Presbyterian Church of Cape Cod

Orthodox Presbyterian Church

  • WHO WE ARE
    • Leadership
    • Doctrines and Beliefs
    • History & Polity
    • Reformed, Confessional & Presbyterian
    • Our Vision and Mission
    • Goals and Matters of Focus
    • Presbyterian Oversight and Care
    • Church Membership
  • WORSHIP
    • Services
    • Live Stream
    • Bulletins
    • Audio Sermons
  • BIBLE STUDIES
    • Adult Sunday School
    • Sunday Evening Study
    • Wednesday Bible Study
  • FROM THE PASTOR’S DESK
    • Church Blog
    • Published Works
    • Sermon Lessons
  • CONFERENCE
    • Conference Information
  • CONTACT US
You are here: Home / Archives for James Labelle

Reading the Puritans: A Soul-satisfying Feast

March 28, 2019 by James Labelle

        Coming into the Reformed Faith out of the Pentecostalism of the Bible belt and the false teaching of the Word of Faith movement with “Dad” Hagin, Kenneth Copeland, and Benny Hinn, I was starving for trustworthy commentaries and biblical interpreters; but I didn’t know where to find them. I had just read the Bible through for the first time in my life and was confronted with the many errors in my belief system and with many truths in Scripture which I’d never been taught. I didn’t know where to go from there, but I knew I couldn’t in good conscience continue as a pentecostal, word-of-faith, arminian, dispensational believer.

        Although I cared nothing for reading, in God’s gracious providence, my dear friend Dan put a book into my hands for which I will be eternally grateful. It was Boettner’s Reformed Doctrine of Predestination. It radically affected me and opened my eyes to the analogy of faith (using Scripture to interpret Scripture) and to the Reformed Faith–which I believe with all my heart is, as Warfield said, “Christianity comes into its own.” I’d never seen anyone listen to Scripture the way Boettner did. He treated it as the authoritative Word of God and simply let it speak–even if it meant demolishing one’s preconceived notions and biases. He didn’t manipulate it to make it fit his thinking. He didn’t avoid its difficult sayings and tensions. He let Scripture stand as God had given it, let clear passages govern unclear ones, and left the secret things in the hands of God. I’d never seen hermeneutics like that before and at the end of the book was driven by two questions: “Who taught him? What authors was he reading?” I wanted to learn from the teachers who’d taught him to understand and exegete the Word of God as he had in his book. I wanted to read the books he’d read. So I turned to his Bibliography–and that’s where I was introduced to writers like Warfield, Hodge, Dabney, Berkhof, and Kuyper.

        That same thought that drove me all those years ago to learn from my teacher’s teachers is the very thought that’s propelling the production of a massive “top-shelf” dvd project entitled Puritan: All of Life to the Glory of God (puritandocumentary.com) by Media Gratiae (who brought us Logic on Fire and Behold your God) and Reformation Heritage Books. The boxset includes 3 dvds (Disc 1, a 2-hr documentary on the significance of the Puritans; Discs 2 and 3, 17 sessions on key Puritans and 17 sessions on important Puritan themes), a workbook, a book introducing the Puritans, and more.

        We all read and listen–with joy and edification, I might add–to men such as John MacArthur, Steven Lawson, Geoff Thomas, J. I. Packer, John Piper, Joel Beeke, Kevin DeYoung, Mark Dever, Sinclair Ferguson, Al Mohler, Ian Hamilton, Michael Haykin, Derek Thomas, Stephen Yuille, and Chad Van Dixhoorn. And as we’ve listened to these men exposit the Bible, apply the truth, preach the Word, and teach theology, haven’t we asked the questions, “Who taught them? Who are they reading?” In a spectacular and thorough way, this dvd project seeks to give this answer: “The Puritans are the writers whom the preachers and teachers you love so much are reading–and you should be reading them too.” Let me cut to the chase and recommend you order two copies of this boxset, one for yourself and one for your church library.

        My own love for the Puritans came thanks to a recommendation Iain Murray gave at the 2007 Banner of Truth Conference in PA. He was promoting Brooks’ The Mute Christian Under the Smarting Rod. Although I knew of their importance and had a few of the classic texts, I had only dabbled into the Puritans at that point. But Murray’s recommendation was so appealing that I left home with Vol. 1 of Brooks’ Works. It’s an understatement to say that the hundred page Mute Christian changed my life. It was my first year in the pastorate and I felt the need for two things: 1) mentors for the grand task of pastoral ministry and 2) satiating soul-food to replenish the constant outflow in my ministry to others. “Pastor” Brooks’ treatise on quiet, patient, and trusting suffering did more for my soul and heart than anything I’d ever read. I immediately ordered the remaining volumes of his Works, along with the Works of Bunyan, Manton, Sibbes, Swinnock, and–over time–dozens of others. The more I read the Puritans, the more I found my soul satisfied, my love for Christ grow, my zeal enflamed, my life changed, my congregation and family blessed, and my entire ministry strengthened. Being fully aware of their fallibility as men and their being men of their time, I took the Puritans as my mentors and fed my soul on their writings. They’ve had a tremendous influence on my life and ministry and I thank God for the many blessings that I’ve enjoyed from studying them.

        Here are some of the reasons why I find their writings to be so helpful and why I highly recommend them to you. 1. Their writings are biblically saturated. As Spurgeon said of Bunyan, if you prick a Puritan he’ll bleed Bibline. 2. Their writings are Christ-centered and Christ-exalting. They bring everything back to Christ, showing Him to be a complete Savior who completely saves. 3. They understand sin and the sinfulness of the human heart. Their writings drive the sinner out of all his hiding places and leave him no other refuge but in Christ alone. 4. They give a clarion call to intentional holiness, calling God’s people to walk in the good works prepared for them, all the while maintaining that true holiness is a work of the Spirit which we enjoy by faith in Christ and pursue out of a love for God–which makes them haters of legalism and lovers of the law of Christ. 5. They constantly press the comforts of the gospel onto the consciences of the weak and doubting believer, rehearsing the themes of free grace, full grace, relentless grace, grace all-sufficient for all our sin-troubled days. 6. They teach how to walk through suffering with patience, joy, gratitude, and faith. 7. They’re exemplary in preaching the whole counsel of God to the whole man, aiming at head, heart, and hand, seeking to awaken the conscience, stir the affections, and change the life. 8. They believed in the sufficiency of the Word of God for life, for ministry, for counseling, for evangelism, for all things.

        The writings of the Puritans are a spiritual, Christ-centered, soul-satisfying feast. I pray you’ll make room for them on your reading list. You’ll be glad you did.

Filed Under: Homepage Slider

1:66 Acts

March 23, 2019 by James Labelle

  • The history of the Christian Church is more worthy of our notice than the revolutions of an empire. The Church of Christ has been the object of God’s special providence since the world began and every step of its progression cannot but evidence the power, wisdom, and goodness of God. And its history in the book of Acts in particular is the history of the accomplishment of a long series of prophecies, the history of the transition from the old to the new covenant, the history of the execution of a plan to which all the other parts of the divine administration are subservient, for the Church is the central concern of divine providence, the ordained soul-saving and sanctifying station of God on earth.
  • As we begin our Sunday School class on this book, I encourage you to study attentively and read widely. The history of the first age of the Christian Church is “splendid, because it is miraculous; edifying, as it records many noble examples of faith, charity, patience, and zeal; and it arrests the attention and touches the heart, by displaying the triumph of the gospel over the combined malice and wisdom of the world” (Dick).
  • I’d like to recommend several resources on the book of Acts that I’ve found helpful. You may want to purchase some of these for more in-depth study on your own or a few of you may want to do a group study together. Either way, I encourage you to read. It goes without saying that we must be reading God’s Word, as it’s the primary means of grace; but it greatly contributes to our growth in faith and practice when we read good Christian literature as well. So I recommend the following books for your use:

Thematic Studies

  • The Message of Acts (a thematic study)–Dennis Johnson
  • Lectures on the Acts of the Apostles–John Dick
  • Paul the Preacher–John Eadie
  • Signs of the Apostles–Walter Chantry

Commentaries

  • Let’s Study Acts–Dennis Johnson
  • The Book of the Acts–F. F. Bruce
  • Acts: New Testament Commentary–Simon Kistemaker
  • The Message of Acts: John Stott
  • The Acts of the Apostles Explained–J. A. Alexander
  • A Commentary on Acts–Matthew Henry

Sermons

  • Acts: An Expositional Commentary–James Boice
  • Acts: Reformed Expository Commentary: Derek Thomas
  • Acts: The Church Afire–R. Kent Hughes
  • Sermons on Acts, Chapters 1-7–John Calvin

Filed Under: Homepage Slider

From the Pastor’s Desk

February 3, 2016 by James Labelle

Seven Rules for Preparing to Hear the Word of God Preached 

            When Jesus says in Luke 8.18, “Take care then how you hear,” it’s obvious from vv. 4-15 that He’s talking about how we listen to the preached Word. Many heard His preaching with hardened and distracted hearts and recieved no real eternal good from it (vv. 11-14). Only a few heard with hearts softened by grace to both receive and bring forth fruit (v. 15).

With this in mind, three things are immediately clear: 1) Few listen to sermons well. 2) It’s hard to listen to sermons well. 3) It’s critical that we listen to sermons carefully and heartily if we expect to benefit from them. But how can we do this?

Much is lost and wasted by lack of preparation. The reason we listen poorly is because we poorly prepare to listen. Indeed, the very reason so many Sabbaths are lost on God’s people––for whose eternal benefit He provides them (Mk 2.27), is because they fail to prepare for them on Saturday. In such a case, the Lord’s Day, which is the Queen of our days, fattened with God’s gracious fare, the market-day for our souls, is practically imposed upon us, with its privileged duties being almost forced from us––all for lack of preparation.

So how do we prepare for hearing the Word preached? Let me give you seven rules or principles for your preparation.[1]

  • Lay aside all worldly thoughts, concerns, and business, in order that your mind may be free for God and the impressions of His Word and Spirit.
    On Saturday night, shut up the eyes of your heart against the world as Nehemiah did the gates of Jerusalem (Neh 13.19-20). Whatever seeks your attention should be considered a distraction to the duty at hand, and should be kept out of your heart until the Sabbath is over. Otherwise, while your ears may receive the Sunday sermons, your mind and heart will get nothing, because they’re already filled the things of the world. Leave the world at the foot of the mountain when you ascend it in worship. Only then will you be able to hear well.
  • Consider and meditate on the great importance of the Word of God.
    It is the ordinary means appointed by God to convert the sinner and sanctify the converted (Js 1.18; 1Cor 4.15; Rom 10.17). Therefore labor to have a high esteem of the preaching of the gospel (Rom 1.16). God has appointed it in mercy to work both your conversion and eternal salvation. It was appointed for your benefit and you have every reason to expect that God will so use it if you so listen to it.
    It is true that God can and does work where and when and how He pleases. He can work in your life without Sunday’s sermons and even without the church. He does not need means or instruments to do His will. But you do. Why? Because while He has not tied Himself to use means, He has tied you to use them, when you have them. Therefore no one has any reason to expect God will bless him when he willfully neglects those means by which the Lord has told him to seek His blessings–especially that primary means of the preaching of His Word.
    Moreover, consider again that the intent of the Word is not only to regenerate (Rom 10.17), but to nourish, increase, and perfect your faith and spiritual graces (Eph 4.11-14). Your knowledge is imperfect, your faith is weak, your affections for the things of God are dull, and your will to obey His Commandments is often backwards. Is there no remedy for this immaturity!? Indeed, there is. The regular preaching of the Word of God was ordained for that purpose. But for those who slight His Word, is it any wonder if they sit barren under its powerful and faithful preaching?
  • When you’re going to hear the preached Word, consider where it is that you’re going.
    You’re going to meet with the great God of heaven and earth, a God that is not to be trifled with (Lev 10.3). When the Israelites were to hear God speak the Lord told Moses to have them sanctify themselves beforehand (Ex 19.9-11). What does this mean for us today? James tells us: “put away all filthiness and rampant wickedness and receive with meekness the implanted word, which is able to save your souls” (1.21).
    Consider therefore that this God is present when you gather to worship Him and hear His Word preached; and consider that He speaks with you directly in the preaching of His Word (1Thes 2.13). Learn to say with Jacob, “Surely, the Lord is in this place” (Gen 28.16).
  • Before you go to church, don’t fail to pray earnestly to the Lord on behalf of both the preacher and yourself.
    For the preacher: pray that the Lord would teach him what he should teach the saints, and would direct and enable him to declare His mind to His people for their salvation and edification. Pray that he would be greatly helped by the Holy Spirit in his preparations, studies, and preaching. If the Apostle Paul coveted the prayers of the church, then so does your pastor (Rom 15.30; Eph 6.18-20; Col 4.3-4).
    For yourself: pray that the Lord would fix your mind and make it serious, that He would enlighten your mind and open your heart (Acts 16.14) to understand and receive His truths, that you would have a heart to believe and embrace the truth in love, that truth would not float around in your thoughts to no purpose, but would sink down in your heart (Rom 10.10), for a faith only in the mind is no better than a devil’s faith (Js 2.19). Pray that the Spirit would use the preached Word to subdue your lusts and corruptions.
  • Labor to come with a teachable and pliable frame of spirit.
    There are three sorts of spirits that are opposite to this: 1) the caviling spirit that stands ready to raise objections to everything. 2) the angry spirit that stands ready to take up arms against every admonition and reproof. The conviction that should humble this person provokes him instead (compare the response in Acts 2.37 to that in Acts 7.54). A guilty conscience thinks the minister aims at him in particular and intends to disgrace him and therefore hates him for it. Yet, it’s noteworthy that those who are most angry at reproofs in a sermon are usually those who most deserve them. 3) the hardened spirit by which a man is “sermon-proof.” He’s resolved to hold his own (his own sins!) and not give over (Lk 7.30; Acts 13.46).
    Instead, a meek, humble, and teachable spirit is joined with a tender heart and stands ready to receive the impressions of God’s truth (Acts 10.33). The sermon works to change, transform, and bless this person because he listens with a tender heart to the God of the Word.
  • Come with an appetite and a longing desire to profit by the Word.
    Nothing makes the wholesome food of God’s Word taste so good and do so well as an appetite for it (Mt 5.6). Some people come to the sermon already full of the world and therefore with no spiritual appetite for it. Would that the saints would wait upon the words of the herald of their Saviour like those who waited upon Job’s words (Job 29.23)! Would that they had the affections of David for it (Ps 42.1-2)! Would that they would pant after Christ, who is altogether lovely, as the world pants after its deceitful pleasures that satisfy not! Then we would see sermons work! But when people come with no appetite, with no desire for the Christ of heaven and already full of the dust of the earth, and sit down to be seen by men, the most blessed gospel-truths are to them but as tasteless as the white of an egg. Rather than relish the preaching of Christ and Him crucified, they find it stale and say with those in Amos 8.5, “When will the Sabbath be over!?”
  • Having sought the Lord and taken pains to bring your heart into a right frame, come to the preached Word with expectation.
    Jesus often said, “According to your faith be it done to you” (Mt 9.29); and truly, people usually do profit by sermons according to their expectations.
    But take this caution: don’t ground your expectations on anything in the minister. If you come to hear a man, then you will leave after hearing a man; but if you come to hear God, then you will meet with God in His Word and leave after hearing from God in His Word (compare Acts 9.7; 22.9). Therefore expect your blessings, not from the minister–who is but a man, a jar of clay and nothing more–but from God’s promise to bless those who attend upon His Word (Prov 8.17; Jer 29.13; Amos 5.4).

May the Lord use these rules and principles for your edification. May He be pleased to open your heart to receive them and enable your will to put them into practice. Just think how much more profitable the preaching of God’s Word would be to you if you duly prepared to hear it. When we get nothing from the preaching of His Word and end the Lord’s Day no better than we started it, the fault is surely our own, for He is faithful who has promised good to us by it (Num 10.29).

––Your servant for His sake, Pastor La Belle

[1] Adapted from Rev. Samuel Cradock, 1659.

Filed Under: News

PCCC CALENDAR

May
14
Wed
6:30 pm Wednesday Prayer Meeting
Wednesday Prayer Meeting
May 14 @ 6:30 pm – 7:30 pm
 
May
18
Sun
10:00 am Sunday Morning Worship @ Presbyterian Church of Cape Cod
Sunday Morning Worship @ Presbyterian Church of Cape Cod
May 18 @ 10:00 am – 11:30 am
We cordially invite you to join us for worship and fellowship this Lord’s Day. Come and hear the good news of salvation for sinners provided by God in the work[...]
4:30 pm Sunday Afternoon Study
Sunday Afternoon Study
May 18 @ 4:30 pm – 6:00 pm
To view our live service online please visit us on livestream.com
May
21
Wed
10:00 am Wednesday Bible Study
Wednesday Bible Study
May 21 @ 10:00 am – 11:00 am
Our Tuesday morning Bible study is back!  Now on Wednesdays the 1st and 3rd Wednesdays of the month. We begin our study on The Names and Titles of Christ in the[...]
6:30 pm Wednesday Prayer Meeting
Wednesday Prayer Meeting
May 21 @ 6:30 pm – 7:30 pm
 
May
22
Thu
6:00 pm Trustees Meeting
Trustees Meeting
May 22 @ 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm
 
7:00 pm Session Meeting
Session Meeting
May 22 @ 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm
 
May
25
Sun
10:00 am Sunday Morning Worship @ Presbyterian Church of Cape Cod
Sunday Morning Worship @ Presbyterian Church of Cape Cod
May 25 @ 10:00 am – 11:30 am
We cordially invite you to join us for worship and fellowship this Lord’s Day. Come and hear the good news of salvation for sinners provided by God in the work[...]
4:30 pm Sunday Afternoon Study
Sunday Afternoon Study
May 25 @ 4:30 pm – 6:00 pm
To view our live service online please visit us on livestream.com
View Calendar

PCCC’s Vision

By God’s grace and blessing, we envision and work toward being a dynamic congregation of God’s people growing in grace, witness, and Christian fellowship, impacting Cape Cod for the sake of Christ with the message of His glorious gospel of grace and forgiveness.

When We Meet

  • Sunday Worship 10:00 am
  • Sunday Afternoon Worship 4:30 pm
  • Sunday School 8:50 am
  • Wednesday Prayer Meeting 6:30 pm

Psalm 122:1

"I was glad when they said to me, 'Let us go to the house of the Lord!'"

Copyright © 2025 Presbyterian Church of Cape Cod - A MereChurch Website.