Redeemer in Airdrie

Airdrie, Alberta Canda

Orthodox Presbyterian Church

  • Home
  • Visitors
  • About
    • Our Beliefs
    • Leadership
    • Worship
  • Blog
  • Contact
  • Location
  • Upcoming Events
  • Visitors
  • Resources
    • Members Only
    • Sitemap
    • Ultimate Questions
    • Links
    • Calendar
    • Sermons
    • Blog
  • OPC Home
  • Offering
You are here: Home / Archives for 2013

Archives for 2013

Only a generation away from apostasy?

09-November-13 by Pastor Larry Wilson

D.A. Carson writes:

The last serious attempt at moral and theological reformation in the kingdom of Judah is reported in 2 Kings 22. After that, there is only the final slide into exile.

King Hezekiah, the effect of whose reign was so largely good, was succeeded by his son Manasseh. He reigned a long time, fifty-five years, but his reign was notorious for its “evil in the eyes of the LORD, following the detestable practices of the nations the LORD had driven out before the Israelites” (2 Kings 21:2). There was no form of current idolatry he did not adopt. According to 2 Chronicles 33, Manasseh repented toward the end of his life, but the religious and institutional damage could not easily be undone. He was succeeded by his wicked son Amon, who lasted only two years before he was assassinated (2 Kings 21:19–26).

Then came Josiah, a boy of eight when he came to the throne (2 Kings 22:1). He reigned thirty-one years—which means, of course, he died a premature death at the age of thirty-nine. Initially he would have been under the guidance and control of others. But in the eighteenth year of his reign, Josiah, then in his mid-twenties, initiated temple cleanup and repair—and the “Book of the Law” was rediscovered. Probably this refers to the book of Deuteronomy. (Nineteenth- and twentieth-century scholars of skeptical bent contend that this was in fact when Deuteronomy and other parts of the Pentateuch were actually written, so that this story of “rediscovering” the law was made up to justify these new developments. This theory is increasingly being dismissed; its foundation is little more than raw speculation.)

The reforms instituted by Josiah were sweeping. On every front, wherever he could effect change, Josiah brought the nation into line with the Law of God. He fully recognized the terrible threat of wrath that hung over the covenant people, and he resolved to do what was right, leaving the outcome with God. If the day of reckoning could not finally be removed, at least it could be delayed.

Of the important lessons to be learned here, I shall focus on one. Some people find it difficult to believe that the nation could descend into complete biblical ignorance so quickly. After all, Hezekiah was Josiah’s great-grandfather: the reformation he led was not that long ago. True—but long enough. The intervening three-quarters of a century had begun with the long and wicked reign of Manasseh. The history of the twentieth century testifies to how quickly a people can become ignorant of Scripture—and we live this side of the printing press, not to mention the Internet. The church is never more than a generation or two from apostasy and oblivion. Only grace is a sufficient hedge.

How we need to keep Christ central and depend on him!

Filed Under: Uncategorized

To Prepare for Lord’s Day Worship, 10 November 2013

06-November-13 by Pastor Larry Wilson

 

10 November 2013 — 10 AM Worship

 

Scripture: 1 Samuel 8
Sermon: “Is The ‘Customer’ Always Right?” 
Hymns: TH 379 — “Lord Jesus Christ, Be Present Now”
TH 675 — “Only Trust Him”
TH 663 — “O God Eternal, You Are My God!” [From Psalm 63]
TH 670 — “If Thou But Suffer God To Guide Thee” [“to suffer” = to accept, allow]
Doxology: TH 379 (stanza 4) — “Glory To God”

 

 

10 November 2013 — 3 PM Worship

Larger Catechism #84 (paraphrased into modern English) Shall all people die?
Since God threatened death as the wages of sin,
it is appointed unto all people once to die
because all have sinned.
Larger Catechism #85 (paraphrased into modern English) Since death is the wages of sin,
why are the righteous not delivered from death,
seeing that all their sins are forgiven in Christ?
At the Last Day the righteous shall be delivered from death itself,
and even in death they are delivered from its sting and curse.
Therefore, even though they die,
it is out of God’s love
so that by this means he sets them perfectly free
from sin and misery,
and makes them capable of fuller communion with Christ
in glory, into which they enter at death.
Scripture: Hebrews 2:1–4
Sermon: “How Shall We Escape If We Neglect Such A Great Salvation?”
Hymns: TH 363 — “We Gather Together”
TH 662 — “As the Hart Longs”
TH 497 — “I Need Thee, Precious Jesus”
Doxology: TH 406 (stanza 6) — “Glory to the Father”

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

The Importance of Preaching

05-November-13 by Pastor Larry Wilson

W. Robert Godfrey writes:

The Westminster Directory of Publick Worship has a significant section on the preaching of the Word. It begins by stressing the spiritual importance of preaching and repeating the words of Scripture that it is “the power of God unto salvation” (Romans 1:16).

Do we today still believe that the preaching of the Gospel is the power of God unto salvation? Do we really believe the Heidelberg Catechism (question 65): “You confess that by faith alone you share in Christ and all his blessings; Where does that faith come from? The Holy Spirit produces it in our hearts by the preaching of the holy gospel…”?

[KEEP READING]

 

See also Especially the Preaching of the Word by Larry Wilson

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Why Both Morning and Evening Worship?

04-November-13 by Pastor Larry Wilson

An empty church?

 

 

Roland S. Barnes writes:

It is my conviction that God’s people, redeemed by His grace through the Lord Jesus Christ, ought to worship Him privately or publicly, morning and evening, each day of the week, and especially on the Lord’s Day. Yet attendance in churches that continue to have a Sunday evening service is down. The congregation which I serve probably has an attendance in the evening which is about 50% of that which is present in the morning. That is good when you are comparing it to other churches that have evening services, from whatever denomination. Yet, it is also a sad fact that there are many, many churches that have discontinued their evening worship services altogether. With the advent of television, other media, sports, and all else that takes place on Sunday, worship in the evening is on the way out. For many, worship on the Lord’s Day has become a matter of getting the perfunctory hour of worship out of the way so one can go about doing whatever he would like for the remainder of his day, not to be disturbed again until the next Sunday morning. For the first nineteen and one-half centuries of the Christian Church it was not like this. As far as can be determined, for nineteen hundred and fifty years (more or less) the Church accepted the reality of morning and evening worship on the Lord’s Day as a recommended practice based upon a solid Biblical foundation. It was thought, “Surely that is what we ought to do on the Lord’s Day.” No one even questioned it. When I was a boy growing up in Georgia, as far as I know, every church of every denomination worshipped on the Lord’s Day, morning and evening. Even as an unbeliever, I grew up in the church worshipping on the Lord’s Day, morning and evening. Our family was in attendance. Why did we do that? Why was that the practice of the Church for over nineteen-hundred years? Was this only a well established tradition with no Biblical foundation? Was this a practice imposed upon the Church by medieval theologians who could think of nothing better to do on Sunday? Did they required the people of God to worship twice on the Lord’s Day, morning and evening, with no more solid basis than an arbitrary assertion of will? What is the rationale for having a Sunday evening service on the Lord’s Day? It might seem strange to some even to raise such a question, but the realities of our day require that we consider it. I am sure that even those who are regular attenders of evening services of worship have battled with members of their own households about whether they should return again to worship on Sunday evening. In this paper I would like to present some suggested reasons why Christians ought to worship on the Lord’s Day, both morning and evening.

[KEEP READING]

Filed Under: Uncategorized

I Don’t Want to Join the Church!

04-November-13 by Pastor Larry Wilson

 

I Don’t Want to Join the Church!

Dr. Robert Strimple, a retired professor at Westminster Seminary, writes a letter in response to a person who has asked him, “What is the biblical basis for the idea that every Christian should be a member of a Christian church?”

See also A Disembodied Gospel?

Filed Under: Uncategorized

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • …
  • 23
  • Next Page »

Previous Videos: YouTube Channel

Service Times: Sunday 10:00 am & 5:00 pm

Location: 308 1 Ave SE, Airdrie, Alberta, T4B 1H6 (in Seventh-Day Adventist Church)

 

Search Site

Contact

Pastor: Iwan Baamann
Email: baamann@gmail.com
Phone: 780-237-6110

Church Government

Presbyterian

Denomination

Orthodox Presbyterian

Copyright © 2025 · Outreach Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in