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Octavius Winslow

The Lord My Keeper

The Lord is our keeper, and through His divine power and intercessory prayer, He keeps us from falling and preserves us in a state of salvation.
Octavius Winslow emphasizes that the Lord is our ultimate keeper, capable of preserving believers from falling into destruction. He explains that no one but God can uphold us, as human efforts are insufficient for salvation. Winslow highlights the importance of Jesus' intercessory role, affirming that while Judas was lost, true believers are kept by divine power. He encourages believers to remain vigilant in prayer and watchfulness, recognizing that while God keeps us, we also have a responsibility to guard our faith. Ultimately, the assurance lies in the fact that Jesus, our divine keeper, will sustain us until we reach glory.

Text

"The Lord is my portion, says my soul."

"Those who You gave me I have kept."--John 17:12

And who could keep His people but the Lord Himself? All the saints and angels in heaven could not keep a believer from finally falling and forever perishing. Unable to keep themselves, how could they keep another? There is not one rational being in the universe who, left to his own upholding, but would prove his own destroyer--and terrible would his suicide be! The restraining and upholding power of God over His creatures, is marvelous, universal, and incessant. "Power belongs unto God." It reigns in heaven, it rules on earth, it is felt in hell. "God has spoken once, TWICE have I heard this (heard it in the solemn tones of its resounding echo), that POWER belongs unto God." "Kept by the POWER of God."

In the intercessory prayer which Jesus, in the exercise of His priestly office on earth, offered--the Royal Prayer, pre-eminently and emphatically the Lord's Prayer, a type of His intercession on our behalf within the veil--His keeping of His people is solemnly affirmed, "Those that You gave me I have kept, and none of them is lost." But you will perhaps reply, "Was not Judas given to Jesus, and was he not lost?" Most assuredly! and the answer to this is, Judas was given to Christ as a disciple, as an apostle, as a minister, but not a saint, nor for the salvation of his soul. And what a dreadful picture, and what a solemn lesson does his history present! We gather from it how far a religious professor, or a Church officer, or a preacher of the gospel distinguished for his gifts and usefulness may go, and yet be utterly destitute of the converting grace of God, and dying so, "go to his own place." O Lord, "hold me up, and I shall be safe." "Keep back Your servant from presumptuous sins, and let them not have dominion over me." "Search me, O God, know my heart; try me, and know my thoughts, and see if there be any wicked way in me, and lead me in the everlasting way."

But the Lord is our keeper. He is a Divine keeper. Deity alone could keep us from falling. The same power that upholds the universe upholds the saints, and no power short of this could uphold them one moment. My soul! the Savior that redeemed you and called you, keeps you; and because He is divine, you are divinely kept, kept every moment, and kept forever! "Kept by the power of God, through faith unto salvation."

But we equally needed a human keeper, one in personal union with our nature, acquainted with our weakness, in sympathy with our infirmities, temptations, and sorrows. We have all this in Jesus, the Lord our Keeper. Oh, there is not an angel in heaven who could have compassion upon our infirmities, pity our weaknesses, sympathize with our assaults, bear with our proneness to fall, and restore us when we wander. Jesus can! Jesus does!

Nor does this divine keeping release us from the solemn obligation of personal and incessant prayer and watchfulness. There is a sense--limited indeed--in which the believer is his own keeper. "Keep yourselves in the love of God, looking for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ unto eternal life" (Jude 21). Let us, then, be in our watchtower whole days and whole nights, watching over our besetting sins, watching against the evil of the world, and watching against the assaults of the Evil One of the world. Oh, you weak and humble saint of God, often fearful lest at last you will fall short of heaven, look up! the Lord that bought you with His blood, called you by His grace, preserves you by His indwelling Spirit, and who prays for you moment by moment that your faith fails not, keeps you, and will continue to keep you, until He brings you to glory. "Now unto Him who is able to keep you from falling, and to present you faultless before the presence of His glory with exceeding joy, to the only wise God our Savior be glory and majesty, dominion and power, both now and forever! Amen!"

Sermon Outline

  1. The Lord is Our Keeper
  2. The Lord's Power and Sovereignty
  3. The Lord's Intercessory Prayer
  4. The Lord's Personal Union with Humanity

Key Quotes

“Those that You gave me I have kept, and none of them is lost.” — Octavius Winslow
“Power belongs unto God.” — Octavius Winslow
“Kept by the power of God, through faith unto salvation.” — Octavius Winslow

Application Points

  • We must be in a state of personal and incessant prayer and watchfulness to stay safe from falling.
  • We should seek to be kept by the power of God through faith in Jesus Christ.
  • We must recognize our weakness and infirmities, and seek the compassion and sympathy of Jesus, our Lord and Keeper.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does it mean to be 'kept' by God?
To be kept by God means to be protected and preserved from falling and perishing, and to be kept in a state of salvation through faith in Jesus Christ.
Can angels or saints keep us from falling?
No, only God Himself can keep us from falling, as He is the only one with the power and sovereignty to do so.
What role do we play in our own keeping?
We are to be in a state of personal and incessant prayer and watchfulness, watching over our besetting sins and the evil of the world.
What is the significance of Jesus' intercessory prayer?
Jesus' intercessory prayer affirms His keeping of His people, and is a type of His intercession on our behalf within the veil.
Can we lose our salvation?
No, once we are given to Christ as a saint, we are kept by Him and cannot lose our salvation, although we can fall into sin and presumptuous sins.

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