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
Thursday, March 05, 2026
A Heavy Message of Comfort [Family Worship lesson in Nahum 1:1]
2026.03.05 Hopewell @Home ▫ Nahum 1:1
Read Nahum 1:1
Questions from the Scripture text: What is the first thing that this little book calls itself? Against whom is this burden? What else does the burden call itself? What does it say are the contents of this book? Who had this vision? Where was he from?
What sort of book is Nahum? Nahum 1:1 prepares us for the hearing of God’s Word, publicly read, in the holy assembly on the coming Lord’s Day. In this verse of Holy Scripture, the Holy Spirit teaches us that Nahum is divine Scripture that hangs the weight of certain judgment around the neck of Nineveh, and all the enemies of God.
Nahum is another (cf. Jonah) three-chapter book dealing exclusively with one pagan city. That there is one of these in Scripture is surprising. That there are two sends the message that we should pay close attention. Whereas Jonah proclaimed the free offer of the gospel, and God’s care to all His creatures, and especially for sinful men, Nahum comes later, as a warning of what comes if we do not cling to God in repentance and faith.
The burden. Instantly, we feel the heaviness of the message. “Heavy” (“burden”) is the first word in the book. This warning is not being used to bring Nineveh mercy via repentance. It is tying a massive weight around Nineveh’s neck, which will surely sink it. And your sin will do so to you, too, dear reader, lower than the grave, if you do not take its warning and turn to God in repentance from sin and faith in Christ.
This introduction also tells us something about the way in which God is revealing this weighty Word.
The burden begins as a “vision.” That is to say, it is something that He shows to Nahum that he could not have seen in any other way. While unbelievers suppose Nahum has to have been written later, in order for the book to be aware of the doom of Nineveh, internal evidence puts the date between 663 and 654 b.c. “No Amon” is another name for Egypt’s Thebes, which fell in 663. But Egypt recovered Thebes in 654, so the comparison in Nahum 3:8–10, which implies that Egypt is still seen as unable to help Thebes, places the book before that date. What that means is that, at the time of writing, Nineveh is currently at the height of its military dominance and financial affluence. Its inevitable, horrific destruction wouldn’t make any earthly sense at the time, and certainly no one could have foreseen its downfall from there. But God gives a vision; He gives Nahum to see what no one could, apart from divine revelation.
But the burden continues as “the book.” It is written down for our instruction (cf. Romans 15:4; 1 Corinthians 10:11). The Lord has breathed out, by causing to be written down, whatever we need to be furnished for every good work (cf. 2 Timothy 3:16–17). The God Who can effortlessly give visions, Who could have spoken to us immediately by His Spirit, has chosen to give us a book (cf. Revelation 22:18–19). The Lord has given you His Word in Holy Scripture, dear reader. But He commits His Word to writing so that we might be the more sure, and consider it with the seriousness due unto the very Word of God.
Comforting destruction. Considering the nature of the book, it may seem odd, at first, that the name of its author is, literally, “comforting.” But, Assyria had conquered the northern kingdom and has ruthlessly oppressed Judah for the better part of a century. God’s judgment is sure, just, and complete against all evil. The inevitability and completeness of Nineveh’s judgment is truly a great comfort to the people of God. God’s judgment is certain. Every evil will be fully repaid. And, for those whose sins have been atoned for by Christ, that is a great comfort.
Lasting significance. I would love to draw some help for making use of the book from the fact that Nahum is “the Elkoshite.” But we simply don’t know what to make of it. Elkosh is almost certainly a place, not a person or family. But, our best guesses at the location are either a city in Galilee, according to the early church, or southwest of Jerusalem, according to recent archaeology. For us, the lesson may just be that God knows, but we don’t. God saves, and employs, those who are insignificant to the world. Great Nineveh is going to be destroyed, but unknown Nahum, from unknown Elkosh, is redeemed and lastingly useful. May the Lord bless to us this little, heavy book, dear reader.
How have you responded to God’s warnings of the judgment due to your sin? What use do you make of the written Word of God? How do you take comfort from the doctrine of God’s sure and full judgment?
Sample prayer: Lord, thank You for giving us to know, from Your Word, what we could not have known in any other way. And thank You for giving us Your Word in writing, that we might be sure of it and treat it with all the weightiness of Your Word. Forgive us for taking Your Word too lightly. Forgive us, especially, for how lightly we have taken the warnings of Your Word. Finally, Lord, we thank You for the comfort of knowing that You will fully repay all evil. Forgive us for how we have not taken that comfort to heart, and have unnecessarily feared the wicked, or desired to take vengeance into our own hands. Thank You that You have atoned for our sin in Christ. For His sake, forgive us, and make us to be like Him, we ask in His Name, AMEN!
Suggested songs: ARP7B “God Is My Shield” or TPH385 “The Lord Will Come and Not Be Slow”
Wednesday, March 04, 2026
2026.03.04 Midweek Meeting Livestream (live at 6:30p)
Leading in Believing [Family Worship lesson in Deuteronomy 31:1–8]
2026.03.04 Hopewell @Home ▫ Deuteronomy 31:1–8
Read Deuteronomy 31:1–8
Questions from the Scripture text: Who spoke to whom (Deuteronomy 31:1)? What did he say about his age (Deuteronomy 31:2)? And his ability? And what has YHWH said to him? Who does cross over before them (Deuteronomy 31:3)? What will He do? So that they can do what? Who else crosses before them? What is the example of what YHWH will do to the nations of the land (Deuteronomy 31:4)? What must they do with those whom YHWH gives over to them (Deuteronomy 31:5)? What does Deuteronomy 31:6 command? Why must they? What will YHWH do? What will YHWH not do? Whom does Moses call in Deuteronomy 31:7? In whose sight? What does he command him? For what task? What does Moses call the land? What will Joshua cause them to do with the land? What promise does Moses make to him in Deuteronomy 31:8—what will YHWH do with Joshua? What won’t He do? What mustn’t Joshua do?
How must a man lead the people of God? Deuteronomy 31:1–8 looks forward to the hearing of God’s Word, publicly read, in the holy assembly on the coming Lord’s Day. In these eight verses of Holy Scripture, the Holy Spirit teaches us that those who lead the people of God must do so as those who are trusting in the Lord, and leading others in trusting in Him.
The Lord is our hope and our help, but He uses means—especially particular men. In this passage, there is a transition from Moses’s leadership to Joshua’s leadership, before the eyes of Israel. But, in the most important way, there is no transition at all. It is still YHWH Who goes before them, YHWH Who will be with them, and YHWH Who will not leave or forsake them.
The Lord has marvelously sustained Moses to lead them. He is functioning marvelously for a 120 year old (cf. Deuteronomy 34:7), but the Lord is not preparing him to lead the military campaign in the promised land (Deuteronomy 31:2). He is preparing Joshua to do that (Deuteronomy 31:3, Deuteronomy 31:8). Just as YHWH used Moses, so now He will use Joshua. Just as He destroyed and dispossessed Sihon and Og (Deuteronomy 31:4), so will He do to the nations of Canaan (Deuteronomy 31:3). This, He does in marriages through husbands, in families through dads, and in congregations through ministers and elders.
The parallels between Deuteronomy 31:6 and Deuteronomy 31:7-8 show us the nature of leading (and following) as one who follows YHWH.
YHWH Himself will cross over before Israel (Deuteronomy 31:3) and YHWH is the One Who goes before them (Deuteronomy 31:8). YHWH will go with Israel (Deuteronomy 31:6), and YHWH will be with Joshua (Deuteronomy 31:8).
YHWH will not leave nor forsake Israel (Deuteronomy 31:6), and YHWH will not leave nor forsake Joshua (Deuteronomy 31:8).
Israel is to be strong and of good courage(Deuteronomy 31:6); Joshua is to be strong and of good courage (Deuteronomy 31:7).
Israel is to obey every commandment (Deuteronomy 31:5), and Joshua must go, as he is now being commanded (Deuteronomy 31:7). Israel must not fear or be afraid (Deuteronomy 31:6, in contrast to what they did at the report of the spies), and Joshua must not fear nor be dismayed (Deuteronomy 31:8).
The implication is plain: those by whom YHWH leads His people must do so by being the lead believers—the lead trusters in the Lord and obeyers of the Lord. They must not lead like it depends upon them, and those whom they lead must not put their trust in them. Leaders are to be “believers-in-chief” above those whom they lead.
Whom are you leading, or by whom are you being led? Whom are you/they counting on to make things turn out well? How can you tell whether you are trusting in the Lord, or whether you are trusting in the man whom the Lord is using?
Sample prayer: Lord, forgive us for when we are afraid or dismayed. This shows that we forget that You go before us, and we forget that You are with us. And forgive us for when we trust in the man that You use to lead us, when we should be trusting in You Yourself. But, give us to trust in Christ, by Whom You lead us, because He is one God, with You and with the Spirit, forever. So, we ask this in His Name, AMEN!
Suggested songs: ARP7B “God Is My Shield” or TPH433 “Amazing Grace”
Tuesday, March 03, 2026
Where Jesus Makes Himself Known [Family Worship lesson in Song of Songs 6:1–3]
2026.03.03 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 opening portion of public worship 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”
Monday, March 02, 2026
The Covenant that Only Condemns Us [Children's Catechism 42—Theology Simply Explained]
Q42. Why can none be saved through the covenant of works? Because all have broken it, and are condemned by it.
Where to Find Jesus [2026.03.01 Evening Sermon in Song of Songs 6:1–3]
The Lord Jesus gives Himself to be found in His church.
The Glory of the Lord’s Day [2026.03.01 Morning Sermon in Matthew 28:1–15]
The risen Lord Jesus prepares us for the glory of the Day of the Lord by the experience of His glory every Lord's Day.