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Henry Mahan

Taught By God

Psalm 119:71
Henry Mahan August, 11 1985 Video & Audio
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- Taught By God - Psalm 119:71
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Henry T. Mahan Tape Ministry
Zebulon Baptist Church
6088 Zebulon Highway
Pikeville, KY 41501
Tom Harding, Pastor

Henry T. Mahan DVD Ministry
Todd's Road Grace Church
4137 Todd's Road
Lexington, KY 40509
Todd Nibert, Pastor

For over 30 years Pastor Henry Mahan delivered a weekly television message. Each message ran for 27 minutes and was widely broadcast. The original broadcast master tape of this message has been converted to a digital format (WMV) for internet distribution.

Sermon Transcript

Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors

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Let's look for our message today
to the book of Psalms, and the verse of scripture that I'm going
to read and use for text is found in Psalm 119, verse 71. Psalm
119, 71. David writes, it is good for me, good for me, that
I have been afflicted that I might learn, that I might
learn thy statutes and thy way." In other words, David is saying,
I was taught by trouble. I was taught in and by the troubles
that God brought upon me and into my life. Now, if you want
to read about real trouble and real trials and real affliction,
read the book of Job. Here was a man who was tried
by God as perhaps no other man has ever been tried by God. He
lost everything, literally everything. He was so high. He said, I was
at ease, and God brought me so low. In Job 16, let's just read
a few of the things that he had to say about this trial, this
time of affliction. In Job 16, verse 11 and 12, now
listen carefully. He said, God hath delivered me
into the hands of the ungodly. God has turned me over into the
hands of the wicked. I was at ease, but he hath broken
me asunder. He hath taken me by the neck
and shaken me to pieces. He hath taken me by the neck
and shaken me to pieces. That's what Job said. In Job
19, verse 9, he says this, God has stripped me of my glory. He has taken the crown from my
head. He has destroyed me on every
side, and I am clean gone. I am gone. All my friends hate
me, and they whom I love are turned against me. In Job 23,
verse 8, he said, I go forward And God is not there. The Lord
God not only took him by the neck and shook him to pieces
and destroyed him on every side, but God withheld his presence
from Job. He said, I go forward and he's
not there. And I go backward and I cannot
see him. On the left hand, I cannot behold
him. He hideth himself on the right
hand. I cannot see God. I cannot find
God. Now Job was so high and brought
so low. But now listen to this. Listen
carefully. Job didn't try to hide his sorrows. He was a man in great sorrow. He wept. He wept. It's no sin to weep. It's no
sin to mourn in time of trial, in time of sorrow. God's people
are people with tender hearts. And when they bear the rod, they
feel it. They feel it. They weep. When they walk through
the valley of trial and suffering, they hurt. And they weep, and
they mourn in time of trouble. Paul said this, he said, I have
great heaviness of heart. I have continual sorrow of heart
for my brethren. Peter said this, if need be,
you are in heaviness, heaviness through many trials. I see the
hand of God in things that happen in my life, and you see the hand
of God in things that happen in your life, but they still
hurt. You still feel the pain, you
still weep. It's no sin to feel pain and
to weep and to feel sorrow. Paul said this, he said, We sorrow,
but not as those who have no hope. We do sorrow. We know what sorrow is. We know
what trouble is. We know what trial is. But we
don't sorrow as those who have no hope. When my son was killed
in the Vietnam War, I knew it was God's will, I knew it was
the purpose of God. But that didn't take the hurt
out of it. It still hurt, and it hurt deeply. And it hurt for
a long time. It still hurts. Just because
we recognize the hand of God in a matter doesn't take the
hurt out of it. Doesn't take the affliction out of it. Doesn't
take the sorrow out of it. We sorrow. And don't you let
anybody ever tell you that it's a sin to weep or a sin to know
what sorrow is. Our Lord was a man of sorrows
acquainted with grief. But a believer's sorrow is sanctified
by worship. When Job received the sad news
of the destruction of all of his property, he was disappointed. When he received the news of
the death of all ten of his children, He was plunged into deep sorrow
and heavy grief and mourning. You imagine? He lost one. He
lost the whole family. He rent his clothes in sorrow. He shaved his head in grief.
And he fell down on the ground, but he worshipped God. Now there's the difference. A
believer's sorrow is sanctified by worship. By worship. He didn't murmur. He didn't complain. He didn't grumble. He didn't
find fault with the purpose of God. Not at all. He didn't find
fault with the providence of God. He didn't compare himself
with others. He didn't say, well, why did
this happen to me? It should have happened to the fellow down
the road. I'm a better man than he is. Why did it happen to me? Why didn't it happen to him or
to her? He didn't charge God with foolishness, with injustice. But when he brought in the news,
His heart was broken. He was plunged into deep sorrow
and tears. His heart was broken, but he
worshipped God. He worshipped God. Now, here's
what I'm saying. If grief presses you to the ground,
then worship that. Then worship that. You don't
have to jump up and run, click your heels, and say you don't
hurt, and you're not sorry, you're not in sorrow. If grief presses
you to the ground, worship God there. If trial has laid you
low, worship God there. If floods of sorrow have weighed
you down, worship God there. They came and told Job, everything's
gone, your children are all dead. He poured ashes on his head and
tore his clothes and laid out on the ground in sackcloth, but
he worshiped there. He worshipped that. He fell down. It was his grief that brought
him down. It was his sorrow that brought him down. It was his
affliction that brought him down. He fell down and worshipped. Well, not only should a time
of trial and sorrow be a time of worship, but a time of learning. And that's what I'm talking about
in this message. Taught by trouble. A time of
learning. David said in my text, it's good
for me that I've been afflicted that I might learn, that I might
learn some things. You know, David talked to himself
one time in trouble in Psalm 42, verse 5 and 6. He's talking
to himself here. He says, Psalm 42, 5, Why art
thou cast down, O my soul? It was cast down. His soul was
cast down in sorrow. He said, Why are you cast down,
O my soul? Why are you troubled in me? So
why are you troubled? Hope thou in God. I will yet praise him for the
help of his countenance. Hope thou in God. And David learned
in his times of trouble. These men of God, their times
of trouble were sanctified by worship, by worship. but also
sanctified by a time of learning. They learned in time of trouble.
They learned in the valley of the shadow of death, in affliction.
Job fell down and worshipped, and he said, naked I came out
of my mother's womb, and naked shall I return thither. The Lord
gave, and the Lord hath taken away. Blessed be the name of
the Lord. I'm saying that Job learned four
things in this awful time of sorrow and trouble. He learned
four things. The first thing he learned was
this, and I see all four things in what he said. They came and
told him, the Sibeans fell upon your oxen, the Chaldeans fell
upon your sheep and camel, the Tornado struck the house and
killed your children, and Job fell down and worshiped God.
And then he said some things. He learned some things. He said,
I came out of my mother's womb, and naked shall I return thither. The Lord gave, and the Lord hath
taken away. Blessed be the name of the Lord."
What did Job learn? Number one, Job learned the brevity
of life and the certainty of death. Job learned the brevity
of life. He said, I came, I shall return. I came, and I shall return. That's
his summary of life. I came, and I shall return. I
read a story one time. There was an old man standing
on a street corner, and a friend of his walked up to him, and
they exchanged a time of day and a word of greeting. And then
the friend said to the old man, he said, My friend, what is life? What is life? And the old man
stood there silently, not a word. And then in a moment, he turned
and walked away. And sometime later, these two
met again, this old man and this friend. And the friend walked
up to him and said to him, the other day, I asked you a question,
and you didn't answer me. And the old man said, I answered
you. No, he said, you didn't, you didn't. He said, I asked
you what is life, and you were there, and then suddenly you
were gone. You were there one moment, and
then you were gone. You never did answer my question. The old
man said, I did answer your question. You asked me, what is life? And
I told you. That was my answer. My answer
was, we're here one moment, and gone the next. And gone the next. We're here one moment, and gone.
And the place thereof shall know it no more. That, my friend,
is life. Scripture says it's like a steam
vapor. It's like a shadow. It's like
a weaver's shuttle. Job said in chapter 42, man that
is born of woman is a few days and full of trouble. He cometh
forth like a flower and is cut down. He fleeth as a shadow and
continueth not. Life is so brief. Job said, I
came, I shall return. I say life sometimes, I think
of it like a procession or a parade, as you're standing watching a
parade go by. We're going down the valley one
by one. The old song used to say, we're
going down the valley one by one with our faces toward the
setting of the sun. I think about my own life. When I was a child, I knew my
grandparents quite well. I spent quite a bit of time with
my grandparents, but they're gone. They were here. They were
very real to me as a young boy. I used to spend days with them,
weeks with them. But they're gone. And my parents
are gone. And my only brother is gone.
And one of my sons is gone. They were here. They were here. They were really here. They were
here for a good while, it seemed like to me, but they're gone.
Now it seems like they've been gone a long time. So Job learned
in this time of trouble, it shut him up to some truth. And maybe David was saying the
same thing, it's good for me that I've been afflicted, that
I might learn something. Slow down and shut up and learn
something. And I learned the brevity of
life. I came and I'll leave. Children were all gone. And then
Job learned the frailty of earthly possessions. Listen to what he
said. I came. Naked I came. That's how I came. I came and I shall return. I
came naked and that's where I'm going. Naked. I didn't bring
anything with me, not going to take anything out with me. Job
had nothing when he was born, neither did you. But he lived
to accumulate great wealth. Job lived to accumulate great
possessions and great wealth and large holdings and a big
family And here he sat, after the whirlwind of judgment had
swept through, everything gone. It was all gone. He thought,
of course, when he got that case of boils, and was scraping himself
with a piece of glass, and all but dead, he thought, this is
the end. And he said, naked, I came into this world, and I'm
going out naked. I'll tell you, when we leave
this earth, we'll take nothing with us, we'll go out naked.
Why is it so hard for us to learn this lesson that's so obvious?
That a man's life does not consist in the things which he possesses?
You're born into this world and you just, you kind of grow up
and go to school and get an education, learn something, then start fighting
to get all you can get. Fighting to get property and
fighting to get a boat and a house and a farm and stock and savings
and securities, and bonds, and status, and influence, and power,
and prestige, and office, and position, and all these things. Then one day you get cancer,
or heart trouble, or lay down and die. And you leave every
bit of it. And they don't even remember
you very long. Don't even remember you. There's a fellow waiting
down the road to take your place. Take your job, and take your
position, Live in that house you're living in. Somebody's
going to live in that house you're living in someday. That's right. You
talk about your yard, your trees, and your flowers. No, they're
God's flowers and God's trees. And somebody else is going to
live on that. Somebody else is going to lease that land one
of these days and live on it. And then he's going to be gone
too. The fashion of this world fadeth away. Somebody moves in,
dies, and take him out. And somebody else moves in, dies,
and take him out. And somebody else moves in, dies. It just
keeps on. It's like a procession. Rich young ruler, the Lord told
him, said, sell all you have and give it to the poor and follow
me. He'd like to have that option again, wouldn't he? He made the
wrong decision. He made the wrong decision. But
we can't learn it. We just can't learn it. If you
be risen with Christ, set your affections on things above, not
the things of the earth. And here's the thing, if God
is determined to teach us that lesson, He can teach it, but
he'll have to teach it in time of trouble, in time of trial,
because we're such poor learners when the sun's shining. We're
such poor, we just haven't got time to learn. We don't have
the desire to learn. We're just bent on these things
of the world, and we just don't have time to sit down and listen.
We're too busy. Well, God can un-busy you real
quickly. And God can, you say, I don't
have time to read. Well, if He's pleased to show
His grace to you, He'll give you some time to read. Well,
I just don't have time to pray. I don't have time to worship
God. I don't have time to search the Scriptures. If you want His
own, He'll make the time for you. But He may do it in a hard
fashion. Job learned the frailty of earthly
possessions, the frailty. And then Job learned something
else. Job saw the hand of God in everything. The hand of God
in everything. Listen to what he said. He said,
the Lord give it, and the Lord had taken away. He learned the brevity of life.
He said, I came and I'm going to leave. And then he learned
the frailty of human possessions. He said, naked I came into this
world, and naked I'm going to leave. But in the meantime, I
enjoyed some things. I enjoyed a house. and a farm
and some animals and a bunch of fine children, grandchildren
and so forth. But the Lord gave them. The Lord
gave them. And the Lord had taken them away. Job learned that he saw the hand
of God in everything. He learned that what he had,
God gave him. God gave him. The Lord gave him. Listen to Hannah's prayer in
1 Samuel 2, verse 6. The Lord killeth and the Lord
maketh alive, he bringeth down to the grave, and he bringeth
up. The Lord maketh poor, and the Lord maketh rich." Did you
know that? The Lord maketh poor, and the
Lord maketh rich. The Lord raises the beggar from
the dunghill, and sets him on the throne among princes. What
hast thou that thou hast not received? Paul asked that question
in 1 Corinthians. He said, who maketh thee to differ?
What do you have that you didn't receive from God? Well, if you
received it, why do you boast as if you didn't? Why are people
so class conscious? Let a fellow get a little bit
of money, and he gets so proud and boastful and so high and
mighty and lifted up above his poor neighbors. God gave it to
him. Let a man get a position. He gets to be elected chief of
police or mayor or senator or congressman. He gets so all-fired
proud and arrogant, you know, like he did it himself. God gave
it to him. Let a fellow have a little strength
and ability to play a little ball. These young kids do that
in high school. They get so arrogant. Or in college,
some of these star athletes, they get so proud, so proud,
and then one of them gets his neck broke on a football field
and he gets so sweet and humble all of a sudden. God gives and God takes away.
God gives. Job didn't say, I earned it,
or I deserved it. This is the product of my hard
work. He said, the Lord give it. The
Lord give it. Our Lord Jesus Christ said, a
man can receive nothing except it be given him from above. James said, every good gift and
every perfect gift cometh from God with whom there is no change.
No, Job was a wise man. He learned something. He said,
I came into this world naked. I'm going to leave here naked.
And in the meantime, I've enjoyed some rich blessings and some
good gifts. But the Lord give it. The Lord
give it. And all that I have materially,
all that I have physically, all that I have spiritually is the
gift of God. Did you know that? Did you know
that? Repentance is the gift of God.
Have you been led to repent toward God? Then it was the goodness
of God that led you to repentance. Have you been given faith in
Christ and an understanding of the Scriptures? Faith is the
gift of God, not of works, lest any man should boast. For God
so loved the world, He gave His only begotten Son. 1 John 5,
11, this is the record. God hath given us eternal life. Romans 6, 23, the wages of sin
is death, but to what? The gift of God is eternal life. Job saw that everything he had,
God gave him. Now wait a minute. But Job saw
also that God was pleased to take it away. Take it away. God did it. The Lord give it. The Lord take it away. Now this
servant rushed in and said, the Sabaeans have fallen upon the
oxen and taken them away. The Chaldeans, those wicked Chaldeans,
have come down in a great band and took all the sheep and the
camels. And while he was yet speaking, another servant rushed
in and said, Hey, a tornado hit the house where your children
were having a celebration and killed every one of them. And
Job didn't fall down to the ground and tear his hair and rid his
garb and say, Those awful Sabeans, I'm going after them. Those awful
Chaldeans. They shouldn't have done that.
That awful tornado, why did it happen? No. He fell down and
he said, the Lord gave. And the Lord has taken away.
Blessed be the name of the Lord. Job learned that God gave. And God has the right to take
it away. It's his prerogative. It's his
right. He's God. That's what David said. Listen
to Psalm 39. This is a good text. Psalm 39, 9. David said, I open
not my mouth, for God did it. That's a good time not to open
your mouth. I open not my mouth, because God did it. That's what
David said. And then Eli, when Samuel told
him that the Lord was pleased to kill both of his sons, you
know what that old man said? He said, It's the Lord. Let him do what he will. It's the Lord. Let him do what
he will. Our Lord took Jeremiah to the potter's house and let
him watch the potter take the clay and mold a vessel on the
wheel. And he said, Jeremiah, as that
clay is in the hands of the potter, so are you in my hands. And Paul
picked it up and said, he will, according to his will, make of
the same lump a vessel unto honor and a vessel unto dishonor. It's
not of him that willeth nor of him that wanteth, it's of God
that showeth mercy. God gave and God took away. And then the fourth thing Job
saw was this. He saw that the Lord was to be
praised in all things. that God was to be praised in
all things. So this was the end of his little
sermon. When they brought the bad news,
the horrible news, he fell down, tore his clothes, put on sackcloth
and ashes, and wept openly. And he said, Oh, naked, naked,
I came from my mother's womb, and naked I shall return thither. The Lord gave And the Lord now
hath, in his good providence and purpose, taken it away. Blessed
be the name of the Lord. Blessed be the name of the Lord. Paul summed it up in 1 Thessalonians
5, 18. Paul said this, in everything,
in everything give thanks. Whatever, whether in a funeral
or a wedding, give thanks. Acknowledge and recognize the
hand of God in these things. Whether in a funeral or wedding,
give thanks in everything. In birth or in death, give thanks. Blessed be the name of the Lord.
Bless the Lord, O my soul, and all that's within me. Bless his
holy name, who forgiveth all thine iniquities, who healeth
all thy diseases, who satisfies thy mouth with good things, so
that thy youth is renewed like the eagle. Rejoice evermore.
Give thanks. Learn to give thanks. Any of
us can give thanks in birth. But he said in everything. In
death too. Give thanks in health. Give thanks
in sickness. I know this is difficult. But
it's something we must not throw up our hands and say, I just
can't get it. I can't attain unto it. I can't lay hold of it. Let's
try. Job did. And Job, like Elijah,
was a man of like passions. Give thanks in gain or in loss. Give thanks in success or failure. Give thanks in plenty or poverty. Give thanks in summer or winter.
Why? Because all things work together
for the eternal good to them who love God, who are called
according to His purpose. Learn in trouble. Talk by trouble. Now this message
is on a cassette tape, taught by trouble, taught by trouble. On the other side is a message
I preached last week on the subject, Why Christ Died. If you want
this tape, send two dollars and we'll send you both messages
on the same cassette tape. You'll get the address now from
the announcer. Until next week, may God bless
you, everyone.
Henry Mahan
About Henry Mahan

Henry T. Mahan was born in Birmingham, Alabama in August 1926. He joined the United States Navy in 1944 and served as a signalman on an L.S.T. in the Pacific during World War II. In 1946, he married his wife Doris, and the Lord blessed them with four children.

At the age of 21, he entered the pastoral ministry and gained broad experience as a pastor, teacher, conference speaker, and evangelist. In 1950, through the preaching of evangelist Rolfe Barnard, God was pleased to establish Henry in sovereign free grace teaching. At that time, he was serving as an assistant pastor at Pollard Baptist Church (off of Blackburn ave.) in Ashland, Kentucky.

In 1955, Thirteenth Street Baptist Church was formed in Ashland, Kentucky, and Henry was called to be its pastor. He faithfully served that congregation for more than 50 years, continuing in the same message throughout his ministry. His preaching was centered on the Lord Jesus Christ and Him crucified, in full accord with the Scriptures. He consistently proclaimed God’s sovereign purpose in salvation and the glory of Christ in redeeming sinners through His blood and righteousness.

Henry T. Mahan also traveled widely, preaching in conferences and churches across the United States and beyond. His ministry was marked by a clear and unwavering emphasis on Christ, not the preacher, but the One preached. Those who heard him recognized that his sermons honored the Savior and exalted the name of the Lord Jesus Christ above all.

Henry T. Mahan served as pastor and teacher of Thirteenth Street Baptist Church in Ashland, Kentucky for over half a century. His life and ministry were devoted to proclaiming the sovereign grace of God and directing sinners to the finished work of Christ. He entered into the presence of the Lord in 2019, leaving behind a lasting testimony to the gospel he faithfully preached.

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