Pride, Part 19

May 10, 2009

Ezekiel 28:17 – “Your heart was lifted up because of your beauty; You corrupted your wisdom by reason of your splendor.”

The passage in Ezekiel 28:17 (and surrounding context) shows that Satan was beautiful, but that his heart was lifted up (pride) because of that beauty. It led to his fall and the fall of numbers of angels, as well as the promise he made to the woman that she would be like God (Gen 3:5). It is not that Satan lost all knowledge of God, but his pride gave him a focus on himself. That is the problem with human beings too. The fall has caused us to focus on ourselves and all of our lives are full of self unless God changes our hearts and gives us eternal life which consists in knowing and loving Him. It is lost on the modern day with its self-esteem and self-centered focus that a person can be very self-centered and very religious at the same time. We live in a time where biblical Christianity seems to be all but lost because the true doctrines of it have been twisted to man-centeredness. The promise of Satan that we would be like God has been swallowed by so many today, including Reformed conservatives. The quote below is the same quote as given in the last BLOG. It is devastating to what passes as Christianity in our day.

Now it might well seem as if all religion must, in the nature of the case, be theocentric; for if the word ‘God’ is to have any meaning at all, it cannot but signify the dominant centre of life and of all existence. And it is true that no religion is entirely lacking in awareness of this fact. All religions display at least some traces of theocentricity. Such traces, however, do not generally suffice to form what may be termed the leitmotif of the religion; they are not determinative of its character as a whole, but in one way or another are subordinated to the egocentric tendency. For illusion occurs in religion as easily as in the physical world. Even though I have learnt that the sun is the centre around which my earth moves, and I with it; I will tend to live and think as if the sun moved around my earth and me. Similarly in religion, although I readily admit that God must be the centre of existence, I do not as readily perceive or accept all that this implies; and it is the most natural thing for me still to live and think as if I myself were the centre around which all else, even including God, moved. I find it exceedingly difficult to rid myself of this illusion and allow God really to be the centre, that is, really to be God. (Let God Be God! An Interpretation of the Theology of Martin Luther)

Reformed theology is the theology that claims Luther and Calvin as those that God used to bring back the core of biblical truth from great darkness. However, one can have their doctrines without their theocentric focus. One can even have their doctrines and speak highly of God and yet miss the driving theocentricity that drove them in all that they did. One can have a creedal belief that all things are to be done to the glory of God and yet miss what that really means and not have a true love for God in the heart. It certainly seems possible that in the modern day that the Reformed theology that is having a resurgence does not have a thorough theocentricity at the heart of it. It is possible to love the doctrines of the Reformation because of their history. It is possible to love the doctrines of the Reformation because of their logical consistency. It is possible to love the doctrines of the Reformation because they are rather novel and can spark others to irritation. It is possible to love the doctrines of the Reformation because they are biblical. Yet all of those reasons and more can be from nothing more than a self-centered heart.

The Pharisees believed in the doctrine of election, but they did not love the true God. The Pharisees believed in many things about sovereignty, but they did not love the sovereign God. The Pharisees believed in some version of limited atonement as they did not believe there could be any atonement for the Gentiles. The Pharisees had their own version of depravity as well. However, though it all they were focused on themselves and nothing but themselves. When they prayer, they sought the honor of others (Mat 6:1ff). Their works of righteousness were done in order to be seen by men. The heart that is focused on self and the things of self can so easily be taken with a god of some sort while thinking of nothing else but self. Reformed theology can be nothing more than an illusion that we have been delivered from self while in fact we are still enslaved to self. Reformed theology, since it is closer to the truth, has the possibility of a great degree of delusion. The proud heart will believe that it is justified by faith alone because it believes that justification by faith alone is true. The proud heart will believe in limited atonement because it can so easily believe that Jesus would die for it and not others. A proud heart can believe in a great God that loves it because it loves itself so much. It is easy to love a God that loves self since self loves all that loves it. But that is not true love. Pride blinds in Christian things too, and perhaps even especially so.

Pride, Part 18

May 8, 2009

The history of Israel as it moves from Abraham to Isaac and then through the Old Testament is one seen through various lenses. The Old Testament is the revelation of God to humanity. It was God revealing Himself bit by bit to a people that He had called out to reveal Himself through. God Himself set up the ceremonial and civil laws of the nation. Those were meant to point to Him as well. The pride of the human heart is so visible when it is looked at in that way. It appears that vast numbers of the Israelites, if they had any real concern about the religion set up by God, were more concerned with the outward or external parts of the religion. They became man-centered in their religion which was to be thoroughly centered upon God. It is pride beyond human measure to take a way of instruction about God and the true worship of God and then turn it for the convenience of men. In one sense that is a major story in the Old Testament. It was also a major story in the Reformation and it is a major story in the modern day. Human beings have taken Christianity which is to be all about God in all ways and have turned it to be all about the self. It seems that many have taken the theology of the Reformation and are using it as a means of self as well. This is pride taken to atrocious levels. Read and meditate on this quote:

Now it might well seem as if all religion must, in the nature of the case, be theocentric; for if the word ‘God’ is to have any meaning at all, it cannot but signify the dominant centre of life and of all existence. And it is true that no religion is entirely lacking in awareness of this fact. All religions display at least some traces of theocentricity. Such traces, however, do not generally suffice to form what may be termed the leitmotif of the religion; they are not determinative of its character as a whole, but in one way or another are subordinated to the egocentric tendency. For illusion occurs in religion as easily as in the physical world. Even though I have learnt that the sun is the centre around which my earth moves, and I with it; I will tend to live and think as if the sun moved around my earth and me. Similarly in religion, although I readily admit that God must be the centre of existence, I do not as readily perceive or accept all that this implies; and it is the most natural thing for me still to live and think as if I myself were the centre around which all else, even including God, moved. I find it exceedingly difficult to rid myself of this illusion and allow God really to be the centre, that is, really to be God. (Let God Be God! An Interpretation of the Theology of Martin Luther)

This way of looking at things gives us glasses on how to look at the actions of people in the Old Testament. It will also give us a way to look at the disciples of Jesus, the Acts of the Apostles, and the epistles. But it will also help us to examine religion today. It is possible for people to speak highly of God, be conservative in theology and in morality, but also be very centered upon themselves. The reason that they speak highly of God is because they think of Him as loving them and doing things for them. It appears to me that much of what passes as Christianity falls directly under this condemnation. It is nothing but pride in the human heart that would do such a thing. Pride in the human heart is still directly linked to the injection of the poison of the evil one back at the Fall. The pride in the human heart has its source in the devil and it is of the same nature. The devil wants to rule over himself and wants to draw worship away from God. As the first promise of the devil to the woman was that “you shall be as God,” so that is the heart of human beings. All human beings are born into the world with self-centered hearts that are proudly fixed on self and want all things to be about them. That includes religion.

Romans 3:23 tells us that sin is to fall short of the glory of God. That means that all that man does is to fall short of the glory of God and nothing that man does is pleasing to God. The proud heart thinks it has fallen just a bit short and thinks that as long as it is good more than its bad it will be okay. But the more orthodox heart thinks that as long as it has some intellectual belief about God then it will be okay. But notice how all of these things flow from proud hearts and in truth revolves around self. The heart that is broken from pride and self (though not perfectly) is a heart that knows that it deserves nothing but wrath from God and depends utterly on grace and grace alone. The Bible tells us that God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble. The proud want something they think of as grace, but they hate true grace in reality. They want to help themselves some and retain the rights to self even when they tell others that Jesus is Lord. That little bit of control is the proud heart turning from a God-centered Christianity to one that is man-centered. How easy it is for a proud heart to have the illusion of true Christianity.

Pride, Part 17

May 5, 2009

Ezekiel 28:17 – “Your heart was lifted up because of your beauty; You corrupted your wisdom by reason of your splendor.”

The New Testament speaks highly of Abraham and his faith, so unless we have read the Old Testament we would not see the battle of his heart. Abraham was indeed of the promised seed and he is looked at in the New Testament as the standard of faith. “Yet, with respect to the promise of God, he did not waver in unbelief but grew strong in faith, giving glory to God, 21 and being fully assured that what God had promised, He was able also to perform” (Romans 4:20-21). Yet Abraham was a man that made some blunders. He went in with Hagar who was Sarai’s maid at the request of Sarai so that she might obtain a child through Hagar. That had disastrous consequences. Once again he looked to his own reasoning and had Sarai (who was now Sarah) pretend to be his sister in order that he would be treated kindly by Abimelech. God’s promise had faded into the background for the moment.

The issue of self comes up and we think that we are in our own hands and left to our own devices. This is the battle that human beings have to face each and every day. Do we believe in the promises of God or do we follow the reasoning and promises of self? Abraham fought the battle and sometimes he fell behind but God kept him from falling completely. Abraham had received promises directly from God and even a strong covenant promise from God. The direct promises of God also included Sarai and God changed her name to Sarah. Yet the battle of self and of pride was still there. It seems as if the pull of self that is in the heart of all human beings came out in Abraham and it is amazing to us now. Yet we have the promises to Abraham made clear and we even have a resurrected Savior who also ascended into heaven. Even more, the Father and the Son have sent the Spirit. Yet the battle with self continues. God promises to be the possession of His people. He promises to dwell in them and that they would partake of His very life. Yet we still sin. How ugly is that pride and self as we rationalize and reason to ourselves about how we are to do what God commands in our own way.

The battle that Abraham had was epitomized in his son Isaac who was the child of promise. We must remember that Abraham was the seed of the woman and that seed was going to be passed on through him to someone. It was not going to be Ishmael who was the result of a plan to help God out. It was going to be Isaac who was to be the child of older parents and whose mother had been barren until then. When Sarah had Isaac one can only imagine how joyful Abraham and Sarah were. They had waited for years and now not only did they have a on in their old age, but they saw the promises of God being fulfilled. But then God commanded Abraham to take Isaac and offer him up as a burnt offering (Gen 22:1-2). The battle that went on within Abraham the next three days as he journeyed to the place where he was to sacrifice Isaac must have been intense. God had made promises about Isaac it was in Isaac that all of His promises would be fulfilled (at least in the line of Isaac). Now God told him to go and sacrifice Isaac. It would have been so easy for Abraham to have reasoned his way out of this as he had reasoned about Hagar and the two times he told others that Sarai/Sarah was his sister. It is true that she was part sister, but that is not what Abraham was saying to the kings. It was nothing more than a lie in an attempt to do his part to save his own skin. The inward wrestling that Abraham went though had to have been very intense. But after he had learned his lessons, he now knew that God would not lie no matter what and that God could do as He pleased. Nothing would or could stop God from keeping His promises.

Hebrews 11 tells us of the incredible faith of Abraham: “By faith Abraham, when he was tested, offered up Isaac, and he who had received the promises was offering up his only begotten son; 18 it was he to whom it was said, “IN ISAAC YOUR DESCENDANTS SHALL BE CALLED.” 19 He considered that God is able to raise people even from the dead, from which he also received him back as a type” (Heb 11:17-19). As Abraham walked along he either came to the conclusion of Hebrews 11 or he came to that conclusion immediately and did not waver from it during the three day journey to the place of sacrifice. His faith is seen in Genesis 22:5 when he said that “I and the lad will go very there; and we will worship and return to you.” He said that both would return. The faith in the promises of God that was in Abraham overcame the power of self and the reasoning of self and Abraham was going to kill and burn his son in a sacrifice while believing that God would raise him from the dead in order to keep His promises. The promises of God were ultimately kept in the seed of the woman and the seed of Abraham years later. They were kept in Jesus Christ who was killed as a sacrifice. He was also raised from the dead. It is nothing but pride to argue God’s promise can come in any other way. How wicked is the pride of the human heart.

Conversion, Part 13

May 2, 2009

Last week we looked at the agent in conversion and that agent is the Holy Spirit. Indeed Christ has purchased sinners, but He also purchased the Holy Spirit and the application of the Holy Spirit to the souls of sinners. It is not just that God does something to the soul using a secondary source, but in conversion it is God Himself by the Holy Spirit taking a human soul and converting it. There is no greater work in all of history than this conversion. God’s creating the world from nothing but Himself was an act that no human mind can understand. But even creation pales in contrast with the Holy Spirit taking sinners and making them into new creations in Christ Jesus.

It is certainly easy enough to state the biblical fact that the Holy Spirit is the agent of change in the transformation of the human soul, but it is so hard for the human soul to come to a deep distrust of self and a trust in God for that work. The natural soul is full of self and its own strength which leaves that soul in the deepest parts of its own self-sufficiency. The self-sufficient soul will always think of itself as being able to love God apart from grace. It may have a theology that is different than what it is really trusting in, but in the inner depths of that soul it is trusting in its own sufficiency or something of self. It must be broken from its own strength in order to love from the love of God put in the humbled soul. The self-sufficient soul will trust in its own interpretation of the world and of Scripture. In other words, it must be broken from its pride in its own wisdom to look to Christ and rest in His wisdom and in His sufficiency. The proud soul will look to something of self and trust in its own righteousness rather than to rest in the righteousness of Christ. The proud soul will trust in its own works and efforts in order to be holy and to do what it thinks is grow in sanctification.

The great battle in the human soul is not just to overcome a particular sin, but for the proud and self-centered heart which is sin itself to be overcome. That will only happen when the soul submits to the living God and the true King reigns in it. That only happens when the Spirit of the living God engages to do battle in the soul and overcomes that soul by the work of conviction and humiliation. But people says this: “We are justified by faith alone. All we have to do is believe.” Indeed, but apart from humility there is no faith. A soul trying to believe without true humility is like trying to love without any love at all. There can be no faith in Christ as long as the proud and self-centered heart trusts in self. There can be no living by faith as long as the soul trusts in its own sufficiency.

The agent for conversion is the Holy Spirit. But why does the Holy Spirit transform and change sinners? What purpose and reason does He have for doing what He does? The reason for conversion is grace and not the merit, worth, works, righteousness, nor any other thing that a sinner is or has done. The sinner always wants to look to self in order to provide God a reason to show him or her grace or to obtain some good. That is the worst thing that a person can do. God operates by grace and grace alone. The sinner, then, must not only come to an understanding that it is the Holy Spirit who must change him or her, but the sinner must also come to the understanding that there is nothing that he or she can do to move the Holy Spirit to the work of conversion. The Holy Spirit in conversion changes the sinner by grace and only by grace. There is no reason that a person is converted other than grace.

Romans 3:24 being justified as a gift by His grace through the redemption which is in Christ Jesus; 25 whom God displayed publicly as a propitiation in His blood through faith. This was to demonstrate His righteousness, because in the forbearance of God He passed over the sins previously committed, 26 for the demonstration, I say, of His righteousness at the present time, so that He would be just and the justifier of the one who has faith in Jesus. 27 Where then is boasting? It is excluded. By what kind of law? Of works? No, but by a law of faith.

Romans 4:16 For this reason it is by faith, in order that it may be in accordance with grace, so that the promise will be guaranteed to all the descendants, not only to those who are of the Law, but also to those who are of the faith of Abraham, who is the father of us all,

Romans 11:6 But if it is by grace, it is no longer on the basis of works, otherwise grace is no longer grace.

Galatians 2:21 “I do not nullify the grace of God, for if righteousness comes through the Law, then Christ died needlessly.” 5:4 You have been severed from Christ, you who are seeking to be justified by law; you have fallen from grace.

Ephesians 1:6 to the praise of the glory of His grace, which He freely bestowed on us in the Beloved. 7 In Him we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of our trespasses, according to the riches of His grace.

Ephesians 2:5 even when we were dead in our transgressions, made us alive together with Christ (by grace you have been saved), 7 so that in the ages to come He might show the surpassing riches of His grace in kindness toward us in Christ Jesus. 8 For by grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God.

These verses are sufficient to show the reason that a sinner is converted. In Romans 3 it tells us the very motive of God in saving sinners. That motive and reason is not found in the sinner, but is found in God Himself and in God alone. God justifies sinners on the basis of Christ and nothing in the sinner is found to move Him to do so. Christ alone is all that is needed. The sinner needs to have his sin taken away, but there is nothing the sinner can do to merit the slightest sin to be taken away. But God provides the propitiation in the person of Jesus Christ who bore His wrath for sinners. He did not do that because the sinner was worth it, but because the Father was worth it. He did this to demonstrate the righteousness of the Father and not for the slightest bit of good in the sinner. He did this so that the Father could be just and the justifier, not because the sinner had any reason in self for saving him or her. There is utterly no room for boasting at all in the sinner because the sinner did nothing to save himself and there was no reason to save him or her. The only reason was and is within the Godhead and salvation is all of grace.

Some still think that conversion and salvation is because of their faith, but Romans 4:16 should dispel that notion. Salvation is by faith in order that it would be by grace. The biblical teaching of faith has no idea that faith is a human work, but instead it is the way God saves so that it would be totally of grace. Faith is an instrument given by and used by God to save by grace. Whatever work a human being tries to bring into the situation simply makes salvation to be something other than by grace alone which spoils the whole thing. One work of the sinner makes grace to be no longer grace. One act of faith if it is a work of the human flesh spoils the whole teaching of justification by grace alone through faith alone. The Holy Spirit’s reason for His work in conversion is grace.

Galatians 2:21 shows us that the work of Christ is the source of the grace shown to sinners. It is not as some try to show in the modern day that God can show grace apart from Christ, but that in some way grace is connected to the death of Christ. If grace can come to us by works or by a work then there was no need for the death of Christ. The death of Christ on the cross was moved by grace and is His purchasing grace for sinners. Galatians 5:4 then shows us the result if we try to find a reason within ourselves if we look to our own efforts. To the degree we look to our works or the Law as a way of being justified, it is to that degree that we fall from grace as the way of salvation. This is why we must teach people to look to God alone and not to themselves. It is not until a person has been broken from his or her self-sufficiency that the person will look and trust totally in the sufficiency of Christ and to the Gospel of grace alone. If God’s reason for converting sinners is Himself, that is, grace and grace alone, then the sinner must be broken from any idea that he can do anything of himself for salvation.

Ephesians 1:6 shows us the motive God has in salvation: “to the praise of the glory of His grace.” God saves sinners to the glory of His grace. This is in Ephesians 2:5-8 as well. God takes dead sinners who have no good in them and no ability to please or give Him a reason to save them and makes them alive in order to display the surpassing riches of His grace. Whenever a sinner tries to find a reason in self for God to save him, that sinner is fighting grace which is the only reason God has for saving sinners. It is grace that displays the very beauty and glory of God in the Gospel. It is grace that shines forth the mercy and love of God. It is grace that shows the sovereignty of God. It is grace that is the only real hope for sinners. The sinner must be stripped of all hope in his own works and look to the Holy Spirit as the agent of salvation. The sinner must be stripped of all hope in finding any reason for salvation in self so that s/he could look to grace alone for salvation. In conversion the Spirit pours out the love of God in the soul and now the sinner loves God. When we love God in truth, we love Him more than ourselves. We should desire that we would be saved to the glory of His name rather than anything found in us or done by us. A soul that is saved by grace delights in the glory of that grace rather than self. God finds reasons within Himself to save us. That is grace and that is why salvation is by grace alone. Oh the glory of it all!

Pride, Part 16

May 2, 2009

Ezekiel 28:17 – “Your heart was lifted up because of your beauty; You corrupted your wisdom by reason of your splendor.”

As we follow the trail of pride from the heart of the serpent and then as he sunk the poison into human souls, we can see the trail of destruction that pride has brought to the human race. Not only that, however, it has brought massive changes to the created world and to animals as well. Human beings are so blinded by pride and self-love that they simply do not see how despicable and hideous pride and self-centeredness are and what they do to all that they touch. If we can imagine how life would have been without pride and self-centeredness, then we can see the horrid nature of pride. Adam and Eve never would have blamed each other for anything. They would have depended on God for all wisdom and all things. They would have been perfectly one with each other and they would have walked with God as individuals and as a couple. Their children would have grown up without sin and both Cain and Abel would have loved God and each other.

The children of Cain and Abel would have gotten along well and they would not have went after multiple wives and challenged God like Lamech did if they had not been full of self and pride. The trail of pride and self wins itself through the paths of the Old Testament and the hearts of human beings as a serpent winds its way along a trail on a mountain path. We can see the awful results of pride in the hearts of those in the Bible and some in our own day, but we don’t see that same pride in our own hearts. We don’t see the path of the serpent or the effects of the poison of the serpent in our own hearts. We don’t see that pride and self when our desires are not what God desires. We don’t see the pride in our own hearts when we are angry when our wills are crossed and we don’t get what we want. That pride blinds us to our own hearts because the self in those hearts are always providing justifications for our own behavior. We provide ourselves with justification for our own actions and hearts while we condemn the same things in others. Pride and self simply blind us to our own hearts.

From the midst of a people with hearts devoted to self stepped a man that was from the seed of the woman. He was a descendant of Shem who was the blessed son of Noah and his first name in the Bible was Abram (Gen 9:26). The Lord told Abram to leave his people and to another land that he would show him. The Lord made great promises to Abram regarding his future and that he would make him into a great nation (Gen 12). The Lord also promised Abram that the one who blessed him He would bless and the one that cursed him He would curse. The promise even came to Abram that in him all the families of the earth would be blessed (12:1-3). Abram believed these promises enough to leave his relatives and head toward the land the Lord led him to. However, when Abram arrived in Egypt the power of pride and self took over.

It is easy to see how the love of self filled Abram when he was willing to have Sarai his wife pretend to be his sister to save his own life as he thought, but how is that pride? It is pride because he thought of himself rather than the promises of God. He valued his own life more than the words and promises of God. The Lord had told him that He would curse those that cursed Abram. But Abram preferred his own method. Pharaoh and his house were then struck with great plagues because of her. God honored His promises even though Abram in his pride sought to save his own skin in his own way. Abram was blessed, not because he was a great man in and of himself, but because God is a great God who makes promises and keeps them.

The same thing is true today. We can see the promises of God in Scripture, but we still do things our own way. It is pride in our hearts to think that we have the resources to take care of ourselves and even to do the will of God as we please. We are so focused on the survival of self in so many realms that we do not look to the hand of God. While we may mock those that say things like “God helps those that help themselves,” that is still the language of our hearts. We may use the excuse of God using means, and in fact He does use means, but we can use means as a way of serving self under the guise of orthodoxy. God calls His people to be aliens or strangers in this world since it is not our final home. We are just passing through and are not to set up a permanent camp here. We are headed for the true Promised Land. Yet our pride blinds us to the things of the world and we begin to focus on self. Our self-preservation fueled by pride finds reasons to focus on the now. We make excuses, but it is our pride and self that keep us from focusing on the promises of the Lord. How we need to keep our eyes on Him rather than on self.

Pride, Part 15

April 29, 2009

Ezekiel 28:17 – “Your heart was lifted up because of your beauty; You corrupted your wisdom by reason of your splendor.”

Genesis 6:5 is a devastating verse. We see that as a result of human beings being so wicked because every intent of the thoughts of their hearts were wicked that God sent a flood to wipe out all but one family. One might think that such a judgment on pride would have eradicated it. But then after the flood we see this:

20 Then Noah built an altar to the LORD, and took of every clean animal and of every clean bird and offered burnt offerings on the altar. 21 The LORD smelled the soothing aroma; and the LORD said to Himself, “I will never again curse the ground on account of man, for the intent of man’s heart is evil from his youth; and I will never again destroy every living thing, as I have done. 22 “While the earth remains, Seedtime and harvest, And cold and heat, And summer and winter, And day and night Shall not cease” (Genesis 8:20-22).

Another way to look at this is to say that even this great flood that left one family had not wiped out pride from the human heart. But the covenant that God made was not to destroy every living thing as He had previously done. The enmity between the seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent continued in Noah’s family. As with Adam and Eve and their children, there were different seeds from the same family. Cain killed Abel and demonstrated that right from the start there was enmity between the seeds even in the same physical family. We are then shown that within the family of Noah the same thing is true. To be a child of those who have received grace does not mean that grace passes to the children automatically. The seed of the serpent is in all who are born into the world in the human race. The heart of pride controls all those that are not controlled by the indwelling life of Christ.

We also see animal sacrifices in Genesis 8 as well. This shows that sin had not been eradicated from the earth at all. It took a clean animal (Gen 8:20) to make a sacrifice and which shows that the right way to worship God is according to God. It takes a perfect sacrifice to be acceptable to God and a heart that is sinful can never be perfect. These sacrifices pointed to the one sacrifice that alone could really take away sin. The lambs of the Old Testament pointed to the Lamb of God (John 1:29) who alone could truly take away the sin of the hearts of sinners. The fact that they had lambs to picture Christ points to the need for the sacrifice to be humble. It took a humble sacrifice to pay for the pride of human souls. It takes a humble Savior to live the life of humility in the hearts of humans as opposed to the pride of the serpent. Philippians 2 shows us the depths of the humility of Christ who took human flesh to Himself and then humbled Himself even more to go to the cross. How this points to the wickedness of pride in the human heart. How this shows us what we should be in heart rather than proud and self-centered.

As we move into Genesis 9 we see the sin of Canaan. It is hard to know the exact sin here and the degree of what is going on, but we do know that Canaan dishonored his father and was then cursed for it. The other two sons strove to honor their father. But let us not forget the sin of Noah here is getting drunk. He did not have the New Testament teaching on this nor did he have the Proverbs, but his conscience was enough for this. God had created man in His own image and that image of His is to live in control and godliness rather than to get drunk and result in the sin of Canaan. Genesis 10:15-20 tells us that the curse of Noah on Canaan came true and he became the father of the families of Canaan. But Shem, who was blessed by Noah, had Abram who became Abraham as his descendant. The seed of the woman continued and of the serpent continued from the same physical family. The Canaanites and the Israelites were at war in the Old Testament and there is still war between them.

In Genesis 11 we see the pride of human beings that had not been stamped out in the flood. The people of the earth wanted to build a tower where the top would reach into heaven and they wanted to make a name for themselves (Gen 11:4). They did not want to scatter across the earth and fulfill the command of the Lord to fill the earth and subdue it (Gen 1:28). Some think that the thought of building the tower (in their ancient mindset) was that they could actually reach to God with it. The rebellion and pride of these people is given in just a few words, but if we look at what is going on we can see the depths of pride in the hearts of these people. Human history is simply the history of pride and of man following his own way on the earth and trying to make his own way to heaven rather than looking to the Lord alone. The serpent’s poison of pride always rules unless the humble Savior reigns there.

Pride, Part 14

April 27, 2009

Ezekiel 28:17 – “Your heart was lifted up because of your beauty; You corrupted your wisdom by reason of your splendor.”

Genesis 6 is the next move of God in terms of the seeds. The proud seed of the serpent had apparently taken over the earth except for one man. Verse 5 tells us that “the wickedness of man was great on the earth.” While the modern day religious folks might think that homosexuality, abortion, and divorce were the causes of this, the LORD had His eye even deeper than those things. As in New Testament times when the Pharisees were focused on external things, but their hearts were all about self in the sense that from their pride they sought the honor of men, so the LORD in Genesis sees that “every intent of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.” Here is the indictment of the LORD on human beings. It was not just that they had many wicked things to answer for, but that their thoughts were evil. It was not just that the thoughts of their hearts were evil, but that the thoughts of their hearts were only evil and that continually. But it was not just that each thought of each heart was evil, but that ever single intent of each thought of each heart was evil.

If we catch even a glimpse of this text we must gasp as the horror of our own hearts settles upon us. God looks upon my heart, but He also beholds the thoughts of my heart. He not only knows the thoughts of my heart, but He sees the intent of the thoughts of my heart. 1 Chronicles 28:9 tells us this: “As for you, my son Solomon, know the God of your father, and serve Him with a whole heart and a willing mind; for the LORD searches all hearts, and understands every intent of the thoughts. If you seek Him, He will let you find Him; but if you forsake Him, He will reject you forever.” Hebrews 4 drives the stake, so to speak, even deeper: “For the word of God is living and active and sharper than any two-edged sword, and piercing as far as the division of soul and spirit, of both joints and marrow, and able to judge the thoughts and intentions of the heart” (v. 12).

What we see from these two texts is that God has not changed from Genesis 6:5. God still judges the intents of the thoughts and it is not just something in ancient history. But, some will surely say, I don’t have many evil thoughts and I surely don’t intend them in an evil way. They will say that they are basically good people and that they are not like those people in Genesis. I am sure that is pretty much what the people in Genesis 6 would have said. In Genesis 6:12 it tells us that “all flesh had corrupted their way upon the earth.” Later on in Scripture that is precisely what is said about sinners in Isaiah: “All of us like sheep have gone astray, Each of us has turned to his own way; But the LORD has caused the iniquity of us all To fall on Him” (53:6). “I have spread out My hands all day long to a rebellious people, Who walk in the way which is not good, following their own thoughts” (65:2).

How can it be that every intent of the thoughts of the heart be wicked? We must see what God thinks is wicked rather than accept our own standards for what is wicked. We have seen the pattern of Genesis 3:1-5 carried out in 1 Jn 2:16: “For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh and the lust of the eyes and the boastful pride of life, is not from the Father, but is from the world.” It is not just that a thought has to be wicked, but when we have pride of life we are living and thinking in a way that is according to pride. Proverbs 21:4 also tells us that “Haughty eyes and a proud heart, the lamp of the wicked, is sin.” That which guides the wicked and gives light or is that which they follow is pride. When a person follows his or her own way rather than God’s, that is wickedness. When a person is interested in what is good for self rather than God’s, that is pride.

The pride of the devil was in being lifted up in his own heart and seeking his own way and his own glory. The pride of the Pharisees was in being lifted up in their own heart and seeking their own way and their own glory. The people described by God in Genesis 6:5-12 were not all outwardly wicked people, but they were following their own ways as they followed their own hearts doing what they pleased. When a person is following self, even the religious deeds of that person are vile and wretched before God. There is a lot of self in the modern religious scene. There are many arguments about how to worship. Most of those discussions are about how “I like to worship.” Yet God tells us that true worship must be in spirit and in truth (John 4:24). When we want a church to be like what we want, that might be simply following the ways of self. Ephesians 2 speaks to this: “And you were dead in your trespasses and sins, 2 in which you formerly walked according to the course of this world, according to the prince of the power of the air, of the spirit that is now working in the sons of disobedience.3 Among them we too all formerly lived in the lusts of our flesh, indulging the desires of the flesh and of the mind.”

The seed of the serpent flourished in Genesis through the pride of human beings. The seed of the serpent flourished in the religion of the Pharisees through the pride of human beings. They simply followed their own way which is to follow the pride of the heart. To follow the pride of our own hearts is to follow the course of the world. It is to follow the course set out by the prince of the power of the air who still works in the sons of disobedience. It is to indulge the desires of the flesh and of the mind. Those who live in open sin do this and those who are very religious can do this as well. When the intent of a thought is for self, there is nothing but a wicked intent that is there because it is pride. After all, we are commanded to love God with all of our hearts and minds. It is nothing but pride to have an intent of a thought of the heart or mind to be for self. How many thoughts pass through our beings everyday that are not out of love for God but are oriented on self? Those are proud intents and therefore are wicked intents in His presence. Even if the thoughts are good, they have wicked intents. Pride is that which spoils everything that we think or do. It is a poison that poisons all we do. We must be humbled or all we thing and do comes from a proud heart. God destroyed all by water once, but He will destroy all by fire the next time. Let us seek to be humbled from our proud hearts.

Pride, Part 13

April 25, 2009

Ezekiel 28:17 – “Your heart was lifted up because of your beauty; You corrupted your wisdom by reason of your splendor.”

The devil, who was the serpent of old, deceived Eve who led Adam into sin and in so doing sunk his poisonous fangs into the nature of human beings. Human beings, after that point, were driven by pride and self. Instead of confessing his own sin, Adam blamed Eve. Instead of confessing her sin, she blamed the devil. Pride blinds us to our own sins and blames them on others. We saw how Cain became a chip off the old block (not a chimp off the old block). His pride was such that he was angry at Abel when Abel offered an acceptable sacrifice while Cain’s was not. Cain eventually displayed his poisonous nature of the devil and killed Abel. Indeed the enmity that was part of the curse (Genesis 3:15) is seen from the start. Cain was of the seed of the serpent and Abel was of the seed of the woman. This is the line that can be traced throughout the whole Old Testament. This is the enmity that was eventually between Israel and the nations. This is the enmity that is seen now between Christ and the world.

That enmity between the seeds is because the nature of the rebellion of the serpent is now part of the nature of human beings. This can be clearly seen over and over in the Bible which gives us the inspired record of the enmity between the seed of the serpent and the seed of the woman. The Bible moves directly from Cain being cast away to that of the generations or seed of Cain. A few generations down from Cain we find a character named Lamech in Genesis 3:18. Lamech’s proud and desire to be elevated above God is seen in Genesis 4:23-24:

23 Lamech said to his wives, “Adah and Zillah, Listen to my voice, You wives of Lamech, Give heed to my speech, For I have killed a man for wounding me; And a boy for striking me; 24 If Cain is avenged sevenfold, Then Lamech seventy-sevenfold.”

God had promised to avenge Cain “sevenfold” in Genesis 4:15 if anyone killed Cain. Lamech was so great in his own mind and wanted to be superior to God that he was going to avenge himself seventy-sevenfold. What a display of pride and arrogance, and yet this is exactly what the seed of the serpent does. This seed is at enmity against all but self in its own way but especially against all who love God and then God Himself. The arrogance Lamech has is almost unimaginable, but he is bragging in front of his wives. He wants to show His supposed greatness in front of them and then to show his greatness as compared to God. He wants to show them that he takes greater vengeance than God. It might also be the case that he was trying to control them and retain a strong rule over them. But regardless of all the reasons, the pride of Lamech is on display. It might also be helpful to note that the Lamech of Genesis 4 is not the same Lamech of Genesis 5. The Lamech of Genesis 5 was the father of Noah.

Genesis 6:1-4 records the history of how the sons of God came to the daughters of men and the result of that was that the wickedness of human beings became great on the earth. There have been many ways of interpreting Genesis 6:1-4, but the easiest and most natural way to interpret it is to look within the text of Genesis itself. We must not forget that we have a major theme given to us by the text itself. That theme is the enmity between the seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent. This is not just a physical seed, but it is also a spiritual seed as well. After Cain (seed of the serpent) killed Abel (seed of the woman), we are told that Eve bore another child and his name was Seth. He was named Seth because Eve saw him as a replacement for Abel. In other words, this was the man that the seed of the woman was to come through. It was when Seth had a son (Enosh in Gen 4:26) that “men began to call upon the name of the LORD.” Some think the translation should be “then men began to be called by the name of the LORD.” The latter translation is what fits with the context before and after. In Genesis 5 there is the “book of the generations of Adam.” In verse 1 Adam is said to have been made in the likeness of God. Then in verse 3 it tells us that Adam had a son “in his own likeness, according to his image, and named him Seth.” The line is then traced to Noah. There is no mention of Cain being a child of Adam in this context.

It is in this light, I think, that Genesis 6:1-4 should be looked at. It was when those who were called by the name of the LORD began to intermarry with the daughters of men that wickedness spread on the earth even more. It is of interest to note that Abel offered the acceptable sacrifices and Cain’s were not acceptable. We can see the seed of Cain were those that were at enmity with God with Lamech being the example. We see the seed of Seth as being Enoch who walked with God for three hundred and sixty-five years and then God took him. Enoch was the great, great grandfather of Noah who was righteous. After the mixing of the daughters of men with those called by the name of the LORD, we are left with one man named Noah. Pride and self had filled the earth at this point.

Conversion, Part 12

April 24, 2009

In the teaching of salvation in the modern day the focus is on getting human beings to do something. It may be to make a decision or to walk an aisle. It may be to look to Jesus for something in general or perhaps for forgiveness of sins in particular. Even when people are told to look to Jesus they are usually told to look to Him in such a way that it is contingent upon them doing something. They are told that Jesus will forgive them if they will pray a prayer or that if they will simply believe in Him He will save them from hell. Perhaps we tell others that they must repent and believe in order to be saved. That is very true and the Bible uses those very words. But what do we mean when we use those words? Do we mean that a person has the strength from self to just repent of external and internal sin? Do we mean that a person simply must make a choice to believe and that belief is the deepest belief of his or her soul that controls all other beliefs?

As mentioned in the last newsletter, some people try to educate others about the Gospel of justification and then get them to believe that the Gospel is true. Satan believes that the Gospel is true, but he is not a converted being. The intellectual belief that the Gospel is true does not mean that a person is a true believer of the Gospel. If a belief in the Gospel is only intellectual, then a mere change in the intellect means that a person does not now believe in the Gospel. If we move on to assurance with only an intellectual belief, then we have the absurd conclusion that many have taught. A person may be a believer at one point (intellectual belief in the Gospel) and yet can fall away and be an unbeliever or even an atheist and still be converted. The problem with that position is that it uses the biblical terms of “believe” or “faith” without the biblical meaning of them. The Bible does not refer to saving faith as an intellectual belief alone, but to the soul as converted and therefore in a state of being a believing soul.

The agent of conversion is not that of the human soul, but is God. Jesus taught that the soul must be born from above in order to enter the kingdom (John 3:3). But He also taught who that agent of change was. He taught us that it was the Holy Spirit (John 3:8). Some hear these things often and put them into a different category or simply have lost the ability to hear. While a person must believe in Jesus Christ in order to be truly converted, that person must be born from above and it is the Holy Spirit that does that. It is not that a person changes him or herself, but a person that is going to be truly converted must be converted by the agency or working of the Holy Spirit.

Pelagian thinking doesn’t really allow much for the Holy Spirit because it focuses on the moral power of man to do what is right. Arminian thinking allows for the Holy Spirit but in the end it is the human being that must make the choice. In modern versions of Reformed thinking the Holy Spirit is a doctrine but not a reality. So if we can convince a person to be more moral, to make a choice, or to believe a doctrine they must be converted. But conversion is of God as triune and is not the work of human beings. The Scriptures refer to the actions and workings of the Holy Spirit as the One who works in time and as the One who regenerates and converts souls. Apart from the work of the Holy Spirit there is no conversion.

4 But when the kindness of God our Savior and His love for mankind appeared, 5 He saved us, not on the basis of deeds which we have done in righteousness, but according to His mercy, by the washing of regeneration and renewing by the Holy Spirit, 6 whom He poured out upon us richly through Jesus Christ our Savior, 7 so that being justified by His grace we would be made heirs according to the hope of eternal life (Titus 3:4-7)

These verses can be rather shocking if we look at them from a God-centered point of view. We notice in verse 4 that it is the kindness of God our Savior and His love for mankind that appears. We can read that rather casually and know that He saves us, but how does He save us? The only Savior who is God saves not on any other basis but His own mercy and grace. There is nothing within the sinner and there is nothing the sinner can do in his or her own power to save self. This is the work of the living God. So how does this Savior save sinners? He saves them “by the washing of regeneration and renewing by the Holy Spirit.” The only Savior, according to this text, saves by the work of the Holy Spirit in regenerating and renewing souls. Where is the cross? Where is the imputed righteousness of Christ in this text? They are not in this text, but that does not mean that they are not true. It is just that this text has a different focus. What did Christ purchase for sinners? We say that the Holy Spirit is a blessing and we are correct. Could it be that Christ purchased the Spirit and His work for His people at the cross?

Before the last question is answered, let us look again at Titus 3:4-7. God is the only Savior and He saves sinners by His mercy and grace. He does not save them because they repent or because they work up morality or faith. He saves sinners because of who He is and not because of anything found in them. He finds them hateful and hating one another living in all manners of vile sin (Titus 3:3). All of salvation can only be moved on the basis of God’s grace and mercy rather than anything that a vile sinner can do. God saves sinners by the work of the Holy Spirit. Sinners are not saved until they are regenerated and renewed by the Holy Spirit. But this work of the Spirit comes through Jesus Christ. It is Christ who is called Savior in verse 6 while God is called Savior in verse 4. But the text tells us that the Holy Spirit is poured upon us. The word for “upon,” when preceded by the accusative case, can also mean “in.” The Holy Spirit was not just poured on the outside, but He was given in order to change the inner person. This can be seen from Romans 5:5: “and hope does not disappoint, because the love of God has been poured out within our hearts through the Holy Spirit who was given to us.”

Surely it is obvious at this point that being saved is not just a matter of uttering a prayer, making a decision, or of being intellectually convinced. It is only when God saves sinners through Christ by pouring out the Holy Spirit in sinners who regenerates and renews them. The end result, then, is that the sinner is justified by grace (Titus 3:7). It is not that grace saves sinners and leaves them as they are, but the grace that flows from the throne of God is a grace purchased by Christ and poured out to and in sinners by and in the Person and work of the Holy Spirit. We should also notice how this text connects regeneration and justification. It is only when a sinner is regenerated by the Spirit can the sinner be said to be justified before God by grace. By the grace of God the sinner is changed from a state of unbelief to a state of belief by the regenerating power of the Spirit. A person is not declared just because the person has come up with something called belief or faith, but because the Spirit has regenerated the person and now the person is in a state of a continual belief or faith.

Now we are in a better position to answer the previous question: Could it be that Christ purchased the Spirit and His work for His people at the cross? See what Galatians 3:12-14 has to say about this:

12 However, the Law is not of faith; on the contrary, “HE WHO PRACTICES THEM SHALL LIVE BY THEM.” 13 Christ redeemed us from the curse of the Law, having become a curse for us– for it is written, “CURSED IS EVERYONE WHO HANGS ON A TREE “– 14 in order that in Christ Jesus the blessing of Abraham might come to the Gentiles, so that we would receive the promise of the Spirit through faith.

This text tells us without any equivocation at least one reason that Christ redeemed us from the curse of the Law by becoming a curse for us. He did this so that in Christ Jesus the blessing promised to Abraham would not only come to the Jews but to the Gentiles. That blessing is that the promise of the Spirit would be received through faith. The promise of the Spirit is spoken of many times in the Old Testament and then by Jesus. We are told in the Old Testament (Ezekiel 36) what God is going to do in the New Covenant:

26 “Moreover, I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit within you; and I will remove the heart of stone from your flesh and give you a heart of flesh. 27 “I will put My Spirit within you and cause you to walk in My statutes, and you will be careful to observe My ordinances. 29 “I will not hide My face from them any longer, for I will have poured out My Spirit on the house of Israel,” declares the Lord GOD.

The promise seen in the Old Testament is that God will give people a new heart. His Spirit would be put within them and they would be caused to walk in His statutes. God would no longer hide His face from them. Now we see that in Christ the Spirit has been purchased and is sent to regenerate and renew the souls of sinners (Titus 3:3-7). Now we see that believers are the temple of the living God and of the Holy Spirit (I Cor 3:16-16; 6:19). The very life of the believer is Christ and the believer has been baptized into Christ by the Spirit (I Co 12:13). It is Christ who looses us from our sins by His blood (Rev 1:5), but it is the Spirit who cleanses us in the inner person. For Christ to save sinners in the biblical way, which is to regenerate them and cleanse them from sin, then He had to purchase all those things for them. For Him to purchase all of those blessings for them, He had to purchase the Spirit who works those things and applies them. Conversion, then, is truly all of grace since God alone can do this work of regenerating and renewing. The agent of a salvation that is all of grace has to be God and not a human being. The agent of conversion is the Holy Spirit who was purchased by Christ. Humility is the proper response.

Pride, Part 12

April 23, 2009

Ezekiel 28:17 – “Your heart was lifted up because of your beauty; You corrupted your wisdom by reason of your splendor.”

We have seen the progression of pride from Satan to the human race. In previous BLOGS, we saw how it is pride that moves a person to violate God’s commands. Pride is not just something that comes and goes, but it controls the fallen human being. We can see how Satan deceived Eve and how she was injected, so to speak, with the vile nature of pride. But then we see it coming out in the children of Adam and Eve. Something has gone terribly wrong with the human race. God created human beings good, but they fell and now pride was ruling in them.

Now the man had relations with his wife Eve, and she conceived and gave birth to Cain, and she said, “I have gotten a man-child with the help of the LORD.” 2 Again, she gave birth to his brother Abel. And Abel was a keeper of flocks, but Cain was a tiller of the ground. 3 So it came about in the course of time that Cain brought an offering to the LORD of the fruit of the ground. 4 Abel, on his part also brought of the firstlings of his flock and of their fat portions. And the LORD had regard for Abel and for his offering; 5 but for Cain and for his offering He had no regard. So Cain became very angry and his countenance fell. 6 Then the LORD said to Cain, “Why are you angry? And why has your countenance fallen? 7 “If you do well, will not your countenance be lifted up? And if you do not do well, sin is crouching at the door; and its desire is for you, but you must master it.” 8 Cain told Abel his brother. And it came about when they were in the field, that Cain rose up against Abel his brother and killed him. 9 Then the LORD said to Cain, “Where is Abel your brother?” And he said, “I do not know. Am I my brother’s keeper?” (Genesis 4:1-9).

After the fall into sin Adam and Eve had two children (though most likely more). We can imagine this as a drama with tension and dramatic music playing as people wondered if the boys would have this horrible poison of pride in them. We see the pride of jealousy fairly quickly over the issue of bringing offering to the LORD. We see pride in Cain when he was mad and angry with Abel because Abel’s offering was accepted while Cain’s was not. Instead of looking at himself and asking God for what the correct offering would be, Cain was proud of his work and of his offering. There are some things here that should teach us about worship. God will not just accept any worship or offerings that we decide we want to offer. It is sheer arrogance on our part not to follow the ways and commands of God in worship. We can see the pride in Cain when he thought God should accept his offering, but we don’t see the pride in our own hearts when we try to determine what worship is according to our own desires.

The LORD warned Cain that sin was crouching at his door and it desired him. He told Abel, but did not take heed to himself. The LORD had warned Cain and asked him why he was angry. In other words, the LORD was pointing to the pride in Cain’s heart. The problem was not with Abel but with the pride in Cain’s heart. Here we also see the continuance of the pride of Adam and Eve. As soon as the fall occurred, Adam blamed Eve and Eve blamed the devil. One sign of pride in the heart is when a person will not take the blame for sin but instead always blames another. Cain continued that practice of pride by blaming Abel in the issue of the offerings rather than look in his own heart. We then see the pride of Cain in that he was so angry with Abel that he killed him. Cain took the life of Abel which only God has a right to. In this act there was great pride in Cain and he violated all the commandments from his great pride. Murder is a hideous act of pride and demonstrates a self-centered and self-focused person that is more concerned with self than the welfare of other human beings and of the rights and honor of God.

As the story moves on we see the hardening of Cain’s heart. He was mad at Abel, but now he has no one else to blame but God. So he lashes out at God. It is when pride has blinded us and has taken our wisdom away that we think we can lie to God. Maybe this was also being like Adam who tried to hide from God. His answer about not being his brother’s keeper demonstrates much pride since he is talking to God. We began with the birth of Cain and went to the rejected worship of Cain. It shows the pride in Cain’s heart as he blamed Abel and then killed him. He then lied to God and was “smart” with God. The poison of Satan (pride) was now being seen in the children of men. The enmity between the seeds is also between blood brothers. As Satan deceived Eve through a serpent, so he now murders though his children. Satan was the real murderer from the beginning (Jn 8:44). How awful pride really is, though we see it better in others. It is much easier to see pride in others and blame others rather than self.