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2007·10·22 · 1 Comments
“. . . founding our hopes on his promises.”

Let us learn, therefore, not to become drunk on our foolish hopes. Rather, let us hope in God and in God’s promises, and we will never be deceived. But if we base our hopes on our own presumptuousness, God will strip everything away. This is one of our most essential doctrines, since human nature is so driven by presumptuousness. For we are so influenced by insupportable pride that God is forced to punish us harshly. We think we are so much higher than God that we ought to be more powerful than God. Consequently, seeing how inclined we are toward this vice, all the more ought we to pay heed to what Micah says here: that we must not rest content with the thought that whatever happens will happen. Rather, we must realize that so long as God’s hand is upon us, we are condemned to be miserable. For there is no other cure shy of our returning to God and founding our hopes on his promises. Therein lies our surest remedy, equal to any and all disasters that might befall us.

—John Calvin, as quoted by Lawson in The Expository Genius of John Calvin (Reformation Trust, 2007),106–107.

1 Comments:

1. 07·10·23··07:34
donsandsd

Amen.

He will never leave us. He will chastise us. He will give us all that we ask, according to His will.
The Lord's promises need to be understood in light of His whole Word.
Many take His promises out of context, and worse. And this causes great harm to a human soul, and to the Gospel.


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