Sermon – “The Value of a Human Soul”
I hope in the future to put together some information on Vincent van Gogh and his Christian experience. So many books downplay any of this religious experiences or undertakings as expressions of his insanity, but it is clear so many of those authors have little or no understanding of Christianity themselves. I was surprised to learn while listening to the audio book of Van Gogh: The Life by Steven Naifeh and Gregory White Smith about Vincent’s experience with Evangelical Christianity in the late 1870’s. I recently purchased and read At Eternity’s Gate: The Spiritual Vision of Vincent van Gogh by Kathleen Powers Erickson which shows the profound and lasting impact of Vincent’s faith throughout his life.
While reading At Eternity’s Gate, I was amazed to learn that Vincent included a copy of a sermon he delivered in English as part of a letter to his brother Theo. The letter is available online thanks to the Van Gogh Museum‘s VanGoghLetters.org. It was sent to Theo van Gogh and dated November 3, 1876 and can be read in full here.
Psalm 119:19 I am a stranger in the earth, hide not Thy commandments from me.
It is an old faith and it is a good faith that our life is a pilgrims progress ─ that we are strangers in the earth, but that though this be so, yet we are not alone for our Father is with us. We are pilgrims, our life is a long walk, a journey from earth to heaven.─
The beginning of this life is this. There is one who remembereth no more Her sorrow and Her anguish for joy that a man is born into the world. She is our Mother. The end of our pilgrimage is the entering in Our Fathers house where are many mansions, where He has gone before us to prepare a place for us.─ The end of this life is what we call death ─ it is an hour in which words are spoken, things are seen and felt that are kept in the secret chambers of the hearts of those who stand by, ─ it is so that all of us have such things in our hearts or forebodings of such things.─ There is sorrow in the hour when a man is born into the world, but also joy ─ deep and unspeakable ─ thankfulness so great that it reacheth the highest Heavens. Yes the Angels of God, they smile, they hope and they rejoice when a man is born in the world.─ There is sorrow in the hour of death ─ but there too is joy unspeakable when it is the hour of death of one who has fought a good fight. There is One who has said, I am the resurrection and the life, if any man believeth in Me, though he were dead, yet shall he live.─ There was an Apostle who heard a voice from heaven, saying: Blessed are they that die in the Lord for they rest from their labour and their works follow them. There is joy when a man is born in the world but there is greater joy when a Spirit has passed through great tribulation, when an Angel is born in Heaven. Sorrow is better than joy ─ and even in mirth the heart is sad ─ and it is better to go to the house of mourning than to the house of feasts, for by the sadness of the countenance the heart is made better. Our nature is sorrowful but for those who have learnt and are learning to look at Jesus Christ there is always reason to rejoice.─ It is a good word, that of St Paul: As being sorrowful yet always rejoicing. For those who believe in Jesus Christ there is no death and no sorrow that is not mixed with hope ─ no despair ─ there is only a constantly being born again, a constantly going from darkness into light.─ They do not mourn as those who have no hope ─ Christian Faith makes life to evergreen life.
We are pilgrims in the earth and strangers ─ we come from afar and we are going far.─ The journey of our life goes from the loving breast of our Mother on earth to the arms of our Father in heaven. Everything on earth changes ─ we have no abiding city here ─ it is the experience of everybody: That it is Gods will that we should part with what we dearest have on earth ─ we ourselves, we change in many respects, we are not what we once were, we shall not remain what we are now.─ From infancy we grow up to boys and girls ─ young men and young women ─ and if God spares us and helps us ─ to husbands and wives, Fathers and Mothers in our turn, and then, slowly but surely the face that once had the “early dew of morning” gets its wrinkles, the eyes that once beamed with youth and gladness speak of a sincere deep and earnest sadness ─ though they may keep the fire of Faith, Hope and Charity ─ though they may beam with Gods spirit. The hair turns grey or we loose it ─ ah ─ indeed we only pass through the earth, we only pass through life ─ we are strangers and pilgrims in the earth. The world passes and all its glory.─ Let our later days be nearer to Thee and therefore better than these.─
Yet we may not live on just anyhow ─ no, we have a strife to strive and a fight to fight. What is it we must do: We must love God with all our strength, with all our might, with all our heart, with all our soul, we must love our neighbour as ourselves. These two commandments we must keep and if we follow after these, if we are devoted to this, we are not alone for our Father in Heaven is with us, helps us and guides us, gives us strength day by day, hour by hour. and so we can do all things through Christ who gives us might. We are strangers in the earth, hide not Thy commandments from us. Open Thou our eyes, that we may behold wondrous things out of Thy law. Teach us to do Thy will and influence our hearts that the love of Christ may constrain us and that we may be brought to do what we must do to be saved.
On the road from earth to Heaven
Do Thou guide us with Thine eye.
We are weak but Thou art mighty
Hold us with Thy powerful hand.
Our life, we might compare it to a journey, we go from the place where we were born to a far off haven. Our earlier life might be compared to sailing on a river, but very soon the waves become higher, the wind more violent, we are at sea almost before we are aware of it ─ and the prayer from the heart ariseth to God: Protect me o God, for my bark is so small and Thy sea is so great.─ The heart of man is very much like the sea, it has its storms, it has its tides and in its depths it has its pearls too. The heart that seeks for God and for a Godly life has more storms than any other. Let us see how the Psalmist describes a storm at sea, He must have felt the storm in his heart to describe it so. We read in the 107th Psalm, They that go down to the sea in ships, that do business in great waters, these see the works of the Lord and His wonders in the deep. For He commandeth and raiseth up a stormy wind which lifteth up the waves thereof.─ They mount up to Heaven, they go down again to the depth, their soul melteth in them because of their trouble. Then they cry unto the Lord in their trouble and He bringeth them out of their distresses, He bringeth them unto their desired haven.─
Do we not feel this sometimes on the sea of our lives. Does not everyone of you feel with me the storms of life or their forebodings or their recollections?
And now let us read a description of another storm at sea in the New Testament, as we find it in the VIth Chapter of the Gospel according to St John in the 17th to the 21st verse. And the disciples entered into a ship and went over the sea toward Capernaum. And the sea arose by reason of a great wind that blew.─ So when they had rowed about five and twenty or thirty furlongs, they see Jesus walking on the sea and drawing nigh unto the ship and they were afraid.─ Then they willingly received Him into the ship and immediately the ship was at the land whither they went. You who have experienced the great storms of life, you over whom all the waves and all the billows of the Lord have gone ─ have you not heard, when your heart failed for fear, the beloved well known voice ─ with something in its tone that reminded you of the voices that charmed your childhood ─ the voice of Him whose name is Saviour and Prince of peace, saying as it were to you personally ─ mind to you personally “It is I, be not afraid”. Fear not.─ Let not your heart be troubled. And we whose lives have been calm up to now, calm in comparison of what others have felt ─ let us not fear the storms of life, amidst the high waves of the sea and under the grey clouds of the sky we shall see Him approaching for Whom we have so often longed and watched, Him we need so ─ and we shall hear His voice, It is I, be not afraid.─ And if after an hour or season of anguish or distress or great difficulty or pain or sorrow we hear Him ask us “Dost Thou love me” then let us say, Lord Thou knowest all things, Thou knowest that I love Thee. And let us keep that heart full of the love of Christ and may from thence issue a life which the love of Christ constraineth.─ Lord Thou knowest all things, Thou knowest that I love Thee, when we look back on our past we feel sometimes as if we did love Thee, for whatsoever we have loved, we loved in Thy name. Have we not often felt as a widow and an orphan ─ in joy and prosperity as well, and more even than under grief ─ because of the thought of Thee.─
Truly our soul waiteth for Thee more than they that watch for the morning ─ our eyes are up unto Thee, o Thou who dwellest in Heavens.─ In our days too there can be such a thing as seeking the Lord.─
What is it we ask of God ─ is it a great thing? Yes it is a great thing, peace for the ground of our heart, rest for our soul ─ give us that one thing and then we want not much more, then we can do without many things, then can we suffer great things for Thy names sake.─ We want to know that we are Thine and that Thou art ours, we want to be thine ─ to be Christians.─ We want a Father, a Fathers love and a Fathers approval. May the experience of life make our eye single and fix it on Thee. May we grow better as we go on in life.
We have spoken of the storms on the journey of life, but now let us speak of the calms and joys of Christian life.─ And yet, my dear friends, let us rather cling to the seasons of difficulty and work and sorrow, even for the calms are treacherous often.
The heart has its storms, has its seasons of drooping but also its calms and even its times of exaltation.─ There is a time of sighing and of praying but there is also a time of answer to prayer. Weeping may endure for a night but joy cometh in the morning.
The heart that is fainting
May grow full to o’erflowing
And they that behold it
Shall wonder and know not
That God at its fountains
Far off has been raining.
My peace I leave with you ─ we saw how there is peace even in the storm. Thanks be to God who has given us to be born and to live in a Christian country. Has any of us forgotten the golden hours of our early days at home, and since we left that home ─ for many of us have had to leave that home and to earn their living and to make their way in the world.─ Has He not brought us thus far, have we lacked anything. We believe Lord, help Thou our unbelief. I still feel the rapture, the thrill of joy I felt when for the first time I cast a deep look in the lives of my Parents, when I felt by instinct how much they were Christians. And I still feel that feeling of eternal youth and enthusiasm wherewith I went to God, saying “I will be a Christian too”.─
Are we what we dreamt we should be? No ─ but still ─ the sorrows of life, the multitude of things of daily life and of daily duties, so much more numerous than we expected ─ the tossing to and fro in the world, they have covered it over ─ but it is not dead, it sleepeth.─ The old eternal faith and love of Christ, it may sleep in us but it is not dead and God can revive it in us. But though to be born again to eternal life, to the life of Faith, Hope and Charity ─ and to an evergreen life ─ to the life of a Christian and of a Christian workman be a gift of God, a work of God ─ and of God alone ─ yet let us put the hand to the plough on the field of our heart, let us cast out our net once more ─ let us try once more ─ God knows the intention of the spirit, God knows us better than we know ourselves for He made us and not we ourselves. He knows of what things we have need, He knows what is good for us. May He give His blessing on the seed of His word that has been sown in our hearts.
God helping us, we shall get through life.─ With every temptation He will give a way to escape.─
Father we pray Thee not that Thou shouldest take us out of the world but we pray Thee to keep us from evil. Give us neither poverty nor riches, feed us with bread convenient for us. And let Thy songs be our delight in the houses of our pilgrimage. God of our Fathers be our God: may their people be our people, their Faith our faith.─ We are strangers in the earth, hide not Thy commandments from us but may the love of Christ constrain us. Entreat us not to leave Thee or to refrain from following after Thee. Thy people shall be our people, Thou shalt be our God.─
Our life is a pilgrims progress. I once saw a very beautiful picture, it was a landscape at evening. In the distance on the right hand side a row of hills appearing blue in the evening mist. Above those hills the splendour of the sunset, the grey clouds with their linings of silver and gold and purple. The landscape is a plain or heath covered with grass and heather, here and there the white stem of a birch tree and its yellow leaves, for it was in Autumn. Through the landscape a road leads to a high mountain far far away, on the top of that mountain a city whereon the setting sun casts a glory. On the road walks a pilgrim, staff in hand. He has been walking for a good long while already and he is very tired. And now he meets a woman, a figure in black that makes one think of St Pauls word “As being sorrowful yet always rejoicing”. That Angel of God has been placed there to encourage the pilgrims and to answer their questions:
And the pilgrim asks her: Does the road go uphill then all the way?
and the answer is “Yes to the very end”─
and he asks again: And will the journey take all day long?
and the answer is: “From morn till night my friend”.
And the pilgrim goes on sorrowful yet always rejoicing ─ sorrowful because it is so far off and the road so long.─ Hopeful as he looks up to the eternal city far away, resplendent in the evening glow, and he thinks of two old sayings he has heard long ago ─ the one is:
“There must much strife be striven
There must much suffering be suffered
There must much prayer be prayed
And then the end will be peace.”
and the other:
The water comes up to the lips
But higher comes it not.
And he says, I shall be more and more tired but also nearer and nearer to Thee. Has not man a strife on earth? But there is a consolation from God in this life. An angel of God, comforting men ─ that is the Angel of Charity. Let us not forget Her.─ And when everyone of us goes back to daily things and daily duties, let us not forget ─ that things are not what they seem, that God by the things of daily life teacheth us higher things, ─ that our life is a pilgrims progress and that we are strangers in the earth ─ but that we have a God and Father who preserveth strangers, ─ and that we are all bretheren.─
Amen.
And now the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, our Father, and the fellowship of the Holy Ghost, be with us for evermore.
Amen.
(Reading Scripture Psalm XCI)
Tossed with rough winds and faint with fear,
Above the tempest soft and clear
What still small accents greet mine ear
“’t Is I, be not afraid.”
’t Is I, who washed thy spirit white;
’t Is I, who gave thy blind eyes sight,
’t Is I, thy Lord, thy life, thy light,
’t Is I, be not afraid.
These raging winds, this surging sea
Have spent their deadly force on me
They bear no breath of wrath to Thee
’t Is I, be not afraid.
This bitter cup, I drank it first
To Thee it is no draught accurst
The hand that gives it thee is pierced
“’t Is I, be not afraid.”
When on the other side thy feet,
Shall rest, mid thousand welcomes sweet;
One well known voice thy heart shall greet ─
’t Is I, be not afraid.
Mine eyes are watching by thy bed
Mine arms are underneath thy head
My blessing is around Thee shed
“’t Is I, be not afraid.”
An Old Message for America
Hosea 4:1-5
There is a phrase used sometimes to describe the land in the middle of the United States:
Flyover Country
It is a phrase that is meant to describe the vast stretches of land that many Americans only see as they “fly over” it while traveling from coast to coast.
Thus it is deemed as unimportant or inferior and unworthy of stopping or living there.
Honestly, that flyover country is my sort of place.
Less people, more nature, country life
If there is Flyover Country in the Scriptures, it is the twelve books some call the Minor Prophets.
They were first called “minor” by Augustine of Hippo around 400 A.D.
The ancient Jews called them “the Twelve” and they were often on one scroll.
These books are often “flown over” as people jump from the prophecies of Daniel to the coming of Christ in the Gospels.
If I were to ask you this morning to list these twelve books from memory, I doubt more than a handful will name them correctly and in order.
What a mistake we make in disregarding these books!
In them we meet:
Hosea who prophesied about the judgment to come upon the Northern Kingdom of Israel
Joel, who prophesied about pestilence and judgment upon the Southern Kingdom of Judah
Amos, who prophesied against the Northern Kingdom
Obadiah, who prophesied against Edom
Jonah, who fled God’s call before reluctantly obeying after graduating from Whale University.
Micah, who prophesied against the sins of both Kingdoms
Nahum, who prophesied about Nineveh’s fall
Habakkuk, who prophesied about the righteousness of God’s judgment upon Judah
Zephaniah, who prophesied concerning the terrible day of judgment upon Judah
Haggai, who motivated the Jews returned from captivity to rebuild the Temple
Zechariah, who prophesied about the future of Israel through those returned captives
Malachi, the final prophet of the Old Testament era who preached for repentance and revival
I do not know why but it seems God has been leading us lately into these overlooked messengers.
We just finished going through Jonah in Sunday School and are starting in Micah.
Today, we find ourselves in Hosea.
Who was Hosea?
His ministry stretched out for at least 50 years.
He was a contemporary of Isaiah
He was the original “weeping prophet”
The sadness of his home life and his message to unheeding audiences
The judgment he announced upon Israel.
God used Hosea’s home as an object lesson for Israel
Just as Israel had been unfaithful to God, so would Gomer be unfaithful to Hosea
Just as God would in mercy redeem Israel from its sin, so would Hosea redeem Gomer
I would not count myself to be an expert on this book, though I have taught through it twice in Sunday School settings and once at the Norris Bible Baptist Seminary.
And here is what strikes me every time I read the words of Hosea:
Though written about a kingdom and people some 2,700 years ago, I find so many parallels to today.
I know of no other book that I see our situation in America reflected in as well as it appears here.
Let me say that is because people are still people, no matter the date or location.
We are all sinners.
Sin was just as effective and deadly then as it is now.
God still judges sin and calls for man to repent of that sin before it is too late.
God still offers forgiveness through His mercy and grace.
So, this morning, I want to look at the Book of Hosea and see what its message is for today.
I. The Terrible State of Affairs
Look at the words of Hosea Chapter 4:
Hos 4:1 Hear the word of the LORD, ye children of Israel: for the LORD hath a controversy with the inhabitants of the land, because there is no truth, nor mercy, nor knowledge of God in the land.
When God looked down to examine the hearts of men what did he find?
Well, He tells us what He did not find – the things He was looking for.
Truth! Mercy! Knowledge of God!
My eyes read those words and I hear echoes from Genesis 6:5:
Gen 6:5 And GOD saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.
Why, those are His chosen people – the descendants of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob!
Yet God sees them in the same position as the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah:
Void of righteousness!
Void of Truth!
Void of Light!
Read on:
Hos 4:2 By swearing, and lying, and killing, and stealing, and committing adultery, they break out, and blood toucheth blood.
In the first 11 words they are guilty of breaking 4 of the Ten Commandments!
They are broken free from all restraints as a dog broken free from its leash.
The blood of their victims pools together, crying out for justice!
My friends, can you not see our present world in those words?
Read the front pages of any newspaper in America!
Glance at any news website!
Good is evil and evil is good!
The prophet Isaiah nailed it when he said:
Isa 5:20 Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil; that put darkness for light, and light for darkness; that put bitter for sweet, and sweet for bitter!
How can that be?
Hosea tells us in vs. 6
Hos 4:6 My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge: because thou hast rejected knowledge, I will also reject thee, that thou shalt be no priest to me: seeing thou hast forgotten the law of thy God, I will also forget thy children.
Our society is void of truth!
America had God’s truth.
America rejected God’s truth.
America will be judged according to God’s truth.
A. That rejection of God is manifested in Idolatry
Hos 4:12 My people ask counsel at their stocks, and their staff declareth unto them: for the spirit of whoredoms hath caused them to err, and they have gone a whoring from under their God.
Hos 4:13 They sacrifice upon the tops of the mountains, and burn incense upon the hills, under oaks and poplars and elms, because the shadow thereof is good: therefore your daughters shall commit whoredom, and your spouses shall commit adultery.
Just as Ancient Israel rejected God for worthless idols, so has America.
Oh, they need not be statues or figures for anything placed above God in our hearts is an idol.
Money, fame, power, greed, lust, selfishness…
B. That rejection of God is through all society.
Hos 5:1 Hear ye this, O priests; and hearken, ye house of Israel; and give ye ear, O house of the king; for judgment is toward you, because ye have been a snare on Mizpah, and a net spread upon Tabor.
Hos 5:2 And the revolters are profound to make slaughter, though I have been a rebuker of them all.
Hos 5:3 I know Ephraim, and Israel is not hid from me: for now, O Ephraim, thou committest whoredom, and Israel is defiled.
I see three groups of people in these verses.
First, the general populace – the house of Israel
Second, the religious leaders – the priests
Third, the aristocracy – Ephraim
Why is Ephraim the aristocracy, the ruling elite?
Ephraim was the most powerful tribe
Jeroboam, an Ephrathite, started the cracks that led to the split of Israel
See I Kings 11:26-40
Let me say that I despise those that seek to divide our nation through inciting class warfare.
I am not here to say the problem is the poor or the rich or the rulers or the young or the old.
I’m here to say that as a whole and then no matter who you slice it, our society is becoming more and more corrupt.
C. That rejection of God led them to seek answers outside of God.
Hos 5:13 When Ephraim saw his sickness, and Judah saw his wound, then went Ephraim to the Assyrian, and sent to king Jareb: yet could he not heal you, nor cure you of your wound.
The wages of sin came due with interest.
Where did they turn? Not to God!
They turned to the pagan Assyrians, who would soon conquer them!
They call today the Information Age.
We can find answers to almost any question in a matter of moments.
Yet in all that searching we fail to look to Truth itself.
We fail to go to God!
Oh, we turn to celebrities and their “expert opinions”.
We turn to scientists and their knowledge.
We turn to political leaders and their influence.
And we fail to turn to God!
It is His Truth that we have rejected!
It is His Judgment that surely must fall if He be Just at all!
It is He who can grant mercy and forgiveness!
And we will go anywhere to anyone but to Him.
WHAT CAN WE DO???
Well, I’m glad that God is merciful to us sinners!
He has provided the remedy then and now.
II. The Trigger to Stop God’s Anger
Hos 6:1 Come, and let us return unto the LORD: for he hath torn, and he will heal us; he hath smitten, and he will bind us up.
Just because God may judge our sin does not mean He casts us off.
He bids us to COME.
What a wonderful word!
Hear the words of Christ:
Mat 11:28 Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.
Mat 11:29 Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls.
Mat 11:30 For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.
What is the message for the world today? Come!
Rev 22:17 And the Spirit and the bride say, Come. And let him that heareth say, Come. And let him that is athirst come. And whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely.
Oh, what America needs to do is to come to Jesus!
What we Christians need to do is to come to Jesus!
What does it mean to COME?
A. It means to come from where we are.
That is repentance in a nutshell.
We change our mind and our direction.
We turn from sin to the Savior!
We turn from sin’s wages to the Great Shepherd’s care!
We turn from a curse and death to blessing and life!
B. It means to come expecting a change.
Hos 6:1 Come, and let us return unto the LORD: for he hath torn, and he will heal us; he hath smitten, and he will bind us up.
Hos 6:2 After two days will he revive us: in the third day he will raise us up, and we shall live in his sight.
Everything changes when we turn from sin toward God.
Our nation needs a good ol’ fashioned life-changing revival!
The kind that makes a lasting change in the hearts of men.
Too many today attempt to turn to Christ without loosing their hold on sin.
Then they wonder why they struggle so spiritually.
It is like a drowning man holding on to an anvil when we try to serve God and hold onto sin.
C. It means a change in heart and not just action.
Hos 6:6 For I desired mercy, and not sacrifice; and the knowledge of God more than burnt offerings.
We focus on the actions, while God focuses on the heart.
It has always been so.
Cain’s sacrifice was rejected more for the heart behind it than the offering itself.
The story bears that out.
David was chosen among his brethren not because of his appearance but because of his heart.
God does not want us to make the appearance of turning to Him, He wants our hearts to be truly changed.
What does God want from us today?
He wants the sinner to turn to Him for salvation!
He wants to Christian to turn to Him for strength and guidance!
If we do not turn, they we will be like the Israelites we read about here.
Hos 6:7 But they like men have transgressed the covenant: there have they dealt treacherously against me.
What happened to them?
History tells us the judgment came.
The Assyrians conquered them and carried them away captive.
Thomas Jefferson said: “Indeed I tremble for my country when reflect that God is just: that his justice cannot sleep for ever…”
The hope for our nation is that those of use with God’s Truth will heed that truth and repent.
When we change our ways, we may affect the wicked to change theirs.
Though also not written to us, we may learn from the words God spoke to Solomon:
2Ch 7:14 If my people, which are called by my name, shall humble themselves, and pray, and seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways; then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin, and will heal their land.
Just uploaded the audio of the Easter 2021 sermon from Faith Baptist Church, Decatur, TX. It is titled “A Tale of Four Gardens” and is an overview of the the drama of man’s redemption through Christ.
Matthew 16