Examining the Heart 7

March 28, 2014

Consider, the greatest sins may be hid under the greatest duties, and the greatest terrors. See that the wound that sin has made in your soul be perfectly cured by the blood of Christ! Not skinned over with duties, humblings and enlargements. Apply what you will besides the blood of Christ, it will poison the sore. You will find that sin was never mortified truly, if you have not seen Christ bleeding for you upon the cross. Nothing can kill it, but beholding Christ’s righteousness.   Thomas Wilcox

The heart is deceptive, sin is deceptive, and the devil is the deceiver. The sentence above that “the greatest sins may be hid under the greatest duties” is more insightful the more one thinks about it. There are at least two ways of looking at the meaning, with one being that people can hide their sins under doing great duties and so they don’t look at their sins because they are focused on their duties. The second way is that people’s greatest sins are in doing the duties but the duties hide the sin from the understanding of the person, or the sin is in the heart of the person and they are blinded by the external actions or duties. It could also be true that both ways of understanding the statement are true.

We can take a minister as an example. The minister is caught up with religious activities and even fervor and so cannot see anything but what he is doing. He can be orthodox in his theology and quite moral in terms of his external behavior, but his heart is the issue. This man can be doing all he does out of the love of self though he may think that he is doing it all for the glory of God. After all, he knows that a person should do all for the glory of God and he says he does all for the glory of God, so he assures himself that he is doing all to the glory of God. But this minister has deceived himself and is actually doing all from his own strength (strength of the flesh) instead of receiving his strength from grace. The deception of the heart is so strong in that the person knows what is right and he tells himself that he is doing what is right but his own motives and intents are hidden from him.

We can also think of a pastor standing in the pulpit to preach. The man has worked hard on his manuscript and has consulted multiple commentaries. The man has spent time praying over the sermon and during the week has spent time in reading the Bible. All of the actions of this man are commendable, but in many ways they don’t tell us what is in the heart of this man. The sermon is delivered, even delivered well, and it is straight from the Bible and is very orthodox. But where is the heart of that man? He can be deceived by how orthodox the sermon is and perhaps how orderly and even how well it came off, but that tells us nothing how the heart. Did he love God in the preparation of the sermon? Did he love God in the giving of the sermon? Perhaps this man preaches orthodox sermons in order to make it appear that he is righteous. This man can be covering over a heart that hates the true God with sermons that are orthodox. This man can be hiding an adulterous heart (spiritually adulterous) and an idolatrous heart under the guise of orthodox sermons. The man can be quite deceived himself and yet his sin is being hidden under his great duty.

We can also imagine this man (the minister) has having what appears to be a perfect family (whatever that may mean). The family is ordered well, the wife is a great helper to him, and the kids are nice kids. But once again, we are looking on the outside and we are not looking at the heart of the man or the family. The two Greatest Commandments do not tell us many things, but they do tell us to love God with all of our being all of the time. All the external things of family and church can be ordered by human flesh, carried out by human flesh, and in so doing hide true unbelief and enmity toward God underneath outward acts of righteousness.

While this little BLOG used ministers as an example, this can be true of any man in virtually any situation. Men will go to great lengths to hide their true heart from others and even themselves, but men can be greatly deceived by religion. The very outward acts that religion requires of people can be done in the flesh and men use that to deceive themselves. The very outward acts of religion that religion requires of people can hide the reality of the spiritual realm and the utter necessity of a new heart and of true love. We make the horrible assumption that if we are doing the outward acts then of necessity that shows a new heart and we must have true love. In that case, once again, the greatest of sins (self-righteousness and true unbelief) are hidden by and underneath the greatest duties.

Examining the Heart 6

March 25, 2014

Consider, the greatest sins may be hid under the greatest duties, and the greatest terrors. See that the wound that sin has made in your soul be perfectly cured by the blood of Christ! Not skinned over with duties, humblings and enlargements. Apply what you will besides the blood of Christ, it will poison the sore. You will find that sin was never mortified truly, if you have not seen Christ bleeding for you upon the cross. Nothing can kill it, but beholding Christ’s righteousness.    Thomas Wilcox

These words by Wilcox, written in the mid-1600’s, have more wisdom and insight than most of the books written in the modern day. If we simply accept the fact that men are in darkness and have no spiritual wisdom but what is given to them by grace, we can easily see that men don’t truly see their sin. If we then accept the fact that men have deceptive hearts in their blindness, it is easy to see that men will not understand how truly great some sins are. Instead of dealing with the truth of sin in their hearts and seek the cure of sin by Christ, they will focus on doing duties thinking that their duties will cover their sin when in fact trying to cover sin with duties is a great sin itself as it is a form of self-righteousness and a rejection of the righteousness of Christ. The heart is so terribly deceitful that it will try to hide great sins with duties which is to hide sin with more sin and possibly and even greater sin. The wound of sin cannot be taken care of by anything other than the blood of Christ. Nothing but Christ, nothing but Christ, nothing but Christ should be the song of every heart that knows its sin.

When Wilcox uses the words “skinned over with duties, humblings and enlargements,” he covers a lot of territory. Some of the meaning may be of how it is not the animals that covers our sins, but Christ.  Not only do our deceptive and deceitful hearts work to get us to try to cover over our sins and consciences with duties, but they also try to deceive us into thinking that it is enough to be humbled in some way for sin. We should be humbled for sin, though there are forms of humility that are not true humility and these can be used for hearts to deceive themselves with. The heart is so wicked it will also think that if it has some enlargement of heart that God must have forgiven it, but again that is deception. Duties, being humbled, and an enlargement of soul can be nothing but the work of the flesh. The Israelites had many duties and many things that they were to do to humble themselves, but all of those could be and were done as works of the flesh. The works of the flesh, regardless of how religious they are and how pleasing they may be in the sight of others or self who see them, will not cover over the smallest part of the smallest sin. Nothing but Christ can do that.

As Wilcox notes, when we apply things other than Christ to our sin what we are really doing is seen by the analogy of pouring poison on an open sore. Trying to cover an open sore with poison is no cure at all but will certainly lead to a greater sickness and perhaps death. The wound of sin needs to be cured and the poison of duties, humblings, and enlargements will do nothing but make things worse. Making all efforts to keep the law will not cover sin because the intent of giving the law was to reveal sin. Trying to come up with sorrow and humility from the flesh is an effort to keep the law in a way, but it is from the flesh and there is no profit at all in the flesh. Poor sinners who are not instructed in the Gospel of grace are constantly going to physicians who are pouring poison upon the wounds of their patients and the patients are so blind that they cannot see that either. There is only one Physician who is suited to the deadly wounds of sin and that is Christ Jesus. It is His blood alone that can heal.

Sinners also set out to mortify sin, but they set out to do this by the works of the flesh in various duties. It is Christ alone and His cross and righteousness that will mortify sin. It is Christ in the soul teaching the soul by His Spirit that it must die to sin and grow more and more in living out what it means to be crucified with Christ. As a sinner is declared just in Christ and because of Christ, the Scriptures also teach us that the sinner in Christ is said to have been crucified with Christ. It is in beholding the crucified Lamb of God and seeing the value and worth of the bloody cross as the glory of God shines in those great truths that sinners are in time mortified to sin. Nothing can kill my sin and my trying to cover sin with the poison of duties than growing into the truth of being crucified with Christ and having His perfect righteousness. What good are duties for righteousness if sinners have a perfect righteousness in Christ and have no need for any more? His righteousness is perfectly sufficient. In light of Christ who suffered and died on a bloody cross and His perfect righteousness for sinners, there is nothing but poison in anything else that sinners try to cure their wounds of sin by. The worst thing of all, perhaps, are the works of religion which is using the things that should point to Christ in an effort to do what Christ alone can do.

Musings 42

March 25, 2014

Hebrews 11:26 considering the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures of Egypt; for he was looking to the reward.

It is easy to admire Moses for his giving up all the riches of Egypt by considering that the reproach of Christ was greater riches than all the treasures of Egypt. That was good for him in that time, we might think, but now is a different day and I want all the things I can get. We can also think that we have the spiritual riches of Christ now and that we simply long to have some of the things of this world, though some would say God is glorified in us when we have plenty of riches.

Without going into any or all of the arguments in a direct way, yet we can say that we are called to deny self, take up the cross, and follow Christ. We are not to do this because we earn merit or anything like that, but simply because we are to follow Christ. Involved in the motives in doing so, however, is that all spiritual blessings are found in one and only one location or place, and that is in Christ. There are no spiritual blessings in any other place and regardless of how we try or work, there are no spiritual blessings to be found but in Christ. We cannot find one spiritual blessing in our so-called “free-will” or anywhere else in us, but instead they are all in Christ. We cannot find one spiritual blessing in any other human being or any group of human beings, but each and every spiritual blessing is found in Christ and only in Christ. All blessings found in Christ can only come by grace and come by a free and glorious grace at that.

Ephesians 1:3 “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ.”

Why does God save sinners to begin with? “So that in the ages to come He might show the surpassing riches of His grace in kindness toward us in Christ Jesus” (Eph 2:7). The riches of grace cannot be seen as anything but a spiritual blessing when those blessings are found in Christ. The riches of His grace are said to be a “surpassing riches.” In Ephesians 3:19 the same word in the Greek is used for that which surpasses knowledge and so the riches of His grace are beyond our ability to comprehend them though we can admire from a great distance and even taste something of His glory in that grace. As Moses looked to a far greater riches and reward found in Christ to that of the wealthy Egyptian nation, so believers are to view Christ as exceeding the whole world in terms of riches and wealth. Christ Himself should be seen as the riches and Christ Himself should be the focus and object of our greatest desires and love.

Ephesians 3:8 is a glorious verse in that it shows that Paul saw that preaching Christ was a grace given to him, but it was grace to preach “the unfathomable riches of Christ.” The riches of Christ are beyond what the mind can plumb the depths of. The riches of Christ are beyond what any human being can even begin to find out how deep and wide they are. The riches of Christ are what people in heaven will be enraptured over for all eternity. For all eternity those in heaven will behold the glories and riches of Christ and the grace that is found in Christ and is the reason sinners are saved by Christ. For all eternity the unfathomable riches of Christ will be the delight of the souls for all in heaven and for all eternity people will dive to as deep as they can go only to find out that the glory of those riches are so great that they will never be able to dive to the bottom of them.

For all eternity those in heaven who were the worst of sinners on earth will delight themselves in thinking of how the grace of God saved sinners for no reason other than to manifest the riches and glories of Christ. People there will wonder how they could ever have been blinded to the treasures found in Christ and of how they could have ever thought if His grace was enough to cover their sins. It is in the presence of Christ that saved sinners will know what Moses knew (though perhaps ever so slightly) about the fact that reproaches for Christ were far better than a world of riches. In that place there will be oceans of love that cannot be emptied that are full of the love, kindness, mercy, and glory of God.

Since it is true that in heaven there are such treasures and that saved sinners have treasures in heaven, it should be clear that those treasures are worth far more than the riches of the whole world. How saved sinners should flee from sin in order to pursue a greater knowledge and experience of Christ here and for eternity. Even in this life we are to give up seeking the world and its treasures to seek Christ and His glory. It is like giving up a small clump of dirt for riches untold.

Examining the Heart 5

March 24, 2014

You who pride yourself on the gifts you have, look to see there is not a worm at the root that will spoil all your fine gourd, and make it die about you in a day of scorchings. Look over your soul daily, and ask, Where is the blood of Christ to be seen upon my soul? What righteousness is it that I stand upon to be saved? Have I got away from all my self-righteousness? Many eminent religious people have come at length to cry out, in the sight of the ruin of all their duties, “Undone, undone, to all eternity!”       Thomas Wilcox

The pride of gifts is one that is hidden to many and yet all have it to varying degrees. Some pride themselves on their physical gifts in the sense of athletic ability or perhaps in the area of the arts or craftsmanship in some field. Others have pride in their intellectual gifts, but what Wilcox is speaking of here is in the realm of Christian living. Regardless of the area of giftedness the human heart is either given to pride or prone to pride for anything it might be able to distinguish itself from some others. The proud heart is always looking for a way to distinguish itself in order that it and others may admire it. The area of spiritual giftedness is no different in the human heart in one sense, but it can really expose the depths of pride in its own way.

All physical gifts are from God, but they are perceived to be something He gives us in our genetic material and then leaves the use of them up to us. Spiritual gifts are thought to be gifts that He gives us to be used at church or in spiritual things and yet they are still thought to be powered and used at our discretion. What Wilcox is getting at, or at least I think so, is that some people have pride in their use of what they think of as spiritual gifts and yet there is no reliance upon the blood of Christ for sin and no reliance on the righteousness of Christ. The gifts themselves can appear to hide our sinful hearts from us and they (the gifts) can hide our absolute need of the righteousness of Christ each and every moment from us.

Spiritual gifts (whether real or simply perceived as such) are from God and are to be powered by grace with the intent of His glory. Spiritual gifts are not to be used for the honor of self whether before our own eyes or before others, but instead they are to be manifestations of the glory of God. Even in our physical gifts they are not there so that the creature can use them to exalt self, but instead are for the glory of God. With spiritual gifts, however, it seems that the obligation to use them for the glory of God is even greater. There is no place for anyone to exercise a physical gift and then exalt in himself before himself and/or others, but to use a spiritual gift in that way is idolatry and even blasphemy. It is to use Christ and His Spirit as means to gain honor and glory for self rather than to seek the glory and honor of Christ.

Each heart should be careful to note that pride in what it is doing is completely opposite of what the humble Lamb of God was when He took human flesh to Himself and went to the cross to die for the glory of God and the good of sinners. A heart of pride is completely opposite to a heart that is resting in the righteousness of Christ which He earned by humble doing all that He was sent to do and fulfilling the law out of love for God and His people. When Christ healed a person He was not full of pride, but instead He pointed to God. When Christ fed thousands, that did not fill Him with pride but instead He humbly pointed to the glory of God.

When sinners see how utterly dependent upon God for all things, they should bow in humility before Him for any good He does through them. When sinners see that they have done something that appears to be good, instead of being puffed up about themselves they should be humbled that God would use them. When sinners see that they have done something of spiritual good, then should examine their hearts and know that it was the blood of Christ that purchased the Spirit for them and it was the Spirit who worked that in them. Despite all of that, sinners who are even modestly acquainted with their own hearts will know that their own sinful hearts have tainted all that they do and so they know that the very best they do still needs the blood of Christ to cover them. They will also know that the very best they have done, since it is tainted with sin, can add nothing to their own righteousness and as such they know that they need the perfect righteousness of Christ. Each day, then, sinners should be looking to Christ alone knowing that if what they are doing is causing them to think of self and seek the honor of self that means they are not looking to Christ alone. Only those who have Christ alone will not be cast out. We should be diligent to search our hearts to see if we are looking to the cross and righteousness of Christ alone.

Examining the Heart 4

March 23, 2014

You that glory in being a Christian, you shall be winnowed. Every vein of your profession will be tried to purpose. It is terrible to have it all come tumbling down, and to find nothing but itself to stand upon…You who pride yourself on being a Christian, see to your waxen wings, which now will melt with the heart of temptation. What a misery is it to trade much, and be bankrupt at length, and have not stock, nor foundation laid for eternity in your soul!     Thomas Wilcox

There was a different view of Christianity in the 1600’s (of which Thomas Wilcox was a pastor and writer) than there is now. In that time, which was basically 100 years after the time of the Reformation, Christianity was taken very seriously and was the most important thing in life, death, and for eternity. It was thought that there was a real devil and that he was very interested in deceiving men concerning their souls. It was also thought that the hearts of men were deceptive and that they could easily be deceived concerning their salvation. Wilcox wrote in a way in which to awaken people to their false professions, but also in such a way to warn true believers that they would be tried. In the modern day the least hardship will send professing believers into a tailspin because it is thought that if God loves you then He will give you an easy life.

Wilcox, on the other hand, recognized that God tried His people and these trials were sent to purify His people and that these hardships were from true love. While it is not comfortable for people to examine their own hearts, it is a necessary task in order to see if one is a believer or not and also helps people during times of trial. If a person is not careful to examine self, however, that person will have nothing to stand on during the times of trials and perhaps on judgment day. A true profession of faith will be tried by God and false professions of faith may not be tried by God but instead established in its strength by the devil. It is necessary to pursue a form of self-examination as Paul said in II Corinthians 13:5.

It is one thing to glory in being a Christian in name and yet quite another to be one in truth. One can make a profession of faith very easily in the modern day and it never be questioned in our easy day of false religion. But a true faith will have trials from the outside and the inside. A true faith must grow and God will send trials and hard things to force it to grow, yet when He does the young or weak believer may have a hard time realizing what is going on. It is very hard for sinners to come to an end of self and to learn to look to grace alone. It is so hard for people who have always worked for what they get to learn to look to free grace alone. It is hard for those who have been moral all their lives to look to free grace to save them as horrid sinners. It is hard for those who have had easy lives without trouble or have had doting parents who removed all the hard things from them to understand that a good, loving, and gracious God will send fiery trials in order for them to grow.

It is so very hard for sinners (Christian sinners too) to be broken from their pride so that they may look to grace and grace alone rather than self. It is so very hard for sinners to come to the point of seeing how deep their depravity really is and that their hearts are far worse than the very worst of their outward sins. Yet the Lord in His great kindness and mercy will show people the depths of their sin (to some degree) and increasingly so as they mature. It takes a great faith which comes by a great grace to look to Christ alone while fighting the onslaught of our own wicked and sinful hearts. Yet without those trials and without the battles that faith has to have in order to grow in Christ and in grace, the soul would not grow and remain an infant.

There is such a great danger in people taking up a profession of Christianity and leaving a good and moral life, yet on judgment day they will have no hope at all. They will have sown seed on hard soil and they will have lived an outwardly moral life in the strength of self, though they may have professed Christ and prayed to Him in a way. They may have been the best of neighbors and the best of people in the town and church, but they did not have Christ. They did not live by grace and they never died to self. These people had a profession and they may have spoken much of Christ, but they were never united to Him by faith and so they never received Christ and His grace. They will have to stand upon their own filthy works and they will never have the wrath of God for their sins satisfied. They will face eternity entirely bankrupt rather than having the imputed righteousness of Christ and along with that all of His spiritual blessings. How much better it is to examine now rather than wait for the day when all things are opened by the Light and it is too late.

Examining the Heart 3

March 22, 2014

If you retain guilt and self-righteousness under it [root of your religion], those vipers will eat out all the vitals of it at length. Try and examine with greatest strictness every day, what ground your religion and hope of glory is built upon, whether it was laid by the hand of Christ. If not, it will never be able to endure the storm that must come against it; Satan will throw it all down, and great will be the fall thereof (Mat 7:27).    Thomas Wilcox

The Gospel of Jesus Christ is all of grace from eternity past to eternity future. This grace flows from the self-sufficiency of God and is aimed at the glory of God. In this Gospel of Jesus Christ and in the Gospel of grace we see that glory of God in all He has done to glorify His name in the Gospel. Included in this Gospel is the imputed righteousness of Christ in which is the only righteousness acceptable to God. This comes to sinners by grace and grace alone and is based on nothing found in the sinner (who has nothing but sin) but is based on God Himself. It is in Christ alone that sinners are declared just and sinners are declared just based on the righteousness of Christ alone. It is in Christ that God declares sinners just and is Himself just in doing so.

The proud heart of man, however, is always turned to self-righteousness and is given to efforts to obtain and defend righteousness for self. This is not always in the open and obvious to any human, but the heart longs for something it can do to either obtain or earn righteousness for itself under any deception or guise. It is even possible for proud hearts to brag about the righteousness of Christ and in doing so secretly harbor the thought that it is obtaining righteousness in some way for doing so. A proud heart can pray, give alms, and fast and think that it is humble while in reality it is quite proud and seeking righteousness in its own way.

Matthew 6:1 “Beware of practicing your righteousness before men to be noticed by them; otherwise you have no reward with your Father who is in heaven.

One of the ways that is perhaps hidden from our eyes many times is when we want others to notice the good we do. Instead of doing it out of love for God and His glory, we do it from self-love and the desire for others to notice us and honor us. This is one way that we do things from a heart of self-righteousness, though we don’t think of it that way. A desire to be thought of as good or honored as good is a form of desiring to be seen as righteous. This is so common in professing churches and in religious circles, but the recognition of others is an accepted way (in our day) to get people to serve and do things. This is to say that we try to motivate people to do things from a sinful desire for honor which is self-righteousness, and this is to motivate them to do outwardly good things from a sinful motive. When human beings are motivated to do things in order to be noticed or honored, this is a motivation that is from self-righteousness. When human beings want to do things in order to notice themselves or be able to think highly of themselves, this is also self-righteousness. If those things are true, then we are presently living in a tidal way of self-righteousness. It is simply everywhere.

Self-righteousness and pride cannot be separated, though they can be distinguished. We are to live for the glory of God rather than the glory and honor of self, which should show us that if we seek for our own glory and honor we are idolaters and are seeking the glory of self rather than that of God. If we seek the glory of self and/or think of ourselves with satisfaction when we obtain a goal, this is nothing but self-righteousness and pride. Our hearts do not have to go around thinking of self as righteous in order to be guilty of self-righteousness, but simply seek to do things to get others to think highly of us, honor us, or simply to think highly of self. The heart, then, is vital in the area of self-righteousness and makes it possible for anything we do to be done in the way of self-righteousness.

If self-righteousness is impossible to escape without an examination of our hearts and a pursuit of a true righteousness by grace, then all people should search their hearts for this viper that destroys all vital and true religion. It does not matter how gifted a person is or what a person is in the professing Church, self-righteousness will absolutely destroy any hope of having Christ. This must be repented of and this must be pursued at all costs. A profession of faith and of a life of faith that is rooted in self-righteousness, even if it is hidden to our own eyes, is part of the broad road that leads to destruction. A deep-rooted love of self which is bound to each unregenerate heart will seek a righteousness of its own and from that same self-righteous pride will try to hide it and keep it hid from the eyes of self and of others. Self-righteousness is an abomination to God who seeks His own.

Musings 41

March 20, 2014

It is so easy for people to fall into ways of thinking of grace and holiness that are not according to the New Covenant, but rather are according to their own strength and a legal form of the law. It is so hard for people to come to the Gospel of grace alone and then to live by grace rather than by a self-righteousness in their own strength. It is so easy for believers to become frustrated by their own sin rather than look to Christ and His grace to overcome their sin and their guilt. It is easy for sinners to think that they are defeated when they battle sin with the power of self rather than by grace which is His strength. Believing sinners and unbelieving sinners need to understand that apart from Christ they can do nothing (spiritual or good). All true spiritual fruit must come from Christ (the Vine) first and come by His Spirit. All sinners have a great need to understand and experience the grace of God in their souls. We must taste and see that the Lord is good rather than just know about it.

God justifies (declares just or righteous) sinners by grace and grace alone, which is to say that it is by Christ and Christ alone. No amount of suffering conviction or pain or pricks of conscience can pay for one sin. No amount of seeking can pay for one sin or earn the slightest bit of merit or righteousness. But we seek in order to be loosened from self-righteousness and self-sufficiency, though it seems as if many are deceived into thinking that seeking brings God under obligation in some way. We come to God knowing that He saves by grace and grace alone knowing that all the acceptable sufferings for sin come to us by grace alone and all the acceptable righteousness comes to us by grace alone as well.

Our sins cannot overcome the blood of the cross and our unrighteousness cannot be greater than His righteousness, yet nothing else but Christ and His blood and righteousness are acceptable. This should dash all our hopes in self and grant us a great hope in Christ and Christ alone. We come to the throne of grace to receive nothing but grace and grace alone. This grace is free in the sense that it is totally uncaused by us. This grace comes on behalf of Christ and the glory of God. Men constantly look to themselves for some reason to receive grace and after they have received grace they will look to themselves to see if they can keep grace. No, grace is the spring of all true holiness and holiness is not the spring of grace.

In one sense there is no real preparation of the soul for grace if by preparing one means that one can merit a bit of it or become better in order to receive it. The soul is only prepared for grace when it is stripped of thinking that it has some merit or some righteousness that might move God to save it. No, no, no, but instead we come to God empty of all and simply look to grace alone. We come as poor, naked sinners with nothing but demerit in us yet knowing that God saves sinners and makes sinners holy and blameless in His sight because of Himself and His own glory. The Son died for sinners because He loved the Father thus fulfilling the Great Commandment on behalf of His people. We should never let our sin, though indeed it is terrible, stop us from seeking the grace of Christ since His grace is far greater than our sin. This is no excuse for sin, but we should know that in this live we will sin in all we do as all we do is less then perfect. We need grace for our very best acts and prayers.

For our whole of life we may be haunted by past sins and perhaps present sins when we see just how far short of His glory we have fallen and still fall. Yet God does not save because people are good, but because He is good. God does not save because people obtain some standard of holiness, but because He is holy. God does not save because people follow His law of love, but because He is love. God does not save because people obtain some form of sufficiency in themselves, but because He is self-sufficient. God does not save because of anything found in the person, but because of the glory He finds in Himself. The grace that saves sinners is uncaused by themselves and within themselves because grace has a far greater cause and that is the love God has for His own glory. The freeness of His grace should move us to flee to Him for refuge, but also to flee from sin and pursuse holiness. Grace teaches us to pursue holiness by the strength and power of grace rather than to pursue an outward form of righteousness in our own strength. The beauty and glory of grace is seen as it shines forth from God for the purposes of and glory of God. May we behold Him shining forth in the face of Christ and may we be instruments of glory in His gracious hands.

Examining the Heart 2

March 19, 2014

If you retain guilt and self-righteousness under it [root of your religion], those vipers will eat out all the vitals of it at length. Try and examine with greatest strictness every day, what ground your religion and hope of glory is built upon, whether it was laid by the hand of Christ. If not, it will never be able to endure the storm that must come against it; Satan will throw it all down, and great will be the fall thereof (Mat 7:27).     Thomas Wilcox

The vitality of true Christianity is the life of Christ in the soul and this is when Christ takes away the guilt of sin and those who have Christ have a perfect righteousness as a gift from Christ and so they no longer need to live for their own righteousness but are free to live out of love for God and His glory. Self-righteousness in any form eats at the very heart of Christianity and takes the vitality (life) out of it. Guilt for sin will also do the same thing because a person that has Christ has a perfect satisfaction for the guilt of sin and so should be free of living under the guilt of sin. It is true that no one lives like that perfectly, but those who have the life of Christ in them will not be in bondage to the guilt of sin nor to the horrible sin of self-righteousness.

The true believer, which is the person that has died to self (been crucified with Christ) and now Christ dwells in that believer by His Spirit, is a person that lives because of what Christ has done and what the Spirit is doing in the person now. Every true person that lives by faith in Christ and so lives by grace alone is not a person that looks to self-righteousness to obtain anything, but instead is horrified at the thought of having self-righteousness. A self-righteous spirit is hated by God and is in reality to the person that is self-righteous an idol. How many who profess Christ seem to serve the idol of self rather than Christ and try to use Him to prop up the idol of self before others.

There is no life or vitality of Christianity in those who live by guilt or self-righteousness. Both of those are indeed vipers and come from the Serpent who deceives people into thinking that they are believers. One who is seeking Christ will find that these vipers will eat away at any hope of having Christ and of seeking Christ in truth. The very concept that the Puritans had of seeking was that a person should be broken of self-righteousness as they sought God and a person was not truly seeking who became self-righteous as a result of some form of seeking.

While it may not be possible to examine ourselves with strictness each and every day, it is certainly a good idea to examine ourselves often. This goes against the thinking in the modern day that if we have prayed a prayer or walked an aisle we should never doubt that Christ has saved us, but when one considers how deceitful the human heart is and how deceptive sin and the devil are, it is wisdom to examine ourselves to see if Christ is in us (II Cor 13:5). It is clearly taught in the New Testament that many will be deceived and many will seek to enter who will not enter. There will be many who were very religious, did miracles, and did many good works, and even many pastors and preachers who will be told that they were lawless and that they must depart from Him. They did not build their lives and righteousness upon Christ and Christ alone.

It is not enough to say that I have Christ and it is not enough to entertain a hope of the glory of God. It is not enough to pray a prayer and to pursue an outward morality. It is not enough to pursue an inward morality from the strength of self. It is not enough to be very religious and do all the things of religion. If what a sinner does is not built upon Christ and does not come from Christ by grace alone, that sinner is building on a sandy foundation that will have a great fall regardless of what that sinner does in the name of religion.

Christianity is built on the grace of God and on the grace of God alone. A soul is saved by the grace of God alone and no man can help that grace save him or he would share in his own salvation and have something to glory in. A soul must live by Christ and be the manifestation of the glory of God through Christ in the world or that soul is in some ways seeking self and the righteousness of self. There appear to be many who are seeking fame and riches through religion whether in academics or in leadership or simply in service at a local church. It is possible to seek self-righteousness and honor for that in being busy in a local church, but it is not possible to seek the glory of God while one is seeking the honor of self (John 5:44). Since the natural man is so prone to self-love, honor for self, and self-righteousness it is easy for the evil one to deceive the natural man with the things of religion. But grace teaches us that we must die to those things that Christ would exalt Himself through us.

Examining the Heart 1

March 18, 2014

A word of advice to my own heart and yours.—You are a religious person, and partake of all the ordinances. You do well: they are glorious privileges; but if you have not the blood of Christ at the root of your religion, it will wither, and prove but a painted pageantry to go to hell in.   Thomas Wilcox

The author starts off with a point that wrests the attention from worldly things and even religious things. He gives a word of advice to the heart, not just the mind, and his advice goes beyond anything that the world has to offer and that includes worldly religion. While it is not easy to hear, most of the religion of people today has to do with ordinances and morality. It may be the case that the name of Christ is used, but that is a far different thing than having the blood of Christ at the root of the religion. It may also be the case that the cross of Christ is brought up and perhaps a cross (crucifix) is used and maybe the cross is preached (in some manner) in some cases, but once again that is a far different thing than having the blood of Christ as being the very root of the person’s religion.

Apart from having the real Christ and the truth of the cross and blood of Christ as the foundation of all a person’s religion, all the religious actions of the person will wither along with their worldly actions and loves and will indeed have nothing of substance to it and will prove to be a painted pageantry to go to hell in. This is incredibly sobering and should awaken people to examine their own hearts. When a person enters eternity and stands before the judge who sees all and knows all, if a person does not really and truly have Christ and His bloody cross as the foundation of all they are, then all of their religious actions will be nothing but that which helps send them to hell. Those very religious lives and religious actions will contribute to their eternal damnation instead of giving them salvation from eternal damnation.

It seems that so many today focus on their baptism and then the Lord’s Supper as what they must do and continue doing in order to be saved, but those are things that a person can do in his or her own natural power. Anyone can receive a baptism and anyone can eat the bread and drink the juice or wine. But it takes a sovereign grace to deliver a person from trusting in his or her religion and give them Christ and the cross instead of self to rely on and trust on. It appears that the vast majority of people today either trust in their baptism or in their own decision for something rather than Christ alone, which is simply another form of trusting in self for salvation.

Another way that people deceive themselves is to walk an aisle or pray a prayer as an act (they say) to trust Christ and that makes them think that they are trusting in the blood of Christ, but it is not. It is trusting in themselves to do something rather than trust in Christ alone to do something. Then these people set out to live moral lives and go to some church as a way of expressing their religion. They may get involved in worship teams and perhaps great movements of evangelism. But all of those things can be done (and most of the time are) from a heart that is spiritually dead and as such has no foundation in Christ at all.

The blood of Christ is the foundation of all true salvation and sanctification. The blood of Christ is the foundation of all human activities that can even begin to please God because God is only pleased with Christ Himself. It does not matter (in this sense) how moral a person can be without the blood of Christ because all that outward morality is done out of love for self and enmity toward God. There is nothing that is good apart from a true love for God. All that people can do apart from being covered by the blood of Christ and purchased by Christ is nothing but sin. The most religious actions a person can do are nothing more than an attempt to assert self (which is idolatry) in the presence of God rather than Christ Himself.

But despite the plain teaching of Scripture that it is not the will of man but God’s, men continue to teach self as the root of religion. Men can make their choices and can be as outwardly moral as a man can be while confessing an orthodox catechism and yet be as lost as a person can be and as deceived as a person can be. Jesus was far more severe with the religious people of His day than with anyone else, yet what pageantry we see going on in religious conferences and churches in our day. In the name of Christ (in one sense) we see the words and Person of Christ being denied by religious trappings and teachings. Instead of men being told to deny self and follow Christ, men are being told to fulfill self. Instead of God being loved, men love themselves. But God cannot be mocked and all of those covered by pageantry rather than Christ will be turned into hell. We must examine our hearts.

Reflections on and Admirations of God 19

March 16, 2014

Isaiah 53:8 By oppression and judgment He was taken away; And as for His generation, who considered That He was cut off out of the land of the living For the transgression of my people, to whom the stroke was due? 9 His grave was assigned with wicked men, Yet He was with a rich man in His death, Because He had done no violence, Nor was there any deceit in His mouth. 10 But the LORD was pleased To crush Him, putting Him to grief; If He would render Himself as a guilt offering, He will see His offspring, He will prolong His days, And the good pleasure of the LORD will prosper in His hand. 11 As a result of the anguish of His soul, He will see it and be satisfied; By His knowledge the Righteous One, My Servant, will justify the many, As He will bear their iniquities. 12 Therefore, I will allot Him a portion with the great, And He will divide the booty with the strong; Because He poured out Himself to death, And was numbered with the transgressors; Yet He Himself bore the sin of many, And interceded for the transgressors.

The glory of God is the primary issue in Isaiah and in all of Scripture. God does all for the glory of His own name. In Isaiah 6:3 we see the angelic beings crying out “Holy, Holy, Holy, is the LORD of hosts, The whole earth is full of His glory.” The very holiness of God in some way consists in the fact that the whole earth is full of His glory and that is true whether men see it or not. The darkness and blindness of men to spiritual things does not negate the fact that the light of the glory of God is shining forth at all times and in all places.

Isaiah 35:2 It will blossom profusely And rejoice with rejoicing and shout of joy. The glory of Lebanon will be given to it, The majesty of Carmel and Sharon. They will see the glory of the LORD, The majesty of our God.

Isaiah 40:5 Then the glory of the LORD will be revealed, And all flesh will see it together; For the mouth of the LORD has spoken.”

Isaiah 42:8 “I am the LORD, that is My name; I will not give My glory to another, Nor My praise to graven images.

Isaiah 42:12 Let them give glory to the LORD And declare His praise in the coastlands.

Isaiah 60:2 “For behold, darkness will cover the earth And deep darkness the peoples; But the LORD will rise upon you And His glory will appear upon you.

The Son of God bearing the guilt and sin of many sinners to the point where God was and is satisfied is glorious to the LORD of hosts. The pleasure of the LORD is crushing the Son is glorious. Beholding the glory of God’s perfect wrath is glorious as we behold it when it poured forth upon the Son. We can behold the glory of God’s pleasure in His own glory in beholding the cross. We can behold the glory of God’s love for the body of His Son in the Church that He purchased. We can behold the glory of the self-sufficiency of God in saving sinners instead of sinners being able to do something of themselves. We can behold the glory of God’s perfect and eternal plan of making a place for the display of His glory of justice and wrath where they met at the display of His perfect love and grace. It may be the case that academics can spend many years studying nuances of the text of Isaiah 53 or of various things about the cross, but for those with eyes to see the glory of God they will see far more.

For those who love God they will love the sight of a crucified Savior and know that the wrath of God was fully satisfied by the Son. They will behold a satisfied justice and know that Christ alone is the way for their sins to be fully and totally propitiated. Those who love God and His glory will learn to look at the cross know that the glory and the majesty of God was displayed and is displayed at the cross. Those who love God and His glory will see that the glory of the LORD has been revealed. Those who love God and His glory can know by a gaze of the cross that God will not give His glory to another. Those who love God and His glory will know that all should live to the glory of God. Those who love God and His glory will know that while the earth is in deep darkness at the moment, at some point the LORD Himself will arise and His glory will appear. Those who love God and His glory know that His glory is shining even now for all those with eyes to see. For those who don’t see His glory, they need a new heart with new spiritual eyes that they may behold the most beautiful things that can be beheld.