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Paul Mahan

No Place I'd Rather Be

Psalm 84
Paul Mahan May, 21 2024 Video & Audio
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Sermon Transcript

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I'm back with you, I really am.
David said, I was glad when they said unto me, let's go unto the
house of the Lord. And I mean that too. Don't you?
You glad to be here? Psalm 84, go back where Brother
Gabe read to us. David wrote this, we believe. David, as you know, wrote of
Christ. all through the scriptures, all
through the Psalms. And he wrote a great deal about the church.
He loved God's church. He loved God's people. The church
goes by many names in the Old Testament. Zion, Mount Zion,
Jerusalem. When you think of Jerusalem,
That's the church, the kingdom of God. Christ came preaching
the kingdom of God. That's his church. That's his
people. This is a psalm about the church
and about her Lord. I love to talk about our Lord. I love to hear someone preach
about my Lord. You know, you can't talk about
the Lord without talking about his bride. It's like husband
and his wife. It's a marriage. When you think
of one, you think of the other. When you think of Obie, you think
of Stacia. It's almost like one word, Obie
Stacia. Henry Doris and Gabe and Hannah, right? That's the
way it is. And Christ and his church. Our Lord loves his people. He loves his church. He laid
down his life for his church. He told husbands to love your
wives even as Christ loved the church and gave himself for it. I love to think about the church. Someone said you don't go to
church. You are the church. So when we talk about the church,
we're not talking about this building. I call it the church
house. But the church is His people,
God's people, the house of God. He dwells in His people, and
they dwell in Him. It's a mystery, isn't it? He's
the temple and yet We are the temple of God. We dwell in him,
and he dwells in us, the church. And David said, I was glad when
they said unto me, let's go to the house of the Lord. He said
in Psalm 26, he said, Lord, I have loved the habitation of thy house,
the place where thine honor dwelleth. Don't you? You love to come here
and love to fellowship with God's people and hear Christ preach.
That's a sign that you're a member of the church. All right, let's
look at this psalm. Don't you love the psalms? He
said, how amiable are thy tabernacles, O Lord of hope. How lovely, how
lovely are thy tabernacles. This is a lovely place. I preached
this a couple of years ago and I titled it, What a Lovely Place
This Is. There's another psalm that says
how beautiful for situation is Mount Zion. We have a beautiful
view, don't we, of our Lord and His Son through the preaching
of the gospel. It's a lovely place to be. Our
loving Lord, our altogether lovely Lord is proclaimed in this place. In Deuteronomy, beginning in
chapter 12 all the way through, I think it's chapter 17, I forget
how many times, 17 or 18 times, It says there's a place the Lord
has chosen to put his name there. 17, 18 times. Have you ever seen
that? All through the book of Deuteronomy. Well, that's his
church. A place where he's chosen, his
people are chosen to put his name there, to put the name of
his son there. They're called Christian. They're
called sons of God. And that's where he is. That's
where his honor dwells. That's where he dwells in the
midst of his people. And that's where I want to dwell.
And David said that, I want to dwell in the house of the Lord
all the days of my life and behold the beauty of the Lord and inquire
into his temple. That's what we're doing tonight.
I hope that's what we're doing. Beholding the beauty of the Lord
and inquiring into his temple. Paul wrote this in Ephesians
2. He said, he's made us sit together in heavenly places. This is a foretaste of glory
divine. This is a heavenly place. You
know it's so when you're out there in Sodom and you come into
this place where there's lovely people and you hear a man, a
lovely man, preach of your altogether lovely Lord. It's an amiable
tabernacle. And you notice it says tabernacles,
tabernacle. There was one tabernacle. where
the one high priest went in, the Holy of Holies, and put the
blood on the mercy seat, okay? That's our Lord in Him we dwell. Lord, thou hast been our dwelling
place in all generations. But they're tabernacles, they're
little local places where God is, like this place. Don't you
love his tabernacles? Don't you love his local churches
in Spring Lake and Pikeville and Rocky Mound and Kingsport
and Crossfield? Don't you love those places?
Down in Mexico, all those tabernacles where our dear brethren are.
How lovely are thy tabernacles, O Lord of hosts. Said four times
in this one psalm and throughout the psalm. He's Lord over all,
but his people are the hosts of heaven and the church in earth
and in heaven. And his people, the scripture
said, are as the sands of the sea and the stars of the sky.
Now, if you enjoy this, try to imagine Just try to imagine what
it's going to be like when all the hosts get together. You like
Bible conferences? There's going to be one continual,
eternal Bible conference. There's going to be some real
preaching going on. Our Lord is going to speak to us and we're
going to be so glad to be there. How amiable are thy tabernacles,
O Lord of hosts? Verse 2. He says, my soul longeth,
yet even fainteth for the courts of the Lord. David, David was
in exile several times during his life. He was on the run from
Saul. You remember Saul sought his
life. David born in Bethlehem and grew up around there and
Jerusalem later, but David was on the run from Saul and David
was on the run from his son Absalom. And while he was away, and we
believe he was away at this time, he wished he was with God's people
in God's house. He longed to be there. He said,
my soul long yet even fainted for the courts of the Lord, where
God's people are at my heart and my flesh cry out for the
living God. David went to worship the Lord. Like you and I do like tonight. He, David, though he was a King
and a sweet psalmist of Israel, he had to hear a man preach the
gospel. He listened to Nathan preach, didn't he? Nathan spoke
to him and he blessed him so greatly. Well, when he was away,
there's nothing he wanted more than to be back with God's people.
Is that you? You've been away for whatever
reason, you've been sick or you had to work or whatever. Didn't
you not long to be with God's people? That's a sign, that's
evidence that you're part of the body. You hate to be away
when you're gone. He said, my soul longeth, even
fainteth for the courts of God. He said, my heart and my flesh
crieth out for the living God. You have the abundance of the
heart, the mouth speaketh. My heart longs for the worship
of the Lord. He said, my mouth crieth unto
the Lord. Whatever your heart longs for,
your flesh will go after. You know that? If your heart
and your affection is set on things above, your body will
be in the pew where God's people are and where the gospel is spread.
It has to, it has to. He looked at verse three, he
was away and he said, the sparrow had found a house, a swallow,
a nest for herself. David envied the birds that were
nesting in the rafters of the house of God. He said, I wish
I could just be a bird in the rafters. Years ago, I planted a vine on
the side of our church building. It was one of those, it was an
ivy, an English ivy. Big mistake. David, Gabe, his
name's Dave, Gabe said he had one, your last house, he said,
he said, I could hear it taking over the house at night. You're
growing, they're prolific growers, aren't they? Well, I planted
this vine, it was beautiful. And I loved him. But there was
a bird that started building a nest in that vine on the side
of the church house. And that year, she built the
nest, he, and they raised their young. And then the next year,
I believe it had to be the same bird. And I gave strict orders
to everybody, don't you touch that bird nest. Don't you disturb
that bird. That bird has found a nest, a
resting place for itself. Anything or anyone who comes
to God's house is going to find a refuge. And our Lord ensures
their safety and their peace and their rest. And it says here,
the sparrow hath found a house, a swallow, a nest for herself. Do you consider God's house where
God's people are, where Christ is preached, Christ our resting
place? Do you not consider this your
your home, where you want to be, like David said, where I
want to be, a nest, a place of rest, where we hear of Christ,
our Sabbath, our Red, and it says, where she may lay her young,
look at verse three, where she may lay her young, that's the
reason she nests there, even thine altars, O Lord of hosts,
my God and my King and my God. A place to lay her young. Brother
Brandon read from 1 Samuel 1 and 2 where
Hannah asked the Lord for a child and the Lord gave her Samuel.
And Hannah told the Lord, she pleaded with the Lord, if you'll
give me a child, this child's yours. You give me the child.
It's not mine, it belongs to you. I'm gonna give this child
back to you. And she did just that, didn't
she? The Lord gave her a child. So she brought Samuel to God's
house. And she raised her young boy
at God's house. And when he was old enough to
be weaned, she left him there. And Obie, he stayed right there
for the rest of his life. Isn't that what you want when
you're young? Have you not, by God's grace,
found a place to raise your young? You're so blessed. We're so blessed
to be in a place where God's name dwells, where the truth
is, where the true man of God that preaches Christ there to
raise your young. Thank God every day that your
children are not out there passing through the fire. Scripture talks
a great deal about that, making their children go through the
fire, acquire the fire, and all this false religion. We're so blessed. All this man
is doing, all these men are doing, is preaching Christ to you, the
truth. And all they want for your children is for them to
know Jesus Christ. Isn't that right? Oh, how blessed
we are. Oh, Lord of folks, my King and
my God. Verse four, blessed are they
that dwell in thy house. How blessed. How I bled, to dwell
in God's house. God's house, dwelling place. As I quoted Psalm 90, it's a
good psalm to read. If you haven't read it in a while,
read Psalm 90. Read it once a week. Lord, thou hast been our dwelling.
Talks about the infinite God. Talks about finite man. Talks
about the sinfulness of man. Talks about the brevity of life.
Talks about, teach us to number our days when we apply our hearts
to wisdom. It's a wonderful song. But God
is our dwelling place. Where does God dwell? He doesn't
dwell in buildings, as said in the beginning. This building
is not the church, but wherever His people are, that's where
He dwells. God, we dwell in Him, in Him we live and move and have
our being, and He dwells in us. Like a bottle in smoke, you see.
There's smoke in the bottle, or a bottle in the ocean. That's
a good illustration. A bottle in the ocean, and the ocean's
in the bottle. That's us. That's God's people.
Dwell. Best are they that dwell in him,
that dwell in his house. Verse four says, they will be
still. Praising that. Sela. I love Sela. We don't pronounce
that word because it's supposed to be a musical pause. My dad
at one time said it meant raise the volume on the next verse. We're not sure. David was a psalm
writer. He must have been a wonderful
guitar player. But he uses that often. Pause
is a good thing in music. and pick it back up again. Think
about that. Think about that. Those that
in God's house that dwell there, they're going to be still. He
maketh us to lie down in green pastures. He leads us beside
the still waters of His Word. Christ is the water. It stills
our soul. Turn with me to 2 Chronicles. Real quickly, 2 Chronicles. Second Chronicles, chapter 20.
This is a wonderful, wonderful story. Gabe probably preached
from this, but one of the most poignant, touching, precious
scenes in all of Scripture, where Jehoshaphat and all Israel were
gathered together to the Lord to ask His help, safety, salvation
from their enemies. They were surrounded by enemies.
And look at verse 12, 2 Chronicles 20. 2 Chronicles 20, verse 12,
it says, oh our God, Jehoshaphat's praying, wilt thou not judge
them or deal with our enemies? We have no might against this
great company, nor do we have any might against our foes and
our adversary that cometh against us. Neither know we what to do.
We don't know what to do, but our eyes are upon thee. Well, you know what the Lord
did? Look at verse 13. All Judah stood before the Lord
with their little ones, like you here, their wives and their
children. Isn't that a beautiful picture?
They're all standing before the Lord, looking to the Lord, needing
his help, with their wives and their little ones. That's exactly
what we're doing. We have no might, we have no
strength. What did the Lord do to still them? What did the Lord
do to comfort them? What did the Lord do to assure
them that he was with them, that no harm would befall them? He
sent a preacher. Look at it, verse 14. A man named
Jehaziel. As far as I know, this is the
only message he ever prayed. What a message. If you only had
one message to pray, this would be it. So Jahaziel stood up to
preach verse 15. He said, hearken, hear Judah,
hear your soul live. Inhabitants of Jerusalem and
King Jehoshaphat, he needs to hear. We all need to hear from
the Lord. Thus saith the Lord unto you,
be not afraid nor dismayed. How many times did it say that? Be not dismayed for I am thy
God. I will still give thee aid. Read on, be not afraid or dismayed
by reason that it's a great multitude. The battle is not yours, it,
but it's God's tomorrow. Go down, go out there, go out
in the world. Your enemies out there. Yes.
All your foes, the adversary, the God of this world is out
there, but verse 17, you shall not need to fight in this battle.
Set yourselves. Stand still. Have you ever heard
that before? You know what Moses said at the
Red Sea? That foe that was chasing behind
him, that vast gulf fixed between them. One message, stand still. Don't do anything. Trust the
Lord. Look to the Lord. You'll see
the salvation of the Lord. Oh, they'll be still. Go back
to the tent. He said, those that dwell in God's house, that's
what they're going to hear from the preacher. He's going to tell
them. Trust the Lord. Look to cry. Stand still and
see the salvation. Don't do anything. Trust the
Lord. That's what I heard. Brother Gabe, I asked him if
that message he preached to the people in Africa was recorded.
I hope it is. You need to hear it. He preached
that here before? He preached it again. I'm sure they remember every
poem. But that was wonderful. It was wonderful. And that was
his whole message. Just trust Christ. Look to Christ.
Don't do anything. Trust Him. Stand still. They
will be still. The only thing that will still
our hearts and minds and our troubled souls is to hear Christ
lifted up. And I like to read it this way.
They that dwell in thy house, those that are fixtures planted,
Psalm 92, blessed are they that are planted in the house of the
Lord. They will be still praising death, even in old age. Those
that are planted there, they're not gonna be removed. They're
not gonna be plucked up. They're gonna still be there.
When it's all over, when Christ come, his people that are planted,
and everyone that he doesn't plant, brother, I got your name, Tony. Known
you all my life. Everybody that hadn't been planted,
the Lord's gonna pluck them up. And we've been planted in Christ. Christ is the vine with the branches.
If we don't abide in him, we're gonna be plucked up, gonna be
cast down. But every one of those, they're
gonna be still there when he comes. Praising him. He's still praising him. My father,
My father, when he was in his 90s, he was still in every service
up until, you know, he couldn't, we had to put him in a home and
for a little while, broke his hip, that's what. He was there
until he broke his hip, Alan broke his hip. And he could barely
walk in the last, these last few years. He could barely get,
he just shuffled. You remember that. He could barely
shuffle. And a step that high, going from
their garage into their house, he was only about that high.
Not even four inches. He had trouble getting his foot
up. But there's 16 steps from the base of our church house
up into the sanctuary. And I said, Dad, let me drive
you around. Nope, ain't gonna do it. He didn't
want people to, he didn't want help. But he, it was a struggle
for him to walk those 16 steps. He had to do it. And he did it. The other day, he broke his hip.
He had to be in God's house. Do you know what that meant to
all of us? You know what that meant to everybody else? What
a testimony that, that said as much as all those years that
he stood behind the pulpit. That says that Christ and the
worship of our Lord and the meeting with God's people and the fellowship
with God's people is my life. And it ain't worth living if
I can't go be with God's people. So there'll be still, praise
and thank. And then, Selah. Verse five, blessed is the man
whose strength is in thee. People, you know this, and this
is what Brandon, your prayer was a blessing. We don't have
any strength. Without him, we can do nothing.
You have no strength. Faith is another word for strength. And it's not our faith. It's
the one we have faith in. We don't have faith in our faith. We don't depend on ourselves
for anything. He's our strength. We're strong
in the Lord and the power of his might. And what is the power
of his might? His word, his promise. It's his
gospel. The gospel is the power of God
and salvation. We have no strength. It says, but blessed is the man,
blessed is the man whose strength is in Christ. How blessed, how
blessed. In whose heart, verse five, are
the ways of them, or that is those who dwell in God's house,
those who are there praising Him. The ways of God, what's
that? Well, faith, love, thanksgiving, praise, word of God, worship
of God's Son. That's God's ways. That's God's
way. Blessed, how blessed are they
whose ways, God's ways, he put in them. Christ, the way, the
truth, and the life. Verse six, they pass through
the valley of Baca and make it a well. This is J.C. Philpott, his daughter wrote
a, well, put together a devotional, daily devotional. Some of you
have it? It's called Baca's Valley, Baca's Valley. veil and it's
a collection daily readings and he said this valley of baka means
a valley of tears a valley of sorrows valley of troubles and
that fits doesn't it and we walk through the valley of the shadow
of death we need not fear evil why well it's psalms 8 the lord
is with me David was a fearless man, as a young man, fearless.
He faced Goliath through the strength of the Lord. But he
said, what time I'm afraid, I'll trust in the Lord. Passed through
this valley of Baca, of trouble, of tears, and sorrow, and all
of God's people, our Lord said, in the world, you're gonna have
tribulation, and sorrows, and trouble, and a lot of tears.
But he makes it well. We draw from the wells of salvation,
the well of his word, the well of his mercy, the well of his
grace, and it's exhaustless, it's endless, it's a bottomless
well, the well of his goodness, which is Christ. Christ is the
well. When our Lord sat on the well and that woman came to the
well, she didn't know. She really did come to the well.
Christ was sitting on the well. Christ is the well. The well
of salvation. Oh, the rain, verse six. The
rain filleth the pools. Scripture says Christ will come
down like rain. Come down like rain. And the rain said, refreshing.
And we can't live without it. It's the water of life. Well,
that's Christ, our Lord. The word, Isaiah 55 talks about the
word coming down, giving seed to the soul, bread to the...
Christ is the rain. Blessed right, he'll come down,
fill the pool, the pool of Bethesda. This is the pool of Bethesda,
where the impotent, the haught, the lame can come and hear Christ. And this is the pool, and he
fills his pool with his mercy and his grace and his goodness.
Where's all the fullness of God anyway? He'll cry, fill up the
pool. Verse seven, they go from strength
to strength. Strength to strength, we gather
our strength. We come in here, those that wait
on the Lord, Isaiah said, shall renew their strength. They'll
mount up, he said, young people are gonna faint, strong are gonna
faint, but those that trust in the Lord shall renew their strength.
They're gonna mount up like on wings of eagles. I remember what it's like to
work all day on a Wednesday and then come dragging in here. And
I remember so many times, I had a faithful pastor preach Christ
and preach this. And I'd come dragging in, but
I'd go flying out. This is where we renew our strength
in it. Again, where is our strength? It's in Him, it's in Him, it's
in Christ. They go from strength to strength,
our strength. As thy days, so shall thy strength. Every one of them, in Zion, appears
before God. Who do we come, who do we come
to see tonight? We love to see one another. I
love to see, I meant it. Brother Scott used to say, I'm
not just preaching, I'm telling you the truth. I meant it when
I said I'm glad to be here. I'm glad to see you. I believe
you're glad to see me and one another. And that is, those that
love him that begat, love them that are begotten of him. That's
how you know. By hearing, shall we know that
we're of the Lord, we love his brethren, we love his son, we
love his gospel. But we come here to see him,
don't we? We come here to hear from him.
We need him more than anyone or anything else. So we come
to appear before our God. Now, look at this. He closes
with a prayer. Verse eight. The rest of this
is a prayer. Oh, Lord, God of hosts, hear
my prayer. Give ear, oh God of Jacob. Think about that. Blessed is
he that the God of Jacob is here. He said, I'm the Lord. I've changed
not. You sons of Jacob aren't going
to be consented. It says, O Lord God of hosts, hear my prayer.
Give ear, O God of Jacob. Who will the Lord hear? Who does God hear? You know,
I remember years ago, the president of the Southern Baptist Convention
in Louisville, Kentucky, I don't know if the man knew the Lord
or not, but he said this publicly, and it caused a furor, an uproar.
He said, God does not hear the Jews when they pray. And if they don't believe Jesus
Christ, he doesn't. He doesn't hear them. Scripture says that the
Lord is nigh unto them that fear him, fear him, unto them that
call upon him in truth. Christ is the truth. God doesn't
hear anybody that doesn't call on him in the name of Christ.
That's who God will hear. He's the God of Abraham, Isaac,
and Jacob. Sovereign God. Electing God.
God of the true God. God of the scripture. What you
said in that message today. As he's described in the scripture.
The God of the Bible. He's the God of Jacob. Jacob
have I loved. Esau have I hated. Somebody said,
I don't like that. Well then God doesn't love you.
Oh God of Jacob, hear us. You'll hear those that bow to
him. You'll hear those that believe him. You'll hear those that call
upon him in the Lord Jesus Christ. That's who he hears. You'll hear
him. Think about that. Verse nine,
look at it. Behold, oh God, our shield, our
salvation, our defense. Look upon the face of thine anointed. Who's that? What's the name Christ
mean? Anointed. God can't look upon
us except through Christ. Look upon the face that I anointed.
Look upon me in Christ. God sees his people in Christ,
doesn't he? Oh, God. Verse 10. A day in thy
courts is better than a thousand, anywhere else. And I think I'm
gonna title this, Brandon, if you need a title. There's no
place I'd rather be. No place I'd rather be. This
is what David said. He said, a day in thy courts
is better than a thousand anywhere else. He said, I'd rather be.
There's no place I'd rather be. I'd rather be a doorkeeper in
the house of my God than to dwell in the lavish tents. Tents, it's
all temporary. Just tents, and they're all coming
down, of the wicked. I'd rather be no place. I'd rather
be than with God's house. I'd just make me a doorkeeper.
He said, just let me keep the door. You know that David, when
he was giving orders to Solomon about the temple and David provided
a lots of money and lots of things, goods for the building of the
temple before he died. And David appointed 4,000 porters.
You want a Porter? It's a doorkeeper. 4,000 doorkeepers. Tony, what a job that'd be. All
you do is stand there at the door and greet people come in.
How you doing? Good to see you. Doorkeepers. David said, I'd rather be a doorkeeper
in the house of God. 4,000 singers, players on instrument
that he made. Sounded like he made every one
of those instruments. I don't doubt that. 4,000 players on,
wouldn't that be a good vocation in God's house? I'd rather be
a doorkeeper. No place I'd rather be, nothing
I'd rather be doing, David said, than being in God's house with
God's people, hearing about my Lord and Savior. How about you?
Four, verse 11. The Lord God is the sun. You
know, the sun shines on the inside of this building as well as the
outside. He does. Son of righteousness
with healing in his wing, the Lord Jesus Christ. He's a son
for life. You can't live without the Son,
can you? And he's warmth, healing, and shield. That word kept coming
up when the Lord sent that plague four years ago. You couldn't read the scripture
without seeing it. He's our shield. He's our safety. He's our salvation.
David said, thou only makest me to dwell in safety. Not a
thing, not a medicine, but a person. Son, he's a shield. And verse
11 says, no good, no good. The Lord will give grace and
glory. What's that? Not a what? The grace of God is in the Lord
Jesus Christ, the glorious Christ, the glorious gospel of the Lord
Jesus Christ. And he says, no good, this promise,
no good. And the word thing is in italic. No good will he withhold from
them that walk uprightly. No good, because although we
enjoy things, things can be a blessing, but it can be a curse. But the
one thing needful that he will not withhold, that he will give
his people, the goodness of the Lord is the Lord Jesus Christ,
the gospel. That's what the gospel means,
good news. He will not withhold from them
that walk upright, that walk by faith in Christ. Verse 12,
O Lord of hosts. Blessed, how blessed is the man
that trusteth in death. You trust the Lord, don't you?
Let me just close with reading these verses to you. Psalm 62,
this is a good way to fit in with that psalm. It says verse
eight of Psalm 62. Verse six, he only is my rock,
my salvation, he's my defense, I shall not be moved. And God
is my salvation, my glory, he's the rock of my strength, and
my refuge is in God. Verse eight, trust in him at
all times, ye people. Pour out your heart before him. God is a refuge for us. Selah. I was thinking about that. May the Lord bless His Word.
Paul Mahan
About Paul Mahan
Paul Mahan has been pastor of Central Baptist Church in Rocky Mount, Virginia since 1989; preaching the Gospel of God's Sovereign Grace.

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