Lewis Bayly's sermon "Meditations for the Sick" addresses the doctrine of divine affliction and its purposes in the life of believers. Bayly argues that God employs afflictions to correct past sins, strengthen faith, and encourage reliance on Him. He emphasizes that suffering is a sign of God’s love and fatherly discipline, supported by Scripture references such as Hebrews 12:6-7, which states, "the Lord disciplines those whom He loves," and Psalm 119:67, where David acknowledges that afflictions lead to obedience. The practical significance of this sermon's doctrine is to remind Christians that suffering is not an indictment of God's absence or disfavor but rather a means of refinement, sanctification, and a deeper relationship with God, leading to eventual glorification.
“Affliction, therefore, is a seal of adoption, no sign of reprobation, for the purest corn is cleanest fanned, the finest gold is most often tried, the sweetest grape is hardest pressed, and the truest Christian heaviest crossed.”
“God, like a skillful physician, seeing the soul to be poisoned with the settling of sin, and knowing that the reigning of the flesh will prove the ruin of the spirit, ministers the bitter pill of affliction.”
“The loving and the serving of God, and trusting in His mercy in the time of our correction and misery, is the truest note of a sincere child and servant of the Lord.”
“O the unspeakable goodness of God, which turns those afflictions, which are the shame and punishment due to our sins, to be the subject of His honour and glory!”
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