God sets the times

Ecclesiastes: Making Sense of Life Under the Sun - Part 4

Preacher

James Ross

Date
Feb. 27, 2022
Time
10:30

Transcription

Disclaimer: this is an automatically generated machine transcription - there may be small errors or mistranscriptions. Please refer to the original audio if you are in any doubt.

[0:00] Well, can we turn together in God's Word to the book of Ecclesiastes and chapter 3 to remind ourselves that God sets the times.

[0:20] But before we go there grand scale, I want to think about Lego sets. I'll bring it right down. We have boys in our house, so we often have Lego sets in our houses.

[0:30] I know some of you enjoy, still enjoy Lego. Lego's an amazing thing. If you haven't seen it since when I was growing up in the 1980s and early 90s, it has moved on considerably.

[0:42] So you open a box and you're confronted with a whole host of random pieces, lots of new shapes and designs in the Lego world.

[0:53] And it's amazing for me, anyway, to see how you can go from step one to step however hundred. You're building it up and you're wondering, how is this block going to add to this car or this castle, whatever it is.

[1:07] You go, you follow the instructions, you come out with this brilliant model at the end. There's something wonderful about the imagination and design of engineers.

[1:18] Think about Lego sets. Think about our lives and our times. Our lives are full of various times and seasons.

[1:29] Our stories take in a whole host of people and places and events and circumstances and conversations and joys and sorrows.

[1:42] And many of those we did not plan. But still, somehow they lock together and they piece together to make us who we are.

[1:55] And our stories, as we look around the room today, our stories can and will be hugely different from those around us. But that doesn't matter because our great point today is that we are not the designers.

[2:12] We are not in control. It's God who is the master builder. It's God who sets the time. It's God who chooses the pieces. God who sets the pattern and the plan of our lives.

[2:25] That our times, individually and collectively, are in God's hands. And I hope that we'll see how that's really good news. But it involves us living with an understanding that we have a lack of control.

[2:42] It forces us to acknowledge that we have limits. For some of us, we might find that quite comforting, instinctively. Others of us, we might find that quite challenging, instinctively.

[2:54] Well, to live with limits can be comfort and is comfort for the people of God if and when we learn to trust God.

[3:07] Recognizing that with God there are no limits. Recognizing that God stands beyond time and over time and over our times. And he has a character that we can trust.

[3:19] There is comfort there. Especially if we think about the alternatives. If the alternative is that I set the agenda for my life and I drive the timetable.

[3:32] Then very quickly, I am going to become frustrated or perhaps very stressed. Because things are not working out the way that I hope.

[3:42] Alternatively, if I think blind chance and coincidence is setting the course of our lives.

[3:54] That very quickly becomes a recipe for despair and that sense that life is vanity and is meaningless. But when I come to understand that my times are in God's hands, that's a real source of hope.

[4:11] If I know the character of God and I have learned that I can trust him. And that is true whether we're thinking globally. So we're just coming out of pandemic.

[4:24] Whether we think of what's happening in the Ukraine. Or whether we're thinking about the personal situation that we are in right now.

[4:36] It is comfort and hope for us to appreciate that God sets the times. So that we might stand in awe of him. And we might learn to trust him.

[4:48] That's what we're going to see today. We need to begin with the problem of our times. Because that's really what this poem, this really famous poem, is speaking about in the first nine verses.

[5:03] I've probably said this before. But when it comes to poetry, I would consider myself to be fairly dense. I enjoy the language. I like the sound of poetry.

[5:14] Generally, I don't get it. So coming to any poem, I'm having to ask, what is our author trying to say? Very basic for me, because I've got a basic mind.

[5:25] Here, to understand what's going on in this poem, we need to set it in its context. We need to see it as we've been through Ecclesiastes 1 and 2.

[5:37] And we also need to see the words that follow from verse 10 onwards. Because our poem, as beautiful as it is, reveals a problem to us.

[5:50] And it's the prose that follows in verse 10 onwards that begins to offer real comfort to us. So look at the introduction in verse 1. The introduction to the poem.

[6:02] There is a time for everything and a season for every activity under the heavens. And I'm sure we agree with that. We understand that life has rhythms and seasons, whether we're thinking about the calendar or just the seasons of life.

[6:17] But the teacher's point, the point of Ecclesiastes, is that God sets those times. Not you and not me.

[6:30] Thinking about the subject matter of the poem in verses 2 to 8, what are we dealing with here? It seems like in these few short lines, our teacher, our poet, is wanting to cover the completeness of human experiences and human emotions.

[6:52] A few clues to that. First of all, if we follow the rule of seven. So in the Bible, seven is the number of completeness. How many lines are in our poem?

[7:05] I'll save you counting. There are 14. So there are two blocks of seven. How many times is the word time in our poem? Time being the key theme.

[7:15] There's 28 time references. Four times seven. Completeness is in view. And then think with me about the very first line, verse 2.

[7:27] A time to be born and a time to die. Doesn't that take in the completeness of our human lives? All else within the poem fits within those two bookends.

[7:40] So this is trying to say, here is a summary of the completeness of human experiences and human emotions. So let's have a look at it.

[7:51] We're not going to go line by line, but we're going to notice four features of the poem. First one being that the times of our lives are outside of our control.

[8:04] Now we've already said that and we're going to see this here. So again, first line. A time to be born and a time to die. We know this. The day of our birth, we did not decide.

[8:17] The day we will die, we do not decide. And the ageing that happens in between, we do not control. The second line takes us in the same direction.

[8:30] A time to plant and a time to uproot. There are some gardeners in the room. I am not one of them. But to think very basically about planting and pruning and harvesting, we know that there are right times to plant.

[8:48] And there's right times to pluck up and harvest. If we decide that the right time for planting is in, I don't even know, December, we are not going to get the crop that we are looking for.

[9:02] There are right times for those events and we do not set those times. Rather, God does. We can turn to verse 8.

[9:15] A time to love and a time to hate. A time for war and a time for peace. Most of us were born in peacetime. Some of us were born in times of war.

[9:27] That again was outside of our control. And that we happen to live in the security of Edinburgh. And that we're not living in Kiev.

[9:41] Is down to God's providence. That wasn't our decision. So the times of our lives are outside of our control. We are dancing to someone else's tune.

[9:54] Someone else is setting the rhythm and that's God and that's not us. Another feature that we see in this poem is that the times that we experience in our lives can be wildly contrasting.

[10:06] From day to day. Verse 8. We'll pay attention to verse 8 because it changes the pattern. Did you notice that all the couplets, they kind of corresponded to each other?

[10:20] But these ones, they contrast. So you go love, hate. And instead of going peace, war, you go love, hate, war, peace. It's drawing attention to these closing lines.

[10:32] And it's drawing attention to the fact that they sum up much of the rest of what's come before. To say that life comes with ups and downs that are very markedly different.

[10:47] Our days are full of contrasts. To see some of this. Imagine verse 3. In the ears of a shepherd. There is a time to kill and a time to heal.

[11:00] And they would understand that. There is times when you slaughter the flock. But you may previously have spent many hours and nights tending to that same sheep.

[11:11] Verse 5. There is a time to scatter stones and a time to gather them. In the ancient Near East, during times of war, you would place stones in your enemy's field to prevent them from growing crops.

[11:26] But then in a time of peace, you would gather those stones together to make room for crops to grow. Think about what he's saying about our attitude to our possessions.

[11:39] There's a time to search and a time to give up. A time to keep. And a time to throw away. And we've probably found ourselves doing that. We recognize there's times when it's good for us to acquire.

[11:50] There are certain things that are really important for us to hold on to. But other things we realize. It's okay to get rid of them. We downsize and we declutter. And that's good for us. But they're very different seasons.

[12:03] Again, our poem reminds us. That the times that we live in. Are beautifully complex. Because to read this poem is a reminder that we're never solitary individuals.

[12:18] We're made for relationship. We live in relationship. We're governed by relationships. And because we're involved with other people, our times are never going to be straightforward.

[12:30] Verse 4. A time to weep. A time to laugh. A time to mourn. And a time to dance. Families have weddings. And families have funerals.

[12:43] Families enjoy laughter. And families mourn together. Verse 7. A time to tear. And a time to mend. Again, I didn't know this until this week.

[12:53] But in the ancient Near East, we read this in our Bibles. That with mourning would come the tearing of clothes. But after a period of mourning, as people began to recover and to move on, then those same clothes would be sewn up again.

[13:11] There is in verse 7 a time to be silent and a time to speak. Sometimes we comfort. Sometimes we confront. And the complexity that we see in our human circumstances reminds us that we need much wisdom to know how to live well together and to respond well to different circumstances.

[13:38] The last feature of our times, as we think wider in the book of Ecclesiastes, go to verse 9. What do workers gain from their toil?

[13:50] There is that reminder that our times bring no lasting gain. We won't find lasting and eternal happiness in the times that we experience.

[14:07] Many people are living for the next big experience. And Ecclesiastes is there. It doesn't save. It won't ultimately satisfy. It reminds us that the times are set, including the day of our death.

[14:25] Which again presents that huge problem, that huge barrier to trying to find ultimate meaning only in this life. In a sense, to read through the poem, you get that sense that the times are cancelling each other out.

[14:40] The idea of not making real progress. Our times without God bring no lasting gain. Now we're going to see, in verses 10 to 15, that our response to that isn't, you know, fatalism.

[14:58] You know, what will be, will be. The right response is not, well, let's eat, drink and be merry, for tomorrow we die, and to just live as if nothing matters apart from enjoying what we've got.

[15:09] Nor is the right response to simply throw up our hands and say, well, what's the point? Rather, we're invited to trust and worship God as Lord over all times and to enjoy Him in the times that He gives to us.

[15:26] But before we get there, three practical observations as we think about the problem of our times. One, to do with expectations. And it's simply this, that we need to recognize that the seasons of our lives will change.

[15:43] If we find ourselves in a time of joy or a time of sorrow, we might expect that that will last forever. God says the seasons of our lives will change.

[15:56] And we know by experience that those changes in the times of our lives, they often surprise us. those changes can often be very dramatic. But we need to be ready that our times change.

[16:11] We're all made with different temperaments. Some feel more comfortable with the up times and the happy times. Some are more reflective or melancholic or happy with the down times. But life is never going to be flat, calm, and constant.

[16:25] And our poem is telling us that. And so related to that is a reminder that we need wisdom. So this is Old Testament wisdom and it's calling us to have wisdom from God.

[16:39] And the wisdom from God, as we think about the life as we see it in Ecclesiastes, is wisdom that learns to adapt. Wisdom that learns to respond to the changing times.

[16:53] So we've used the illustration of someone learning to drive. A driving instructor is teaching a pupil how to face new driving conditions, how to deal with different types of hazards, different road conditions, how busy the road is.

[17:11] And wisdom learns how to respond well to changing circumstances. The Bible is teaching us to understand that your joys and your sorrows, they come from God's hands.

[17:26] And we should seek his wisdom to know how to live well in both. And again, related to that is the idea of trust.

[17:37] If you have walked around this area at all, you might have seen Cafe Nero just around there. On the box outside, I've got a picture of it up there. Someone has spray-painted we are not gods, small g, we are gods.

[17:53] We belong to him. And that's actually really helpful when it comes to the times of our lives. We need to learn to accept our time-bound limits.

[18:07] To learn to fight the impatience that would want to push us beyond the season that God has us in right now rather than live well and patiently waiting on God and patiently waiting on God in that season.

[18:22] We're invited to trust the eternal God and his unchanging character and his unfailing promises. And that moves us from the problem of our times to think about the comfort in our times.

[18:38] It's what we're going to see in verses 10 to 15. I don't know if anybody, I guess a few folks may be familiar with the TV program as kids or as parents, Art Attack, Neil Buchanan, something of a legend, children's after-school television.

[18:59] One of the things that Neil Buchanan would do in his TV program, Art Attack, he would go to a beach and he would begin a piece of art. But the camera would be really close up as he was working and so you'd see the fine detail but you wouldn't really know what he was making until as he got towards the end of his design, the camera would pull back and all of a sudden you'd see it was as if the beach had become this huge canvas.

[19:25] That's a really helpful way to think about the burden that our teacher talks about in verses 10 and 11. Let me read those again. I have seen the burden God has laid on the human race.

[19:39] He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity in the human heart yet no one can fathom what God has done from beginning to end.

[19:51] Here is the burden. There is beauty. There is a rightness to our times. We are made with eternity in our hearts.

[20:02] We are made to reflect and to seek ultimate and to seek to know what lies beyond but here is the burden we cannot see and understand what God is doing from beginning to end.

[20:18] It's like we see close up. We don't have the right camera angle. We don't have the right perspective. We cannot have God's perspective on what he is doing in our times.

[20:34] But here is the comfort. Having spoken of the burden our teacher then gives us comfort. Verse 14. I know there is certainty that everything God does will endure forever.

[20:50] Nothing can be added to it and nothing taken from it. God's plans, God's purposes endure. There is no plan B with God. There is nothing that happens in the world that takes God by surprise so he has to modify his plan.

[21:11] The world is often surprised by the actions of men. Think again about the Russian invasion. God was not surprised.

[21:24] That does not throw off God's plans and purposes. Verse 15. Whatever it is has already been and what will be has been before and God will call the past to account.

[21:35] What's that saying about God? It's saying God is over all time and God is able to weave past, present, and future all together by his grand design.

[21:50] The thousands, maybe tens of thousands of people and places and events and moments and conversations and discoveries and heartbreaks and joys and sorrows and opportunities, all of them that make up our lives planned and patterned by the God of glory who is the Lord of time and he knows what he is doing in his people's lives.

[22:18] Joni Erickson, a name many of us will be familiar with, paralyzed for many decades, living for years with chronic pain.

[22:29] I was reading just this morning one of her books on suffering and she was talking about Ephesians chapter 2 which talks about us being God's workmanship, God's masterpiece, God's poem.

[22:45] And on that picture she said, do I have the right to say to God the poet, you need to change that line. I feel like this line's a bit dark, you need to sort of brighten my life somewhat.

[23:01] Do I, the poem, know more than the poet? It's learning to trust in the God who sets the times. Every moment comes from God's hands.

[23:15] Us being here today is no accident but God's design. He is weaving this moment, this day into the great poem of our lives and what's the design that he wants for the people of God?

[23:27] What is it that he's working in us? That his people would be saved by his love and grace and would be molded and conformed into the beautiful image of his son Jesus.

[23:41] That's his purpose in all the times that he sends into our lives using them to make us more like Jesus. Now let's go back to think about some implications.

[23:55] So since we cannot control and often cannot understand the times that God sets, what should we do? There are two things that we're told that we should do in our text.

[24:08] The first is to concentrate on enjoying God's gifts today. Verse 12 and 13 I know that there is nothing better for people than to be happy and to do good while they live.

[24:21] That each of them may eat and drink and find satisfaction in all their toil. This is the gift of God. So we thought about that last week as well. Whatever season we find ourselves in, satisfaction in God and his everyday gifts and mercies is possible if we accept our limits, if we trust our unlimited God and if we receive with gratitude his kindness to us.

[24:51] Wherever we are, wherever we find ourselves in our lives is by God's design. It's a portion for us to receive from our Father's hand so that we would make the most of the life that we have today.

[25:05] So we're invited to ask God for wisdom. Ask God for wisdom to act wisely in our relationships.

[25:19] For wisdom to have a good attitude to our possessions. Wisdom to know how to use our emotions appropriately. Today, ask for wisdom to know how to Sabbath well.

[25:36] Think about the times and the seasons that God sets. Here's a season, a day for rest, for worship, for mercy, for fellowship. Ask God for wisdom to use the gifts that he gives as a good father.

[25:51] So that's the first thing that we're invited to do. The second is to stand in awe of the God who sets the times. That's what it says in verse 14.

[26:02] I know that everything God does will endure forever. Nothing can be added to it and nothing taken from it. God does it so that people will fear him.

[26:15] So our teacher has been making the point time and again, as people we are limited. We are helpless. We are not in control. We are dependent.

[26:26] And that's something that can be very humbling for us. Runs contrary to our culture in many ways. But at the same time he invites us to see that God has no limits.

[26:37] He is the Lord of time. He is the Lord over our times that his purposes stand forever. He knows our changing times that can cause us so much confusion and distress.

[26:51] And so our proper response is to fear him. To stand in awe of him. to rejoice with a sense of wonder how great he is.

[27:06] That we would behold our God in his glory. To receive him as our Lord. Whatever our situation is today, to follow him in faith and in trust.

[27:21] departs through the I want to notice time.

[27:32] So the message of Ecclesiastes 3 is that God sets the times, God controls all times, including the times of salvation. And the amazing truth that the Bible teaches is that the Son of God, the creator of time, at just the right time, entered into time and history as the Savior that we need. That's why we read the beginning from Galatians 4. When the set time had fully come, God sent his Son, born of a woman, born under law, to redeem those under the law.

[28:07] At God's set time, the Redeemer came, and he came to free us from judgment as lawbreakers by taking the judgment that we deserve, so that we could become children of God in God's perfect timing.

[28:26] Mark chapter 1, verse 15, as Jesus' public ministry begins, what does he say? He said, the time has come. The kingdom of God has come near. Repent and believe the good news. God's time has come because God's King has come, and he comes bringing in the kingdom, and that's good news.

[28:47] That Jesus has come to make a way for us once again to live in proper relationship to our God. And what do we need to do? We need to turn from our sin, turn from thinking we are in control, where we ignore God as Lord, and we need to trust in Jesus. And think about the times of Jesus' life as we think about the Gospels. Jesus knew times of joy and feasting, and we read about those, but we also know he wept tears and had sorrow. Jesus spoke of times of seeking lost sheep, but he also spoke of separating, losing the goats who would reject him. Jesus spent much time speaking and speaking truth, but at his trial, he was silent. At the cross of Jesus, there was a time of war as Jesus went to war on the great enemies of Satan and sin and death, and achieving for us and for the world, a time of peace for those who would trust in Jesus.

[30:11] Romans chapter 5 verse 6 speaks of the wonderful timing of God's grace. At just the right time, when we were still powerless, Christ died for the ungodly. Didn't wait for us to clean ourselves up, because we never can. Doesn't wait for us to be good enough for God's love, because we never will be.

[30:30] When we were undeserving, powerless sinners, God, in love, at just the right time, sent his Son to die on the cross. Paul, in 2 Corinthians chapter 6 and verse 2, in light of the Gospel, declares, now is the time of God's favour. It's wonderful. Today is the day of salvation. Today, as we recognise Jesus as God's Son and Saviour, we're invited again to trust him, to live worshipping him.

[31:08] When God entered time. To go back to our Lego sets, every Lego set, every set of instructions has one final piece. Every piece of beach art, no matter how big, has one last line, and then it's completed. Your life and mine will have one last breath. Our lives will draw to an end.

[31:34] Only God knows our time. But by way of one last application, our teacher would say to us, be prepared for the day of your death. Be prepared by looking to Jesus with trust. Trust in his death as the sacrifice that you need to cover your sin, to bring you the forgiveness that you need.

[32:01] Trust in his resurrection to new life to be the guarantee of the eternal life that you desire. to be at home with God in a world of perfect love forever.

[32:15] When we know Jesus as Lord, we can trust him in the times of our lives, remembering that he said, surely I'm with you always to the end of the age.

[32:29] Let's pray together in response. Lord, our God, we thank you for the hope that we find in your words, in your words of truth.

[32:46] That reminder that nothing lies outside of your control. Lord, our God, we thank you for the time. That you are altogether wise. You know the beginning from the end.

[32:56] That nothing stops your purposes. And that your character is good. And we can trust you. Lord, help us, each one of us, to trust you in the times of our lives.

[33:11] Whether they be good or whether they be difficult. Whether we feel like we have a handle on what's going on or whether we're thoroughly confused. Help us to have faith and to trust.

[33:25] And Lord, as we think about your control, we pray once again for the situation that we see unfolding in the Ukraine. Lord, we pray for a swift end to violence.

[33:38] We pray for a wise international response. That would halt the terror. Lord, we pray that for those who are injured, that you would bring comfort and healing.

[33:59] Lord, we pray that as many cry out in distress, that you would hear and that you would answer. Lord, that in your amazing providence, you would work through this awful situation to bring your saving purposes to pass in Ukraine and Russia and beyond.

[34:18] May the gospel message of peace ring out from churches in Ukraine and Russia and all around so that many men and women and boys and girls would put their trust in the Lord Jesus, not in a government or in a rule.

[34:37] Lord, we also want to commit our church times into your hands. We thank you for the opportunity that we have to begin to talk together and to learn together and to encourage one another about how we can share our faith in our communities.

[34:58] Lord, you know the challenges that we have, the struggles that we face. And so we pray that that would be a time of equipping for us. Lord, we thank you for the chance that we have to run Hope Explored in a few weeks.

[35:11] And Lord, we know that there are so many people asking questions about hope and peace and purpose. And we know that your word has answers and that Jesus is the answer.

[35:25] And so as we invite our friends and our family and our neighbours and our colleagues, may you put it in the hearts of many to come along. And for those who maybe aren't clear on what Christianity teaches, that we'd be able to gather together and as we spend time in Luke's gospel to have greater clarity so that we could invite many to discover the good news that's found in knowing Jesus as Lord.

[35:52] Lord, we think about our church. We thank you for our elders and deacons, for the way that they serve and pastor and enable the church to keep functioning.

[36:04] And Lord, we pray as we vote for new deacons and elders that you would be guiding us, that we'd be thankful for your provision. Lord, that we'd be able to continue in our mission and purpose of making disciples.

[36:23] Lord, we also pray for other churches as we're invited to. We remember the church in Cumbernauld, just on the outskirts of Glasgow, just recently vacant.

[36:33] Lord, give them unity. Lord, we thank you for the contacts that they have in their community through a toddler group and through youth work. And may that lead many to saving faith.

[36:45] Lord, we also pray for New Mills Church in Ayrshire. And we pray that you would bind them together in unity and in purpose and in the joy of the Lord Jesus.

[36:56] We pray that you would give them wisdom as they think together about how to be most effective in sharing the good news with the towns and villages around them.

[37:07] And Lord, we also remember the church in Moldova. And we thank you that they are able to give help to refugees fleeing the Ukraine.

[37:21] Thank you for women for mission who were able to help the church in Moldova last year and will continue to help this year. Lord, that as your people love and serve in Jesus' name, may it draw many to trust in the Lord Jesus.

[37:39] We pray this so that you would be glorified and so that many people would have deep and lasting joy. Amen. Now, as we sing together, our boys and girls will come back in.

[37:54] Our hymn is, My Times Are In Your Hands. So we can stand together to sing. My Times Are In Your Hands My God, I wish them there My life, my friends, my soul, I leave entirely to your care.

[38:39] My times are in your hand, whatever they may be.

[38:52] Pleasing or painful, dark or bright, as you know best for me.

[39:13] My times are in your hand, why should I? Should I doubt or fear, a father's hand, why should I die or fear?

[39:26] A father's hand will never cause his child a needless tear.

[39:41] My times are in your hand, Jesus the crucified. Jesus the crucified.

[39:53] Those hands, my cruel sins that pierced are now my guard and guide.

[40:09] My times are in your hand, such faith you give to me.

[40:28] That after death at your right hand, I shall forever be.

[40:43] Please have a seat. As we come to the Lord's table, I wanted to continue with that sense of understanding that our times, and indeed the time of salvation, is in God's hands.

[41:05] One of the themes that we find in John's Gospel is Jesus speaking about his hour. At the beginning of the Gospel, his hour had not yet come. And then we come to John chapter 12 and verse 23, where we read, The hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified.

[41:25] And then as Jesus prays, the night before the cross, John chapter 17, he looked towards heaven and prayed, Father, the hour has come.

[41:38] Glorify your Son that your Son may glorify you. How was Jesus' glory revealed?

[41:50] His glory is revealed through his death for sinners on the cross. His glory is revealed in perfectly completing God's saving plan, in perfectly demonstrating God's righteousness, that God cannot sweep sin under the carpet but must deal with it, but in his love and grace for his people, he deals with it in his Son, Jesus, in his loving sacrifice to bring us eternal life.

[42:31] So as we share the Lord's Supper as the people of God, we remember the glory of our Savior. We remember with thankfulness that the time of salvation is in God's hand.

[42:47] And in the fullness of time, just as he planned, he sent his Son to be Savior. Who is the Lord's Supper for?

[42:58] The Lord's Supper is for all who have seen the glory of Jesus, who have become aware of our great need for mercy and forgiveness, who are trusting him for salvation, who are part of his church.

[43:14] In a moment, we will sing words from Psalm 116. And as we do so, our stewards will direct those who are wishing to share the Lord's Supper to come and to take the elements from the front.

[43:31] And then if you take them back to your seat, then we can eat and drink together. So we can remain seated while we sing Psalm 116.

[43:42] And then folks can actually, no, let's stand. And then as folks are invited, you can come down and collect the bread and the wine. How can I thank the Lord for all he's done?

[44:12] With gratitude, salvation's cup I raise.

[44:24] I'll call upon his name and will fulfill my vows to him before his people's face.

[44:44] The Lord holds dear the death of all his saints.

[44:57] Hear me, O Lord, I am your servant true. I am your servant and your handmaid son.

[45:20] And from my chains I have been freed. Thank offerings I will sacrifice to you.

[45:41] And call upon the name of God the Lord.

[45:53] When all his people in assembly meets.

[46:04] With joy I will fulfill my solemn word.

[46:15] Before his people I will keep my vows.

[46:27] Within the courts of our God's holy place.

[46:38] Within the city of Jerusalem. Unto the Lord alone be all the praise.

[47:00] And where is my friend of all his saints. For the gods of Jerusalem.

[47:13] Please have a seat.

[47:43] Let me read our words of institution from 1 Corinthians chapter 11. For I received from the Lord what I also passed on to you.

[47:58] The Lord Jesus on the night he was betrayed took bread and when he had given thanks he broke it and said this is my body which is for you. Do this in remembrance of me.

[48:11] Let's pray together. Lord our God we thank you that in your kindness to us that you have given us a visible picture of the gospel.

[48:25] That this bread and wine representing the broken body and the shed blood of the Lord Jesus reminds us of our need of him.

[48:38] It reminds us of your grace towards us in giving us your son as our saviour. It reminds us that we come to this table as broken sinners who need forgiveness, who need ongoing grace and help from you.

[48:57] And so we pray that as we eat and drink that we would do it with a sense of grateful wonder. That you would be so kind to us.

[49:09] That you would give us that spirit of worship. That you would also give us that spirit of unity as we remember that we share one loaf as one body made one by faith in the Lord Jesus Christ.

[49:30] That you would also give us that spirit of unity as we pray in his name. Amen. So when Jesus had given thanks he broke it and said this is my body which is for you.

[49:45] Do this in remembrance of me. Let's eat together to remember Jesus as Lord. In the same way after supper he took the cup saying this cup is the new covenant in my blood.

[50:07] Do this whenever you drink it in remembrance of me. For whenever you eat this bread and drink this cup. You proclaim the Lord's death. Until he comes.

[50:19] Let's drink and proclaim the good news of our Lord's death. And we will close our time together with a wonderful hymn that reminds us of the hope that we have in Jesus Christ.

[50:46] Our hope in life and death. And let's again stand to sing together with a praise. What is our hope in life and death?

[51:06] Christ alone, Christ alone. What is our only confidence? What is our only confidence? That our souls to him belong.

[51:19] Who holds our days within his hand? What comes apart from his command? And what will keep us to the end?

[51:33] The love of Christ in which we stand. O sing hallelujah.

[51:43] Our hope springs eternal. O sing hallelujah. Now and ever we confess.

[51:57] Christ our hope in life and death. Christ our hope in life and death. Amen. Amen. Amen. Amen. Amen.

[52:08] What truth can come the troubled soul? God is good. God is good. Where is his grace and goodness known?

[52:21] God is good. In our great Redeemer's blood. Who holds our faith when fears arise? Who stands above the stormy trial?

[52:35] Who sends the waves that bring us nigh unto the shore, the rock of Christ?

[52:45] followingैers, let us grow old man. And what are my words that bring us nigh not? God is true. I have clouded praises roads in which we stand above the sea. Amen. God is good. A booth extension 정 Valley. God is a tenner. Can we try and buy us not far? And how many are we достиhing every day?

[52:56] eno Jesus blood is angry now thejähr. God is become holy, R is a tenner. Whenever we confess Christ our hope in life and death.

[53:13] Unto the grave what shall we sing? Christ he lives, Christ he lives. And what reward will heaven bring?

[53:27] Everlasting life with him. There we will rise to meet the Lord. Then sin and death will be destroyed.

[53:41] And we will feast in endless joy. When Christ is ours forevermore. O sing hallelujah.

[53:58] Our hope springs eternal. O sing hallelujah. Now and ever we confess Christ our hope in life and death.

[54:13] Now and ever we confess Christ our hope in life and death. Amen. And now may the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ.

[54:33] And the love of God. And the fellowship of the Holy Spirit. Be with you all. Amen. Amen.

[54:53] Amen. Amen. Amen. Amen. Amen. Amen. Amen. Amen. Amen. Amen.

[55:04] Amen. Amen. Amen. Amen. Amen. Amen. Amen. Amen. Amen. Amen.

[55:14] Amen. Amen. Amen. Amen. Amen. Amen. Amen. Amen. Amen. Amen. Amen. Amen.