Entries from April 1, 2008 - May 1, 2008
Foreward Ho

A couple of quick notes about May’s agenda here at Rebecca Writes.
- I’m hoping to have another Recipe Round Up, but no one has volunteered to host. Hint.
- I want to do an interpretive paraphrase of Romans 8:18-39, which will involve a whole series of posts. The aim of that series is to show one way to do that sort of Bible study. If you want to join in and work along with me, I’d like that. If you want to offer suggestions for how my work might be improved, I think I’d like that, too.
- There’ll be no theme for May, then, because I’m going to concentrate on the Romans 8 series.
- However, over the summer, I’m planning to post weekly photos of the pricing sign at my neighbourhood gas station so you can see what I pay for gas. It’d be fun if some of you posted periodic prices of gas at the pumps near you, too. If you do, I’d love to have the link to your post so I can link back to you and we can compare prices.
What are the reasons annexed to the second commandment, the more to enforce it?
The reasons annexed to the second commandment, the more to enforce it, contained in these words, For I the Lord thy God am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth generation of them that hate me; and showing mercy unto thousands of them that love me, and keep my commandments;[1] are, besides God’s sovereignty over us, and propriety in us,[2] his fervent zeal for his own worship,[3] and his revengeful indignation against all false worship, as being a spiritual whoredom;[4] accounting the breakers of this commandment such as hate him, and threatening to punish them unto divers generations;[5] and esteeming the observers of it such as love him and keep his commandments, and promising mercy to them unto many generations.[6]
Petitionary Prayer: April 29
This is the last of the Petitionary Prayer posts because April is coming to an end.
- I’m praying for youngest son, who will be flying out to Edmonton tonight and then driving back with his friend. They are fairly level-headed young men, but still—they are young men! So I’m asking for wisdom for them and traveling mercies, too.
- Darlene and Phil are in Sicily for this week and she asks for prayer: “Phil is teaching theology! 8 hours a day — plus Q and A!”
- Today, Dorothy is praying for herself: “I am asking God to take away my fearfulness and tendency to worry.”
- Elaine asks for prayer in regards to a big change for her husband and for her family, too.
- Update: Julana is praying for someone she knows with pancreatic cancer. She prays that she senses the presence of Jesus with her today.
Theological Term of the Week
Providence
- From the London Baptist Confession, 1689, Chapter 5:
God the good Creator of all things, in his infinite power and wisdom doth uphold, direct, dispose, and govern all creatures and things, from the greatest even to the least, by his most wise and holy providence, to the end for the which they were created, according unto his infallible foreknowledge, and the free and immutable counsel of his own will; to the praise of the glory of his wisdom, power, justice, infinite goodness, and mercy.
- From J. I. Packer, Concise Theology:
If Creation was a unique exercise of divine energy causing the world to be, providence is a continued exercise of that same energy whereby the Creator, according to his own will, (a) keeps all creatures in being, (b) involves himself in all events, and (c) directs all things to their appointed end. The model is of purposive personal management with total “hands-on” control: God is completely in charge of his world. His hand may be hidden, but his rule is absolute.
Some have restricted God’s providence to foreknowledge without control, or upholding without intervention, or general oversight without concern for details, but the testimony to providence as formulated above is overwhelming.
The Bible clearly teaches God’s providential control (1) over the universe at large, Ps. 103:19; Dan. 4:35; Eph. 1:11; (2) over the physical world, Job 37; Pss. 104:14; 135:6; Matt. 5:45; (3) over the brute creation, Ps. 104:21, 28; Matt. 6:26; 10:29; (4) over the affairs of nations, Job 12:23; Pss. 22:28; 66:7; Acts 17:26; (5) over man’s birth and lot in life, 1 Sam. 16:1; Ps. 139:16; Isa. 45:5; Gal. 1:15-16; (6) over the outward successes and failures of men’s lives, Ps. 75:6, 7; Luke 1:52; (7) over things seemingly accidental or insignificant, Prov. 16:33; Matt. 10:30; (8) in the protection of the righteous, Pss. 4:8; 5:12; 63:8; 121:3; Rom. 8:28; (9) in supplying the wants of God’s people, Gen. 22:8, 14; Deut. 8:3; Phil. 4:19; (10) in giving answers to prayer, 1 Sam. 1:19; Isa. 20:5, 6; 2 Chron. 33:13; Ps. 65:2; Matt. 7:7; Luke 18:7, 8; and (11) in the exposure and punishment of the wicked, Pss. 7:12-13; 11:6. (L. Berkhof, Systematic Theology, 4th ed.)
- From Octavius Winslow, My Times in God’s Hands:
Beloved, remember that all our past and all our coming prosperity, if indeed He shall so appoint it, is in the hand of God. It is His wisdom that suggests our plans, it is His power that guides, and it is His goodness that makes them successful.
Every flower that blooms in our path, every smile that gladdens it, every mercy that bedews it, yes, “Whatever is good and perfect comes to us from God above…”
Oh! for grace to recognize God in all our mercies!
How much sweeter will be our sweets, how much more blessed our blessings, and endeared our endearments, to see them all dropping from the outstretched, munificent hand of a loving, gracious, and bountiful Father!
Oh! for a heart lifted up in holy returns of love, gratitude and praise! - A few applications of the doctrine of providence from God’s Glorious Providence:
- It gives us “deep gratitude to God for all good things—including our love for Him and faith in Him—because all good things are from God.”
- It “gives us patience and comfort, strength and hope through suffering and adversity.”
- It “causes us to marvel at God’s great wisdom.
- “It gives us deeper trust in God because He will accomplish all of His purposes.”
- It gives us “confidence in prayer,” because “God can do what we ask.”
- It keeps us from feeling “overwhelmed, because God is in control.”
- “It gives us great courage and boldness through all things.”
- “It shatters bitterness and complaining” and causes us to be content in our circumstances.
- Louis Berkhof: Summary of Christian Doctrine, Chapter 10, Providence
- James Montgomery Boice: God’s Providence
- John Reisenger: The Sovereignty of God in Providence (mp3)
Sunday's Hymn: In Bunhill Fields
Hail, Father, whose creating callUnnumbered worlds attend;
Jehovah, comprehending all,
Whom none can comprehend!In light unsearchable enthroned,
Whom angels dimly see,
The fountain of the Godhead owned,
And foremost of the Three.From Thee, through an eternal now,
The Son, Thine offspring, flowed;
An everlasting Father Thou,
An everlasting God.Nor quite displayed to worlds above,
Nor quite on earth concealed;
By wondrous, unexhausted love,
To mortal man revealed.Supreme and all-sufficient God,
When nature shall expire,
And worlds created by Thy nod
Shall perish by Thy fire.Thy Name, Jehovah, be adored
By creatures without end,
Whom none but Thy essential Word
And Spirit comprehend.
- The Fifth Sunday After Easter at Magic Statistics
- In the Cross of Christ I Glory at The Happy Wonderer
- Blessed Lord, in Thee Is Refuge at Hiraeth
- Jesus, Your Name at Seasoning of the Heart
- Immortal Honors Rest on Jesus’ Head at Whatever Things…
- Shout, for the Blessed Jesus Reigns at Field Stone Cottage
- Lord’s Day 17, 2008 at The Thirsty Theologian
- I Know That My Redeemer Lives at JoythruChrist
- Sing with All the Saints in Glory at Conjubilant With Song.
My Desktop Photo 4: Atlin Lake at Sunset
Photo by Andrew Stark
I need a little change again.
Petitionary Prayer: April 25
This month’s theme here at Rebecca Writes is petitionary prayer. On Tuesdays and Fridays throughout April, I’ll be posting one request I am making of God, and I’m inviting you to join me. You’ll find all the details here.
- This is a time of transition in this house: new seasons, new projects, new jobs, etc. I’m praying for wisdom and energy in regards to those things.
- Lisa Nunley is praying for her husband:
The stress he is under as an anesthesiologist. The balance of resting in God’s sovereignty when a person has lost their life in surgery… He begins to think heavily about that person… their family, the loss, their pain, was that person a believer?
- Update: Kim in ON is praying for both of her parents because her father is ill.
- Update 2: Dorothy is praying that God would provide a summer job for her daughter.
- Update 3: Candy is in the area experiencing all the earthquakes. I imagine is quite disconcerting to be experiencing such an unusual natural phenomenom.
We have been having swarms of earthquakes in our area, and they are getting worse. We have had some register approximately 3.1 or so and now last night one registered 4.7. We are in a high seismic area but this is very unusual.
What are the sins forbidden in the second commandment?
The sins forbidden in the second commandment are, all devising,[1] counseling,[2] commanding,[3] using,[4] and anywise approving, any religious worship not instituted by God himself;[5] tolerating a false religion;[6] the making any representation of God, of all or of any of the three persons, either inwardly in our mind, or outwardly in any kind of image or likeness of any creature whatsoever;[7] all worshiping of it,[8] or God in it or by it;[9] the making of any representation of feigned deities,[10] and all worship of them, or service belonging to them;[11] all superstitious devices,[12] corrupting the worship of God,[13] adding to it, or taking from it,[14] whether invented and taken up of ourselves,[15] or received by tradition from others,[16] though under the title of antiquity,[17] custom,[18] devotion,[19] good intent, or any other pretense whatsoever;[20] simony;[21] sacrilege;[22] all neglect,[23] contempt,[24] hindering,[25] and opposing the worship and ordinances which God hath appointed.[26]
Providence and Ravens
Until I came north, everything I knew about ravens, I learned in Sunday school. (Okay, in Sunday school and from Edgar Allan Poe.) We had their close cousins, the crows, where I grew up in Minnesota, but I don’t remember ever seeing a raven. According to this map, there should have been some there, but I guess I missed them.
It’d be impossible for a child to grow up in the Yukon and not notice the ravens. They are here and they are not silent.
Northerners tend to have a love-hate relationship with these big black birds. If we don’t lock the lids tight on our garbage cans, the packaging from our food waste will be spread all over the neighbourhood by trash-picking ravens. Can you see that the one in the photo (above left) is carrying a scavenged treasure? Once I saw a raven fly off with a whole package of cheddar cheese from a bag of groceries left in the back of a pickup truck in the supermarket parking lot. I’d like to have heard the conversation in that kitchen when it came time to make the grilled cheese sandwiches for supper.
It’s because ravens seem to relish life that we love them. When it comes to ravens, bird-brained isn’t stupid, and some of that raven brain power is used purely for amusement. Ravens love to swirl and roll in the air currents near the edge of the escarpment rimming town, performing stunt-pilot-worthy aerobatics displays. I have it on good authority that ravens have been seen sliding down snowbanks just for the fun of it. Another favorite pastime is playing “Nonny-nonny-nonny, you can’t catch me!” with my dog. Frankly, in an I.Q. competition between my dog and a raven, I’m not sure my dog would come out on top.
Their extreme cleverness shows itself in their hoarding behaviour. Sometimes ravens will store bits of stolen food in little caches so they can come back for it later, and studies have shown that they find their stockpiles again because they remember where they put them. They also spy on other ravens to see where they are burying their goodies, so that when the opportunity arises, the neighbour’s stash can be raided. Sometimes a hoarding raven will only pretend to bury food in order to throw the thieving spies and raiders off the trail. You might say that ravens are the greedy geniuses of the bird world.
But let’s get back to what I learned about ravens in Sunday school, way before any real-life raven encounters. I learned, first of all, that it is God who feeds them.
Who provides for the raven its prey,
when its young ones cry to God for help,
and wander about for lack of food? (Job 38:41)
That’s a rhetorical question and we’re supposed to answer, “God does.” If you need further confirmation, see Psalm 147:9 and Luke 12:24.
God intentionally provides prey and other goodies for the ravens. Yes, they dumpster dive and trash pick and forage for berries and scavenge for carrion and hunt small rodents. They even eat carcass-feeding maggots and beetles. (How’s that for opportunistic snacking?) And this is how God feeds them.
According to Wikipedia, the raven’s “diet may vary widely with location, season and serendipity,” which my dictionary defines as “the occurrence or development of events by chance in a happy or beneficial way.” It’s not quite serendipity, of course, if God feeds them, is it? But if we changed “by chance” to “by God’s intent” in that definition, we’d have a fairly good definition of providence. God intentionally controls the occurrence and development of events with a happy and beneficial result for the ravens.
So by providence, it is, that the ravens are fed. I leave the lid on my garbage can unfastened and it is God’s provision for them. The unguarded bag of groceries in the back of the pick up? Providence for the birds. Road kill? God’s good gift to the hungry young ones. Ravens have enough brain power to devise clever schemes for keeping their food finds all to themselves. This, as well, is God’s providence for them. All these things are good gifts from God who feeds the ravens.
Now Elijah the Tishbite, of Tishbe in Gilead, said to Ahab, “As the Lord, the God of Israel, lives, before whom I stand, there shall be neither dew nor rain these years, except by my word.” 2 And the word of the Lord came to him: 3 “Depart from here and turn eastward and hide yourself by the brook Cherith, which is east of the Jordan. 4 You shall drink from the brook, and I have commanded the ravens to feed you there.” 5 So he went and did according to the word of the Lord. He went and lived by the brook Cherith that is east of the Jordan. 6 And the ravens brought him bread and meat in the morning, and bread and meat in the evening, and he drank from the brook. (1 Kings 17:1-6)
Petitionary Prayer: April 22
This month’s theme here at Rebecca Writes is petitionary prayer. On Tuesdays and Fridays throughout April, I’ll be posting one request I am making of God, and I’m inviting you to join me. You’ll find all the details here.
- Today I’ve prayed for youngest daughter again. Tomorrow is the big test for the training for her job as a flight attendent, and she came down with a nasty illness this morning.
- Dorothy is praying for her husband and a couple of other men who are experiencing job-related stress.
- Kim of Hiraeth reminds us that we can intercede for others without giving (or knowing) the details.
- Kim of The Upward Call is praying for her daughter, who dealing with many stressful things right now.







