dead, and God gives Him the victory, God vindicated incarnate
grace, and God raised Him up, and it is the great guarantee
of our resurrection. It is the model of our resurrection,
we too sown in weakness. There was a time when your father
could repair a television. But now he's unable even to switch
a television on. There were times when he would
devour his food. And now he needs both hands to
hold a cup to sip through a tube. We're sown in weakness. Mortality
is written on all of us. But that is not the end. It is
raised in strength and glory And honour, that is the Christian
hope. On the first Lord's Day, there
was the eruption of the power and goodness of God into this
world. On this planet, someone who was dead opened an eye and
opened another eyelid and looked around and flexed his fingers
and toes and got up and took off the napkin. And a messenger
from God took the stone away and he came forth in the power
of an endless life. God gives us the assurance that
when he speaks of hope and peace and joy, that it is grounded
in his mighty power in Christ over the greatest and last of
our enemies. And then this God of hope, he
tells us how this joy and peace can become yours. It is as you
trust in him. Some of you are not sure whether
you have faith or not. The New Testament doesn't tell
us much about the psychology of faith. It doesn't give us
much information that we can analyse that. emphasises greatly
Jesus Christ. It wants us to think about him.
It wants our minds and our conscience and our affections to be drawn
to Jesus Christ and in that, faith comes. Let's use the word
trust, the NIV translates it as we trust in him, and that's
a good word, trust. It's a softer word, isn't it?
It's an Anglo-Saxon word rather than faith, which is a Latinized
French word, faith, fide, trust. You trust in him, you trust,
you know what trust is, you've got that digital alarm clock
at the side of your bed and it's so reliable and you hardly ever
have to change it except if there's a power cut. It's there and it'll
tell you, you can't sleep, it's 3.34. You trust the clock, don't
you? You trust your mother's love
for you. You know, her face lights up when she sees you. We can
trust in God. We can trust God. We can trust
God implicitly. We can trust whatever God is. We can trust God. Whatever He's done, what He says,
God is straight. We can trust Jesus Christ. You
can trust Jesus. You can trust Him. When He said,
the Son of Man came to lay down His life for ransom for men.
That's why He came. You can trust Him. Our ransom
has been paid. He says, come to Me and I will
give you rest. You can trust that He will give
you rest if you come to Him. Coming to Him is a movement of
your heart and affections and mind, energised by the Holy Spirit
as he takes the word that you were listening to, and he brings
you then to himself. He is meek and lowly of heart. because he received a sinner
like you. You can trust him. You can trust
him absolutely. You can trust him implicitly.
When the devil says we've sinned too much and we've out sinned
his forgiveness. There was a little girl and she
was six years of age. She is six years of age. Her
name is Aspen and she was being driven home from school by her
father. Mother couldn't do the school
run and her father had gone down to pick her up and it was one
of those downpours where you need double speed on the windscreen
wipers just to see ahead. And there was silence in the
car, father didn't want to hit anything. And she said, Daddy,
yes, I've been thinking. Yes, he said, what are you thinking
about? The rain is like sin and the windscreen wipers are like
God wiping our sins away. He'd never said anything like
that before. He had a lump in his throat. She was a funny little
girl. She said that. He wanted to see
if he could go a little further with it. So he said to her, do
you notice that the rain is still coming down? What does that tell
us? She didn't hesitate for a moment.
She said, we keep on sinning and God keeps on forgiving. We keep on sinning. And I said,
yes, Lynn, I've never done anything free from sin. Everything I've
done and said, holiest prayers and sermons they need the forgiveness
of God. There's too much self here still,
until in a better land when I'll sing His power to save. You may say about what I've just
said to you, we keep on sinning. But Jesus Christ keeps on forgiving. You may think that that is a
license for promiscuity, for continuing in sin. I say to you,
Golgotha won't let you. The rest you've had in coming
to Christ won't allow you. to add an ounce to the burdens
that he bore. You trust in him. You trust right
into him. You trust and trust in him as your prophet, as your
priest, as your king. You trust everything about Jesus.
You trust him. You trust his warnings. But they
are pastoral and caring warnings. The place where the worm dies
not and the fires are not quenched. You trust what he says. Trust
everything. He's never dying love for you.
He's saying... Sometimes, you know, I say, if he sends me to hell, I'll
go to hell trusting in him. Well, of course, no one's ever
gone to hell trusting in Jesus. No one's ever gone to hell asking
Jesus for mercy and forgiveness. I'll go to hell with you, if
you go to hell crying to the Lord to save you. The God of hope kills us, and
the result is We are filled with all joy and peace. That's such
extraordinary encouragement. We, not super Christians, not
Jonathan Edwards, not Spurgeon. We ordinary Christians. He wants that church in Rome. Young believers, new believers,
people from such awful backgrounds, converted gladiators. He wants
them filled with all joy and peace. The joy of knowing God,
the joy of being loved by God, the joy of realising our sins
have been cast into the depths of the sea and God remembers
them. The joy of walking through life from getting up on a Monday
morning, going off to school, going off to work and the Lord
is with you, the joy of the heart, the joy of having a Bible, the
joy of the Lord's day, the joy of the Lord's people, the joy
of the means of grace, the joy of the Word of God coming in
power and the Holy Spirit and with much assurance, the joy
of serving other people in the name of Jesus, the joy of bearing
witness with a lisping, stammering tongue, the joy of hearing What
a friend we have in Jesus. I was in Grand Rapids a couple
of years ago now. I was preaching in Providence
Reformed Church in Grand Rapids. We went for lunch to a fascinating
family. The man was a carpenter. I knew
a bit about the family. There were ten children. and
there was the husband and the wife and there was Jola and myself. We were 14 around the table.
We had chicken soup and bread. Just great. And he got the Bible
to read at the end of the meal. He said, you were preaching on
contentment this morning, Pastor Thomas. I said, do you know something
about our family? And I did, but I wanted to hear
it from the horse's mouth. He said, I was married and had
three children and my wife was expecting her fourth and she
was driving along the road and a drunk shot through a red light
and hit the car and killed her. And my second wife here, she
said her husband, he was a baker in Grand Rapids. And one day
a disgruntled employee took a Colt 45 and went to work and shot
him dead. And her parents came to look
after her and the five children. And on the Sunday morning they
were driving to church as they did. Her parents and her and
the five children in the back and they were driving along and
suddenly a voice came from the back of the vehicle. We're not singing. We always
sing going to church. And one of them pitched up John
Newton's great Sabbath hymn. safely through another week. They'd lost their father. He'd
been murdered. But he was safe in the arms of
Jesus. It's said that when the boy had more faith than
all of us, the children, like children, like statues, listening to this
story of their life. She came with her five children
to church and he was there with his three children and the Lord
brought them together. They fell in love with one another
and then the Lord has given them two children themselves and there
are the ten children. And he read scripture and expressed
his contentment with God's good and perfect will. The God of
hope filled them with joy and peace as they trusted in God. You have joy as Christians. The
clouds lifted this morning when we saw the mountains for the
first time. We'd heard about them. They were there. They were beautiful. Sometimes
you look out of a window at your backyard and you see a bird pulling
up a worm from the lawn and you're just overwhelmed with joy. I sit and watch my three girls
and behind a book that I'm watching them and they're talking to one
another and they're listening carefully as one speaks and the
other speaks. See their affection for one another
now, all mothers talking together. Just overwhelmed with joy. How unworthy to be blessed in
this way. The Lord fills us with joy. The joy of hearing of people
being converted. When Philip preached in Samaria
and the Lord blessed his ministry in Samaria, then many Samaritans
were converted and Luke tells us that the city was full of
joy. Isn't that interesting? He could
have said it was full of faith and full of praise and singing
and full of repentance and all that would have been true. That's
what he seizes on, his joy. And when Philip was taken and
ministered to the Ethiopian eunuch, he went on his way full of joy. The disciples were full of joy
and the Holy Ghost is at the end of Acts 13. That can't be
the disciples were regenerate. It can't be. There is something
experiential about that definition of Christian men and women. They
were filled with joy and the Holy Spirit. Paul, the great
apostle of joy, he mentions it twenty-one times in the Bible.
Joy, filled with all joy and peace. Never joy only, but a
joy that's characterised also by peace. It's not just effervescence. It's not I'm working on the microphone,
getting close to you and asking the organist to play a tune again,
dimming the lights and all that psychological trickery. I despise
it. It's joy and peace. It's heaven's gift. The only explanation from it
is that God in his mercy has given us this joy and peace. The peace that comes from knowing
that nothing happens by chance or because of the devil. But we go back to the first cause
and our Heavenly Father is the first cause of everything. If only we could believe what
we do believe, what we say we believe. Oh, if only I believe
what I say. If only I believe wholly what
I'm preaching to you now. Peace from accepting God's will
without murmuring. I was reading John Newton a couple of years
ago because it was the bicentenary of his death and I was so interested
in Newton. And Newton, I came across this
illustration of his, one morning all the angels of God gathered
together before God to receive their instructions for the day.
The first angel, God says, go and become the emperor of the
greatest empire in the world. Angel goes and he comes the next
one, he says, go and clean the public toilets in the slum in
Mexico City. Angel goes and does it. It's their delight to do the
will of God without question. If God says something, they do
it. It's a matter of utter indifference
whether they're going to clean a ditch to clean out a barn of
rain over an empire. The peace of the angels lies
in doing God's will. One day one will lift a stinking
beggar and he'll carry him into heaven. Another day the angel
will take out the chariots and horses and will go down and will
drive Elijah to heaven. Obeying God's will is all that
comes. A young friend of mine was engaged
to a girl in our congregation and in her last term, just before
her examination, she dumped him. She ended the engagement. She
said to me, he's boring. So unkind and so untrue. and he was just shattered and
heartbroken. Well, he went into the ministry
and he was just a really superb preacher. I always profit from
listening to him. Years went by, he told me, I'm called to be a bachelor. I'm called to celibacy. He said,
come on, come on. I said, come on now. No, no. I'm going to be a bachelor for
the rest of my life. And then one day, he began to
notice a girl in the congregation. Very tricky. And he waited until she was 18.
He was 38. And when she reached her 18th birthday, that week he went
to see her parents. Her father was an elder in the
church. And he asked her father and mother
permission to take her out to ask her would she come out for
a meal with him. And he and his wife talked it over and they
came back to him and they said, no, we feel The age gap is too
great and she is too young to begin a serious relationship
with you. So we don't want you to make
any attempt to get closer to her. And he accepted that. He knew
he would do it that way. And then three weeks went by
and he noticed a fellow from the church beginning to sit next
to her and share a hymn book with her. And then this fellow,
a few weeks later, came to her and said, Pastor, you notice
that I'm going out with so-and-so in the congregation. I want you
to give me some advice on this. I want to do this right now.
I want you to help me. He said to me, I'd make a far
better husband for her than he ever would. But there we are. So I was so
sorry for my dear friend and I tried to give him, you know,
the verses that you would give to encourage him and comfort
him. There are plenty of them, aren't there? It's all right,
Jack. It's all right. We believe that when we ask God
for something, He either gives us what we ask for, or He gives
us something better. Now that's the bedrock of Christian
comfort. That's the bedrock of joy and
peace. But if we don't get that fellow
that we love so much, if the love is unrequited and we are
facing singleness, then God has someone, something better for
us. And sure enough, a couple of
years later, he met his dear wife and asked me to marry them,
and I did. He's still in that church, which
has been the scene of his long ministry, and he has four children
in the congregation. The end of all this is that you
may abound in hope, or the NIV says, overflow in hope by the
power of the Holy Spirit, the result of God working in us.
Preachers always talk about the two seas, don't they, in Israel? There's the Sea of Galilee in
the north and the Jordan flows in and then it flows out and
down the steep Jordan Valley into the Dead Sea, and the Dead
Sea is totally arid. There's no river out of the Dead
Sea, is there? So nothing lives there. It just
takes in and evaporates and that's it. Nothing living is there. But the Sea of Galilee, well,
The river runs in and there's fish in abundance there and the
river runs out. It not only takes in but it gives
out as well and preachers use that illustration about there
can be no joy and peace without service. It's a basic point that you all
understand. It's no good you just coming
here week after week and taking in. the great truths from the
Word of God, the great understanding of Jesus Christ and His salvation,
without then a life of ministry. But you pray, Lord guide me to
someone, guide me somewhere, use me this week, help me, teach
me, that the God of hope fills us
with all joy and peace. that we may overflow, that we
may overflow then in hope by the power of the Holy
Spirit. That's why He fills us with joy
and peace, not to make us feel good, but to overflow, to needy chilliwack. the needy school
you go to, the needy neighbours that live around you. That's
why. There's much in this world I can doubt this
morning. I can doubt the claims and promises
of every candidate running in the election this week. I can
doubt their promises. I can doubt their achievements. I can doubt global warming. I
can doubt windmill farms on the mountains and at sea. I can doubt
the value of state religion giving lessons in morality. I can doubt
many things that others believe. I cannot doubt the goodness of
God. I can't doubt that. I've been
a Christian now since 1954. I've been the recipient of God's
goodness day after day, year after year, decade after decade. I'm one of these people who's
experienced something of the God of hope and how he's changed
my whole heart and life. And I want to abound in hope. to you and to all the world, that this world is held in the
grip of the God of Hope, that He's got it tight. He's in control,
the God of Hope. He's in control of my life and
my destiny. When bad days come, then it's
the power of the Holy Spirit that just keeps me going. I can't
attribute it to anything else. An energy wholly outside myself,
that energy helps me, keeps me going, picks me up. When I fall
again into sin, it picks me up. No matter how unworthy We feel
ourselves to be an incompetent, and our lack of success, the
littleness of our growth, and so on. A sense of hope. Let's
be churches where there's a great message of hope. I have good
news for you, brother. I have good news for every one
of you. I have good news. I have a God
of hope for you. For you to harvest your God and
your Saviour. To fill you with joy and peace
as you trust in Jesus Christ. I have this wonderful message,
the God of hope, that you can abound and overflow in hope. In a hopeless, despairing world,
God has made ordinary Christians like you and me, custodians of
this wonderful message of hope. May God bless His Word to us
this morning. Amen. Let us pray. We pray, gracious
and loving God, for Thy blessing to attend Thy holy word as we
sought to explain it and honour Thee by it and yearn to know
more of the power of the Holy Spirit in our lives, filling
us with joy and peace as we trust in Thee. O God of hope, fill
us, fill this congregation of Thy people. We beseech Thee.
and grant that the message of hope through Jesus Christ shall
go out to the ends of the earth. We ask it in the Savior's name.
Amen.
The God of Hope
| Sermon ID | 51111519115 |
| Duration | 46:36 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - AM |
| Bible Text | Romans 15:13 |
| Language | English |
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