Conviction of the incomparable greatness of YHWH produces a life of obedience to Him, but also an invincible confidence in Him.
Welcome to Hopewell!
Hopewell ARP Church is a Biblical, Reformed, Presbyterian church, serving the Lord in Culleoka, TN, since 1820. Lord's Day Morning, set your gps to arrive by 11a.m. at 3886 Hopewell Road, Culleoka, TN 38451
Friday, February 27, 2026
Conquering Grace [2026.02.25 Midweek Sermon in Proverbs 21:30–31]
Conviction of the incomparable greatness of YHWH produces a life of obedience to Him, but also an invincible confidence in Him.
Where Jesus Makes Himself Known [Family Worship lesson in Song of Songs 6:1–3]
2026.02.27 Hopewell @Home ▫ Song of Songs 6:1–3
Read Song of Songs 6:1–3
Questions from the Scripture text: What do the Daughters of Jerusalem ask the bride (Song of Songs 6:1a, c)? What do they call her (verse 1b)? Why do they ask (verse 1d)? Where does the bride say that He has gone (Song of Songs 6:2a)? What is there (verse 2b)? What does He intend to do there (verse 2c–d)? What does she conclude about herself (Song of Songs 6:3a)? And about Him (verse 3b)? What does she ultimately conclude that He is doing, where (verse 3c)?
Where can we find Christ? Song of Songs 6:1–3 prepares us for the evening sermon on the coming Lord’s Day. In these three verses of Holy Scripture, the Holy Spirit teaches us that it is Christ Who finds us, in His church, by His ordained means of grace.
One of the great things that believers can do for the church is ask her to tell them about Christ Himself (cf. Song of Songs 5:9). Now, in these three verses, we see a second: ask the church where/how Christ is to be found. True church members desire to find Him themselves (“that we may seek Him with you,” Song of Songs 6:1d). And true church members desire for the church, corporately, to find Him. So, one of their great services to themselves and to her is to ask, “Where has your Beloved gone?” (verse 1a) or “Where has your Beloved turned aside?” (verse 1c). In answering these questions, the church herself finds her beloved.
It turns out to be vital that these church members continue to have this view of the bride: “fairest among women” (Song of Songs 6:1b). For, when the church answers the question of where Christ is to be found, the answer is… the church! “My Beloved has gone to His garden.” Now, not everything that is called the church is automatically a place where Christ is found. Rather, when the church is producing Christlikeness (“beds of spices”), and devoted to the means of His grace by which He feeds them (“feeding [His flock]”), that the congregations (“gardens”) as His church (“His garden.”)
When the church has not been well or done well, the answer is not to turn to something else. The parachurch inclination is opposite the way of the Lord. The solution is not to work outside the church, but the reformation and revival of the church itself. This is where Christ will be found.
And what is He doing there? Gathering lilies. This language of gathering (Song of Songs 6:2d) is used of Christ’s collecting believers to Himself (cf. Matthew 23:37, John 11:52). What does Jesus do in His garden? He eats, He enjoys, He invites current friends/beloved to do the same (cf. Song of Songs 5:1); and, He gathers lilies. Notice that this is done not just in “His garden” (singular, Song of Songs 6:2a), but “in the gardens” (plural, verse 2c). The church is not merely some nebulous association of all believers in the world; it is found especially in particular congregations. Jesus walks among the lampstands. If this was true of the church at the time of the Song, how much more in the age of the gospel!
What a wonderful cure this was for the bride, in this Song! In the four short lines of Song of Songs 6:2, as she answered the daughters, she becomes the means of her own rediscovery of her Beloved. What a blessed ministry the church has, where, in order to do good to her members, she is the means of her own revival.
And this is her conclusion: “I am my Beloved’s, and my Beloved’s is mine” (Song of Songs 6:3a–b). Her “veil” (cf. Song of Songs 5:7) is restored. She has recovered her confidence in their marriage bond, her certainty in His love. She knows Him, again, as she has before: as the One Who feeds His flock among the lilies. Among those whom He is gathering to Himself.
Dear Christian, dear church, this is where Christ gives you to know Him with confidence: as the One Who has betrothed you to Himself, the One Who feeds His flock in His church—the One Who gathers His elect to Himself, by His means, in His church. Let us come to Him, in His church, in His means, where we will find this altogether lovely One! Or rather… it is there that He has ordained to find us.
How have you sought, from your own congregation, to know where Christ can be found? How have you sought to be provided with those things in which He can be found? How have you availed yourself of the means of His grace in your congregation? What has been your experience of Christ in those means?
Sample prayer: Lord, You are our Beloved. Give to our congregation to teach us where to find You. And give to our congregation to look for You in the means of grace, so that we may seek You together. Make us to know that we are Yours. Make us to know that You are ours. Feed Your flock here, and gather Your elect to Yourself. Make us to know and see You, again, our altogether lovely One, we ask in Your Name, AMEN!
Suggested songs: ARP34B “I Will at All Times Bless the LORD” or TPH87A “Zion, Founded on the Mountains”
Thursday, February 26, 2026
The Bible's Chief Message (Man's Chief End) [Family Worship lesson in Ecclesiastes 12:8–14]
2026.02.26 Hopewell @Home ▫ Ecclesiastes 12:8–14
Read Ecclesiastes 12:8–14
Questions from the Scripture text: How does Ecclesiastes 12:8 summarize the preacher’s (assembler’s) conclusion about the length and significance of life in this world, on its own terms? What had the concluding teaching been, rather than to live life on its own terms (cf. Ecclesiastes 11:10–12:1)? So, what did the preacher still do to the people (Ecclesiastes 12:9)? And what did he seek out and set in order? What sorts of words, specifically (Ecclesiastes 12:10)? What two things does verse 10 say about the words that were written? What are the words of the wise like (Ecclesiastes 12:11)? What are the words of masters-of-collections like? By Whom are these goads and well-driven nails given? To whom is Ecclesiastes 12:12 addressed? What does the preacher tell him to do with those words? What does he say about other books and other study, by comparison? What is the concluding command (Ecclesiastes 12:13)? As what, must he do those two things? What truth/reality drives home that this must be how we live?
What is the chief end of man? Ecclesiastes 12:8–14 prepares us for the hearing of God’s Word, publicly read, in the holy assembly on the coming Lord’s Day. In these seven verses of Holy Scripture, the Holy Spirit teaches us that man’s chief end is to glorify God and to enjoy Him forever.
Here, we come to the conclusion of the whole book, indeed the conclusion of all of life. In and of itself, our life in this world—indeed the life of this entire world—is a vapor of vapors (Ecclesiastes 12:8). The most fleeting blink of a moment.
So what do we do? That’s what the project of Ecclesiastes (and Proverbs) has been all about. Solomon, by the Holy Spirit, has been writing as the caller of assemblies (NKJ “Preacher,” Ecclesiastes 12:9). The fleeting nature of life in this world makes it all the more crucial that people learn to fear God, and what that looks like in the details of life.
The main thing is to rejoice and live righteously, as we have already seen (cf. Ecclesiastes 11:7–10), and this is the book of Ecclesiastes. More details are fleshed out in the book of Proverbs.
Together, Ecclesiastes and Proverbs are the “many proverbs” (Ecclesiastes 12:9) and “delightful/pleasant words” (Ecclesiastes 12:10, more literally). These are the righteous and true words that we have in these two books of Scripture. In Ecclesiastes 12:11, the word “wise” is plural, indicating that Solomon understands that he is writing as just one of many, who give the words of the “one Shepherd.” Here is a biblical doctrine of Scripture: one Shepherd, using many wise men (carried along by the Holy Spirit) to set down the very words of God!
What do these words do? They move and stabilize. Goads move us to do what God says when we are stationary, or back into God’s path, when we are wayward. The well-driven nail, stabilizes the tent against the storm, and this is the other way that the Scriptures help us: giving the stability, strength, gladness, purpose, in God Himself. God uses the Bible to move the believer and to establish the believer.
This is why the Bible is the single book for your admonishment (Ecclesiastes 12:12a). Men will pile up other books, and men will wear themselves out trying to know more (verse 12b), but God has made full provision for our instruction and warning in the Bible. Just as no other words are on par of it (the words of the one Shepherd), so also no other words are to be added it as a rule of faith (nails) and practice (goads).
So, what does the Bible teach? Fear God (nails), and keep His commandments (goads), “for this is the mannishness of man” (Ecclesiastes 12:13, more literally). And, what man gets out of being a proper man is God Himself! Being a true man begins by being not-God, by fearing God alone as God. A true man images God, worships God, obeys God, enjoys God. This is the mannishness of man.
The truth, and certain expectation, of God’s judgment (Ecclesiastes 12:14) is a gift from Him to drive us back to our chief end. The fact that we are sure to appear before the judgment seat of Christ (cf. 2 Corinthians 5:10), together with the fleetingness of this life and this world, drives us to this one great aim: to be well pleasing to Him, so long as we are present in the body (cf. 2 Corinthians 5:9), while we look forward to this mortality being swallowed up in the life and pleasure of enjoying Him forever (cf. 2 Corinthians 5:1–8).
Why is the only chief end that makes sense, the chief end of glorifying God and enjoying God? Who can teach you how to glorify and enjoy Him? What has He given us, by which He teaches us to glorify and enjoy Him? What use are you making of what He has given us? And how is this helping you live life in this world, like someone who expects to enjoy God forever in the next world? What sort of life does this give you to live now?
Sample prayer: Lord, we thank You for the Bible. Please forgive us for when Your words would have goaded us into action, but we have not moved. Forgive us for when Your words would have goaded us back into Your own paths for us, but we have continued in our incorrect ways. Forgive us for when Your words would have stabilized us in You as our great purpose, but we have lived as if we had other, competing purposes. Forgive us for when Your words would have stabilized us in You as our great pleasure, but we have lived as if we had other, competing pleasures. Grant that Your Spirit would use Your Word to remind us that we are coming to the judgment, so that we will live always by Your Word, we ask in Christ’s Name, AMEN!
Suggested songs: ARP45B “Daughter, Incline Your Ear” or TPH116A “I Love the LORD, for He Has Heard My Voice”
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
2026.02.25 Midweek Meeting Livestream (live at 6:30p)
Grace to Love and Cling to God [Family Worship lesson in Deuteronomy 30:11–20]
2026.02.25 Hopewell @Home ▫ Deuteronomy 30:11–20
Read Deuteronomy 30:11–20
Questions from the Scripture text: What is not true of the Word that Moses preached (Deuteronomy 30:11)? Where wasn’t it (Deuteronomy 30:12)? What wouldn’t they have to do? Where else wasn’t it (Deuteronomy 30:13)? What wouldn’t they have to do? But where was it (Deuteronomy 30:14)? In what particular places? So that they might do what with it? What two pairs of things has Moses set before them on that day (Deuteronomy 30:15)? What primary thing has he commanded them to do with YHWH their God (Deuteronomy 30:16)? In what other four commandments does he describe what it means to love God? How would YHWH their God respond to their doing this? How does he describe the heart that fails to do this (Deuteronomy 30:17)? Whom are they worshiping and serving, if they do not keep his commandments, statues, and judgments? What will happen then (Deuteronomy 30:18)? What will they not prolong? Whom does Moses call as witness against them (Deuteronomy 30:19)? What two pairs of things does he now say that he has set before them? What does he urge them to choose? So that they may do what (Deuteronomy 30:20)? What does loving YHWH mean obeying? To what (Whom!) does loving YHWH mean clinging? As what two things for them? How does he describe the land in which they will dwell, if they do this?
How does the Christian choose life? Deuteronomy 30:11–20 looks forward to the hearing of God’s Word, publicly read, in the holy assembly on the coming Lord’s Day. In these ten verses of Holy Scripture, the Holy Spirit teaches us that the Christian chooses life by God’s grace, which gives him to love and cling to God, in Christ.
“Deuteronomy” means second law. It is a sermon on the ten commandments, given by Moses, as he is about to die, and Israel is about to cross over to enter the land. Just as with YHWH’s giving of the original ten commandments, this giving of the law is couched within the covenant of grace. It is just when He has finished telling them that He must be the One to circumcise their hearts that He comes and points out the great instrument that He uses to do this, and the great result that it produces in the redeemed.
The great instrument is the Word of God, which He has brought near. And the great result is that they cling to YHWH, and are not put to shame, but live righteously and blessedly with Him, enjoying the fulfillment of all of His promises. This is why this is the passage to which the apostle refers in Romans 10:4–17. He goes directly to the place where the legalist, or Judaizer, or Pharisee, would go to demonstrate law-keeping as the hope of the godly, to announce that the hope of the godly is God’s grace, through God’s means, to produce clinging to God. And God Himself puts His Son forward, as Christ, as the One in Whom we especially know His grace, have His means, and cling to Him.
So, in our passage, Moses begins with the nearness of the Word (Deuteronomy 30:11-14). It is not mysterious or far off (Deuteronomy 30:11). It does not require heroic effort (Deuteronomy 30:12-13). God circumcises the heart to bless us by means of a submission that His Spirit produces. His providence brings His Word to our eyes and ears. And, His grace brings that Word into our mouth, heart, and hands (Deuteronomy 30:14).
The choice of life and death (Deuteronomy 30:15, Deuteronomy 30:19) is a choice to love YHWH as our very own God (Deuteronomy 30:16, Deuteronomy 30:20), and to cling to Him (verse 20). Love walks in ways because they are His (Deuteronomy 30:16). Love keeps commandments, statutes, and judgments (verse 16), because it is in these that He has given us to hear the voice of YHWH Whom we love, and to cling to YHWH Whom we love (Deuteronomy 30:20). We cling to Him as our life. We cling to Him as the length of our days. And we cling to Him in the fulfillment of all His promises, which He has sworn.
This enriches our understanding, not only of the obedience of the believing life, but of the horror of disobedience. Disobedience is much worse than the violation of standards and terms, which incurs particular punishments. Disobedience is to turn our hearts away from YHWH (Deuteronomy 30:17a), and to reject Him from being our own covenant God. Disobedience is to turn our hearts unto another than YHWH (verse 17b). Whomever, or whatever, we obey—it is they that we worship and serve (cf. Romans 6:16–19).
So, dear reader, let us embrace God’s good law, through which He brings us into eternal life and blessedness, because it is His. He has given Himself to us in Christ. In Christ He gives us His grace—blessing, where we deserve only curse, and strength, where we have only weakness… especially the ministry of His Spirit to circumcise our hearts. His Spirit has given the Word, and preserved the Word, and brought us into contact with it. And it is His Spirit Who gives us tender hearts, so that the Word will penetrate our hearts, fill our mouths, and move our hands. And, it is this Word that speaks to us of Christ (cf. John 5:39). So, as we love Him and cling to Him, by His Spirit’s work, it is especially Christ Whom we love, and Christ to Whom we cling; for, YHWH God has given us to know Him especially in Christ.
What place has love had, in how you have responded to God’s commandments, statutes, and judgments? What place has clinging had, in how you have responded to them? What might it look like for you to grow in loving and clinging? What (Who!) is your hope for this growth? What means does He use to give this? How will this loving, clinging, speaking, and obeying be especially centered upon Jesus Christ?
Sample prayer: Lord, as we have learned that to love You and cling to You means to walk in Your own ways, and to obey Your own voice, and those to keep Your commandments, statutes, and judgments, we have realized something horrible about ourselves. When we have not kept Your commandments, statutes, and judgments, it is because we have worshiped and served another, instead of You. When we have disobeyed, it has been because we were not loving You or clinging to You. Truly, we deserve to perish. But You have given Christ to suffer in our place. And You have given Christ to be our goodness and strength. Help us, now, by Your Spirit. Apply Christ to us. For His sake, forgive us. And by His life, make us to live in love to You, and in clinging to You, in obedience to You, we ask in His Name, AMEN!
Suggested songs: ARP32AB “What Blessedness” or TPH433 “Amazing Grace”
Tuesday, February 24, 2026
He Is Altogether Lovely [2026.02.22 Evening Sermon in Song of Songs 5:9–16]
The believer's great desire is to hear the altogether-loveliness of Christ, and the church's great privilege is to proclaim that loveliness
Sovereignly Saving Providence [2026.02.22 Morning Sermon in Matthew 27:55–56]
God uses the insignificant, the unlikely, and even His enemies, in accomplishing His salvation and applying it to us.