The Old Baptist Test
Where The Old Baptist Faith Is Defended
Sunday, February 22, 2026
Do You Weep For Sinners?
Saturday, February 21, 2026
God Comforts Believers (5)
In this chapter we will give the fifth way, of the nine I gave in the first chapter, in which God comforts his people. That way says that God comforts by giving means of escape.
Comfort by Finding Means of Escape
"My eyes fail from searching Your word, Saying, “When will You comfort me?” (Psa. 119: 82 nkjv)
The Lord's people often ask, often with a sigh, "Lord, when will you comfort me?" The comfort they desire involves their deliverance from some evil, some trial, some distress, some anxiety. The Psalmist complains that his eyes are failing "from searching" God's word. How many have that problem? Not many I fear. In the popular movie "Oh Brother, Where Art Thou?" there is a line which is said more than once, by both Ulysses McGill (Clooney) and "Big Dan Teague" (Goodman) about "people looking for answers." McGill says that when people are lined up waiting to be baptized. The Psalmist was also looking for answers, but he was looking for it in the word of God. His eyes were even strained by long searching. He was not like some professing Christians who superstitiously look for biblical answers by saying -- "I am going to open the bible and the first verse I see jumping out at me will be my answer." No, the psalmist made a "diligent search" (Psa. 77: 6) of the word of God and for answers to his problems. That was the right place to look. Oddly however, he found no answer by his search. I am sure that many of God's people know about this frustration.
God comforts his people at the time and manner of his choosing and the Christian needs to keep this in mind and should never say, as some do, "well, Lord, it's too late now." Why? Because Father knows best. In commenting on this Psalm, John Gill wrote the following in his commentary:
"The people of God are sometimes very disconsolate, and need comforting, through the prevalence of sin, the power of Satan's temptations, the hidings of God's face, and a variety of afflictions; when they apply to God for comfort, who only can comfort them, and who has his set times to do it; but they are apt to think it long, and inquire, as David here, when it will be."
Notice what the apostle Paul said:
"No temptation has overtaken you except such as is common to man; but God is faithful, who will not allow you to be tempted beyond what you are able, but with the temptation will also make the way of escape, that you may be able to bear it." (I Cor. 10: 13 nkjv)
In the above text the words "way of escape" are from a singular Greek word, ekbasis. It is a combination of "ek" and "basis" the former meaning "out of," exit, egress, and the latter denoting a movement of the feet, so together they mean to walk out of, or to escape, some trial or difficulty. The word ekbasis is used only two times in the new testament, the other place is translated by the word "end" in Hebrews 13: 7, which is interesting. The word "basis" is only used once and is translated by the word "feet" (Acts 3: 7). The Lord's people get themselves into tight spots often and the Lord gives them ways to walk out of them. Interesting too is the fact that McGill in the above cited movie often said "we are in a tight spot."
Though the word "comfort" or it cognates are not in the above text, yet it is surely implied, for it deals with ways of escaping temptations (which includes trying times) and with being made "able to bear" those hard times. Recall our definition of comfort in the first chapter, how it means to strengthen, and the Greek word for comfort was "paraklēsis," and the Greek word for the word "comforter" or "advocate" is "paraklētos." In I John 2: 1 "paraklētos" is translated by the word "advocate." Jesus is both a comforter and an advocate, and a helper too. They are compound words, made up of "para" and "klēsis," the former meaning "alongside" and the latter meaning "to call," thus giving the meaning of "to call to one's side" another person to help you. It literally means a person being helped, strengthened, or aided, by another person coming alongside that person in order to give strength, counsel, consolation, emotional support, etc. Some translations actually give "helper" as an English translation of "paraklētos."
Such is God, Father, Son (who is also Christ Jesus), and Holy Spirit. They walk with the Christian, always standing at his or her side, to comfort, help, and as an advocate (lawyer). He gives perfect counsel. He knows what you need and when you need it. Many of the psalms say that Yahweh is the Helper of his people. In the new testament the apostle says: "For He Himself has said, "I will never leave you nor forsake you." So we may boldly say: "The Lord is my helper; I will not fear. What can man do to me?"
Wrote the Psalmist:
"You, who have shown me great and severe troubles, Shall revive me again, And bring me up again from the depths of the earth. You shall increase my greatness, And comfort me on every side." (Psa. 71: 20-21 nkjv)
Here we see God "comforting" by "reviving" and by "bringing up" his servant out of "great and severe troubles." In the Book of Acts Luke records these words:
"Then had the churches rest throughout all Judaea and Galilee and Samaria, and were edified; and walking in the fear of the Lord, and in the comfort of the Holy Ghost, were multiplied." (Acts 9: 31 kjv)
God provided relief by providing the new convert, Saul of Tarsus (who became Paul the apostle), a way out of the hands of those who sought to kill him. In doing so he provided a way of escape for Paul and a way to comfort the churches of Christ.
God is the chief way of escape when facing trials. He is a place of refuge, the place of escape.
Friday, February 20, 2026
Ash Wednesday of Lenten Fasting
"Doesn’t Ash Wednesday contradict this? By wearing ashes, and especially by sporting them and exhibiting them, aren’t we going against our Lord’s command?
Well, the main point we need to recognize here is that Jesus is talking about our intentions. In other words: don’t fast and make sacrifice in order to show off. Do we wear the ashes for God’s glory or for ours? Jesus is employing hyperbole here to help make his point. He exaggerates, seeming to say we should never fast in a way that others can see, but in reality, what he is doing is reacting to those who make a show of their penance."
Thursday, February 19, 2026
Two Seed Baptist Ideology (XLV)
My Friend & Brother, Mike Fisher, has Died
Fine Arts/Humanities Instructor
Arkansas Northeastern College
The above is a picture of Michael Alan Fisher of Jonesboro, Arkansas. I just got word that he has passed away. I met "Mike" when he was a speech professor at Wingate University in my home county of Union here in North Carolina. He and I are roughly the same age, I was born October 5th, 1955 and he was born February 28, 1956. I first met him in my freshman college speech class and he was also the head of the college debate team, one of the best in the country in CEDA debate. I asked him about becoming part of the debate team (I was 28 at the time). He taught me the rudiments of debate. Our debate teams traveled all over the eastern U.S. as we had a large budget. We went to Illinois, Texas, Tennessee, Florida, etc. He was single and I was single (divorced) and we just became close friends. He was a Christian and a Baptist, connected in Arkansas I think with what we would call "Bogard Baptists" because of the influence of Dr. Ben Bogard of Baptist and Landmarker fame and who was from Arkansas. Mike was also the piano player for a local Baptist singing trio, including my wife Paulette, her sister Jami, and her mother Doris. They were always practicing in the home of Doris and her husband who were devout Southern Baptists, she being the choir director of her local church. I met Paulette through Mike.
After my first two years of college, Mike went to Gainesville, Florida to teach at the University of Florida and I went with him, and we both rented a house there for six months. However, I left and came back to North Carolina to marry Paulette and devote all my time to my real estate business and to raise her two adolescent children as well as my own two. That was in 1985.
Mike was a dear friend though he moved back to Arkansas and began teaching there, and we did not keep up with each other regularly. He did check in with Paulette's parents via Facebook and the telephone as did Mike's parents. I was in business with his father, Clarence Fisher, who came to Monroe, N.C. to build some projects with me, some apartments, mini warehouses, and a commercial strip center.
Mike was a Christian, and a Baptist, but he also was to some extent involved in the new age movement. When he was at Murray State University, working on his Master's degree, and even before, he got into drugs and a licentious lifestyle. Thankfully he put all that behind him, though it was a learning experience for him. He was a great piano player. He was a champion debater when he was in college and is one reason why Wingate University was anxious to hire him. He also had a sense of humor. He was a good friend who listened to me and helped me get over my divorce from my first wife and the breakup of our family. We often talked about the bible, and he read it most days. Mike never married.
Before I married Paulette he and I took a trip on our motorcycles to western Kentucky. I will never forget that. We also took "road trips" to other places, once to Florida with others and visited my older brother Eddie. Precious memories. I could go on and on about him and our time spent together. We went to Mexico together, on a one day cruise to the Bahamas, all with the debate team.
It was sad news to hear that he had passed after a short illness. Had he lived a few days longer he would have been 70, my age now. I hope to see him again on the other side of Jordan.
Mike's obituary reads as follows (See here)
Michael Fisher Obituary
Michael Alan Fisher, 69, of Jonesboro, passed away on February 17, 2026, at the Phil and Flo Jones Hospice House. Michael was born on February 28, 1956, in Michigan City, IN, to Alta May and the late Clarence Fisher Jr. In addition to his father, Michael was preceded in death by his bonus mom, Faye Sledge.
Michael was born in Indiana but spent most of his life in Jonesboro, graduating from Valley View High School. His secondary education was a dedicated journey that brought him great pride. His pursuit of knowledge and decision to teach others took him all over the country, but he always kept his roots in Northeast Arkansas. He was a professor at Arkansas State University for many years. During his tenure at ASU, he coached multiple national and international champion debate teams. He also served as a fraternity advisor for the local chapter of Alpha Tau Omega. Most recently, Michael was a communications professor at Arkansas Northeastern College. While at ANC, he also served as director of the theater program and helped the program keep its head above water during the COVID crisis.
His dedication to education matched his love of the arts. From an early age, Michael sang and played the piano. As a charter member of Cathedral Baptist Church, he served as the congregation's first pianist. Singing in church choirs brought Michael many opportunities, including performances at Carnegie Hall in New York City and in Vatican City. He cherished those memories for his entire life. Most importantly, Michael loved his mother, family, and church community.
Michael is survived by his mother, Alta May Fisher of Jonesboro; brother, Billy Fisher (Denise), of North Little Rock; niece, Stacy Sproles (Scotty), of Burkburnett, TX, and their children, Adam and Lydia; nephew, Bradley Fisher (Christina), of Plano, TX; and godsons, Gabriel Arant of Manhattan, NY, and Michael Arant IV (Heidi), and their child, Charlotte, of Jonesboro.
A funeral service will be held at Emerson Funeral Home on February 21, 2026, at 2:00 pm with Bro. Ken Beaver officiating. A visitation will be held from 1:00 pm to 2:00 pm. Burial will follow at Pine Log Cemetery.
Pallbearers include Michael Arant III, Gabriel Arant, Michael Arant IV, Bryson Beaver, Derek Spiegel, Mike Cope, Wes Thornton, and Maddox Beaver.
Tuesday, February 17, 2026
God Comforts Believers (4)
"Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted"
(Matthew 5: 4)
In this chapter we will look at another way God comforts his people, and that being his giving to his people recall of the word of God, of past blessings and deliverances, of past mountain top experiences of joy in the Holy Spirit, etc. I confess to you dear reader that I have often been comforted by God in this way. There is a tendency or proneness to forget things, religiously or theologically speaking. After all, there are things that we need to keep always in remembrance, as the people of God, for doing so will help to insure our comfort and enduring faith. So the apostle Peter wrote:
"For this reason I will not be negligent to remind you always of these things, though you know and are established in the present truth. Yes, I think it is right, as long as I am in this tent, to stir you up by reminding you, knowing that shortly I must put off my tent, just as our Lord Jesus Christ showed me. Moreover I will be careful to ensure that you always have a reminder of these things after my decease." (II Peter 1:12-15 nkjv)
The purpose of keeping certain things fresh in our memories regarding our dealings with God and with our consciences is multi-faceted, and "insures" a number of things, and comfort (strength of mind, heart, soul, and spirit) is one of them. I have often been comforted by the memories of past blessings and providential interventions in my life. They strengthen faith to believe that they will continue, i.e. as God has often heard and answered prayer and granted requests in the past, so I have every reason to believe that it will be so in the future. The apostle Paul connected such remembrance not only with receiving comfort, but salvation, for he says:
"Moreover, brethren, I declare unto you the gospel which I preached unto you, which also ye have received, and wherein ye stand; by which also ye are saved, if ye keep in memory what I preached unto you, unless ye have believed in vain." (I Cor. 15: 1-2 kjv)
Wrote the prophet Jonah while in the belly of hell (the great fish that swallowed him):
"When my soul fainted within me I remembered the LORD: and my prayer came in unto thee, into thine holy temple." (Jonah 2: 7 kjv)
Surely remembering the Lord included remembering God's own history and biography; but also surely included Jonah's remembrance of past blessings divinely given and times of communion with God. Those remembrances gave him high quality comfort and consolation and strength to endure. Likewise the Psalmist wrote: "I remembered Your judgments of old, O LORD, And have comforted myself." (Psa. 119: 52 nkjv) Here the Psalmist receives comfort as a fruit of spending time musing upon God's past works and dealings with him. Such blessed memories fortify the soul. So the hymn "Precious Memories" says:
1 Precious mem'ries, unseen angels,
Sent from somewhere to my soul;
How they linger, ever near me,
And the sacred past unfold.
Refrain:
Precious mem'ries, how they linger,
How they ever flood my soul;
In the stillness of the midnight,
Precious, sacred scenes unfold.
2 Precious father, loving mother,
Fly across the lonely years;
And old home scenes of my childhood,
In fond memory appear. [Refrain]
3 As I travel on life's pathway,
Know not what the years may hold;
As I ponder, hope grows fonder,
Precious mem'ries flood my soul. [Refrain]
According to this hymn writer, what comes from such precious memories? He calls them "unseen angels." Perhaps they are in some sense, angels being God's instruments to bring things to our minds and to put thoughts into our hearts. (Rev. 17: 17, etc.) We know God does this from many bible passages, and angels are in their mission messengers of God. After all, God does send us messages in this and other ways. In God bringing things to our remembrance he causes "sacred scenes" to "unfold" in our imaginations. These visions comfort us. These appear in "fond memory." As these precious memories are enjoyed, pondered, "hope grows fonder," and we are comforted.
Jeremiah, the "weeping prophet," wrote the following in his Lamentations:
"And thou hast removed my soul far off from peace: I forgat prosperity. And I said, My strength and my hope is perished from the LORD: Remembering mine affliction and my misery, the wormwood and the gall. My soul hath them still in remembrance, and is humbled in me. This I recall to my mind, therefore have I hope." (Lam. 3: 17-21 kjv)
Here we see a case where good things came from the prophet remembering former trials, afflictions, and sins, rather than from remembering times of joy and gladness and times of deliverance. That good was humility and hope, and with hope comes comfort. Reflection, which involves the memory, can be very highly productive for our good. Meditating on the past can be blessed by God for our good and comfort. Said wise king Solomon: "Ponder the path of your feet, And let all your ways be established." (Prov. 4: 26 nkjv) That would include pondering the path you have already walked as well as the path you intend to walk in the future. To ponder on the past is to remember it. "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it," famously coined by philosopher George Santayana in 1905. Pondering our past, both ups and downs, will bring us comfort and fortify us against future mistakes and tragedies.
To show how remembering God's past orderings of our lives, and remembering his word, bring us comfort and strength, I cite the words of David who said "Your word I have hidden in my heart, That I might not sin against You." (Psa. 119: 11 nkjv) Hiding God's word in the heart involves keeping it always in our memories. Doing so works to lessen future transgressions and increase holiness. It is a case where an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. I encourage the Lord's people to lay up God's word in their hearts, to memorize as much of it as they can, especially those parts that have made the greatest impression upon them. So God said to Moses and the people of God:
"Therefore you shall lay up these words of mine in your heart and in your soul, and bind them as a sign on your hand, and they shall be as frontlets between your eyes." (Deut. 11: 18 nkjv)
To "lay up these words of mine in your heart and in your soul" involves remembering God's words. The "frontlets" were the headbands worn around the head and which had scripture written on them. I believe, however, that they signify keeping the word in the "forefront" of our minds, for God wants all his creatures, and especially his chosen people, to write his word upon the hearts and minds. So is the exhortation of God: "Let love and faithfulness never leave you; bind them around your neck, write them on the tablet of your heart." (Prov. 3: 3 nkjv) It is interesting that God tells the people to do what he said he would do. God promised, saying, "For this is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those days, declares the Lord: "I will put my law within them, and I will write it in their hearts. And I will be their God, and they shall be my people." (Jer. 31: 33; Heb. 8: 10; II Cor. 3: 3) Mary, the mother of Jesus, certainly did this. Writes Luke: "But Mary kept all these things and pondered them in her heart." (Luke 2: 19 nkjv) I am sure that she was later comforted by these things that she wrote in her memory.
God will bring scripture and past experiences and lessons to our minds for our good and for our comfort. So Jesus said of the sending of the Holy Spirit:
"But the Comforter, which is the Holy Ghost, whom the Father will send in my name, he shall teach you all things, and bring all things to your remembrance, whatsoever I have said unto you." (John 14: 26 kjv)
Since we are saved by the Gospel only if we keep in memory that Gospel, we need the Holy Spirit to daily keep us reminded of it and in doing so we will be kept and preserved from falling into despair, or fainting in the way, and will give us comfort and strength to persevere.
Somebody might say -- "doesn't Paul say we should 'forget those things which are behind' and look ahead to the end goal and prize?" Yes he does in Philippians 3: 13-14. But, he does not mean that absolutely, or in every respect. Paul on more than one occasion told of his past conversion experience, and even recorded his sins in persecuting the church. So, he is not going against his own advice. He rather means that one should turn his back on living as he once did when he walked according to the flesh and according to the course of this age. I often am comforted by recalling the hour I first believed and obtained a hope in Christ.
God Comforts Believers (3)
"God is our refuge and strength,
A very present help in trouble"
Psalm 46: 1
Comfort by Special Divine Presence
God's presence with a believer is a source of comfort, strength, and consolation. In this chapter we will look at the fourth way God comforts his people, which is by giving the downcast an inner sense of God's loving presence through his Spirit bearing witness with their spirits, often whispering peace in his "still small voice" (I Kings 19: 12) as the song we cited in the previous chapter stated, titled "He Whispers Sweet Peace To Me." Number four in the list is similar to number three, showing how God works on the internal feelings in giving comfort. So thought the Psalmist David who said:
"Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil: for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff they comfort me." (Psa. 23: 4 kjv)
The above text in Exodus 33: 14 also indicates that God's presence with his people is a source of comfort or rest. In that oracle the Hebrew term for "presence" is panim and is a plural noun meaning "faces" or "presences," and so means "my presences they shall go." It is a text that bewilders many bible teachers but should not, no more than God's name "Elohim" being in the plural and why Elohim in the creation says "let us make man in our image, after our likeness." I firmly believe that this is because God is three persons though he is one God in essence or substance or nature. God is revealed as Father, Son or Word, and Holy Spirit. The Bible teaches a Trinity of the Unity and a Unity of the Trinity. When a person believes in Christ, all three divine persons enter into him or her and dwell there. So Jesus said:
"Jesus answered and said to him, “If anyone loves Me, he will keep My word; and My Father will love him, and We will come to him and make Our home with him." (John 14: 23 nkjv)
Many verses also speak of the Holy Spirit dwelling in believers. (See Rom. 8: 9; I Cor. 6: 19) So, by God saying "my presences will go with you" he means the presence of the Father, the Son, and the Spirit, each being a face of God.
Yet, to the unsaved, God's presence can be a source of irritation, fear, and grief. In the Garden of Eden Adam and Eve enjoyed God's presence as much as the angels of heaven. Yet, when they rebelled against God by their transgression, we find it recorded how they fled from that same presence.
"And they heard the sound of the LORD God walking in the garden in the cool of the day, and Adam and his wife hid themselves from the presence of the LORD God among the trees of the garden." (Gen. 3: 8 nkjv)
Once they walked with God, enjoying his immediate presence, but when they sinned they fled from the presence of the Lord. When Christ enters into a believer, his presence becomes a source of great joy and comfort. Believers often "sense" God's presence in a special way, especially when they are praying in the Spirit, or when praising the Lord in Spirit and with jubilant joy and delight, or when in deep meditation and musings upon the word and works of God, or when preaching the gospel to the lost or sharing God's word with other believers. After all Jesus said "where two or three are gathered together in my name there I am in the midst of them." (Matt. 18: 20) "There I am" speaks of his presence. He also told the first missionaries that he would go with them, even to the end of the age. (Matt. 28: 20)
It is difficult to define "presence," much like other words, such as life, death, gravity, etc. What does it mean to be in the presence of another? What does it mean to be in the presence of God? Bible teachers recognize the complexity of defining God's presence, such as when it is said that God is omnipresent, or everywhere present, and yet where it says that God only dwells in believers. There is a general presence and a special presence. Some scholars speak of God's "mystical" presence because of how inexplicable is God's presence. In the text in the heading God tells Moses that his presence(s) will go with him which seems odd if God is already everywhere. Clearly the reference is to God's special presence. Who can doubt that God's presence in heaven is different in some ways than his presence on earth?
There is an old Christian hymn that describes how the believer in Jesus experiences the loving presence of Christ, the title and words of that spiritual song are as follows:
How Tedious and Tasteless The Hours
1 How tedious and tasteless the hours
When Jesus no longer I see!
Sweet prospects, sweet birds, and sweet flowers,
Have all lost their sweetness to me;
The midsummer sun shines but dim,
The fields strive in vain to look gay;
But when I am happy in Him,
December's as pleasant as May.
2 His name yields the richest perfume,
And sweeter than music His voice;
His presence disperses my gloom,
And makes all within me rejoice;
I should, were He always thus nigh,
Have nothing to wish or to fear;
No mortal so happy as I,
My summer would last all the year.
3 Content with beholding His face,
My all to His pleasure resigned,
No changes of seasons or place
Would make any change in my mind:
While blest with a sense of His love,
A palace a toy would appear;
And prisons would palaces prove,
If Jesus would dwell with me there.
4 Dear Lord, if indeed I am Thine,
If Thou art my sun and my song,
Say, why do I languish and pine,
And why are my winters so long?
O drive these dark clouds from my sky,
Thy soul-cheering presence restore;
Or take me to Thee upon high,
The Psalmist said: "In Your presence is fullness of joy; At Your right hand are pleasures forevermore." (Psa. 16: 11 nkjv) That is certainly true in heaven, but to a lesser degree it is true in the life of the believer, when in prayer, praise, or meditation, he is in a "heavenly place." God's presence ought to be coveted above all things. When I pray I begin with thanking God for all things and the highest blessing I give him thanks for is his indwelling presence. There is no greater blessing than to have God making our hearts his home or temple. So Moses wrote in his exhortation and encouragement to the chosen people of God:
“For what great nation is there that has God so near to it, as the LORD our God is to us, for whatever reason we may call upon Him?" (Deut. 4: 7 nkjv)
Further, it is a wonderful thing to have God's promise to draw near to us when we draw near to him in faith and repentance. Wrote James: "Draw near to God, and he will draw near to you" (James 4:8).
The believer can be assured that "The Lord is near" (Phil. 4:5). That "The Lord is near to those who have a broken heart, And saves such as have a contrite spirit." (Psa. 34: 18 mkjv)
God himself says:
"For thus says the High and Lofty One Who inhabits eternity, whose name is Holy: “I dwell in the high and holy place, With him who has a contrite and humble spirit, To revive the spirit of the humble, And to revive the heart of the contrite ones." (Isa. 57: 15 nkjv)
Thank God for the comfort that comes from his presence with us!
Monday, February 16, 2026
Two Seed Baptist Ideology (XLIV)
"William Perkins writes equally as clear on this subject as follows: "In the covenant of grace, two things must be considered, the substance thereof, and the condition. The substance of the covenant is, that righteousness and life everlasting is given to God's people by Christ. The condition is, that we for our part are by faith to receive the aforesaid benefits; and this condition is by grace as well as the substance." And no less in point is the following: "He freely provideth and offereth to sinners a Mediator and life and salvation by Him, and requiring faith as the condition to interest them in Him, nourisheth and giveth his Holy Spirit to all his elect to work in them that faith with all other saving graces, and to enable them to all holy obedience of the truth of their faith."





