Hating God

January 3, 2009

The nature of sin has virtually been lost in our day. The nature of human beings has been virtually lost in our day. The nature and character of God has virtually been lost in our day. These three things fit together as well. The very nature of a sinner, as described by Ephesians 2:1-3, is that s/he is dead in its sins and trespasses and by nature is a child of wrath. In this we see that a person by nature is a sinner. In other words, as has been said many times in history, a man is not a sinner because he sins but sins because he is a sinner. The nature that all human beings are born with is that of sin. What is sin? I John 3:4 defines sin for us as lawlessness. But what is lawlessness? Jesus taught us in the Great Commandments that the law is only kept by love. What we see, then, is that human beings are born dead in sin and live in sins and trespasses (violating the law of God). By definition sin is that which is not love and the Greatest Commandment is love for God. What is a human being doing if s/he does not love God?

Here is an important point. Sinners do not just do things that are bad, but they are bad. The reason they are bad is that they do not have the love of God in them and are by nature sinners against God. But if they do not have the love of God in them, they are actually haters of Him. This is not a pleasant teaching and it will not tickle the ears of those who read or hear it. However, it is biblical. Human beings are divided into two camps. It has been said many times that all human beings are either saints or aints. That is true, but even more all human beings either love God or they hate Him. It is hard for people to hear that their nice relative who is very religious and does good things might actually hate the true God. But that is exactly what Scripture teaches.

The Pharisees were very religious and claimed to love God. But when the perfect love of God came to earth in human flesh, they hated Him. When Jesus Christ raised Lazarus from the dead, they hated Him for that and wanted to kill Jesus and Lazarus. When Jesus did miracles and the people followed Him, the Pharisees hated Jesus. They began to fear that they would lose their positions of power and influence and so they tried even harder to kill Jesus. The same thing would be true today. If Jesus came back in bodily form it would be demonstrated to all that man hate God. When the true God is preached in the glory of His sovereignty and grace people hate that God. Men and women who are dead in the sin of love for themselves and their own sufficiency hate the command of God to love Him with all of their being and to die to self and trust in His sufficiency.

James 4:4 gives us some of this teaching that is so unpleasant to the natural man: “You adulteresses, do you not know that friendship with the world is hostility toward God? Therefore whoever wishes to be a friend of the world makes himself an enemy of God.” This text does not mince words and beat around the bush in order to hide the things that pierce the heart. It tells us without equivocation that a simple friendship with the world, not to mention to love the world as John teaches in I John, is an act of spiritual adultery and is hostility toward God. These are not easy words and we must try to understand them rather than explain them away. Before James 4:4 he gives us a basic idea of what worldliness is like: “What is the source of quarrels and conflicts among you? Is not the source your pleasures that wage war in your members? 2 You lust and do not have; so you commit murder. You are envious and cannot obtain; so you fight and quarrel. You do not have because you do not ask. 3 You ask and do not receive, because you ask with wrong motives, so that you may spend it on your pleasures” (James 4:1-3).

Notice that James is writing to religious people and those within the professing Church. In verses 1-3 he does not speak of committing physical adultery, but instead as lusting for things that led to their quarreling. The reason these people had so many conflicts is that they sought their pleasures and even prayed for them (apparently) at the expense of others. A mere friendship with the world is defined in this context as seeking for certain pleasures. This is what God terms to us as spiritual adultery. Spiritual adultery is when a soul is unfaithful to its Creator. Spiritual adultery is when a soul chooses worldly things for its pleasures rather than God. Spiritual adultery is when the soul prays for its pleasures rather than prays to seek God. Spiritual adultery is when there are quarrels and conflicts in a church because some are seeking worldly pleasures rather than the love of God. This friendship with the world is hostility toward God and makes self an enemy of God. We must not think that this only speaks to really evil things, but it speaks to all that desire the pleasures and things of the world even if they are in the name of religion. Our religion itself can be a seeking of our own pleasure and a hating of God. All religious people also either hate God or love Him. All liberals either hate God or love Him. All conservatives either hate God or love Him. All Arminians either hate God or love Him. All Reformed people either hate God or love Him. All unbelievers hate God and all true believers love Him. It is one or the other as there is no middle ground at all.

The Power of the Gospel, Part 12

January 1, 2009

Romans 1:16 – “For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek.”

Colossians 1:13 – “For He rescued us from the domain of darkness, and transferred us to the kingdom of His beloved Son,”

If the Lord Jesus Christ who is King of Kings came to deliver His people from the dominion of darkness, Satan, and sin (Col 1:13), then a person only has Christ if that person is broken from the bondage of sin. A true believer in Christ is one that has Christ the King in his or her soul. The Gospel is powerful because King Jesus is powerful in the soul. The true believer is one that has been transferred from the domain and dominion of darkness which consists in the power of the loves and lusts of the self-centered heart. The true believer is one that is now in the kingdom of Christ which is to be under the reign and rule of Jesus Christ. It is not that the believer is just one who has prayed a prayer and made some changes in the behavior, but the true believer is the one that God has changed the heart. A believer is one whose deepest beliefs, convictions and loves come from the indwelling Christ.

This certainly does not mean that a person will be perfect, but simply that the Gospel of Jesus Christ does deliver a person from bondage by the power of the Gospel or the power of God in Christ. The true believer in Christ Jesus is one who has Christ Jesus as his or her true belief because Christ is the life of the heart of that person. No longer is that person is bondage to the death of spiritual self. No longer is that person ruled over by his or her own lusts of deceit. No longer is that person in bondage to the ways of the world. The believer is indeed not a perfect person, but now the believer has life in Christ. Now the believer has the life of Christ in him or her. Now the believer has the Holy Spirit restraining sin and working to extricate sin. Now the believer has the power of God working in him or her to kill sin and to bow in complete submission to the living God.

We are so used to hearing something called the gospel that depends upon the act of human beings. But the Gospel of Jesus Christ depends upon the acts of the living God. The Gospel of Jesus Christ is the power of God for salvation and not the power of man to save self. The Gospel of Jesus Christ demands that the Gospel be the power of God because no human being has the power to overcome one little sin. No human being has the power to change his or her heart or to overcome the deceitful heart of self. No human being can do one thing to rescue him or herself from the dominion of the devil and of darkness. The devil has far more power than human beings and far more wisdom. He has a human heart that loves self to work with. No human being can outwit or overpower the evil one who works in the human according to that human’s love which is for self. All that the unbeliever sees is through the eyes of self. All that the unbeliever loves is out of love for self. The unbeliever hates because self-love is threatened. The unbeliever hates when the authority and sufficiency of self is threatened. So the unbeliever can and will never be able to extricate him or herself from the power and web of deceit that the evil one has thrown over his or her mind and heart. Only the power of God and His Gospel can do that.

It is said that the most dangerous thing to a lifeguard is the person that is drowning will fight too much and prevent himself from being saved and also be a great danger to the lifeguard. That is a picture of what happens when a false gospel is given to people. They are told that if they will pray a prayer or make a decision that they will be saved. Those are nothing but the actions of the dead self and cannot save because only the Gospel of God is powerful to salvation. A sinner must give up in total despair of all hope in self and look to the true power that will truly save. In 1671 Joseph Alleine wrote An Alarm to the Unconverted. In it he told sinners that “Never think you can convert yourself. If ever you would be savingly converted, you must despair of doing it in your own strength. It is a resurrection from the dead (Eph 2:1), a new creation (Gal 5:15; Eph 2:10), a work of absolute omnipotence (Eph 1:19). Are not these out of the reach of human power? If you have no more than you had by your first birth, a good nature, a meek and chaste temper etc., you are a stranger to true conversion. This is a supernatural work.” We read of the older writers saying things like this over and over. Today we are told not to offend people and to tell people things they can do. That is nothing more and nothing less than the devil would tell people. People must see the depths of their sin and the bondage they are in or they will not give up all hope in themselves and be turned to be like little children who look to receive Christ and Christ alone. The Gospel is of infinite power or we have no hope. The Gospel is the work of the power of God and He will not share His glory. We must be broken from self.

The Power of the Gospel, Part 11

December 30, 2008

Romans 1:16 – “For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek.”

The Gospel of God and of Jesus Christ is a Gospel of power beyond what the mind can conceive. We have forgotten that it is the Gospel that is powerful rather than our presentation of a message and so rely on our ability to talk people into things rather than the power of God in the Gospel to change human hearts. We have learned to rely on human rhetoric and talking people into things rather than relying on the power of God. We have learned to get people to change their behavior rather than to point them to God who can change hearts. The utterance of words in a prayer followed by behavior modification is a poor alternative to the power of God to change hearts.

The old self is, as Ephesians 4:22 sets out, “being corrupted in accordance with the lusts of deceit.” The old self is in a continual state of corruption and needs a new heart rather than just some new behaviors. I Peter 1:14 says that obedient children are not “conformed to the former lusts which were yours in your ignorance.” To put the matter plainly, the old self will always be the old self. It will always be in a state of corruption in accordance with its lusts of deceit. The old self will always be conforming to lusts that are in ignorance. Even if a person says a prayer and follows some form of behavior modification, unless the heart is changed that person is simply a religious person following the lusts of the hearts in ignorance of itself and so continuing on in a state of corruption.

The nature of a human being is that it seeks to keep its pain at a minimum and to maximize its pleasure. This is to say that all human beings are hedonists by nature. We make every choice according to what appears best to the soul and that which will minimize our pain and lead to our pleasure. For some people that means taking up religion and following an arduous path of stringent religious activity. For others that means giving self to what is known as living on the wild side. The latter group is living for the present pleasure and the former group desires to live for what they think of as a future pleasure though they obtain a fair amount of pleasure or contentment by the honor they obtain in their religious groups. Both groups, however, are still living according to self rather than living by a faith that lives by grace. Both groups are at war with God though in appearance one does not seem that way.

Virtually all of the ancient philosophies said something about the good life and what that meant. The Pharisees, on the other hand, also lived for their own pleasure and they loved the honor they received by being so stringent (outwardly) in their commitment to God. They took pleasure in men looking at them and honoring them when they prayed. They took pleasure in men looking at them and honoring them when they gave money to the poor and fasted. The secular philosophies led people to pursue pleasure in various ways. The Pharisees sought their pleasures in a different way and yet thought it would be good for eternal things as well.

What both sets of pleasure seekers needed was the Gospel. All need a new heart so that they may repent of seeking their own honor and pleasure and live to the pleasure and glory of God. The Gospel is one of great power because it takes sinners who seek their own pleasure and changes their hearts so that now they love God and seek His pleasure. The true evangelist is to go about sowing seeds knowing that it is the human heart that must be changed. The true evangelist knows that a human heart will deceive itself and others by making a profession of faith and yet not truly be converted. The human heart is in such bondage to self and self-love that out of love for itself it will make a choice and some behavior modification. “The seed which fell among the thorns, these are the ones who have heard, and as they go on their way they are choked with worries and riches and pleasures of this life, and bring no fruit to maturity” (Luke 8:14). There are those who make professions and yet without a changed heart the seed that was planted gets choked out with worries, riches, and the pleasures of life.

The seed of the true Gospel will bear fruit when it is planted in the soul by God. It is the Gospel which changes the heart and so the Holy Spirit is there and the fruit of the Spirit is love and joy. Those who have changed hearts have a different joy than the world. These are the ones who have food and joy that the world knows not of. These are the ones that have Christ the vine sharing with them His sweet nectar. These are the ones that know what it means to have the joy of the Lord in their souls. These are the ones that have the very joy of Christ in them. No longer is their chief joy and pleasure in the things of self, whether worldly or religious self, but now they have access to the true and living hope and joy of God in the resurrection of Christ who now lives in their soul. That is true power.

The Seeking Church, Part 26

December 29, 2008

While talking about the seeking church sounds so negative to many, it is not. If we accept as fact that the Lord has turned His face from the professing Church, then all that is needed to seek Him in order for Him to turn His face toward us and shine His glory in us is positive. Repentance sounds so negative to people, but it is the heart being turned from sin and toward God. There has been and continues to be a massive problem with liberalism in the professing Church in our day, but there has been and continues to be some of the same problems in our day that the Pharisees had when Jesus dealt with them in His day. Sure we call them by other names, but the principle is the same. It is not even that one has to be a Pharisee to imbibe some of the principles of the Pharisees. But one can certainly take on one or more of the principles of the Pharisees by reacting to liberalism and simply by trying to be conservative rather than biblical. We must always be on the alert to the dangers from both sides of issues if we truly desire to seek and worship the Lord in spirit and truth.

Matthew 23:13 – “But woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites, because you shut off the kingdom of heaven from people; for you do not enter in yourselves, nor do you allow those who are entering to go in. 14 Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites, because you devour widows’ houses, and for a pretense you make long prayers; therefore you will receive greater condemnation. 15 Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites, because you travel around on sea and land to make one proselyte; and when he becomes one, you make him twice as much a son of hell as yourselves.”

In this passage we see some great dangers. In verse 13 (above) we see the terrible danger of adding to the Gospel and of subtracting as well. In one sense the Pharisees added to the Gospel by giving people many things they needed to do to be saved, but in another sense they subtracted from the Gospel by not telling the people that their hearts needed to be changed by God Himself. Whenever a person arrives at some sense of self-assurance about his or her state of conversion that person has shut him or herself off from the kingdom and then begins to teach on that experience. When a false experience is taken to be the standard for conversion, then the kingdom is in one sense shut off from others. A person that has assurance in some way and yet is not converted will be teaching other people the way of salvation and yet be seeking for more confirmation of his or her own. If a person began to seek a true conversion according to Scripture the one that is trusting in a false conversion would try to change the other person back to the false view since it is the way s/he trusts in for conversion.

The scribes and the Pharisees came up with their own ways of interpreting Scripture and their own ways of seeking salvation. Indeed they had plenty of academic and biblical support, but they were lambasted by Jesus on their approach to virtually everything. They had developed a view and they had their verses, their academics, and then they had their experiences to back them up. But all of these things came together and kept the scribes and the Pharisees from entering in and a zeal for those things kept others from entering in. We must not separate the zeal of the scribes and the Pharisees for their positions from their pride and their own way of salvation. It is hard for people to admit that they are wrong and unconverted when they have some verses of Scripture, many academics, and their own experience on their side. It is hard for people to admit that their hearts are not changed when they have changed their opinions on so many things and they have made many moral changes. The human heart is more deceitful than all things (Jeremiah 17:9) and it wants to deceive itself about its own salvation. When it has the support of others, it will leap at the opportunity to deceive itself.

Could it be that there are many in our churches today that are deceived? Could it be that there are many conservative people trusting in their conservatism to be saved? Could it be that there are many who are trusting in their Reformed theology as an evidence of their salvation? Could it be that there are preachers who are trusting in their own preaching to be saved? Could it be that there are many academics that are trusting in their academic qualifications to be saved? Could it be that there are many who are trusting in a false gospel to be saved that has been argued well by the academics and is supported with verses of Scripture? These things happened to the Pharisees and they have happened throughout the history of the Church as well. Are we so arrogant to think that we cannot be deceived as well? We can trust in so many things without having a new heart and convince ourselves that we believe in Christ. What if what we think about what it means to believe is wrong? The Lord has turned His face we must begin to search our hearts and the churches with broken hearts desiring Him no matter where it leads.

The scribes and the Pharisees were united together in their thinking in what it meant to be saved. The Pharisees then went out (see Mat 23:15, quoted above) and traveled across the land and sea to make one convert. Their zeal in their evangelism was very impressive. They were “soul winners” and perhaps missionaries of sorts. The problem, however, is that they were also unconverted and going about with great zeal with a false gospel. When their great efforts were rewarded with a proselyte all that happened was that the person became a son of hell. That may sound harsh to our ears, but they are the words of Jesus. Great attention has been and is still given to evangelism and missions. Would Jesus say the same things about our efforts as He did about the efforts of the Pharisees? Could it be that He would tell us that we are going across land and sea to make converts but all we are doing is turning others into sons of hell? While we look down our noses at the Pharisees are we similar to them in that we are doing the same things though perhaps in a different way? How can it be that our church buildings can have people coming in and yet the power and presence of God not be among us? How can it be that we have so much of our own planning and activity and yet we do not see the activity of God? How can it be that we are so eager to tell others of the Gospel and yet we don’t see the power of the Gospel? It is explained by the fact that God has turned His face and has withdrawn His presence from us leaving us to our own wisdom and efforts.

If God has withdrawn understanding from us, then we may have wrong ideas of what sin really is. The Pharisees, who were very conservative, were also very wrong on the nature of sin. Could it be that we have turned from what true repentance is. After all, if we have been led astray on the nature of sin we will not understand what it means to turn from sin either. If we are wrong on the nature of sin and true repentance, then we might also be wrong on the nature of true conversion from sin to Christ. The Pharisees had their Bibles, the academic opinions, the correct doctrines (they thought), evangelistic experiences and were admired by the people. But they did not know the way of salvation and God was fighting them rather than giving them Himself. They had converts, though they were not converted to Christ.

The modern professing Church needs to go back to its very foundations and do that from the heart. Prayer meetings are few and far between and do not seem to be marked by a seeking of the Lord Himself with the desires of the heart. The gospel that is going out is an intellectual message that depends on the power of man to respond. The Gospel of Jesus Christ is the Gospel of God and it is the power of God for salvation to all who believe. We have turned from God as being our focus in worship and in evangelism and instead have resorted to a man-centered focus using man-centered means. Men and women must know what their sin is in order to seek God who alone can turn them from their sin and give them new hearts. The churches must seek the Lord from the heart and yet in true evangelism the hearts of the people must be changed. We must deal with God in the churches and we must teach others in our evangelism that they must deal with God too.

In a theoretical world we can imagine what would happen if no one had Bibles. People would be blind to the true nature of sin and they would be blind to the Gospel. Yet in the real world the Pharisees were blinded by God in His judgment on them to the true nature of sin and to the Gospel. They read their Bibles (so to speak) and studied them with great diligence, but they were blinded to it. Perhaps they were blinded to the words of God by their own conservatism (pride in not being liberal) and their own scholars. Perhaps they were blinded by their own outward morality. But they were deceived and they were blinded. Let us not assume that God cannot blind us today as well. Let us seek the Lord to give us the light of His glory in the face of Christ and to show us where we are blinded. We also can be deceived by our conservatism, our morality, and our scholars. Having a gospel in name is not the same thing as having the true Gospel. Having the true Gospel in theory is also not the same thing as having the true Gospel change our hearts. For churches that want God in truth it will require a lot of seeking from the heart. It might even require a change of heart. Jesus was severe in His denunciations of the Pharisees. If we have their principles as ours even though in a different name, His denunciation of us is fact. We must learn that our views of conservatism, our evangelism, our morality, our view of sin, and our Reformed theology may not be biblical in truth and will not save. Perhaps even what we think is the gospel will not save. Only the true God working through the true Gospel of Jesus Christ can save. People must be converted by God and not just change themselves. The light of truth must break through our sacred cows and our deceitful hearts. We are truly in the hands of God whether we hate it as the Pharisees did or not. We must bow in utter submission to the true and only Sovereign.

The Power of the Gospel, Part 10

December 28, 2008

Romans 1:16 – “For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek.”

In the text of Romans 1:16 there is another issue that we need to be very aware of. It is the issue of shame. Paul was not ashamed of the Gospel because it was (and is) the power of God for salvation. Today, however, there is evidently a lot of shame because people have watered down the Gospel to a gospel that is nothing more than the power of man. It is when men are ashamed before others to tell the truth of the depravity of man and therefore of the power of the Gospel that what we preach and teach becomes less than the Gospel in our mouths. It is embarrassing to stand and tell people that they are dead in sin and trespasses when that is viewed as archaic and foolish. It is embarrassing to tell people that they are in bondage to sin and that they love themselves so much they will not love God. It is embarrassing to tell people that they are their own idols and are in slavery to their own love for themselves. It is embarrassing to tell people that they cannot save themselves at all but are utterly dependant upon the power of God.

It is easier just to tell people to admit to a little sin here and then that all they need to do is to pray a prayer to be saved. It is easy to tell people that God loves them and wants them to come to heaven with Him. But it is hard to tell nice and even religious people that the wrath of God abides upon them and that they are headed to an eternal hell where His wrath will be poured out on them in perfect justice and holiness. Why is it hard? It is because we love ourselves and don’t want other people to get mad at us. It is because we love the applause of others and desire others to think highly of us. It is because we don’t want to get yelled at and we don’t want others to think lowly of us. However, what we must realize is that we live and speak in the presence of God and it is the living God that we are to please rather than other people. If we live to please people in and of themselves, we will not live to please the living God and we end up doing nothing positive for the souls of other people either.

Paul was not ashamed of the Gospel and was eager to preach it because it was the power of God for salvation. Perhaps we are not eager to preach it and ashamed of it because we have too low a view of God and of the Gospel. Maybe it is that we think too much power is in the hands of human beings and so we approach human beings as if the power is in them. Perhaps we think that if we offend them that they will not make a choice we are trying to get them to make. But the Gospel is offensive to unconverted people. It is offensive to those who openly hate God and it is offensive to those who try to hide their own hateful heart behind their religion. But all that we do is to be done for God. The Gospel is all about who God is. After all, the Gospel is the shining forth of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ (II Cor 4:6). When we try to preach a gospel that is built on our shamed of the truth of who God is, we are preaching something other than the true Gospel. The Gospel requires that we declare the truth of who God is and how He shines forth in Jesus Christ. When we are ashamed of the Gospel we are ashamed of God Himself because it is the Gospel of God.

Let us review for a moment the words of Paul: “So, for my part, I am eager to preach the gospel to you also who are in Rome. 16 For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek” (Romans 1:15-16). Paul was eager to preach the Gospel. Why was he eager to preach the Gospel? He gives us the answer. It was because he was not ashamed of the gospel. If we are not eager to preach the true Gospel, perhaps it is because we are ashamed of it. We can be eager to preach something like the Gospel for religious benefits, but we will only be eager to preach the true Gospel if we are not ashamed of it. Why was Paul not ashamed of the Gospel and so was eager to preach it? It was because the Gospel is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes.

We have watered down the message of sin in our day because we are ashamed to tell people about sin. We are not eager to preach the Gospel because we are ashamed of it. Perhaps we are ashamed of it because it is foolish to us as well. Perhaps, then, the Gospel itself is almost lost in our day because we don’t see it as the very power of God for salvation. Maybe we are preaching a weak and effeminate form that we call a gospel and are ashamed of that. What we must know is that there is only one Gospel and it is a Gospel of power. People may see it as foolish and weak, but we must preach the Gospel of God’s power in His power. Even if they ridicule and mock, the Gospel of God’s power can still change their hearts. If we water it down, it is then and only then truly foolish and weak.

The Power of the Gospel, Part 9

December 25, 2008

Romans 1:16 – “For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek.”

It must be a continuing source of amazement to us that the Gospel is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes. The omnipotent God who brought all things into being by an act of His will and by definition is in the heavens and does what He pleases (Psalm 115:3) is the God whose power to save is described in the Gospel. When people water down the teaching of depravity, they are also watering down the nature of the Gospel and the very power of God. The Gospel is no longer thought of as the power of God for salvation, but it is thought of as within the power of the person to do what s/he needs to do to be part of salvation. The Gospel of Jesus Christ and the Gospel of God is a Gospel of a power beyond what the human mind can conceive and we must be careful not to treat it as some common thing.

Ephesians 2:3 describes the lost sinner: “Among them we too all formerly lived in the lusts of our flesh, indulging the desires of the flesh and of the mind, and were by nature children of wrath, even as the rest.” The sinner that Ephesians 2:1 describes as dead in sins and trespasses is one that lives in the lusts of the flesh. The whole life of the unbeliever is one that is lived in the lusts of the flesh. All that the unbeliever does is to indulge the desires of the flesh and of the mind. The unbeliever follows the desires of his or he flesh and mind and so is in the loving bondage of self. This is a slavery that the unbeliever cannot extricate him or herself from and does not want to be delivered from. This is slavery to self and the unbeliever loves self with all of his or her heart, mind, soul, and strength. The unbeliever, simply out of self-love, will make religious commitments and even a lot of moral and behavioral modification. But the unbeliever cannot deliver self from self. As long as the self is the intent and purpose of the action, self is an idol. The self is the motivation and the goal of each action. The self is the energy and strength of each action. As long as a sinner is not delivered from self, that sinner is in utter bondage.

The very nature of the unbeliever, as Ephesians 2:3 points out, is that of a child of wrath. The nature of the unbeliever is to live in unbelief which means that the unbeliever is living with the wrath of God abiding upon him or her (John 3:36). It is not in the power of a sinner to change his or her nature. As long as the unbeliever is in the power of self, that unbeliever will do nothing but follow the self which is to be a child of wrath. When self is our idol and we do all for self, then we do all out of love for our idol and idolatry is that which God’s wrath is upon. The problem of idolatry is not that the human soul serves other things, but that it uses idols to denigrate the being of God and then to serve itself. The real idol of idol worship is the self. God has been brought down to be a little god and self is trying to manipulate god for the purposes and loves of self. By nature, then, human beings are given over to the power and love of self and all that they do is in loving slavery to self-love. Human beings look to self for strength to do the desires of self and so all they do is for self and from self.

When Christianity loses sight of the glory of God and of what sin really is it degenerates into nothing more than a religion of self wrapped in the teachings about a God that serves us. It becomes a system of rituals and of ways that man tries to please God in some way in order to please self or for self-preservation. Scripture warns us very clearly that men will be religious for self and will do anything for self. The Pharisees were examples of that and indeed the nature of all unbelievers is that way. Apparently there were some who even tried to die in the name of Christ and yet did not have true love. I Corinthians 13:1-3 alludes to this and there were some reports that this was a problem in that people wanted to go straight to heaven. But the root of what they were doing was an attempt to earn salvation by their own suffering and death. That is nothing but self in the guise of religion.

Who can deliver us from this body of sin and of death? Who can deliver us from this great burden of the slavery to self and its selfish desires and loves even when the outward appearance is that of being a great servant? It is only Jesus Christ Himself who can deliver a human being from such an awful bondage. It is only Christ in the Gospel that promises to deliver from sin. What can take away my sin? Nothing but the blood of Jesus. What can change my heart from being in slavery to self to be in loving bondage to the living God? There is no power that can do that but the power of the living God in Jesus Christ. How we denigrate the Gospel of God when we think and talk of it as just a little message that a person only needs to pray a prayer over. No, no, and a million times no. The Gospel is the power of God to save and is not in the power of man to do so. It is to His glory and His glory alone.

The Power of the Gospel, Part 8

December 23, 2008

Romans 1:16 – “For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek.”

Many in the modern church operate by what they want and desire. They gather teachers to tickle their ears and they “worship” the way they do because “I like it.” We might think of this as selfish on their part, but in fact it is how the sinful heart operates. The sinful heart always does what it wants the most. The sinful heart is enslaved to its lusts and pleasures. The sinful heart is in bondage to its own lusts and pleasures and will always choose what pleases it the most. The sinful heart will become religious and even be very devout in that religion but it will not give up its control and it will still operate according to its own lusts and pleasures. The sinful heart, as set out in Titus 3:3 and Jeremiah 17:9, is a deceitful heart as well. This sinful heart can defend its sinful lusts and pleasures by giving spiritual and apparently rational reasons. It will also defend itself and even its own sinful lusts and pleasures by referring to the Bible. It will do this in the world and it will do this at church. The sinful heart follows its own lusts and pleasures rather than denying itself and following Christ. “For we also once were foolish ourselves, disobedient, deceived, enslaved to various lusts and pleasures, spending our life in malice and envy, hateful, hating one another” (Titus 3:3).

The effects of following our sinful hearts are simply the effects of living for self rather than for God. All the destruction of the soul and body that follow sin are the result of following after the lusts and pleasures of the heart. The heart is deceitful above all else (Jer 17:9), but what the heart does in its deception is make excuses and give a rationale for following its own desires and pleasures. The heart is in such bondage to itself that it will follow itself to destruction. The heart that is in slavery to its lusts and pleasures will interpret all things in light of how to obtain and keep its lusts and pleasures. This is a heart that is in full deceit of itself and of others. This sinful heart will deceive others in order to obtain its lusts and pleasures. That kind of heart is one that will flatter others or curse others in order to obtain what it is lusting after. That kind of heart will make all sorts of arguments to defend itself and to give good reasons for what it did because, according to it, the heart will always have a good reason (itself) for what it did. After all, the god of each sinful heart is itself. So the heart was deceived by what it wanted and will continue to deceive itself when it commits acts of sin to get what it desires. The sinful heart is its own standard of morality and its lusts and desires determine for it what its own ultimate morality is. It expects God to agree.

We simply do not understand in our day that God must not only save us from hell to save us, but He must save us from our own hearts in order to save us. If God saved us from hell but left us in our sin, we would not be saved but have the brood of hell in our very own bosom. There is no hell apart from sin. It is impossible to save a person from hell apart from saving them from their sin. That is why the Gospel is a Gospel of the power of God. The book of Ephesians points to a few things in this regard: “that, in reference to your former manner of life, you lay aside the old self, which is being corrupted in accordance with the lusts of deceit” (Eph 4:22). The word “corrupt” also has the meanings of ruin, destroy, lead astray and seduce. The lusts in the heart are deceitful. The lusts in the heart show us how we are being ruined and destroyed. The lusts in the heart seduce us and lead us astray. Much like the woman in the book of Proverbs (7:6-27) who enticed, deceived and persuaded the young man to follow her to sin, so our own lusts do the same thing to our own hearts. We see something and our hearts deceive us about it as the lusts entice and persuade us to do it. We want to do it, yet we are in bondage to our lusts which lead us to death.

The Gospel of Jesus Christ must be powerful to break the stranglehold of hearts that are deceived and yet follow after the lusts and pleasures of the soul. The soul that is enslaved to its lusts and pleasures is a soul that will hate the one that demands that the soul turn from its lusts and pleasures. It is not just that the soul must suffer in not fulfilling its lusts and pleasures, but the heart must be changed to having different desires and pleasures. The Gospel is not a Gospel at all if it leaves people in the bondage and enslavement of their old lusts and pleasures. The Gospel of Jesus Christ who is the power of God for salvation changes hearts and as such changes the pleasures of the soul in order that the soul will be a love-slave to God. The Gospel speaks of a God who is the pleasure of His people: “You will make known to me the path of life; In Your presence is fullness of joy; In Your right hand there are pleasures forever” (Psa 16:11). Jesus came to change the joy and pleasure of the heart: “These things I have spoken to you so that My joy may be in you, and that your joy may be made full” (John 15:11). Would it be a powerful Gospel without a change of the pleasures of the heart from being enslaved to self to love for God?

The Seeking Church, Part 25

December 23, 2008

The modern professing Church in America is in dire straights. The Lord has turned His face and is giving it over to the plans and activities of men. There are conferences and methods galore and yet He is not coming to His people in power. For several weeks we have been looking at how the professing Church is to return to the Lord. It must seek the face of the Lord rather than the things the Lord gives. It must not settle for religious activity and be deceived by that activity. It must not be deceived by busyness and by external successes. It must not settle for anything but God Himself. Our hearts are so deceitful that we can believe that virtually anything is a sign of the Lord’s hand upon us. Instead of looking to ourselves trusting in our own hearts, we must seek the Lord to give us hearts that desire Him above all things. We must begin to look at the nature of true conversion instead of receiving mere outward professions. We must examine what justification is and what true faith is. We must search the Scriptures on what the Bible teaches about justification by faith alone. We must also look and ask ourselves how much like the Pharisees we really are. This might be something we have deceived ourselves about too.

In Matthew 23 we see several teachings of Jesus about the Pharisees. It is easy for us to read over these quickly as things no relevant to us. However, there are principles here that we must be aware of. Could it be that the spirit of the Pharisees is not just something that we read about that happened in the past but is also descriptive of something that is present now? “Then Jesus spoke to the crowds and to His disciples, 2 saying: “The scribes and the Pharisees have seated themselves in the chair of Moses; 3 therefore all that they tell you, do and observe, but do not do according to their deeds; for they say things and do not do them. 4 “They tie up heavy burdens and lay them on men’s shoulders, but they themselves are unwilling to move them with so much as a finger. 5 “But they do all their deeds to be noticed by men; for they broaden their phylacteries and lengthen the tassels of their garments. 6 “They love the place of honor at banquets and the chief seats in the synagogues, 7 and respectful greetings in the market places, and being called Rabbi by men. 8 “But do not be called Rabbi; for One is your Teacher, and you are all brothers. 9 “Do not call anyone on earth your father; for One is your Father, He who is in heaven. 10 “Do not be called leaders; for One is your Leader, that is, Christ. 11 “But the greatest among you shall be your servant. 12 “Whoever exalts himself shall be humbled; and whoever humbles himself shall be exalted.”

Let us pray that we will be very honest with our own hearts as we read passages like this. We usually read this and don’t give it much thought as we don’t see people doing this today. However, if we think through this there may be some application to our day. We have people in our day that are seated in the chair of Moses. What we must be careful to do is distinguish between those with the true gift of teaching and the right heart and those who do not. There are some in the academic circles and there are those who are leaders in the churches who are teachers and use the position for something other than the honor of Christ. There are leaders who indeed lay heavy burdens on the shoulders of others by teaching stringent things about duties. There are heavy burdens placed upon men and women by placing all the stress of life on their shoulders. Women are told that they should have many children and they must school all the children at home while they must keep the house clean and at all costs they should wait on their husbands to make sure he is pleased each moment. This is dangerous territory but we must enter it.

Husbands are told that they are to rule the house and all things that go on. They are told by some that they are the only ones that are to teach the children. Some will tell the husband that if there is a problem in the marriage or home regardless of what it is that the problem is with him. What a burden these things are to some people (and there are others). Are these specific duties that the Bible sets out for people or are they deductions that people have made from a few verses? People are being greatly burdened today by things that the Bible does not set out with a great deal of clarity. Jesus also said that His burden was easy and His yoke was light (Mat 11:30). It is not that the Christian life is to be easy, but it is not to be an overwhelming burden on people. However, many men and women are burdened by all of the rules that are being placed upon them by those with big names and those in the local church. We must examine everything by Scripture and not just because another says it is a law of the Bible.

Is the Church free from those who do what they do to receive honor and be noticed by others? Without denying an appropriate place for academic success, is there a better way to do this than to heap accolades on people? How do people broaden their phylacteries and lengthen the tassels on their garments today? Perhaps they write books and have radio programs where they tell people of their successes. One man used to have a television show where he and his wife would (seemingly) brag about how many verses he had memorized. What does it mean to love the places of honor today? It could be as simple as wanting to be noticed at meetings or to receive honors from the denomination. These things can be done under the guise of helping others in the kingdom. Who is it that desires to be known and to wield power? Can it be that people love to receive respectful greetings and to be called “rabbi” or teacher under the name of professor or pastor? It is one thing to seek to please God from the heart to teach and it is quite another to teach about God and His Word while desiring honor from others.

There are multitudes of books on leadership of stores that sell “Christian” books. But the clear words of Jesus as given in Matthew 23:10 and quoted above is that no one is to be called a leader. The word for “leader” in this verse is translated by some as “teacher.” It is also used in more modern times as the Greek word for professor. This is looked at in various ways, but we must be very careful if we want to be thoroughly biblical. Regardless of how this word is used, because of the context it cuts into several areas. A teacher was and is a leader in some way. Jesus was a teacher and a leader. One leads in some way by teaching and one teaches in some way by leading. But if we look at this verse in its context what we must see is that a true leader and true teacher is one that points to the one Leader and one Teacher who is Christ. It is Christ alone that is to be pointed to rather than self. Jesus commanded us to make disciples of Himself rather than disciples of any human being. It does not matter how great a scholar or author a man or woman is, that person is to point to Jesus Christ alone. True teachers desire to point people to the true Teacher to be taught. True leaders are those that lead people to the true Leader to be led.

It is one thing to speak of the spirit of what the Bible teaches and it is another to place laws on people. It is my belief that if one looks at the text of Matthew 23:1-12 very closely at all s/he will see that the spirit of the scribes and Pharisees is alive today. Let us not forget the words of Jesus, but also let us examine our own hearts by them: “But the greatest among you shall be your servant. 12 “Whoever exalts himself shall be humbled; and whoever humbles himself shall be exalted” (Mat 23:11-12). The scribes and Pharisees were marked by interpreting the Bible and making rules and then by their desire for the honor and attention of others. Can we say that these things are anything less than rampant today? The mark of true greatness is true humility which is seen in being a servant. It must also be the attitude of the heart. One can do many outward things in an effort to deceive him or herself. What Jesus does is to set out a contrast of attitudes of the heart for us. The contrast is between seeking honor for self, even in outwardly good things, or in pointing others to Christ as the true teacher as a true servant will do.

In academic and denominational circles and in the local churches what we must be willing to see is that everyone must point others to Christ and for that to be the intent of the heart. All believers and unbelievers alike must be pointed to Christ Himself. We can teach with great honor and distinction out of nothing but love for self. We can evangelize in order to make a name for ourselves or in an attempt to fill the churches with numbers. We can do each and everything required by external standards in academic circles, in denominational leadership, and in the local church and yet do it without an ounce of true humility and love. How can we expect the living and true God who will do nothing but what is for the glory of His name to come down and give Himself to us in power when all we do is for the honor and glory of ourselves? How can we expect God to do anything but continue to withdraw Himself from us when we are not concerned first and foremost to humble ourselves before Him? If we are not truly humble before God regardless of our station in life, then we are nothing but men and women who seek the interests of self rather than the interests of God (Phil 2:21). In light of Philippians 2:21 and its context, would Paul have anyone to send in our day to a seminary to teach or to a church to pastor if he required the person to only be concerned about the interests of Christ so as to be one that was concerned about the spiritual welfare of the people?

Denominations and local churches must begin to study Scripture with new eyes and to look at their own hearts apart from self-love and self-esteem. We must look to the Word of God rather than standards brought in by the world and imposed upon the Bible and then the people in the churches. We must beware of the leaven (teachings) of the Pharisees (Mat 16:6). It matters not how big or small a person may have, we are to beware of his or her teachings if they have the spirit of the Pharisees in them. It does not matter the academic or denominational position a person may have, Jesus tells us to beware of the leaven of the Pharisees. It does not matter if the person is a favorite conservative or not, Jesus tells us to beware of the leaven of the Pharisees. The Church, a church, and all individuals need to know that not only is there a danger from liberalism, but there is also a great danger from the spirit of the Pharisees that is very much alive in our day. The “beware” of Jesus is part of the inerrant and infallible Word of God that sets out and describes the truth for all ages. That part is inerrant as well.

The Power of the Gospel, Part 7

December 21, 2008

Romans 1:16 – “For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek.”

The nature of the bondage and slavery of sin is necessary to understand for two reasons. One, it is necessary to understand the nature of this in order for people to see themselves as slaves who cannot truly free themselves from their bondage. Two, it is necessary to understand this for people to understand the Gospel of Jesus Christ in truth. If the power of the Gospel is seen in its power to free slaves from the slavery and bondage to sin, then one will only understand the Gospel to the degree that they understand the slavery and bondage of sin.

One way that the Bible (Ephesians and Colossians) describes our bondage to sin is spiritual death. That spiritual death is seen as living and walking in sins and trespasses and being by nature children of wrath (Eph 2:1-3). In the book of Titus there is a shocking verse that describes the nature of sin in another way. “For we also once were foolish ourselves, disobedient, deceived, enslaved to various lusts and pleasures, spending our life in malice and envy, hateful, hating one another” (Titus 3:3). This verse is shocking if we begin to meditate upon what people live for and by. It is shocking when we meditate on what it is that drives people and moves them to make decisions.

Human beings make decisions and choices on the basis of the nature of their entire soul. The soul consists of the capacity to think, the capacity to feel, and then the capacity to choose. However, what we see in Titus 3:3 is that human beings are slaves to lusts and pleasures. The word “lust” has the idea of a passionate longing, the desires of the soul, an earnestness of the soul and perhaps even the impulses of the soul. In other words, to be a slave of our lusts is to be a slave to the things we have passionate longings for and to the deepest desires of our being. It is not that the slavery human beings consists of making them do things they don’t want to do, but it consists in the very desires of the soul. The slavery of human beings in sin is in having and doing the desires of the hearts. This slavery is not in God forcing people to do sin, but in God withdrawing His restraining hand and giving people over to the slavery of the lusts of their hearts. “Therefore God gave them over in the lusts of their hearts to impurity, so that their bodies would be dishonored among them” (Romans 1:24).

The verse above should send waves of shock through our systems. God does not just give people over to outward actions; He gives them over in the lusts of their hearts. If God does not restrain the power of lusts in the human soul, then no one can or will. The human heart will carry out the lusts of its heart when it is no longer ashamed to do so before other human beings or when it no longer has other external constraints. The very judgment of God is in turning people over in the lusts of their hearts and so His judgment is in giving people what they want. Their very desire to be free to carry out the lusts of the heart is a deep form of bondage to sin. The ways of God are certainly above our ways.

In the book of Romans Paul sets out the nature of sin in chaper 1:18-3:20. He then moves to the Gospel in 3:21-5:21, though in chapter five he is speaking of original sin. In chapter six he begins a section on dealing with sin.
“Even so consider yourselves to be dead to sin, but alive to God in Christ Jesus. 12 Therefore do not let sin reign in your mortal body so that you obey its lusts, 13 and do not go on presenting the members of your body to sin as instruments of unrighteousness; but present yourselves to God as those alive from the dead, and your members as instruments of righteousness to God. 14 For sin shall not be master over you, for you are not under law but under grace” (Rom 6:12-14). The believer, as one that has been delivered by the power of God in the Gospel, is to consider him or herself as dead to sin and alive to God. Why is that? It is in light of that that the believer is not to let sin reign in the body so that s/he obeys its lusts. The Gospel has delivered the believer and so that believer is now under the reign of grace rather than the reign and bondage of sin.

The Gospel of Jesus Christ is of great power because it delivers the sinner from the bondage of the lusts that masters him or her. Unbelievers are in great bondage to sin because they are under the dominion of their own lusts that they love. They are also under the dominion of darkness and of the evil one. They are also under the judging hand of God who gives them over to the lusts of their hearts in His judgments. The Gospel of the power of God is, once again, not just some bit of information to believe, it is about the living God who delivers people from the power of their lusts and gives them a love for Himself that controls them rather than the lusts (II Cor 5:14).

The Power of the Gospel, Part 6

December 19, 2008

Romans 1:16 – “For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek.”

The depravity of man is a subject that is not often dealt with and perhaps even less of the time dealt with thoroughly. It is not a positive subject and it is certainly far from a tickle to the ears of those who gather to themselves teachers that will tickle their ears. However, if we desire to deal with our hearts in truth we must struggle with how the Bible describes and exposes our hearts. Part of the “felt” nastiness of the teaching of depravity is that human beings are not just sinners, but are slaves of sin and are even in bondage to sin. This does not fit with our concept of free-will or of some sort of freedom of human beings. However, this is a different kind of bondage. As we have seen the Bible teaches without equivocation and without shame that human beings are slaves of sin and are in bondage to it. “For when you were slaves of sin, you were free in regard to righteousness” (Rom 6:20). “For we know that the Law is spiritual, but I am of flesh, sold into bondage to sin” (Romans 7:14).

If we teach a gospel that is nothing more than delivering a person from our version of hell, then we will not be teaching the Gospel that is the power of God for salvation. The reality that so many refuse to deal with is that human beings are slaves of sin. If a person prays for salvation or has some sort of experience but has not been freed from that slavery, then that person is not a converted person. The true Gospel is the power of God for salvation and part of that salvation is to free sinners from their slavery. But many look to their feelings or interpret reality according to their own desires rather than the spiritual reality that the Bible sets out.

Scripture sets out that human beings are slaves of sin and if now converted they “were slaves of sin.” Notice how the Bible sets things out for us. When a human being is a slave to sin, s/he is free in regard to righteousness. When a human being is freed from the slavery of sin, then s/he is enslaved to God: “But now having been freed from sin and enslaved to God, you derive your benefit, resulting in sanctification, and the outcome, eternal life” (Rom 6:22). In other words, human beings are never completely free as they are always a slave. They are either slaves to sin or slaves to God. Human beings are always free in another sense, though. They are either free from righteousness or they are free from the slavery of sin. So people are correct to say that people are free, but that is not the whole point and does not get at the real issue at hand. It is a terrible slavery to be free of righteousness, yet it is true freedom to be the slave of God. It is in being a slave of God that one is set free by the truth and that one is able to be a lover of God which is true freedom. In fact, it is true life.

There is another truth underlying Romans 7:14 that points to another important point. The Law is spiritual and yet we are of flesh (sinful flesh). Those who are of the flesh and have not been born into the spiritual kingdom are in bondage to the flesh or to sin. The true meaning of the Law at its deepest points has to do with the soul and the spiritual nature of reality and how man is to be like God in the spiritual realm. But those who have not been born from above and are still in the flesh, they are dead to spiritual things and are in utter bondage to sin. They are in bondage to sin because they can do nothing spiritually and the Law can only be kept spiritually. Until a person understands the depths of the Law and its spiritual nature, that person will not understand the depths of his or her bondage to sin. The person in the flesh or the unregenerate nature is a person in complete bondage to sin. That person never obeys one spiritual command and so never fulfills the smallest part of the Law in truth. The person in the flesh has no power over sin because that person has no spiritual nature to do anything with or by. It is to be in the shackles and bonds of a master without any power to deliver self of.

But the Gospel is the power of God for salvation. The Gospel is not just a message with intellectual content to be intellectually believed, but instead it is God Himself in Jesus Christ actually delivering sinners from slavery and bondage. The Gospel is about a God who causes people to be born from above and so makes them alive to spiritual things. The Gospel is about a God that pays the ransom price of sinners and frees them from the debt that they were in slavery to. The Gospel is about a God that gives the free gift of righteousness so that sinners can be free to enter into the very presence of God. The Gospel is not just about intellectual things going on; it is about a God that actually does these things. The Gospel is about a God so powerful that He can do as He pleases. This is a God that actually does what He promises in the Gospel and so the Gospel is a Gospel of power. In fact, it is the power of God carried out in the souls of all who are delivered from sin. The glory of His power shines in the Gospel.