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Three Reasons to Be of Good Cheer

Three Reasons to Be of Good Cheer

A Thanksgiving Meditation

Cheer is somewhat of an old-fashioned word. It has the idea of encouragement, of seeing things in a better light, especially when circumstances change for the better. At this time of Thanksgiving, here is a reading from Book 11 (Old Houses, New Houses) in The Big Book of Coffee Cup Meditations. Enjoy reading it!


Three Cheers from Jesus

From God’s Word, the Bible…

So He got into a boat, crossed over, and came to His own city. Then behold, they brought to Him a paralytic lying on a bed. When Jesus saw their faith, He said to the paralytic, “Son, be of good cheer; your sins are forgiven you.”

Matthew 9:1-2

But Jesus turned around, and when He saw her He said, “Be of good cheer, daughter; your faith has made you well.” And the woman was made well from that hour.

Matthew 9:22

But immediately Jesus spoke to them, saying, “Be of good cheer! It is I; do not be afraid.”

Matthew 14:27


The Gospel of Matthew reports three occasions on which Jesus said: “Be of good cheer.” On each of those occasions, Jesus was speaking to an individual or a group who were beaten down and on the verge of despair. On the first occasion, Jesus spoke to a man who had been paralyzed for a long time. On the second occasion, He spoke to a woman who for twelve years had suffered from a hemorrhage. On the third occasion, He spoke to His disciples who were trying to pilot their little boat through a stormy sea.What are the truths that we can draw from these situations? The first is this: We can be of good cheer because Jesus forgives sin (9:1-2).

In this passage we have a paralyzed man lying on his bed, and Jesus says: “Be of good cheer; your sins are forgiven you.”

What does this say to us? The answer couldn’t be plainer. It affirms that Jesus regarded this man’s spiritual condition as being more important than his physical condition. That’s not to say that Jesus wasn’t interested in his physical condition. He was, and He proved it by healing him. But that’s not where Jesus started. No one had said a word to Jesus about forgiving this man’s sins, but that is where Jesus began.

Jesus put the emphasis in the right place. We all have to leave this world and meet God. No one will be able to stand in God’s holy presence unless his sins are forgiven. The good news that emerges from Jesus’ dealings with the paralyzed man is this: Jesus can and does forgive sins. He came to this earth for the express purpose of providing the way for our sins to be forgiven. He did so by dying on the cross. There He received the penalty for sinners so that all who come to Him in repentance and faith will never receive that same penalty but will rather receive forgiveness.

The second truth we see from the three cheers of Jesus is this: We can be of good cheer because Jesus values imperfect faith (9:22)The woman who had suffered for twelve years with “a flow of blood” (9:20) quite obviously had imperfect faith. Her faith that Jesus could heal her was mixed up with some superstition. She seems to have regarded Jesus as something of a magician who exuded power to those who touched Him. So, she managed to work her way through the crowd around Jesus and touch Him. And that touch was rewarded as Jesus healed her.

We can and should be thankful that the Lord doesn’t require us to have perfect faith before He saves us. Weak faith is still faith. What a consolation that is! J.C. Ryle writes:

Our faith may be feeble; our courage may be small; our grasp of the Gospel and its promises, may be weak and trembling,—but, after all, the grand question is, Do we really trust only in Christ? Do we look to Jesus, and only to Jesus, for pardon and peace? If this be so, it is well. (J.C. Ryle, Expository Thoughts on Matthew, The Banner of Truth Trust, Edinburgh, 1995, p. 89.)

The truth we discover from Jesus’ third cheering statement is very comforting, namely, We can be of good cheer because Jesus is with us in the storms of life (14:27).

After feeding a multitude of five thousand, Jesus told His disciples to cross the Sea of Galilee. They soon encountered a ferocious storm. The boat “was now in the middle of the sea, tossed by waves, for the wind was contrary” (14:24).

Jesus came to His disciples by walking on the sea. His first words to them were: “Be of good cheer! It is I; do not be afraid.”

Jesus did marvelous things in that storm. He enabled Simon Peter to walk toward Him on the water and then rescued him when, after a good start, he began to sink. Jesus then stepped with Simon into the boat, and the wind immediately ceased (14:28-32).

We have our storms, too. And they can be very threatening and frightening. But the Lord Jesus has promised to be with us all through this life (Heb. 13:5), and that includes the storms. With Him beside us, our fear can give away to cheer.

These three passages put the Lord Jesus on display. We see His perfect knowledge, His abounding sympathy, and His sovereign authority and power. Our response should be to worship Him as His disciples did when He stilled the storm (14:33).

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Buy a Kindle version HERE

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Twelve in One

This BIG BOOK is the BIGGEST BOOK we have ever published!

What a treat that all twelve books are available in such a beautiful cloth-bound book with a dust jacket. And what a great Christmas or end-of-year book this will prove to be. At a glance below, note the full titles of each of the books included in the BIG BOOK.


 


The Big Book of Coffee Cup Meditations includes the following twelve titles:

A Dog and A Clock 978-0-9988812-9-4 (Series#1)

The “Thumbs-Up” Man 978-0-9988812-5-6 (Series#2)

When God Blocks Our Path 978-0-9988812-4-9 (Series#3)

Fading Lines, Unfading Hope 978-0-9996559-1-7 (Series#4)

The Day the Milk Spilled 978-0-9965168-6-0 (Series#5)

“Where Are the Donuts?” 978-0-9965168-7-7 (Series#6)

Sure Signs of Heavenly Hope 978-0-9988812-1-8 (Series#7)

My Dog Knows It’s Sunday 978-0-9996559-6-2 (Series#8)

Rover and the Cows 978-0-9996559-7-9 (Series#9)

Apples of Gold in Silver Settings 978-0-9600203-0-0 (Series#10)

Old Houses, New Houses 978-0-9600203-1-7 (Series#11)

Golden Key and Silver Chain 978-0-9600203-2-4 (Series#12)

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Uploaded!

Uploaded!

So, the files were uploaded to the printers–and because it is such a big book, the cover had to be quite a heavy-duty one in terms of design, how much (or how little) text it could support, and how to combine the colors, position the logo and the other stuff that needs to be integral to the reading and buying experience…

And would you like a preview of the inside of the book? Well, take a peek HERE!

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Video Introduction to the Big Book of Coffee Cup Meditations

Video Introduction to the Big Book of Coffee Cup Meditations

This is the largest book we have ever produced. Nearly 800 pages in extent, it has more than enough readings for a whole year. Enjoy viewing the one-minute video introduction in which Jim Holmes shows the paperback prototype and talks about how the book itself will be a beautiful cloth-bound item with a dust-jacket–magnificently produced and suitable to be used as a gift to oneself or to others!

Read a preview HERE.

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Anywhere, Anytime!

Portable, Readable, Enjoyable!

Yes, that’s the idea.

My Coffee Cup Meditations are available on Kindle and are short enough and easy enough to use anytime, anywhere, and on your preferred device!

Click HERE or follow the Amazon link below to purchase copies!

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E-Book Production Underway

Read My Coffee Cup Meditations Books Anywhere…

We’re working on getting the series into Kindle format for readers who like eBooks. Read them on your device… enjoy taking a short meditation break from that backbreaking work!

Activate the link below for a keyword search at Amazon.

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An Unexpected Visitor from Heaven

An Angel Speaks to Joseph

We’ve just released another three books in the series, bringing it to twelve books–one for each month of the year. The reading below is from Book 10: Apples of Gold in Silver Settings. You can buy the book on Amazon (see the link at the end of this reading)

From God’s Word, the Bible…

But while he thought about these things, behold, an angel of the Lord appeared to him in a dream, saying, “Joseph, son of David, do not be afraid to take to you Mary your wife, for that which is conceived in her is of the Holy Spirit. And she will bring forth a Son, and you shall call His name Jesus, for He will save
His people from their sins.”

Matthew 1:20-21

Mary was pregnant, and her fiancé Joseph was perplexed. The child wasn’t his. Assuming Mary had been unfaithful to him, he was inclined to break their engagement quietly, that is, without subjecting Mary to the legal procedures of that time.

Then everything changed for Joseph in an instant. An angel suddenly appeared to him in a dream to offer an explanation and to give an instruction.

The explanation had to do with Mary’s pregnancy. It was unique. There had not been one like this before. The angel said: “. . . that which is conceived in her is of the Holy Spirit” (v. 20).

The instruction had to do with the naming of the One who was to be born. The angel said to Joseph: “. . . you shall call His name Jesus, for He will save His people from their sins” (v. 21).

I love the name “Jesus” because it means “salvation,” and this I know about myself: I need salvation. What is it that I need to be saved from? The angel made it clear. I need to be saved from my sins. And what I have said about myself is true of everyone. We are all sinners (Rom. 3:23), and we all need to be saved from our sins.

Jesus came to this earth for the express purpose of providing salvation for sinners, and there would be no such salvation had He not come.

Yes, Jesus provides an example for us on the matter of how we should live, but that wasn’t the primary reason that He came. Jesus was certainly a marvelous teacher, but He didn’t come to only be a teacher. Jesus came to be the Savior. Any explanation for Him other than that comes woefully short of the truth about the Lord Jesus.

To say that Jesus came to this earth to save sinners is to say that He came to pay the penalty that those sinners deserve. God’s holy character precludes Him from forgiving sinners without that penalty being paid. God would sin against Himself if He were to ignore the penalty that He Himself had pronounced on sin. So the huge question was this: how could God at one and the same time carry out the penalty that He had pronounced on sinners and let those very same sinners go free? To put it another way, how could God both punish and not punish sinners? Or, to put it yet another way, how could God simultaneously satisfy His justice that demanded payment for sin and His grace that demanded release for sinners? Enormous dilemma!

Now you know why I love the name “Jesus.” He is the answer to God’s dilemma. On the cross, He received the penalty that God’s justice required. What a penalty it was! It was the penalty of eternal separation from God, and Jesus experienced that on the cross. That’s why He cried: “My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?” (Matt. 27:46).

Because He was God, an infinite person, He could receive an eternity’s worth of wrath in a finite measure of time. Amazing!

Justice looked on the cross of Jesus and clapped its hands in approval because the demand that it made against sinners was fully carried out. But grace looked on that same cross and clapped its hands as well for this reason: because Jesus had paid the penalty, there was no penalty left for those sinners who trust in Him. Justice and grace met in Jesus.

Now you see the reason I love the name “Jesus.” But I have to say there’s another word that I love in the angel’s announcement. It is the word “will.” That’s a definite word. It doesn’t allow for uncertainty. Jesus was coming to this earth to provide salvation for sinners, and He would succeed in that work. Nothing would stop Him.

I would have enjoyed hearing the angel speak his words of explanation and instruction to Joseph because those words pertain to something that pertains to me—salvation from my sins. There is nothing greater to be found, and it’s all found in Jesus.

We have heard the joyful sound:
Jesus saves! Jesus saves!
Spread the tidings all around:
Jesus saves! Jesus saves!

 

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These Books Lifted My Spirits!

I’m So Glad the Postman Brought These!

Farifteh (Frith) Robb writes from Edinburgh that her spirits lifted when these two books arrived in the mail delivery. “They cheered me up,” she wrote.

Frith herself is a gifted author and tells the story of God’s kindness to her in her memoir Unexpected Grace, also made available through Great Writing Publications. More info HERE.

Observant readers of this post will pay attention to the detail of the coffee cup, too, testimony of Frith’s recent visit to the beautiful upstate of South Carolina

Enjoy reading the meditation (#2 from Book 6) below…

From God’s Word, the Bible…

For though by this time you ought to be teachers, you need someone to teach you again the first principles of the oracles of God; and you have come to need milk and not solid food. For everyone who partakes only of milk is unskilled in the word of righteousness, for he is a babe. But solid food belongs to those who are of full age, that is, those who by reason of use have their senses exercised
to discern both good and evil.

Therefore, leaving the discussion of the elementary principles of Christ, let us go on to perfection, not laying again the foundation of repentance from dead works and of faith toward God, of the doctrine of baptisms, of laying on of hands, of resurrection of the dead, and of eternal judgment.

Hebrews 5:12-6:2


Milk and Meat

We know the Bible is both milk for spiritual babes and meat for the spiritually mature. We also know that we are not to continue to subsist on the milk of the Word. We’re to progress to the meat of the Word.

So we’re face to face with an important question: at what point does the Word of God cease to be milk for us and become meat?

I mentioned in the previous reading that some think the milk of the Word has to do with Christ and His salvation, and we are to graduate from those truths to the greater truths of the Spirit. Imagine it! The Christian graduating from Christ!

But the Christian moving from milk to meat is not a matter of leaving certain doctrines behind. It is rather a matter of coming to a greater understanding of those doctrines. It is building on the simple doctrines that we heard when we first accepted Christ.

Doesn’t the book of Hebrews tell us to leave “the elementary principles of Christ”? Yes, but this leaving shouldn’t be understood in the sense of departing from a place to never return again. It should rather be likened to a man building a house. He lays the foundation, and then he leaves it so he can go on to build on top of it. He doesn’t leave the foundation by destroying it or by denying that it is there.

The author of Hebrews was concerned about his readers because, after laying the foundation and starting to build the house, they were acting as if they wanted to destroy the house and the foundation so they could start all over.

These people should have been at the meat level. That means they should have been able to teach others, and they should have been able to discern between true and false teaching (Heb. 5:12-14). But they were back at the milk level—unable to teach and unable to discern.

I was very much at the milk level in the early days of my Christian life. My understanding of salvation was very simple and elemental when I came to Christ. I knew I was a sinner. I knew Jesus was the Savior. I knew I must repent of my sins and trust Jesus as my Savior. I came repenting and believing, and I was saved.

But I didn’t stay there. As I read God’s Word, read about God’s Word, and heard godly men preach, I began to move off the milk level to the meat level. It wasn’t that I ceased to be interested in Christ and salvation. Far from it! I became more and more interested in Him and His work of salvation. As I learned, I was amazed at the glories folded into the simple gospel.

For example, if I had been asked as a new Christian to identify the three mediatorial offices of Christ (prophet, priest, and king) and explain each one, I would have been at a loss. With the passing of time, however, I learned about these offices and rejoiced in them.

If I had been asked on the day of my conversion to explain how Jesus could pay for our sin in the six hours He was on the cross, I would have been bewildered.

On the other hand, I was easy prey in those days for those who had mistaken notions about Christ and His redeeming work. I now shake my head in amazement at some of the “teachings” that I simply accepted at face value. One especially comes to mind—that teaching that suggests that God tried first one plan of salvation, then another, then another, and finally decided to send His Son. The truth is God has always had only one plan of salvation, and that plan is His Son.

Am I where I want to be and need to be in the spiritual realm? No. After all these years, I can say with Paul: “Brethren, I do not count myself to have apprehended…” (Phil. 4:13).

When it comes to the deep truths of Christ, there should be an end to the milk, but there will never be an end to the meat. There will always be more to understand, and each new understanding will bring greater wonder and awe.

 

 

 

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Get Them While the Ink Is Drying!

Celebrate Six!

So, there are now six of the devotional books available.

The latest books in the series to release are:

The Day the Milk Spilled

I can’t tell you how this saying came about, but I do recall a day when I saw someone crying over spilled milk. The someone wasn’t a child. It was my dad. And the milk wasn’t the small amount in a glass. It was a lot of milk. For years my parents tried to scratch a living out of a hardscrabble little farm near Mulberry Grove, Illinois. There wasn’t much money to be made from farming in those days, at least not from farming on our scale. . .

More information HERE.

“Where are the Donuts?”

Our two sons, their wives and their children were all present for the Christmas gathering. Turkey, ham, dressing, mashed potatoes, gravy, green beans, corn, sweet potatoes, and homemade bread were on the table. When the moment came that we had been eagerly anticipating, we took our seats. As soon as our youngest grandchild, Eramin, was comfortably situated in her high chair, she surveyed the table and asked: “Where are the donuts?”

More information HERE.

 

If you like buying your books from Amazon, activate the link HERE.

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Amazing Amazon

Amazon is Simply Quite Amazing . . .

. . .in its technology, that is!

We’re delighted to let you know that all six of the excellent My Coffee-Cup Meditations books are now available for your convenience on the Kindle platform, and you can purchase them inexpensively from Amazon wherever in the world you live–for $4.99 or the equivalent in your currency!

View the selection from Amazon HERE.

So, there are now SIX great reasons for you to get the Kindle versions of My Coffee-Cup Meditations.

 

 

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