The current brouhaha over smoking has made everyone painfully aware of tobacco’s effects on the body, but it has also obscured a more profound reason for smoking’s popularity: its relation to the soul. As the heyday of smoking passes into the ashheap of history, it is meet that we reflect on this connection.The soul, of course, is a complex thing. Long ago Plato suggested that we consider it as divided into three parts-the appetitive, spirited, and rational-that correspond to the three basic kinds of human desires: the desire to satisfy physical appetites, the desire for recognition, and the desire for truth. Once this tripartite division is recalled, tobacco’s relation to the soul becomes clear: the three prevalent types of smoking tobacco-cigarettes, cigars, and pipes-correspond to the three parts of the soul.
Category Archives: The Church
Sunday Schools
Last night I watched Divided the Movie (free) online and it confirmed what I had expected about the usefulness of Sunday schools. The old Baptists had it right to opposite the separation of children from their parents. If you need some assistance in teaching your children the faith try Family Religion by Matthew Herny.
Sunday Schools come next under consideration. These assume the same high stand as do Tract Societies. They claim the honor of converting their tens of thousands; of leading the tender minds of children to the knowledge of Jesus; of being as properly the instituted means of bringing children to the knowledge of salvation, as the preaching of the gospel that of bringing adults to the same knowledge, &c. Such arrogant pretensions we feel bound to oppose. First, because these as well as the pretensions of the Tract Societies are grounded upon the notion that conversion or regeneration is produced by impressions made upon the natural mind by means of religious sentiments instilled into it; and if the Holy Ghost is allowed to be at all concerned in the thing, it is in a way which implies his being somehow blended with the instruction, or necessarily attendant upon it; all of which we know to be wrong.
Secondly, because such schools were never established by the apostles, nor commanded by Christ. There were children in the days of the apostles. The apostles possessed as great a desire for the salvation of souls, as much love to the cause of Christ, and knew as well what God would own for bringing persons to the knowledge of salvation, as any do at this day. We therefore must believe that if these schools were of God, we should find some account of them in the New Testament.
Thirdly. We have exemplified in the case of the Pharisees, the evil consequences of instructing children in the letter of the Scripture, under the notion that this instruction constitutes a saving acquaintance with the word of God. We see in that instance it only made hypocrites of the Jews; and as the Scriptures declare that Christ’s words are spirit and life, and that the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God, we cannot believe it will have any better effect on the children in our day.
The Scriptures enjoin upon parents to bring up their children in the nurture and admonition of the Lord; but this, instead of countenancing, forbids the idea of parents entrusting the religious education of their children to giddy, unregenerated young persons, who know no better than to build them up in the belief that they are learning the religion of Christ, and to confirm them in their natural notions of their own goodness.
But whilst we thus stand opposed to the plan and use of these Sunday Schools, and the S.S. Union, in every point, we wish to be distinctly understood that we consider Sunday Schools for the purpose of teaching poor children to read, whereby they may be enabled to read the Scriptures for themselves, in neighborhoods where there is occasion for them, and when properly conducted, without that ostentation so commonly connected with them, to be useful and benevolent institutions, worthy of the patronage of all the friends of civil liberty.
Catechisms for your iPod
Two Kingdoms in Scotland
Posted on the Puritan Board;
Sirrah, ye are God’s silly vassal; there are two kings and two kingdoms in Scotland: there is king James, the head of the commonwealth; and there is Christ Jesus, the king of the Church, whose subject James the Sixth is, and of whose kingdom he is not a king, not a lord, not a head, but a member. – Andrew Melville
Judgment & Forgiveness
Philippians 3:13-14 Brethren, I count not myself to have apprehended: but this one thing I do, forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are before, I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus.
The Works of William Tyndale
The New Testament (1526)
Tyndale’s Preface – Bible-researcher.com
Complete Arber ed., 1871 – Google Books
Complete Dabney ed., 1837 – Google Books
Complete – Project Gutenberg
Five Books of Moses, Called the Pentateuch (1580)
Complete Momber ed., 1884 – Google Books
Complete – Project Gutenberg
A Prologue Unto the Epistle of Paul to the Romans (1526)
Tyndale’s Preface – Michael Marlowe
Complete – Michael Marlowe
Complete – Fire for the Ploughman
The Obedience of a Christian Man (1528)
Complete Russell ed., 1831 – Google Books
The Parable of the Wicked Mammon (1528)
Complete Russell ed., 1831 – Google Books
The Practice of Prelates (1530)
Complete Russell ed., 1831 – Google Books
Complete Walter ed., 1849 – Google Books
An Answer Unto Sir Thomas More’s Dialogue (1531)
Complete Walter ed., 1850 – Google Books
The Prophet Jonas (1531?)
The Prologue, Russell ed., 1831 – Google Books
The Exposition of the First Epistle of St. John (1531)
Complete Walter ed., 1849 – Google Books
An Exposition Upon the V. VI. VII. Chapters of Matthew (1533?)
Complete Walter ed., 1849 – Google Books
The Supper of the Lord (1533?)
Complete Walter ed., 1850 – Google Books
Complete Russell, ed. 1831 – Google Books
A Brief Declaration of the Sacraments (1533)
Complete Walter ed., 1848 – Google Books
Complete – Fire for the Ploughman
The Testament of Master William Tracy Esquire,
expounded by William Tindall and Jho[n] Frith (1535)
Complete Walter ed., 1850 – Google Books
Russell, ed. 1831 – Google Books
Other Works
Specimens of Tyndale’s Translations – Google Books
Tyndale’s Letter from Prison – Bible-researcher.com
The administration of the ordinance of baptism and the Lord’s supper – J.C. Philpot
The administration of the ordinance of baptism and the Lord’s supper – J.C. Philpot
“As far as the administration of the ordinance of baptism is concerned, we have no doubt in our own mind that it is perfectly scriptural for any member of the church, say, for instance, the deacon, to administer such, where the place of the pastor is vacant.
As “all things are to be done decently and in order,” we give the preference of course to a minister of the gospel wbere his services can be procured, but we have no superstitious idea that it is indispensable to obtain them.
Both Peter and Paul (Acts 10:48, 1 Corinthians 1:14-17,) seem to have entrusted to others, most probably to what are called in ecclesiastical language “laymen”, the administration of baptism; and Philip, who was only a deacon certainly baptized the Samaritan converts.
And the wisdom and foreknowledge of the Holy Ghost seem to have been in these instances specially manifested.
The arrogant assumptions of the clergy, in which the essence of Popery exists, were foreseen, and foreprovided against by these instances left on record in the New Testament, Were there no example of Baptism or of the Lord’s Supper having been administered by other than the apostles, what strength would it have given to Rome’s arrogant claims, and to her daughter the Church of England’s no less bold pretensions, thaI the ordinances, or, as they term them, the sacraments, can only be administered by priestly hands.
And as there is a strong tendency in the modern dissenting priesthood to set up a similar claim, we are glad to take this opportunity of protesting against it, and of asserting the liberty of the churches.
As to sending for “an ordained minister,” the party that proposes that step should, to be thoroughly consistent, go a step further, and send for a Catholic priest.
If a man be sent of God to preach the gospel, he wants no ordination from man; and if God has not sent him into the vineyard, not all the ordination of man can make him a minister.
As Rushton well remarks, in the book which we lately reviewed, dissenting ordination “is but a pitiful imitation of the original. In the Church of Rome the dominion of an anti-christian priesthood appears in all its grandeur, but ours (dissenting ordination) has neither antiquity nor splendour to snpport it. ‘Theirs,’ says the ingenious Robinson, ‘is nature in the theatre of the metropolis; we are strollers, uttering bombast, in cast-off finery, in a booth at a fair’.”
Dissenting ordinations are, indeed, but a poor third-hand-mimicry, borrowed from the Church of England, which copied them from Rome.
We have spoken somewhat decidedly on this subject, as much of the clerical assumption of “Reverend,” wearing of robes in the pulpit, and other arts of priestcraft are clearly traceable to these dissenting ordinations, and are strongly stamped on some of our most zealous declaimers against popery, who do not see how inconsistently they act in condemning Rome when dressed out in her rags, and in protesting against her principles, when one of her strongest, the monarchical character of the priesthood, is manifested in all they say and do.
As we have in a previous number expressed our sentiments concerning the administration of the Lord’s Supper, we need not here repeat them. Suffice it to say, that we consider it quite scriptural for any member of a Gospel Church to break bread to the rest, their consent being obtained, where there is no Pastor.”
By J.C. Philpot and John M’Kenzie – 1842
Doctrine of Conversion, not Repentance, for the Unregenerate
Whats Wrong with Religious People?
a CALL to the ministry?
J.C. Philpot outlines what it means to be called to ministry and the needed qualifications. You can read a verison at GraceGems, with the understanding that GraceGems does change the wording and scripture quoted, or you can listen to it being read here.
PS: I started a new group just today on Yahoo to discuss Particular Baptist theology, all are welcome to join, see you there.


