Our Aim

We’re seeking to partner with parents in cultivating a passion for the supremacy of God in the lives of their students.  This means training students to embrace Jesus Christ as their greatest treasure, preferring Him above all the fleeting pursuits that the world claims will satisfy.  We aim to give our students a vision for not wasting their lives and to equip them to make much of Christ in their daily affairs.

The Close Connection Between God and His Word


We’re closing down our series on God’s word called “Well Watered.” There was an idea that I repeated again and again, namely, that the point of knowing the Bible isn’t simply to know facts but rather to know God Himself. Remember, it’s about a relationship with God. You need the facts to be in relationship with Jesus Christ, but mere facts about Jesus don’t amount to a real relationship.
There were two verses (among many) that I pointed to in order to show the connection between knowing God and knowing His word.

Psalm 119:2 (ESV) - Blessed are those who keep his testimonies, who seek him with their whole heart.

Psalm 119:10 (ESV) - With my whole heart I seek you; let me not wander from your commandments!

Notice how the psalmist in the first half of verse 2 is talking about keeping “his testimonies,” and then in the second half he speaks of seeking “him.” Why make the switch? Why doesn’t the second half of the verse read “who seek them with their whole heart”? Or what about verse 10? The first half references seeking “you” while the second half mentions not wandering from “your commandments.” The same switch as taken place. Why doesn’t the writer finish the second half of the verse with “let me not wander from you”?
The answer is found in the close connection between God and His word. At the heart of keeping God’s testimonies is seeking him. Keeping God’s word, that is, obeying it, isn’t just a master to-do list that’s meant to be mindlessly checked off. Seeking God with the whole heart is the opposite of wandering from His commandments. God and His commandments are not identical, but God’s commandments reflect who He is, so if we wander from His commandments, then we’re wandering from Him. Bible-reading is about a relationship, and disobedience, our sin problem, is a relationship problem.

Quotes from Wednesday's (4/1) Message

“It is in Scripture that we learn how God views himself, ourselves, and the world, and what he wants us to know in order to serve him. Scripture is like a working museum of which the Spirit is the Curator, showing us around and explaining the wonders of the mind of the Maker. In this museum we are taken behind the scenes to learn from God himself. In growing to know God, therefore, there is no substitute for the discipline of Bible study and Scripture reading and meditation. We cannot bypass the handbook God has given to us and then expect that we can know him in our own way. The only god we can know in our own way is a god that we make in our own image.”
“There is no such thing as genuine knowledge of God that does not show itself in obedience to his Word and will. The person who wants to know God but who has no heart to obey him will never enter the sacred courts where God reveals himself to the soul of man. God does not give divine knowledge to those who have no desire to glorify him.”

Both quotes from Sinclair Ferguson, A Heart For God (Carlisle, Penn.: The Banner of Truth Trust, 1987), pages 8 and 10 respectively.