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Octavius Winslow

The Lord My Helper

The Lord is our Helper, all-sufficient for all our needs, and His help comes to us opportune and effectual.
Octavius Winslow emphasizes the believer's dependence on God as their helper, illustrating that true strength comes from recognizing our own helplessness and the sufficiency of Christ. He explains that life's trials teach us to rely on God's timely and effective assistance, reminding us that our down-casting often precedes His uplifting. Winslow encourages believers to cry out for help in both spiritual and temporal needs, assuring them that the Lord is always present and ready to support them. The sermon highlights the divine nature of our Helper, Jesus Christ, who meets all our needs with love and power. Ultimately, the message reassures us that with the Lord as our helper, we need not fear what others may do to us.

Text

"The Lord is my portion, says my soul"

That is why we can say with confidence, "The Lord is my helper, so I will not be afraid. What can mere mortals do to me?" Hebrews 13:6

The believer is as helpless in himself as he is portionless in the world; and both lessons are only learned by experience--the one, in the school of the soul's nothingness; the other, in the school of earth's insufficiency. Hallowed teaching this which leads to such blessed results! But the lesson of our spiritual helplessness is not once learned, and learned for all time. Oh no! It is a daily, hourly lesson, learned in every event and incident of our life, yet never completed until we pass to the wider sphere, the sublimer studies, the higher, nobler attainments of glory.

Oh, what divine studies await our enlarged faculties! what sublime revelations, our complete holiness! what an ocean of bliss, our hearts perfected in the love to God! But the present is the time of our spiritual education for heaven, and the great truth God is teaching us--by the deeper knowledge of ourselves, by all our mental infirmities and moral delinquencies, the discipline of trial, temptation, and sorrow--is, "Without Me you can do nothing."

"I was brought low," says David, "and He helped me." See how God teaches us. There is first the soul's down-casting before the Lord's uplifting. Oh, how low may we be brought! Low in our spiritual life, low in the graces of the Spirit, low in Christian evidences, low in mind, body, and estate; nevertheless, we have experienced the truth of God's Word, "When men are cast down, then you shall say, There is lifting up." O my soul! is the Lord, by His hidden teaching, or by His afflictive dispensations, mowing you down, and bringing you low? It is but bringing you to testify, with the psalmist, "I was brought low, and HE helped me." But look at our Helper!

Our Helper is DIVINE. "HE helped me." "The Lord is my helper." The Lord Jesus is all-sufficient as our Helper. "I have laid help," says the Father, speaking of the Son, "upon One that is mighty." The Father required help in the redemption of His chosen Church. He found it in His co-equal and co-eternal Son, in whom met all the divine and human requisites for the salvation of His elect. The help, too, the Father laid upon the Son, was help also for us. Therefore the Lord Jesus is our Helper--all-powerful, all-loving, all-pitying, yes, all-sufficient for all the needs we bring.

Our help is OPPORTUNE. It comes just at the moment we need it, and not a moment sooner. Our down-casting is the time of His uplifting. His help, also, is in His own time. The Lord is never before His time, and never after it, in His gracious interventions in our behalf. Wait, then, His time, O my soul! His time is best. "Blessed are all those who wait for Him."

His help, also, is EFFECTUAL. Human help fails to reach our case. The Lord's help is never baffled--it never falls short of our need, urgent, desperate though that need may be. Trust, then, the Lord, O my soul! for "He has said, I will never leave you nor forsake you. So that we may boldly say, The Lord is my helper; I will not fear what man shall do unto me."

But now, as to the nature of the help we need. Each believer walks, for the most part, in his own way, the Lord leading him by a path peculiar to Himself--a path in which he can observe no footprints but Christ's, and indeed a path so narrow as to admit as his companion Christ only. Is your need temporal? all the resources of heaven and earth are Christ's, and He who fed five thousand with a few loaves will not leave you, His beloved child, unnoticed and unsupplied. Cry importunately, "Lord, help me!" until He helps. Is your need spiritual? 'all fullness' dwells in Jesus. And whether your need be the pardon of sin, or the sense of acceptance in Christ, or grace to conquer some powerful, besetting infirmity, or support and comfort in present sorrow, or guidance in some trying perplexity, or deliverance in behalf of one you love--still cry, "Lord, help me!" and your prayer will not be in vain, so that you may boldly say, "THE LORD IS MY HELPER, I WILL NOT FEAR."

Sermon Outline

  1. I. The Helplessness of the Believer
  2. A. Helpless in himself, portionless in the world
  3. B. Lessons learned in the school of the soul's nothingness and earth's insufficiency
  4. II. The Divine Help of the Lord
  5. A. The Lord is our Helper, all-sufficient for all our needs
  6. B. The Lord's help is opportune, coming at the moment we need it
  7. C. The Lord's help is effectual, never baffled or falling short of our need
  8. III. The Nature of the Help We Need
  9. A. Temporal needs met by Christ's resources
  10. B. Spiritual needs met by Christ's fullness

Key Quotes

“Without Me you can do nothing.” — Octavius Winslow
“I was brought low, and He helped me.” — Octavius Winslow
“The Lord is my helper; I will not fear what man shall do unto me.” — Octavius Winslow

Application Points

  • Recognize your own helplessness and dependence on God's help.
  • Trust in God's sufficiency to meet all your needs.
  • Wait on God's timing and provision for your needs.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does it mean to be helpless in ourselves?
It means we are unable to meet our own spiritual needs and are dependent on God's help.
Why does God teach us about our helplessness?
God teaches us about our helplessness to show us our need for Him and to lead us to trust in His sufficiency.
How does God's help come to us?
God's help comes to us opportune, at the moment we need it, and is effectual, never falling short of our need.
What kind of help does God provide for us?
God provides temporal and spiritual help for us, meeting our needs in all areas of life.

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