To Hell, With Love

June 27th, 2009 | Posted in articles | No Comments
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Introduction

Every Christian has been called and sent by Jesus to declare and display his gospel to the world. This means that every single Christian is a missionary…including you. One thing that will help you live as an effective missionary in our current cultural climate is a healthy understanding of the doctrine of Hell. This used to be a doctrine that I accepted, but didn’t much enjoy. Now, thanks to a growing grasp of the the Scriptures and helpful teaching from pastors like Tim Keller, it is a doctrine that I love. The article that follows us taken from a sermon I preached in 2008 from the book of Judges. It is my hope that after reading it you too will grow to love the doctrine of Hell and be moved to explain it to the people you love.

God’s Retribution on Abimelek and Shechem

Judges 8:32-9:3 set the stage for the drama that will follow. Gideon has just died and as soon as he died the Israelites started the cycle all over again. They returned to idolatry, prostituting themselves to false gods even after Yahweh had once again miraculously delivered them from yet another oppressor. Gideon had seventy sons, one of whom was named Abimelek. Abimelek was not like his other brothers. He was only half-Israelite. He was born to a Canaanite woman whom Gideon had taken as a wife despite the fact that Yahweh prohibited his people to marry those who worship false gods. As we’ll see as the story unfolds, Gideon’s rebellion against Yahweh would have severe consequences for his family and his people. And it all begins here with Abimelek going to his mother’s family in Shechem and asking them to make him king. Abimelek argues that it would be in Shechem’s best interest to make him king. After all, he says, it would be better to have one man rule over you than 70. I am the logical choice because “I am your flesh and blood.” The people of Shechem found his argument convincing. “He is related to us,” they said. So they decided to support his claim to the throne and make him their king. But first they would need to eliminate his 70 brothers from the picture. They gave Abimilek seventy shekels of silver from the treasury of Baal’s temple. Abimilek then used the money from their idol worship to hire what my translation calls, “reckless scoundrels.” They were mercenaries. They were murderers for hire. They were the Biblical version of Boba Fett. Abimilek took his new crew of Boba Fetts and went to Ophrah, Gideon’s hometown. Then, there, on one stone, he murdered his 70 brothers one after the other. Imagine the horror of this scene. One brother murdering every one of his other brothers one after another, after another, after another, after another in the same place, on the same stone. As horrific as it is it’s also a little ironic. Abimelek convinced the people of Shechem to make him their king because he was their own flesh and blood. And now we see how Abimelek treats his own flesh and blood. The people of Shechem didn’t seem to recognize the irony though. So when Abimelek returned home the people of Shechem gathered around him and crowned him as king.

What they didn’t know at this point was that one of Abimelek’s 70 brothers had escaped by hiding. His name was Jotham, the youngest of all of Gideon’s sons. When he heard that the people of Shechem had crowned his brother king he climbed to the top of Mount Gerizim and he shouted to them, “Listen to me, citizens of Shechem, so that God may listen to you.” Then he told them a fable about a group of trees who try to select a king. First they go to an olive tree and say, “be our king,” but the olive tree says “no.” So then they go to the fig tree and say, “be our king,” but the fig tray says “no.” Next they go to the vine and say, “Be our king,” but the vine also says “no.” Finally they go to a thorn bush and ask him to be their king. Look how the thorn bush responds in verse 15, “The thorn bush said to the trees, ‘If you really want to anoint me king over you, come and take refuge in my shade; but if not, then let fire come out of the thorn bush and consume the cedars of Lebanon!’” Now this fable is a little weird for us but the point would have been obvious to them. They lived in an agrarian society. How could a group of trees take shade under a thorn bush? They couldn’t. And even if they tried to get close enough to do it what would happen? They would be priced by its thorns. The thorn bush here represents Abimelek and the trees represent the people of Shechem. They have chosen a king who cannot give them refuge, they have chosen a king who will only harm them, they have chosen a king that will consume them in his fire. In case there was any confusion about what this fable meant Jotham made the application quite clear in the form of a curse. Read verses 16-20. “Have you have acted honorably and in good faith by making Abimelek king? Have you been fair to Jerub–Baal and his family? Have you treated him as he deserves? Remember that my father fought for you and risked his life to rescue you from the hand of Midian. But today you have revolted against my father’s family. You have murdered his seventy sons on a single stone and have made Abimelek, the son of his female slave, king over the citizens of Shechem because he is related to you. So have you acted honorably and in good faith toward Jerub–Baal and his family today? If you have, may Abimelek be your joy, and may you be his, too! But if you have not, let fire come out from Abimelek and consume you, the citizens of Shechem and Beth Millo, and let fire come out from you, the citizens of Shechem and Beth Millo, and consume Abimelek!” Both Abimelek and the people of Shechem have done evil. They have murdered the innocent and they have done evil to Gideon, the man who God used to deliver them from their oppressors. Because of this, Jotham promises that Yahweh will bring justice to both Abimelek and Shechem. He will cause them to consume one another like fire. These are very strong words, and after saying them Jotham fled out of fear for his brother. And after what his brother did to the rest of his family I can’t blame him. That’s not a punk move. That’s wisdom.

Verse 22 tells us that Abimelek reigned over Israel for three years. This is the shortest term of oppression or judgeship in this entire book. Verses 23 and 24 explain why, “God stirred up animosity between Abimelek and the citizens of Shechem so that they acted treacherously against Abimelek. God did this in order that the crime against Jerub–Baal’s seventy sons, the shedding of their blood, might be avenged on their brother Abimelek and on the citizens of Shechem, who had helped him murder his brothers.” The rest of this chapter is going to be terribly violent. And according to these verses Yahweh is behind it all. Because Yahweh is a God of perfect righteousness and perfect justice it is his nature and his will to bring justice to injustice and make the wrong right. And that is precisely what he will do with Abimelek and the people of Shechem.

The story unfolds as a man named Gaal moves into Shechem. Gaal begins to draw followers after himself by making the same argument that Abimelek made. He claims to have closer genealogical ties to the people of Shechem than Abimelek does. For that reason he thinks he should be king in Abimelek’s place. Look at how he makes his case in verses 28 and 29, ““Who is Abimelek, and who is Shechem, that we should be subject to him? Isn’t he Jerub–Baal’s son, and isn’t Zebul his deputy? Serve the people of Hamor, Shechem’s father! Why should we serve Abimelek? If only this people were under my command! Then I would get rid of him. I would say to Abimelek, ‘Call out your whole army!’” This cat talks a big game, doesn’t he? He almost sounds as arrogant as Kanye West, but not quite. Well, you know what happens when you talk that kind of trash, don’t you? People hear about it. And that’s what happened here. Abimilek’s right-hand man, Zebul, heard about it and secretly sent word to Abimilek. He told Abimilek to set up an ambush against Gaal and his supporters. Abimilek did. And the next morning many of Gaal’s followers were slain and Gaal himself was driven out of Shechem. You would think that would be the end of it, right? The threat was eliminated. But Abimilek was not done. Just like his father, Gideon, Abimilek wanted revenge. So the next day he waited for the people of Shechem to come out into the fields where he and his army waited to make another ambush. When the people came out Abimilek and his men attacked them and killed everyone they saw. Again, you would think that would be enough. But Abimilek was still thirsty for revenge. He heard that some of the citizens of the city had run to the temple of Baal for safety. So he gathered his army and had every one of them collect branches from the nearby trees. They laid these branches around the temple, lit them on fire, and burned the temple down with the people still inside. One thousand people were burned alive by the king who was supposed to rule them. Again, you would think that would be enough. But Abimilek still hungered for revenge. And Yahweh was still bringing justice. The only citizens that remained had fled to a strong tower in a nearby town. Abimilek chased them into the town, besieged the town, and captured it. Then he headed for the strong tower where the people had locked themselves inside and climbed to the top of the roof. Abimilek approached the tower preparing to burn it down just as he had burnt the temple down. But just as he was about to light the fire a woman dropped a millstone from the top of the roof. It landed directly on his head and crushed his skull. Yet even in death Abimilek was still concerned about his image. So he turned to his armor bearer and said, “Draw your sword and kill me, so that they can’t say, ‘A woman killed him.’” His servant ran through him and he died. Ironically, despite Abimilek’s best efforts the Bible mentions twice that he was in fact killed by a woman. Not only that, but he was killed by a single stone, just as he had killed his brothers on a single stone. But even more important than what happened is why it happened. Look at verses 56 and 57, “Thus God repaid the wickedness that Abimelek had done to his father by murdering his seventy brothers. God also made the people of Shechem pay for all their wickedness. The curse of Jotham son of Jerub–Baal came on them.” This series of violent events was orchestrated by God himself to punish Abimilek for his evil, to punish the people of Shechem for their wickedness, and to bring justice on behalf of the 70 innocent brothers who were murdered in cold blood. The story of Abimilek makes it very clear that God is a God of justice. He will not wink at evil, he will not overlook the guilty. He will bring justice and he will make the wrong things right.

God’s Retribution on You and Me

So what does all of this mean for you and me? First, it means that we should rejoice that the God of the universe is a righteous and just God. We should rejoice that he turns injustice into justice. We should rejoice that he takes what is wrong and makes it right. But it also means that we should be quite concerned. Shechem received their violent judgment because they made someone king who was not truly the king. We do the same thing. We live as though we are king of our lives instead of living with Jesus as the king of our lives. We serve our will and our desires instead of Jesus’ will. We trust in ourselves to rule our lives instead of trusting in Jesus to rule our lives. We have made our own kings. We have made ourselves kings. If the people of Shechem deserved God’s judgment for that don’t we deserve the same?

Second, Abimilek received his violent judgment because he murdered his brothers, 70 of them. Well, you and I are murderers, too. We have murdered our brothers and our sisters and we have murdered at least as many as Abimilek. These are not my words but the words of Jesus. Listen to what Jesus says in Matthew 5:21 and 22, “You have heard that it was said to the people long ago, ‘You shall not murder, and anyone who murders will be subject to judgment. But I tell you that anyone who is angry with a brother or sister will be subject to judgment. Again, anyone who says to a brother or sister, ‘Raca,’ is answerable to the Sanhedrin. And anyone who says, ‘You fool!’ will be in danger of the fire of hell.” Jesus equates anger with murder and says that they are both worthy of the same judgment, they are both worthy of the fires of Hell. Jesus calls you, and you, and you, and you, and me, a murderer. Now let me be clear that the emotion of anger itself is not evil. God himself is said to be angry over 500 times in the Scriptures. Anger is a God-given emotion that often arises in us spontaneously. It’s not the emotion of anger that makes you a murderer. It’s why you become angry and how you respond to that initial emotion. It’s good to be angered by injustices against the innocent. It’s good to be angered when the world is not as it ought to be. But these are not the things that we are most angered by. Our anger is not like Gods. Our anger is almost always rooted in selfishness or pride or jealousy or envy. I can’t believe he did this to me. I can’t believe she said that about me. I can’t believe that he prospers while I suffer. I can’t believe they didn’t give me what I want, what I need, what I deserve. Our anger is not like God’s. Our anger is almost always rooted in the flesh and not in the Spirit. Our anger is not like God’s. It is almost always used as a means to destroy relationships while God’s is used to restore them. Our anger is not like God’s. We do not express it properly. Sometimes we do not express it at all and other times we express it to the wrong person. We allow it to control us and guide us. And it is not justified. It is murder. And we are murderers. You are a murderer. I know that we don’t like to think of ourselves that way. I know that we resist that label. But when you think about it it’s not difficult to see how the two are equivalent. Murder is not just killing someone, murder is the premeditated, deliberate, and malicious taking of a human life. And God says that murder must be punished by death. And the reason God gives for this is that murder not only destroys the person but it destroys the image of God within that person. Anger is murder in principle because anger devalues people and it devalues the image of God expressed in them. When we are inappropriately angry with people we try to take their identity and their value as God’s image bearer away from them. We can do this silently, we can do this vocally, we can do this physically. The ultimate physical expression of anger is murder. But even if we never express this anger physically or vocally we have already devalued a human being and the image of God in them.  In principle, we have murdered them and we have earned judgment for our murder.

So not only have you rejected Jesus as king and made yourself king you have used your power as king to commit murder after murder after murder after murder. You saw what God did to Shechem and Abimilek to bring justice to them. What do you expect God will do with you? If God is a god of justice, if God is a god who makes the wrong things right, how will he bring justice to you? How will he make your wrong right? Obviously your retribution is not going to come through political means in the same way it came to Abimilek and Shechem. It’s going to come quite differently. Jesus says that those who make themselves kings and those who murder people with anger will find their justice in the fires of Hell. God is a God of justice and because God is a God of justice he cannot wink at your evil or my evil, he cannot overlook your guilt or my guilt. He must punish us. He must sentence us for our wickedness. And the place that God has chosen for that sentence to be served is a place called Hell.

Now I know none of us likes to talk about Hell. If you’re not familiar with Emmaus you should know that we are not a fire and brimstone church. We don’t take pleasure in talking about eternal punishment. But we do take pleasure in talking about Jesus. And Jesus talked about Hell a lot. And so if we want to speak accurately about Jesus we have to also speak accurately about Hell. Let me quote some of the things that Jesus himself says about Hell.

In Luke 16:23 he describes Hell as a place of “torment” where people are in constant “agony.” The agony is so severe that in Mark 9:42-48 Jesus explains that it would be better to cut off your own hand, cut off your own foot, and pluck out your own eye than to be thrown into Hell where the “worm does not die and the fire is not quenched.” Jesus describes Hell as a place of “eternal punishment” in Matthew 25:46.  In Matthew 23:13 he call it the place for the “condemned” and in Matthew 8:12 he says that those who are condemned “will be thrown outside, into the darkness, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth. That’s quite the picture isn’t it? Jesus paints us a picture of a truly hellish Hell. A place of torment, a place of agony, a place of unquenchable fire, a place of outer darkness, and weeping, and the gnashing of teeth, a place of eternal punishment. This is difficult. This is uncomfortable. Even upsetting. And these are not my words. These are Jesus’ words. And this can make it even more troubling. Because it is much easier to reject my words than it is to reject the words of Jesus. If we reject Jesus’ teaching about Hell then we have to conclude that Jesus was wrong about some things. If we conclude that Jesus was wrong about some things then we have to also conclude that he is not God, because God has all knowledge. If we conclude that Jesus is not God then we also have to conclude that Jesus is a liar because he claimed to be God. Some of us may be tempted to go there because we are so troubled by Jesus’ teaching on Hell. But we don’t have to go there. As I’ve talked with people about their objections to Hell I’ve realized that most of our complaints about Hell are much weaker than they actually sound.

One of the most common complaints about Hell is that it exists to establish fear. I’ll be the first to admit that Hell is often preached that way. It is often used to manipulate people into behaving a certain way or thinking a certain way. But that is not the Biblical use of the doctrine of Hell, that is a human abuse of the doctrine of Hell. Biblically speaking Hell doesn’t exist to manipulate us with fear.  Hell exists to show us love and bring us comfort. That sounds odd but it’s true. We’ll talk more about how Hell exists to bring us love below. But right now let’s talk about how Hell exists to bring us comfort. Throughout the book of Revelation we read of the judgment God brings upon the wicked. It’s in this book that some of the most vivid images of Hell are found. As horrible and horrifying as these images are they are not there to bring us fear but comfort. What we call “the book of Revelation” is a copy of a letter that the Apostle John wrote to the churches he oversaw in Ephesus. These churches were far from perfect but they were Christian churches. And several of them were facing persecution and suffering. So this book with its images of Hell and judgment clearly wasn’t written to scare pagans into becoming Christians. This book was written to comfort Christians in the midst of persecution. The message of Hell is in part a message of comfort because Hell is our assurance that all things will be made right and justice will prevail. The early Church was scattered, persecuted, impoverished. They were arrested, burnt alive, beheaded. They were powerless to protect themselves. They were powerless to fight back. They were powerless to get justice. Their only comfort in their suffering was that God was with them and he would bring justice. Though those who had done evil to them and to their loved ones might prosper in this world they would be brought to justice in the next. Hell did not make them afraid. Life made them afraid, Hell brought them comfort. The same is true of those who live among us today. What will you say to the girl who was molested by her own father and whose mother refuses to believe her story? What will you say to the rape victim whose rapist has gone unnamed and unpunished? What will you say to the grown man who still suffers psychologically because his own father abandoned him? What will you say to the teenage boy in Sudan who has watched his entire family mutilated and murdered before his very eyes and the whole world knows it but does nothing about it? What will you say to the Indian mother whose daughter is ripped from her arms and sold into slavery and human trafficking? Will you tell them that there is no afterlife and their only hope for justice is here on earth? That is a reason for them to fear, not to be comforted. Or will you tell them that there is an afterlife but everyone will go to heaven, where they will spend eternity with the people who victimized them? That is a reason for them to fear, not to be comforted. Or will you tell them that there is a Hell where God will bring their offenders to justice? That is not a reason for them to fear, that is a reason for them to be comforted. If you’re a white, middle-class, American and your idea of suffering is disliking your job, or not having a second car, or not getting along with your parents you may not see Hell as all that comforting. You may think it’s just a tool to establish fear. But for those who have been the victims of true and terrible evil Hell does not exist to establish fear. Life is reason enough for that. Hell exists to provide comfort. And that’s exactly what it does. It assures them that though they may be weak now, and powerless now, and defenseless now there is a God who has all power and will defend the weak, fight on behalf of the victims, and bring their offenders to justice. Contrary to how many preachers may talk about it, the Christian doctrine of Hell is not about manipulating people with fear. It is in part about comforting those who need comforting.

Another common complaint about Hell is that is unjust. But as we just said Hell is far from unjust. Hell is our assurance that justice will come, even if it doesn’t come during our lifetime. The true injustice is to say that our only hope for justice is here on this earth. If that is the case then most of us will never see justice and never see the wrongs made right. So, no, Hell is not unjust. No Hell would be unjust. The true injustice is to say that how we live our lives is ultimately irrelevant. The true injustice is to say that worshiping Jesus as God and worshiping yourself as God lead to the same result. The true injustice is to say that Martin Luther King and Adolf Hitler, and Billy Graham and Joseph Stalin all suffer the same fate. Hell is not unjust. No Hell is unjust.

A third complaint people make about the doctrine of Hell is that it is intolerant. To say that Jesus is the only way out of Hell is exclusive. How can we believe in such an intolerant doctrine? If this is your complaint you might say something like this, “I’m glad that Jesus works for you but I believe that God will also accept the sincere Muslim, the devout Buddhist, and the good atheist.” This sounds like a more inclusive belief, doesn’t it? This god sounds like a more tolerant god, doesn’t he? But if you think about it, this belief is less inclusive and this god is less tolerant. Because the god who accepts the sincere Muslim, and the devout Buddhist, and the good atheist is accepting these people based on their own work, their own performance, and their own value. This god who seems to be so tolerant and so inclusive is actually quite exclusive and quite intolerant. He only makes room for those who meet his standards of performance. He only makes room for the good, and the devout, and the sincere. But what does that mean for people like me? What does it mean for those of us who fail to be good people, who fail to be devout people, who fail to be sincere people. We are not accepted by this god, we are excluded. But the God of the Bible, the God of Hell, he doesn’t accept us based on our performance. He accepts us based on the perfect performance of his son, Jesus. He accepts those of us who struggle to be sincere, who struggle to be devout, and who fail to be good. He accepts us by his grace instead of our own merits. In spite of our many failures we are accepted because of Jesus’ perfect work. So, as Pastor Tim Keller explains, both positions are exclusive. The “tolerant” view says that the good people will find god but the bad people will not. The gospel view says that the people who know they are not good can find God in Jesus, and the people who think they are good do not because they don’t recognize their need for Jesus. Both of these are exclusive. But the gospel is more inclusive in its exclusivity. The God of the Bible is more inclusive in his exclusivity because he says, “It doesn’t matter who you are or what you’ve done. It doesn’t matter how guilty you may be, how weak you may be, how defeated you may be, how evil you may be. You can be welcomed, and accepted, and approved, and embraced, and loved fully and perfectly and instantly through Jesus Christ.” The gospel concept of Hell is not any more intolerant or any more exclusive than the alternative. What it is is a reminder of God’s tremendous grace given to us through Jesus that allows every one of us who deserves Hell to escape it without any effort or merit of our own.

Yet another objection to the Christian doctrine of Hell is that it portrays God as vengeful rather than loving. Some would say this, “If God is our Father wouldn’t he be more heartbroken than vengeful when his children reject him?” Well, first, let’s clarify something. According to Jesus, God is the Creator of everyone but he is not the Father of everyone. Those who worship Jesus, God’s only begotten Son, become God’s children because they are united to God’s Son. But those who reject Jesus, God’s only begotten Son, are not God’s children. They are the children of whoever they serve and worship in place of the True God. So while many of God’s creation will suffer in Hell not one of God’s children will suffer in Hell. But while it is true that those who suffer in Hell are not God’s children that does not mean that he takes pleasure in their punishment. No, the exact opposite is true. Yahweh takes no pleasure in the death of anyone, even the wicked and rebellious people who reject him. He says to us in Ezekiel 33:11, “As surely as I live…I take no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but rather that they turn from their ways and live.” People do not go to Hell because God takes pleasure in punishing them. People go to Hell because they choose to reject God’s offer of mercy, and grace, and salvation. God goes far beyond anything you could ever ask or think to urge you to turn from the path to Hell and find true life in his Son, Jesus. In his mercy he’s given you the Scriptures that clearly tell you where life is found, they repeatedly warn you to abandon the path that leads to destruction. He’s sent you preachers, and prophets, and friends who invite you again and again to turn from death and embrace the life that God offers you in Jesus. He’s withheld his judgment on you and allowed you to live day, after day, after day giving you more and more time to turn from your false gods and find life in the true God. And most importantly, he became like you and came to you in order to save you. In Jesus Christ he lived the life you have not lived and he died the death that you deserve to die. He did this so that you could be accepted by God instead of rejected. He did this so that you could have life instead of death. He did this so that you would be judged by Jesus’ perfection instead of by your own imperfections. Hell does not show us that God is unloving. Hell shows us just how loving God is because it shows us what tremendous lengths he has gone to to keep you out of it and rescue you from it!

Some of us think we can make God more loving by eliminating Hell. But we have it all backwards. If we diminish the reality of Hell we diminish the reality of God’s great love. If we remove his punishment for wickedness then we remove his grace and mercy that saves us from the punishment we deserve. Is that a loving God? If we say that people can live however they want and not be punished then we say that God cannot bring ultimate justice and God cannot defend the weak and the oppressed and the defenseless. Is that a loving God? If we say that God will not bring judgment in the afterlife then we rob people of a future hope and we give them a reason to do whatever is necessary to get vengeance and justice now. Is that a loving God? If we say that there is no Hell we are saying that God loves every single person in exactly the same way and gives them the exact same treatment no matter what. But that’s not love. That’s indifference. Would it be loving of me to say that I love every woman in this church in the same way that I love my wife? Would it be loving of me to say that I love every child I meet in the same way that I love my own children? Of course not. That’s not love. That’s indifference. Would it be loving of me to do nothing as I watch my children make decisions that will destroy them and lead them to death? No! The more you love someone the more you are upset by their evil and the more you strive to intervene. God is love. Not only does he love us enough to give his own Son to be our rescue, our salvation, our hope, and our life; he also loves us enough to honor our decision to reject him and give us precisely what we ask for.

Of course people have many other objections to Hell. But some of them are just based on misunderstandings. Some wonder, “Why would God create people who he has predestined to go to Hell?” The answer is, he doesn’t predestine people to Hell. Everyone who goes to Hell goes there by their own choice. Some would ask, “How can God give the people he has created over to Satan to torment them.” Well, he doesn’t. That’s a common misunderstanding. Satan does not rule in Hell, God does. Satan and his demons have no power there, they are tormented there. Others will object, “Wouldn’t it be better if God just annihilated wicked people instead of allowing them to suffer for eternity?” No, it wouldn’t. If God were to utterly destroy people he would have to destroy his own image in them. He would also be unable to vary the degree of punishment from the most wicked to the least wicked. And the offenders would not have to deal with the guilt and the consequence of rejecting the true God. Some still object, “But how can a loving God burn people alive in fire for all of eternity.” The answer is, he doesn’t. The language that Jesus uses to describe Hell is symbolic. This is why he can describe it as both an utterly dark place and a place of constant fire. These things cannot literally co-exist, but symbolically they can.

And yet with everything I’ve said and every argument I’ve countered I have not made Hell any less hellish. I believe we have shown that Hell does not make God unloving, or unjust, or manipulative. But by no means have we minimized the horrors and the torment of Hell. It’s true that the fire and darkness described by Jesus are probably symbolic. But that does not mean that the reality of Hell is any less painful. To the contrary, in the Bible the reality is always greater than the symbol that points to the reality. The reality of Jesus is greater than the Judges we’ve been reading about that symbolize his work and point toward him. And the torment of Hell is greater than, worse than, the symbols of fire and darkness that Jesus uses to describe it. So if you think burning alive for eternity would be painful the true pain of Hell is actually worse. The darkness represents the pain of loss, the pain of being eternally shut out from the presence of God’s grace, and mercy, and compassion. The fire represents the pain of sense, the pain of eternally bearing the wrath of God. Jesus describes this in Matthew 25:41, “Then he will say to those on his left, ‘Depart from me (loss/separation), you who are cursed, into the eternal fire (sense/wrath) prepared for the devil and his angels.” Jesus’ Apostle, Paul, describes it again in 2Thessalonians 1:8-9, “He will punish those who do not know God and do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus. They will be punished with everlasting destruction (sense/wrath) and shut out from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his might (loss/separation).”

God’s Retribution on Jesus

There is no doubt that Hell is a hellish, horrible, terrible, frightening place where human beings experience the pain of loss and the pain of sense far beyond anything we can comprehend. There is no doubt that this is a difficult teaching to accept. But we must come to grips with it. Because it is only by understanding the horrors of Hell that we can truly understand the love of God. Because you see, God sent his Son, Jesus, and Jesus willingly went to Hell for us. Jesus went to Hell so that you wouldn’t have to. As Jesus went to the Cross to die in your place he also went to the Cross to go to Hell in your place. As he hung from those wooden beams he experienced the pain of sense in the worst possible way. His body was pulled in every direction, as he tried to pull himself up to resist the stretching the nails tore through his nerves sending excruciating pain through his body and into his brain, the fatigue and pain made him unable to push himself upward, his pectoral muscles became paralyzed, and he was unable to exhale, he continued to hang in pain and torment and agony until finally he suffocated to death.

Jesus experienced the physical pain of receiving God’s wrath for our sins. He went to Hell for us. But far more painful was the pain of loss and abandonment as he was separated from the presence of his eternal Father. He cried out from the Cross, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” When he said those words Jesus was literally experiencing Hell. You know how much it hurts to be abandoned by someone. You know how much it hurts to be rejected by someone. When an acquaintance rejects you it hurts. When a friend rejects you hurt even worse. When your child rejects you the pain is incomparable. When a parent abandons you the pain never stops. When your husband, or your wife, leaves you and says “I don’t love you anymore” the pain is devastating. The longer a relationship is, the deeper a relationship is, the more intimate a relationship is the more traumatic and agonizing any separation becomes. And Jesus’ relationship with the Father was longer than any relationship you can imagine. They were united together for all eternity. Jesus’ relationship with the Father was deeper than we can ever comprehend. They are one in purpose and one in their very nature. Jesus’ relationship with the Father was more intimate than the most intimate human relationship. They share everything. And yet Jesus willingly allowed this relationship to be cut off. He willingly experienced the pain of separation from the perfect being, the greatest good, whom he had been united to eternally. Jesus, who was eternally united with God, willingly separated himself from God so that you, who would be eternally separated from God, could be united with him forever. In doing this Jesus went into the darkest, deepest, most despairing pit of Hell. Jesus went to Hell for us and he did it willingly so that we would not have to experience Hell ourselves.

This is love unparalleled. This is love unequaled. What are you going to do about it? I pray that you will respond to Jesus’ love by loving him, by worshiping him, and by obeying him. Not because doing this will somehow save you from Hell but because Jesus has already saved you from Hell and you cannot help but love him because he so loves you.

Mission: Statement

June 27th, 2009 | Posted in articles | No Comments
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The following article is an excerpt from a 2008 sermon given by Cole Brown.

Introduction

There is something wrong with the world. And you and I have been called to do something about it. The purpose of this article is to help us identify what our mission is and what might be hindering us from living out this mission to the extent we should be. The Scriptures will help us to do this as we look to the unlikely story of Barak, Deborah, and Jael in Judges 4.

The Need for Deliverance

Verse 31 says this, “After Ehud came Shamgar son of Anath, who struck down six hundred Philistines with an oxgoad. He too saved Israel.” That’s it. That’s basically all the Bible has to tell us about Shamgar and what he did. But this is still an important verse because it helps us to understand this whole book. In this one verse we have an insignificant man using an insignificant weapon to deliver an insignificant people. That’s basically the whole book of Judges in a nutshell. What makes these deliverers significant, what makes these wars significant, what makes these people significant has nothing to do with who they are. It has everything to do with whose they are. They are Yahweh’s. These are Yahweh’s deliverers, waging Yahweh’s wars, to deliver Yahweh’s people. These stories are significant because they are not stories about insignificant people they are stories about the Lord of the universe. And through these stories we learn about God. We learn about Yahweh and what he is like.

We also learn what we are like. The book of Judges unfolds in a cycle that repeats itself over and over again: idolatry, oppression, deliverance, idolatry. Israel commits idolatry; their idolatry leads them into oppression; Yahweh has compassion on them and delivers them; and in response to Yahweh’s compassion they return to their idolatry. So if in verse 31 Yahweh delivered Israel through Shamgar what should we expect to find in the next verse? Idolatry. And that is exactly what we find in 4:1, “Again the Israelites did evil in the eyes of the Lord, now that Ehud was dead.” In the book of Judges the words evil and idolatry are interchangeable – they mean the same thing – to commit idolatry is to do evil and to do evil is to commit idolatry. To our modern ears that sounds a little primitive. How many of us really consider ourselves idolaters? If you’re irreligious you figure you can’t be an idolater because you don’t worship any gods. If you’re religious you figure you can’t be an idolater because you worship Jesus Christ as the only true God. Since none of us are bowing down to stone images or sitting at home making our own gods out of Play Doh all of this talk about idolatry seems like it doesn’t apply to us. It seems irrelevant. But we are so wrong if we think that. Because idolatry is not just about bowing down to graven images. According to the Bible idolatry is much more common and much more deceptive than that. Idolatry is giving to creation what belongs to the Creator. It is to give your allegiance, or your trust, or your love, or your fear, or your mind, or your body to someone or something other than Jesus Christ. It is to look to something other than Jesus Christ to give you meaning, value, security, blessing, approval, and acceptance. It is to take anything – even a good thing – and treat it like an Ultimate thing…a god thing. And we can do that with anything. We do that with our marriages, with our children, with our relationships, with our sex life. We do that with our careers, with our finances, with our possessions. We do that with art, with entertainment, with certain emotional with physical pleasures. We do that with politics, with education, with religion. We do that with church and with church involvement. And most frequently we do that with ourselves. We serve ourselves rather than Jesus. Even as Christians we trust in ourselves and in our righteousness rather than in Jesus. We give to ourselves what we should give to Jesus. We look to ourselves to provide what can only be provided by Jesus.

Being modern does not excuse us from idolatry. Being irreligious does not excuse from idolatry. Being religious does not excuse us from idolatry. Every one of us commits idolatry because every one of us sins and all sin is idolatry. That’s why evil and idolatry are equated in the book of Judges. That’s why the words are interchangeable. Because anytime you sin – anytime you do evil – you are committing idolatry and vice versa. Every time we sin we are choosing to serve a master other than Jesus. Every time we sin we are placing our hearts on something other than Jesus. Every time we sin we are saying that Jesus is not sufficient for us. Every time we sin we are trying to find our value, or our purpose, or our meaning, or our pleasure, or our identity, or our fulfillment, or our happiness in someone or something other than Jesus. You lie because you are trying to protect something or acquire something that you don’t believe Jesus is sufficient to protect or acquire. You covet because you feel like there is something you need that you do not have in Jesus. You continue to be in relationships you should not be in because you’re looking to this person to meet your needs instead of Jesus.

All of this proves that the book of Judges is immediately applicable and immediately relevant to all of us. It is a book about idolatrous people whose idolatry leads them into oppression. And idolatry always leads to oppression, even for us. Every one of us becomes enslaved by whatever we worship. It is good to worship Jesus because he is a good master who loves us, serves us, and gives himself for us. But he is the only master that does this. No other master loves us, no other master serves us – they all demand that we love them and serve them and give ourselves to them. And since we rely on the things we worship to give us meaning, value, identity, and fulfillment we must give ourselves to them and we must do whatever they demand of us because we need what we think they can offer us. This is the cycle that we humans naturally walk into. First idolatry, then oppression. In 4:1 we saw the idolatry now look at 4:2 and 3 to see the oppression, “So the Lord sold them into the hands of Jabin king of Canaan, who reigned in Hazor. Sisera, the commander of his army, was based in Harosheth Haggoyim. Because he had nine hundred chariots fitted with iron and had cruelly oppressed the Israelites for twenty years, they cried to the Lord for help.”

The Israelites were oppressed because of their idolatry. They were ruled by Jabin, the king of Canaan, and by Sisera, the commander of his powerful army. This army had 900 chariots! Imagine having 900 fully armored tanks following you around and limiting your every move. That’s oppression. That’s intimidation. In some ways chariots are worse than tanks. Tanks are powerful and break through enemy lines but chariots are swift and effective. You can run from a tank. You can’t run from a chariot. They are designed for the purpose of chasing down those who flee. This was the experience of the Israelites for twenty years. And only after twenty years do we see the Israelites finally crying out to the Lord for help. It’s amazing how long we will sit in our own mess before crying out to God. Yahweh had every reason to ignore their cry and every reason to ignore ours. But Yahweh is loving to the unloving, compassionate to the compassionless, gracious to the ungrateful. So even though the Israelites did not repent, even though he knew they would return to idolatry, he delivered them. That’s the next phase of the cycle: idolatry, oppression, deliverance.

The Unlikely Deliverer

This is where we pick up in verse 4. The author of Judges introduces us to a woman named Deborah. Deborah was a prophet who was leading Israel at the time. She wasn’t a judge in the sense that Ehud was, she wasn’t a deliverer, a warrior. She was a judge more in the sense that we think of it. She made judgments. The people of Israel came to her to have their disputes decided. And since she was a prophetess, since she was in a sense God’s mouthpiece, her judgments could be trusted. Deborah is a very interesting character. She’s not who we’d expect to find calling men and sending men to war. But this is the book of the unexpected. We just read about Shamgar who killed 600 Philistines with nothing but an oxgoad. And now we read about Deborah, a woman, who is judging and leading Israel and calling them to war. In verse 6 Deborah sends for a man named Barak. When Barak arrives she gives him orders to go to war but she’s not speaking as the Commander in Chief. She’s speaking on behalf of the Commander in Chief. “The Lord, the God of Israel, commands you: ‘Go, take with you ten thousand men of Naphtali and Zebulun and lead them up to Mount Tabor. I will lead Sisera, the commander of Jabin’s army, with his chariots and his troops to the Kishon River and give him into your hands.” Yahweh is speaking to Barak through Deborah and calling him to fight for the freedom of his people. And Yahweh is guaranteeing Barak that he will have victory. Yahweh promises that he will give Sisera and his troops into Baraks hands. Victory is certain. Yahweh will deliver his people from this horrible oppression.

Now because we know that Yahweh is faithful to his promises, that he is the Perfect Warrior who cannot and will not be defeated, and that he fights on behalf of his people we would assume that Barak would take Yahweh at his word and do just as he commanded. But that’s not what happens. Instead, Barak hesitates. He was probably thinking of Sisera’s great army and his 900 chariots. So instead of saying, “Yes, Lord” Barak looked to Deborah and said, “If you go with me, I will go; but if you don’t go with me, I won’t go.” Yahweh promised Barak a victory but that wasn’t enough for him. Yahweh promised Barak that he would deliver Sisera into his hands but that wasn’t enough for him. He needed further assurance. So he determined that he would only go if Yahweh’s prophet, Deborah, went with him. Deborah replied, “Certainly I will go with you. But because of the course you are taking, the honor will not be yours, for the Lord will deliver Sisera into the hands of a woman.” Because Barak did not fully trust in Yahweh Barak would not receive the glory for this victory. Yahweh would still deliver his people but he would give the victory to a woman instead of to Barak. When Deborah said this I’m sure that Barak assumed that this woman would be Deborah and that God would give Sisera into her hands. He must have assumed they were going to go up against Sisera and his army as a team; fighting together like Bonnie and Clyde, or Snoop and Chris, or Bobby and Whitney. But that would be too easy. When we’re talking about Yahweh delivering his people we should always expect the unexpected.

So Barak gathered his 10,000 men and along with Deborah they headed for battle. Just as Yahweh promised he led Sisera and his men to the Kishon River. Barak and his army waited on Mt Tabor. I imagine that as they were positioned there Barak was again thinking about Sisera’s great power, his vast army, and his 900 chariots fitted with iron. He hesitated. And Deborah had to remind him whose war this really was. “Go!,” she shouted. “This is the day the Lord has given Sisera into your hands. Has not the Lord gone ahead of you?” With that little kick in the butt Barak and his men went down Mt. Tabor and attacked Sisera and his men and, against all odds, Sisera’s men began to fall one after another to the swords of Barak and his army. They were being routed just as Yahweh promised. And what did Sisera do? He punked out. He saw his chances quickly fading so he jumped down from his chariot and fled on foot leaving every one of his men to die. Definitely not the kind of man you want leading you into a battle.

As Sisera fled he passed by a tent owned by Heber the Kenite. Now Heber and his family were at peace with Jabir, the King of Canaan, who Sisera fought for. The Bible says that they had an alliance. And not the type of alliance you have on Survivor or on Big Brother, but an alliance far more significant and an alliance with much more trust. So much trust that when Jael, Heber’s wife, came outside and invited Sisera to hide in their tent he didn’t think twice about it. “Don’t be afraid,” she said, “come right in.” And because they had an alliance he did. Even if he might have had some concerns they were quickly disarmed by Jael’s warm invitation and generous hospitality. She opened some milk for him, she gave him a drink, and she covered him up. Sisera was exhausted by this point. And since Jael made him feel so welcome and so comfortable he decided to just go to sleep right there in her tent. Before he fell out he just gave Jael two simple instructions. “Stand in the doorway of the tent,” he told her. “If anyone comes by and asks you, ‘Is there a man in here?’ say ‘No’.” Sisera didn’t even realize the humor and irony in what he had just said. It was true. There was no man in the tent. He just proved by the way he fled from the battle that he was anything but a man. And little did he know that in a matter of minutes there he very literally would not be in the tent. He would be dead. Because once Sisera fell asleep Jael picked up a tent peg and a hammer. She walked quietly toward him while he slept, put the tent peg to his temple, raised the hammer, and nailed him to the ground through his temple. Jael was weak and yet she took on great power. She got up close and personal with the man that intimidated everyone and she took him out – not at a distance – but point blank, in her own tent that she seduced him into entering. Right after that Jael exited her tent to see Barak running by looking for Sisera. “Come,” she said, “I will show you the man you’re looking for.” So Barak entered the tent and saw Sisera laying there dead with a tent peg through his temple. Just as Yahweh had promised he delivered his people from oppression. And because Barak hesitated and didn’t fully trust Yahweh to deliver the victory he promised Yahweh provided victory through a woman, just as he said he would. And it wasn’t through Deborah, the leader, but through this non-Israelite woman camped out in a tent who was in an alliance with the oppressors. Again, Yahweh delivers in the most unlikely and most unexpected ways. He does this so that we will be reminded that the battle is his and the victory is his and the deliverance is his.

What Does it All Mean?

So this is a great story, a true story, about how Yahweh delivered his idolatrous people by working in the most unlikely ways. But what does it mean for us? Are we supposed to read this story and then want to be like Barak? No. Are we supposed to read this story and then want to be like Jael? No. Are we supposed to read this story and then want to be like Deborah? No. These characters are essential to the story but they are not the heroes of this story. Yahweh, God, is the hero of this story. And as we read this story we are reminded of just how glorious our God is. Yahweh delivers his idolatrous people even though they did not repent. Yahweh delivers his idolatrous people for no other reason than he is gracious, and compassionate, and merciful and does whatever he wills. Yahweh delivers his idolatrous people through no other means than his power and his sovereignty – his absolute control over and above all things. That’s the moral of the story so to speak. Yahweh is good. Yahweh is powerful. And it is Yahweh’s mission to glorify himself by freeing his people from oppression.

The story is about Yahweh and not about us. But of course that doesn’t mean that we’re not called to respond to what we know about Yahweh. In fact we’re required to. There’s no way that we can know and believe these things about God and not be moved to respond to this good and gracious and powerful God in worship and in obedience. Now we live in a different time than Barak. We live on this side of the Cross of Jesus Christ. So we don’t need to go out, gather tent pegs and hammers, and violently deliver the politically oppressed. But we do need to trust in Yahweh and we need to pursue his mission. His mission is to glorify himself by freeing his people from spiritual oppression. He’s already done all that was necessary for this to happen through Jesus Christ. He’s defeated our oppressors not by killing but by being killed. He’s defeated our oppressors not through the power of chariots but through the weakness of a man, naked, hanging from a tree. He’s defeated our oppressors not by oppressing them but by allowing them to oppress him in our place. Jesus lived the life we could not live and died the death we should have died so that we could be freed from our slavery to self, and sin, and Satan, and death. He rose from the dead and ascended into heaven to show that these things could no longer hold him and could no longer hold his people. If we trust in Jesus – in who he is and what he has done – we are liberated from all of these things. And we are sent out on mission, just as Barak was, to liberate others from their oppression. But our weapon is no tent peg, no oxgoad, no army. Our only weapon is the gospel: the message of who Jesus is and what he has done. Our only weapon is this gospel that we are called to declare with our lips and demonstrate with our lives so that others might be free. Yahweh promises us that he will defend us, that he will fight on our behalf, that he will always be with and never leave us, and that he will save and free those who are his.

If you are a Christian, if you are a follower of Christ, this is your mission. You are to trust in Jesus and to persuade others to do the same. You are to declare the gospel of Jesus Christ and demonstrate the gospel of Jesus Christ to everyone you encounter. You are to wage a spiritual war against a spiritual enemy with this spiritual weapon, the gospel. Jesus says that he has sent you into the world in the same way that his Father sent him into the world.

So why aren’t you doing it better?

Some of you really aren’t doing it at all. You can’t remember the last time you talked with someone about Jesus and his gospel. Some of you are doing better than that. And some of you are doing well. But none of us are doing it perfectly. None of us have really responded to this call to be always on this mission declaring and demonstrating the gospel of Jesus Christ in every relationship we enter into. Why? Why is that? Why do we tend to respond like Barak? Why do we hesitate to do what Jesus sends us to do? Why do we hesitate to trust in Jesus to give us the victory? Why do we want further proof and assurance that God is with us and that the outcome will be what we want it to be?

Let’s answer these questions by looking at a more physical war and mission. I have several friends who have gone to Iraq with the US Military. I have not gone. And I’m not going to go. No matter what. But why? What are the reasons that I would not want to go on America’s mission to Iraq?  I’m not going because either I’m afraid, or I don’t believe in the mission, or my allegiance is not to America but to something else. Those are the reasons I’m not fighting. Either I’m afraid, or I don’t believe in the mission, or my allegiance is somewhere else. Those are the same three reasons that keep you and I from joining Jesus on his mission. Some of you hesitate to declare the gospel in your relationships because you’re afraid. You’re afraid of how people might receive you. You’re afraid you’ll be laughed at, ridiculed, or just generally not approved of or accepted. Maybe you’re afraid that you’re not qualified. You don’t think you have enough knowledge or you don’t think you can explain it well enough. In that way you’re like Barak. You’re looking at Sisera and his chariots instead of looking at Yahweh who will go with you. Some of you may not be afraid. Some of you hesitate to declare the gospel in all of your relationships because you don’t believe in the mission. When it comes down to it you just really don’t believe that half-a-million people in this city are enemies of God and are currently separated from him, and will be eternally separated from him, if they don’t respond to the gospel. You just really don’t believe that Jesus and his gospel are the means – the only means – for people to be reconciled to God and to one another. You just really don’t believe that Jesus and his gospel are the means – the only means – for people to experience true joy, true fulfillment, and true healing. If you really, really believed all of this how could you continue to sit on the sidelines and let others fight while you watch? Some of you are not declaring the gospel in your relationships because you are afraid and some of you are not declaring the gospel in your relationships because there is still a significant part of you that just doesn’t believe that it’s all true. And, lastly, some of you hesitate to declare and demonstrate the gospel in your relationships because your allegiance is somewhere else. It’s not necessarily that you’re afraid. It’s not necessarily that you don’t believe it. It’s just that it’s not your primary concern. Your ultimate allegiance is not to Jesus and his mission. Your allegiance is somewhere else. Perhaps your first allegiance is not to Jesus but to yourself. So his mission does not take priority in your life. Your mission does. You make time to pursue what you want to pursue, and continue in relationships that you want to be in, but you do not make the time to bring the gospel into every relationship you enter into. You hesitate to declare the gospel because your primary allegiance is not to Jesus and his mission but to you and your mission.

Think about this for a minute. Think about how you respond to Jesus’ mission. Are you declaring the gospel in every relationship? Are you demonstrating the gospel in every relationship? Are you purposefully and intentionally seeking conversations about Jesus and his gospel? If you’re not doing this consistently the first thing you must do is acknowledge that you are in sin. You are rebelling against the God who redeemed you. But don’t stop there. It’s not enough to just acknowledge that sin. Because, remember, there is a greater sin underneath that sin. Yes, it is a terrible sin when we are not fully devoted to Jesus’ mission. But as we just saw that sin is the product of another sin. It is either that you are afraid, or that you don’t believe in the mission, or that your allegiance is somewhere else. Which of these sins lies beneath your hesitancy to join Jesus on his mission? Which of these sins lies beneath your hesitancy to purposefully and intentionally bring the gospel into every relationship you have? Now let me be very clear that as I ask these questions I am not asking you as Jael. I am not the one who just does what needs to be done without hesitation or fear. I ask you these questions as Barak. I ask you these questions as one who many times has hesitated to trust Jesus and pursue his mission. I know what it’s like to be afraid. I know what it’s like to have a different mission or a different allegiance. Which is why I know that I can’t just tell you to stop being afraid, and start believing, and started pledging allegiance to Jesus and his mission. I can’t just stand here and tell you to go out there and preach Jesus in every relationship you have. Because I know that even if you leave here wanting to do that you won’t do that. You won’t do that because you can’t do that.

The Unhesitant Deliverer

But don’t be discouraged. Someone else has done that. Someone else has done it for you. Jesus has done it perfectly. When it was time for him to leave his throne and lay aside his glory to free us he did not hesitate. When it was time for him to come to us and become like us in order to free us he did not delay. Though he saw that it would cost him his position, and his riches, and even his very life he did not give in to fear. Though he saw that Satan, and his demons, and every human being would conspire against him he did not abort his mission. Though the people he was delivering did not deserve to be delivered he fought for us anyway. Though we would be thankless and curse him and deny him he pursued us nonetheless. Though he would be rejected, he came. Though he would be hated, he came. Though he would be abused, he came. Though he would be abandoned, he came. Though he would be murdered, he came. He did all of this because his allegiance was given to Yahweh and no one else. He came to set the captives free. He came to deliver the oppressed. He came to fulfill the mission he was given. And because he has done that you now can join Jesus on his mission. You can bring the gospel into every relationship you enter into. Because Jesus has defeated your enemies on the cross, because he has reconciled you to God and made you acceptable to him, you no longer have to be afraid of failure or rejection. Because Jesus has liberated you from your oppression, because he has broken the chains of sin, and self, and Satan from your neck, you can’t help but believe in the mission because you have experienced its reality. Because Jesus has loved you like you cannot even love yourself, because he has given all of himself to you when you deserved nothing but his wrath, you cannot help but give your allegiance to him and him alone because you know that no one else deserves your love or your trust or your life – especially you.

To put it simply you have been given the most glorious mission in the world which is also the easiest mission in the world. It’s the most glorious and the easiest mission in the world because all of the work has already been done. By living the life you could not live, dying the death you should have died, and rising victorious from the dead Jesus has done all that is necessary to reconcile man to God and all that is necessary to free the oppressed. You don’t have to do either of those things. All you have to do is tell the story. All you have to do is sing the song. That’s what Barak and Deborah did in chapter 5 of Judges. Yahweh had given them the victory. They didn’t have to fight any more. So all they could do is sing. They sang together about Yahweh. They sang about how he graciously delivered his people. They sang about how Yahweh had given them the victory. They sang about how Yahweh sovereignly worked in the most unlikely ways to rescue those who didn’t deserve to be rescued. Whether you’re a Christian or not how can we look at Jesus and not want to sing his song? There is no one more beautiful, no one more lovely, no one more attractive. How can we not want to sing about Jesus who rescues those who don’t deserve to be rescued, liberates those who have made themselves slaves, and reconciles the unreconcilable. We must believe it. And if we believe it we must sing it. And if we sing it we cannot just sing it to ourselves but to every person we know. Because we have been freed from everything that would tell us otherwise.


Inseparable

June 27th, 2009 | Posted in articles | No Comments
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The following article is an excerpt from a 2008 sermon given by Cole Brown.

Introduction

I don’t know about you but I have heard a lot of people brag about being an American. I’ve always found that interesting because most of us didn’t have to do anything to become an American. It doesn’t really cost you anything. Oh, yeah, it costs you taxes, but you do everything you can to get out of that. And the taxes you do pay you pay so that you don’t have to do anything else. When America has problems you don’t have to do anything to solve them, you just pay your taxes and let someone else figure it out. When the national debt continues to grow larger and larger you don’t help to find a solution you just pay your taxes because that’s someone else’s job. When America goes to war you don’t go to war you just pay your taxes and let someone else go instead. Being an American is the easiest job in the world. You don’t have to make America’s mission your mission, you can keep pursuing your own mission, yet you still receive all of the benefits of being an American.

I’ve also heard people brag about owning stock in a particular company. And that’s just as interesting. Because you don’t really have to do anything to be a Starbucks stockholder. Well, of course, you have to pay a fee up front but after that you don’t have to do anything.  You don’t have to go in to open the store at 4:45 in the morning. You don’t have to learn how to make dozens and dozens of different drinks. You don’t even have to know the difference between a vente and a grande. But when they make money, you make money, as if you really did work there. Being a stockholder is the easiest job in the world. You don’t have to make Starbucks’ mission your mission, you don’t have to do anything to convince the world that Starbucks is the “premier purveyor of the finest coffee in the world,” you can keep pursuing your own mission, yet you still receive all the benefits of being part of the company.

Unfortunately, in our culture, people have come to think of Christianity in the same way. We think that we can belong to Christ and enjoy all of the benefits without ever having to do anything to further his cause. We act like we can say we’re committed to Jesus but then continue to pursue our own mission. But that’s a lie. The two are inseparable. As a Christian your conversion and your call are one and the same. Jesus converts you to himself and he calls you to his mission, which is to reconcile the world to himself.

Saul and His Mission

We see this clearly in the story of Saul found in Acts 9:1-31. The story begins in verses 1 and 2, “Meanwhile, Saul was still breathing out murderous threats against the Lord’s disciples. He went to the high priest and asked him for letters to the synagogues in Damascus, so that if he found any there who belonged to the Way, whether men or women, he might take them as prisoners to Jerusalem.” Luke, the author of Acts, once again directs our attention to a man named Saul. We’ve already seen Saul twice in this book. When Stephen was stoned as the first Christian martyr Saul held the coats of those who killed him and offered his approval. By the time Stephen’s body was put in the ground Saul was already on a mission to destroy the Church. He went from house to house dragging men and women out of their homes and throwing them into prison simply because they worshiped Jesus as Messiah, as Savior and Lord. Now, after some time has passed, we find in verse 1 that Saul is still breathing out murderous threats against the Christian Church. And these are not empty threats. They are promises that Saul has proven he will keep. He has kept them in Jerusalem and now he’s set on keeping them wherever the church may spread. Even if that means he has to travel six-days to do so. And that’s exactly what he does. He gathers a crew, he hops on his donkey, and he begins the six-day journey to Damascus where he plans to stomp out the Christian church. This is his mission. Saul is driven by it. And he has wholly given himself to it.

But, as I’m sure most of you know, Saul’s mission would be interrupted. It was around noon as he neared Damascus when suddenly the brightest of lights flashed around him. This light must have been magnificent! The sun was already out – it was noon — yet this light was so bright that it knocked Saul to the ground. Just as quickly as Saul had gotten on his ass, Saul fell off his ass, and Saul fell on his…bottom. And from that position he heard a voice speak, “Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me” Saul did not know who was speaking to him but he knew that he should listen to whoever it was. So he asked, “Who are you, Lord?” The reply must have terrified Saul. “I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting. Now get up and go into the city, and you will be told what you must do.” Saul’s crew – the men he had brought with him – stood speechless. They heard the sound and they saw a light but they could not make out anything. As they continued to marvel Saul stood himself up, only to open his eyes and discover that he had been blinded by the light. He could not see a thing. So his men grabbed him and led him by the hand into the city of Damascus, where he would remain blind for three days, eating and drinking nothing. Saul set off for Damascus on his own mission. But Jesus interrupted his mission and would soon give him a new one.

Ananias and Jesus’ Mission

Jesus would also give a very specific mission to Ananias, one of his disciples who lived in Damascus. The Lord called to Ananias in a vision. Verses 11 and 12 explain, “The Lord told him, “Go to the house of Judas on Straight Street and ask for a man from Tarsus named Saul, for he is praying. In a vision he has seen a man named Ananias come and place his hands on him to restore his sight.” Well, as you can probably imagine, that caught Ananias off guard. He hadn’t been living under a rock. He knew Saul’s reputation. He knew Saul’s mission. He knew what Saul had come to Damascus to do to him and to the people he loved. So he responded in verses 13 and 14, “‘Lord,’ Ananias answered, ‘I have heard many reports about this man and all the harm he has done to your people in Jerusalem. And he has come here with authority from the chief priests to arrest all who call on your name.’” Ananias speaks as if he’s giving Jesus information he doesn’t already know. It’s almost as if Ananias is trying to help Jesus see how crazy his request of Ananias is. And it is crazy, isn’t it? Jesus wants Ananias to voluntarily walk into a room with the very man who has come there to arrest him and perhaps do far worse to him. But Jesus knows what he’s doing. He makes it plain again in verses 15 and 16, “Go! This man is my chosen instrument to proclaim my name to the Gentiles and their kings and to the people of Israel. I will show him how much he must suffer for my name.”

At this point Ananias is forced to make a decision. He has to make a decision about where his allegiance is. He has to make a decision about whose mission he’s on. Is he on his own mission? Is his mission to protect his own interests and his own life? If so, then he should ignore Jesus and get out of Damascus as soon as he can. Or is he on Jesus’ mission? Is his mission to follow Jesus on his mission to reconcile the world to himself? If so, then he’ll obey Jesus and willfully walk into a room with the man who came to arrest him, and perhaps do far worse. And that’s precisely what Ananias does because Ananias has made Jesus’ mission his mission. Verses 18-19 tell us, “Then Ananias went to the house and entered it. Placing his hands on Saul, he said, ‘Brother Saul, the Lord—Jesus, who appeared to you on the road as you were coming here—has sent me so that you may see again and be filled with the Holy Spirit.’ Immediately, something like scales fell from Saul’s eyes, and he could see again. He got up and was baptized, and after taking some food, he regained his strength.” I love how Jesus works. One of the men who Saul had come to destroy is now used by Jesus to heal the one who came to destroy him. Because Ananias made Jesus’ mission his mission Jesus used him to play a role in one of the most important conversions in all of history.

Saul and Jesus’ Mission

Saul was converted from despising Jesus and persecuting Jesus to worshiping Jesus. But Saul’s encounter with the resurrected Christ did not simply produce a conversion. It also produced a call. As he encountered the resurrected Christ on the road to Damascus Saul was in pursuit of his own mission. But when Jesus converted Saul, Jesus also called Saul from his old mission to a new mission, from his own mission to the mission of Jesus. Jesus filled and empowered Saul with the Holy Spirit and Saul stopped pursuing his mission and started pursuing Jesus’ mission. The text tells us that Saul remained in Damascus and spent time with the very disciples he had initially come to arrest. And immediately, Saul began preaching Jesus. One by one he entered into the Jewish synagogues and proclaimed that Jesus Christ is the Son of God, the Messiah. Can you imagine the shock that fell upon his hearers? This is the equivalent of Osama Bin Laden going into Muslim mosques and trying to convince them that Muhammad is a false prophet and the Jews are God’s chosen people. People wouldn’t know whether to laugh at him as a joker or kill him as a wacko! Verse 21 explains how the Jews in Damascus reacted to Saul’s teaching, “All those who heard him were astonished and asked, ‘Isn’t he the man who raised havoc in Jerusalem among those who call on this name? And hasn’t he come here to take them as prisoners to the chief priests?’” They were understandably baffled as Saul continued to grow more and more powerful by proving from the Scriptures that Jesus, in fact, is Messiah.

As the former persecutor of the Church, Saul had to know that there would be consequences for preaching Jesus. He had to know that many of the Jewish people would respond to him just as he responded to Stephen and those like him. And they did. They conspired together to kill him. By making Jesus’ mission his mission the persecutor had become the persecuted. By God’s grace, though, Saul escaped through an opening in the city wall and fled to Arabia, where he stayed for three years. After three years Saul finally returned to Jerusalem. He tried to join with the disciples in Jerusalem but they were afraid of him. They didn’t believe he had truly been converted. They thought he was there to spy on them, to destroy them. But one man, Barnabas, saw the truth. He took Saul to the Apostles and from then on Saul stayed with them and went through the city preaching Jesus boldly. This continued until, once again, some Jews in the city plotted to kill him. By God’s grace he escaped to Caesarea. But the threat of persecution and the reality of persecution would follow Saul – who we now know as the Apostle Paul – for the rest of his life on earth. By making Jesus’ mission his mission the persecutor had become the persecuted. But not once did he regret it.

You and Your Mission

Through Saul’s experience we are reminded that we are always on mission.  So the question is not, “Are you on mission?” the question is, “Whose mission are you on?” Are you on your own mission, as Saul was as he traveled to Damascus? Or are you on Jesus’ mission, as Saul was after he encountered Jesus? This is a difficult question to hear, because it exposes the true loves of our hearts. But it is not a difficult question to answer. If you want to know whose mission you’re on just answer three simple questions. What do you do with your time? Does most of it go to serve you and your mission or Jesus and his? What do you do with your money? Does most of it go to serve you and your mission or Jesus and his? What do you do with your words? Do you want people to know about you and your mission or about Jesus and his? If you can answer those questions honestly you can easily answer the other question. Whose mission are you on? Are you living your life in pursuit of your own mission or in pursuit of Jesus’ mission?

One thing is made clear in the story of Saul and Ananias that is also made clear throughout all of Scripture. That is this: conversion and call are inseparable. If you are converted to worship Jesus you are called to Jesus’ mission to reconcile the world to himself. It’s not like being an American citizen where you can call yourself an American but let a bunch of other people fight America’s war. It’s not like being a stockholder at Starbucks where you can say you’re a part of the company but let a bunch of other people do all of the work. To be a Christian is to be one who is committed to Jesus’ mission. You cannot say, “I’m committed to Jesus” and not be committed to what Jesus values just as I cannot say, “I’m committed to my wife” and then show absolutely no concern for what my wife values. To love Jesus is to love his mission. To give yourself to Jesus is to give yourself to his mission. Let us stop with all this nonsense of thinking grace somehow gives us a pass from doing what Jesus calls us to do. It is grace that compels us to do what Jesus calls us to do. Just as it did with Saul, so it does with us.

When we understand who Jesus is and what Jesus has done we are driven to his mission. We are driven to see the world reconciled to him. When we understand that Jesus has lived the life that we were supposed to live but have failed to, when we understand that Jesus has died the death that we deserve to die but now don’t have to, when we understand that Jesus has risen from the dead to bring us to God which we can’t do, we are converted to worship him and we are called and converted from our mission to his mission. So when we are converted to Jesus our time is no longer to be used to serve us, it is to be used to serve him and his people and his city. Our money is no longer to be used to serve us, it is to be used to serve him and his people and his city. Our talents and training are no longer to be used to serve us, they are to be used to serve him and his people and his city. Our goal is no longer to help people see our glory, our goal is to help people see his glory! Precisely because Jesus gave everything to us – freely – we are compelled to give everything to him – freely – because we now know it was never ours to begin with! The conversion and the call are inseparable. You are either on Jesus’ mission because you worship him, or you are on your own mission because you worship yourself.

Now, I know that some of you will say, “Well, I believe all that. And I try to do most of that. But I don’t really go out of my way to preach the gospel to people. And there’s a reason why I don’t go out of my way to preach the gospel to people. There’s a reason why I don’t go out of my way to tell people about Jesus. It’s not that I’m on my own mission. It’s just that I know people don’t want to hear it.” No, really? Of course they don’t want to hear it. They’re dead in their sins. That’s precisely why they need to hear it, that’s precisely why you needed to hear it, that’s precisely why I needed to hear it. The fact that your family, and friends, and neighbors are opposed to the gospel message does not mean that they will never receive the gospel message. No matter how hopeless they may seem, as long as they are breathing they are never hopeless! No one in the history of the world has ever responded to the gospel because of their own wisdom or because of their own spiritual hunger. Everyone who has ever responded to the gospel has responded because of God’s grace, because of the gospel’s power and not their own.

And Saul’s story reminds us of this. Saul’s story reminds us that no matter how hopeless someone may seem they are never outside of God’s reach. You say your family, and friends, and neighbors don’t want to hear the gospel? You say they are opposed to Christianity? That may be true. But not as much as Saul was! As much as they may be opposed to Christianity I bet they’re not going from neighborhood to neighborhood and city to city arresting and killing Christians! If anyone was hopeless, if anyone was hostile to Jesus and his message, if anyone was outside of Jesus’ reach, it was Saul! And yet Jesus called Saul, Jesus converted Saul, and Jesus empowered Saul to pursue Jesus’ mission! We don’t do those things. Jesus does those things. He did them with Saul and he is still doing the exact same things. Every Christian in this room is proof of that. No matter how hostile someone might be to the gospel they cannot resist its power when God chooses to open their eyes to it.

The power of the gospel is not found in our ability to present it well. The power of the gospel is not found in the willingness of our listeners to hear it. The power of the gospel is found in Jesus, who is the gospel. Jesus calls. Jesus converts. Jesus empowers for mission. And all of this is and — in fact, was – accomplished through his life, death, and resurrection. Jesus’ work on the cross didn’t just make it possible for people to be saved. Jesus’ work on the cross actually saved everyone who is his. Which means that the pressure is off of you. Jesus does the calling and Jesus does the converting. But this also means that you are out of excuses. Jesus does the calling and Jesus does the converting. So if you are a Christian there is not one reason why you cannot be fully committed to Jesus’ mission. In fact, to be a Christian is to be one who is committed to Jesus’ mission. Does that describe you? If it doesn’t, let me point you once again to the story of Saul. Like many of you, Saul was not committed to Jesus’ mission. Saul was on his own mission, a mission that brought great pain to Jesus and his Church. Yet Jesus forgave even him. And just as Jesus forgave even Saul Jesus can and will forgive you if you turn to him and repent of your sin. And this fact, the fact that Jesus is so loving and so gracious that he would forgive you for forsaking his mission and pursuing your own, this fact should motivate you toward his mission in love and gratitude. So I urge you in the name of Christ: do not let another week pass you by where you do not talk about Jesus’ gospel and mission, do not let another week pass you by where you do not give everything you have and everything you are to Jesus’ gospel and mission. Your mission guarantees disappointment and death. Jesus’ mission guarantees victory and life.

And Don’t You Forget It!

June 27th, 2009 | Posted in articles | No Comments
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The following article is an excerpt from a 2008 sermon given by Cole Brown.

The Coming of the Spirit

Before Jesus ascended into heaven he gave his followers specific instructions to wait in Jerusalem for the coming of the Holy Spirit. As Acts 2 opens we find the 120 Christian believers doing just that – waiting together in one place. We know from chapter 1 that as they were waiting together they were enjoying community with one another, they were reflecting on the Holy Scriptures, they were talking about Jesus and all he had said and done, and they were praying together in unity. In verse 1 of chapter 2 we see that it is now the day of Pentecost, so it’s been about a week since Jesus gave them their instructions and left the earth. Pentecost was a huge Jewish festival. Jewish believers from all over the world came to Jerusalem, where the disciples were waiting and praying, to present their offerings before God. It was an important festival. And now that this festival has come and a week has passed I imagine the 120 Christian believers are wondering when Jesus is going to send the Holy Spirit he promised. I imagine they are wondering how much longer they’re going to have to wait. But I’m sure the last thing they were expecting is that it would happen NOW. And even less were they expecting that it would happen like THIS. But it did. Suddenly.

This is what Luke explains in verses 2-4, “Suddenly a sound like the blowing of a violent wind came from heaven and filled the whole house where they were sitting. They saw what seemed to be tongues of fire that separated and came to rest on each of them. All of them were filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other tongues as the Spirit enabled them.” Remember that the believers knew they were waiting for the Holy Spirit but Jesus didn’t tell them how they would know when the Holy Spirit had come. But now there was no question. The Holy Spirit had come. And God made that extremely clear through visible signs of his presence. First, we are told, that a sound filled the entire house where they were sitting. This wasn’t one of those, “I think I heard something, did you hear that?” sounds. This sound was unmistakable. It was like the blowing of a violent wind from heaven. And that sound was accompanied by an equally distinct sight. They saw images of fire – what appeared to them to be tongues of fire – separate and then rest on each one of them. These signs of wind and fire were not arbitrary. To these 120 Jewish people it would have been very clear what was happening here. Because throughout the Old Testament both wind and fire are used to symbolize the presence of God and the activity of his Spirit. The believers would have remembered that the prophet Ezekiel once found himself standing in a valley of dry, dead bones. The Lord spoke to Ezekiel and commanded him to speak to the bones. As he did so the Lord sent wind to breathe into the bones and they came to life. God explained that the dry, dead bones represented Israel and the wind represented God’s Spirit which he promised to put in his people so that they would live, though they were now dead. The believers also would have remembered God’s presence symbolized through the fire of Moses’ burning bush and through the pillar of fire that protected the Israelites at night as they fled from the Egyptians. There would have been no question in the minds of these 120 believers that the eternal God himself was intimately present with them and the power of his mighty Spirit was at work amongst them. The Holy Spirit, which Jesus had promised them, had come.

And those weren’t the only signs they were given. There was a third. As they were filled with the Holy Spirit they began to speak in other tongues as the Holy Spirit enabled them. As these first believers spoke in tongues they were not making ecstatic utterances and they were not repeating syllables that did not make sense; they were speaking intelligible words in actual existing languages. They were speaking for the first time in languages that they did not know, had never studied, and had never learned. And their listeners understood them clearly. Remember that this was Pentecost. So Jews from every nation were gathering in Jerusalem. And each of them heard their own native language being spoken.

They were amazed by this as explained in verses 6-8, “When they heard this sound, a crowd came together in bewilderment, because each one heard their own language being spoken. Utterly amazed, they asked: “Aren’t all these who are speaking Galileans? Then how is it that each of us hears them in our native language?” The Jews, in general, looked down on people from Galilee as unintelligent, poorly educated, and not so well spoken. So they were shocked to hear these mere Galileans speaking a language they had never been taught — their language — so clearly and effectively. And this shock produced two responses. One group was intrigued. They wanted to know more. “What does this mean?” they asked in verse 12. Another group was more skeptical and made fun of them, “They’ve had too much wine,” they said.

The Interpretation of the Spirit’s Coming

Peter knew that people were perplexed about precisely what was going on, and he knew the importance of this event. He knew that what was happening in their midst was going to divide history. He knew that this event was proof that one era had passed away and that a new era was beginning. So, Peter, the same man who 50 days earlier was so frightened that he denied Jesus to a powerless woman, now, filled with the Holy Spirit, stands up to preach Jesus before an audience of thousands. The first thing he does is address their question. Are they drunk? No, he says. What you’re witnessing is not the result of alcohol. It’s only 9 in the morning! No, what you’re witnessing is something else. It’s not the result of alcohol. It’s the result of the Holy Spirit.

Peter reminds his Jewish audience of a prophecy spoken by their prophet Joel many years earlier. A prophecy every one of them would have known. In verses 17-21 we read, “In the last days, God says, I will pour out my Spirit on all people. Your sons and daughters will prophesy, your young men will see visions, your old men will dream dreams. Even on my servants, both men and women, I will pour out my Spirit in those days, and they will prophesy. I will show wonders in the heaven above and signs on the earth below, blood and fire and billows of smoke. The sun will be turned to darkness and the moon to blood before the coming of the great and glorious day of the Lord. And everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.” This is that, Peter says. What Joel talked about so many years ago – that’s what you see right now. Prophecy and promise are being fulfilled right before your eyes!

Peter announces that on this day – the day of Pentecost – everything has changed. He explains that with the coming of the Holy Spirit there has also come a new era. He calls this new time the last days. He doesn’t speak of the last days as being something far off but as something that has arrived with the coming of the Holy Spirit. In our day and time we always hear people talking about how “the last days have come” or the “last days are coming” or “we’re living in the last days” as if they are saying something profound and frightening. But this is not news. The last days have been here. The last days began 2,000 years ago with the coming of the Holy Spirit just as Peter says in Acts 2:16 and 17. Jesus has fulfilled the Law and the prophecies about his work. He became like us and came to us in order to save us. He lived the perfect life we could not live. He died the horrible death we deserve to die. He received the wrath of God that we should have received. He rose from the dead so that we could be free from death. He ascended into heaven to reign over the universe. And he sent his Holy Spirit to fill his Church, indwell his Church, and empower his Church to tell the whole world about who he is and what he has done. Through all of this Jesus has ushered in the last days. And we are now living in them. Though the time of final judgment and final salvation is still to come judgment and salvation are happening right now. And it is all based on how we respond to Jesus’ completed work. If we reject Jesus we are in the process of being judged and we will receive our final sentence when Jesus returns to the earth. If we accept and worship Jesus we are in the process of being saved and we will receive our final reward when Jesus returns to the earth. The last days have already begun. Judgment and salvation have already begun. And they will be consummated when Jesus Christ returns to earth to render his final judgments and the fullness of his rewards.

But, as Peter explains, not only has the process of judgment and salvation begun, but something else has also changed in these last days. In the previous era the Holy Spirit occasionally came to fill and empower certain members of the Jewish community (usually leaders) to accomplish certain tasks. But, now, the Holy Spirit will not be limited to just the Jewish people, or just a certain class of leaders. The Holy Spirit will fill, indwell, and empower all of God’s people. As Peter says in verses 17 and 18, “In the last days, God says, I will pour out my Spirit on all people. Your sons and daughters will prophesy, your young men will see visions, your old men will dream dreams. Even on my servants, both men and women, I will pour out my Spirit in those days, and they will prophesy.” God is not just pouring out his Spirit on a certain race of people, or a certain nation of people, or a certain gender, or a certain class. God is pouring out his Spirit on all of his people – regardless of race, class, gender, or ability! Peter explains to his audience that this glorious promise is no longer something to hope for in the future. It is now something to possess in the present. This is that, Peter says. What you’re seeing today is what Joel prophesied about. What you’re seeing today is the beginning of a new era – the last days have begun and God is now pouring out his Holy Spirit on all of his people.

The Presence of the Spirit in Us

You and I weren’t there to see this or hear this. We live in a different time. We live in a different culture. And while we’re so thankful that Luke gave us this detailed and well-researched historical record we can sometimes treat it like that’s all that it is. History. And, yes, it is history. But its relevance to us is not just historical. This event and Luke’s account of this event have present relevance to you and me as we sit at our computers 2,000 years and 7,000 miles removed from what we just read. Because what we just read tells us something astonishing. It tells us that God has sent his Holy Spirit and begun a new era. It tells us that in this new era God is pouring out his Holy Spirit on all of his people. Which means that you and I don’t have to look forward to the day when God will send his Spirit to fill us, indwell us, and empower us. If our faith is in Jesus Christ we look back to the day he sent his Holy Spirit to us to fill us, indwell us, and empower us.

And don’t you forget it.

There are some who will tell you that you have to do something to receive the Holy Spirit. They will tell you that you have to tarry for him – to beg for him, to ask for him, to labor for him. They will tell you that you have to be a certain type of person to receive him; that you have to do this or that; that you have to stop doing that or this; that you have to reach a certain level of maturity or a certain level of righteousness before God will fill you with his Holy Spirit. But when they say that they make God like us, and they make us like God! And God is not like us. And we are not like God. We are evil. We rebel against the True God. We give our trust, and love, and obedience to people and things other than Jesus. We look to people and things other than Jesus to bring us fulfillment, and value, and security, and meaning. We are idolaters who so often worship ourselves in place of Jesus. We do what we shouldn’t do. We don’t do what we should do. Our actions, our thoughts, our words are all imperfect. And yet we think that we can somehow earn the Holy Spirit? We think that we can somehow work hard enough or pray long enough that God would want to live in us? How arrogant and self-righteous and self-worshiping do we have to be to think that we can make ourselves worthy of being the dwelling place of God?! That’s what we’re saying if we say that we have to pray to get the Holy Spirit or that we have to work to get the Holy Spirit. We’re saying that we can make ourselves a worthy place for God to dwell. That is despicable. How you could know the filth that lives in your heart and your mind and think that somehow you can earn the presence of the eternal God living in you is detestable. You are not God. You are nothing like God. And you could never give him a good reason to fill you with his Holy Spirit. And when you say that you can you deny God his glory. You make him like us. And he is not like us. He is not someone who only gives to people who give to him, he is not someone who says, “I’ll scratch your back if you scratch mine.” No, he is a God of love, and mercy, and grace. Which means he gives to us the good that we do not deserve simply because he loves us. It means that he doesn’t give to us the bad that we do deserve simply because he loves us. Look back at Acts 1:4. Look at what Jesus says about the Holy Spirit, “Do not leave Jerusalem, but wait for the gift my Father promised, which you have heard me speak about.” Focus on the words he uses to describe the coming of the Holy Spirit. “The gift my Father promised.” Gift. Promise. These are not things that can be earned by praying long enough or working hard enough. A gift is something that is given freely, that is undeserved, and unearned. Jesus says the Holy Spirit is a gift, meaning you don’t have to do anything to receive him. And the Holy Spirit is also a promise. Not an offer, not a possibility – a promise. God did not say, “If you do this then I’ll send the Holy Spirit.” He said, “I will send the Holy Spirit.” God did not say, “As long as you do A, B, and C I will send you the Holy Spirit.” He said, “I promise you the Holy Spirit.” Rejoice in that! If your faith is in Jesus he has already sent his Holy Spirit to fill, indwell, and empower you and he has done it according to his righteousness and not your own.

And don’t you forget it.

Yet there are still some who will tell you that you don’t have the Holy Spirit unless you speak in tongues. They read this passage in Acts 2 and they say that since the apostles spoke in tongues when they received the Holy Spirit then everyone will speak in tongues when they receive the Holy Spirit. The first problem with that is that the apostles spoke in actual existing languages that they were never trained to speak. If that’s the sign of the Holy Spirit then very, very few Christians are filled with the Holy Spirit. Because while lots of church people speak in tongues that are unintelligible I have yet to meet any that speak perfectly in an existing language. The second problem with that is that this is not at all what this passage is telling us. One of the easiest mistakes we can make when reading the Bible is to read a descriptive passage and treat it as a prescriptive passage (to read about something that did happen and assume that this is what should always happen). We have to be careful here. Because, remember, Luke is writing history. He is describing what happened at a certain time, in a certain place, with a certain group of people. He does not once imply that this is what will happen at all times, in all places, with all people. And no one really believes that anyway. It’s interesting that those who will tell you that you have to speak in tongues to have the Holy Spirit don’t mention the other signs that were present in this passage. Remember, the apostles didn’t just speak in tongues. First, they heard the sound of a rushing and violent wind. Second, they saw tongues of fire resting on each one of them. If we say that what happened to the Apostles when they received the Holy Spirit is what is supposed to happen to everyone then we can’t just say you have to speak in tongues, we have to also say that you have to have fire resting above your head, and a violent wind rushing through the building you’re in. You see we can’t just take a descriptive text in the Bible and turn in into a prescriptive text that applies to everyone. Instead, what we have to do is interpret the descriptive text in light of all of the prescriptive texts we find in Scripture. In this case, we have to see what passages in the Bible directly teach about the Holy Spirit and then we can interpret this historical event in light of the Bible’s direct and explicit teaching. If we do that it won’t take long to see that while tongues may be a sign of the Holy Spirit they are not the evidence of the Holy Spirit. Let’s start in 1Corinthians 12:4-11. The Spirit distributes the gifts as he wills. And it is very clear in this passage that he chooses to give different gifts to different people. To one he gives the message of wisdom, to another a message of knowledge, to another speaking in different kinds of tongues. He gives different signs to different people. Let’s read down further in 1Corinthians 12:29-31. Paul is asking his audience a series of rhetorical questions. And the obvious answer to each of them is no. Are all apostles? No. Are all prophets? No. Are all teachers? No. Do all work miracles? No. Do all have gifts of healing? No. Do all speak in tongues? No. Clearly, speaking in tongues can be a good thing. It can be something given to us by the Holy Spirit. But it is not proof that we have been given the Holy Spirit. So with tongues or without tongues if your faith is in Jesus Christ you can be certain that you are filled, and you are indwelled, and you are empowered by the Holy Spirit.

And don’t you forget it.

This is wonderful news, isn’t it? You don’t have to do anything to receive the Holy Spirit and you don’t have to do anything to prove you have the Holy Spirit. All you have to do is believe. If you believe in Jesus Christ – if you trust in him, put your faith in him, and worship him – you are filled, indwelled, and empowered by the Holy Spirit. Ephesians 1:13-14 explains, “And you also were included in Christ when you heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation. When you believed, you were marked in him with a seal, the promised Holy Spirit, who is a deposit guaranteeing our inheritance until the redemption of those who are God’s possession—to the praise of his glory.” This passage clearly teaches that at the moment we truly believed the gospel we were filled with the promised Holy Spirit. But not only is the Holy Spirit the result of our belief. He is also the cause of our belief. 1Corinthians 12:3 says this, “Therefore I want you to know that no one who is speaking by the Spirit of God says, “Jesus be cursed,” and no one can say, “Jesus is Lord,” except by the Holy Spirit.” In other words, the only way that you can sincerely and truthfully worship Jesus is if the Holy Spirit is already alive and at work in you. So the question is not, do you speak in tongues? The question is not, do you feel the Holy Spirit? The question is not, what have you done to receive the Spirit? The question is this: do you sincerely and truly believe the gospel of Jesus Christ? If you do then you can know beyond any shadow of a doubt that you are filled, and you are indwelled, and you are empowered by the Holy Spirit.

And don’t you forget it.

I go to great lengths to make this clear because so many Christians have been told that they don’t have the Holy Spirit or that they don’t have the “fullness” of the Holy Spirit. Perhaps because you don’t speak in tongues people have told you that you’re missing something. And that grieves me so much. It grieves me because it may make you feel like you’re doing something wrong. That somehow you’ve failed to be good enough and, therefore, God has withheld his Holy Spirit from you. It grieves me because it may make you frustrated with God. You may wonder why it seems like God has given the Holy Spirit to this person and that person but he hasn’t given the Holy Spirit to you. You’re wondering why he keeps passing you over. You’re wondering what they have done that you haven’t done. It grieves me because it may make you feel like you’re not prepared to do certain things. Maybe you think you can’t be involved in this ministry because you “don’t have the Holy Spirit” yet. Or maybe you think you can’t defeat this particular sin because you “don’t have the Holy Spirit” yet. It grieves me so much to think that you have been made to feel that you are not filled with the Holy Spirit because you don’t speak in tongues. And so I want to say again what the Bible very clearly says – if you sincerely and truly believe the gospel of Jesus Christ then you are filled, and you are indwelled, and you are empowered by the Holy Spirit. If you weren’t aware of it before you are aware of it now.

And don’t you forget it.

Maybe that’s not you. Maybe you’ve never been made to feel that you are not filled with the Holy Spirit. Maybe you’ve been taught that, yes, you are filled with God’s Spirit. And if that’s true – praise be to God. But the truth is even you need to be reminded of this. Because though you may know it, you sometimes live like you have forgotten it. So let me use Acts chapter 2 to remind you that, if your faith is in Jesus Christ, you are filled, and you are indwelled, and you are empowered by the Holy Spirit of the living God.

And don’t you forget it!

And don’t you live like you have forgotten it!

Knowing that you’re filled with the Holy Spirit should move you to do what the Holy Spirit has empowered you to do! Since you know you are filled with the Holy Spirit you should be proclaiming the gospel, and proclaiming the gospel, and proclaiming the gospel in the power of the Spirit! Since you know you are filled with the Holy Spirit you should be boldly speaking to people about who Jesus is and what Jesus has done in the power of the Spirit! Since you know you are filled with the Holy Spirit you should be resisting sin in the power of the Spirit! Since you know you are filled with the Holy Spirit you should be living like Jesus in the power of the Holy Spirit! Since you know you are filled with the Holy Spirit you should be praying frequently and fervently in the power of the Spirit! Your life should look like a life lived in the power of the Holy Spirit because if you love Jesus you are filled, you are indwelled, and you are empowered by the Holy Spirit.

And don’t you forget it.

Sin

June 18th, 2009 | Posted in sermons | Comments Off
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Introduction

I hope you don’t take this the wrong way. But I am so glad that in three days the election will finally be over. Can any of you relate? Every time I turn on the TV or the radio I hear one candidate or the other try to convince me that they are the solution to America’s problems. But here’s the most frustrating thing. While we all agree that America has problems that need to be solved we can’t seem to agree on the root cause of our problems. Depending on who you’re listening to you might be told that the root cause of America’s problems is that government has too much power, or too little power; that we’re spending too much money on education, or not enough on education; that the Democrats have screwed everything up, or that the Republicans have screwed everything up; that the religious powers are leading our country astray, or that the irreligious elite are leading our country astray. Well, which is it? It can’t be all of these things because they contradict each other. Which is it? What is at the root of America’s problems? How you answer that question will determine what solution you think is best. And your solution will only be as good as your diagnosis of the problem. The only way we can ever find an adequate solution is to first have an accurate diagnosis of the problem.

Let’s get out of the political arena for a minute and look into the health arena. Imagine you’re with a friend who is experiencing chest pains. You ask her to describe the pain to you and she does. You ask her when it started and she says it started right after she ate a large pizza all by herself. You offer her a solution. You tell her that she should take some antacid tablets. This is a good solution, isn’t it? Only if you have accurately diagnosed the problem. If your heartburn diagnosis was accurate then, yes, antacid tablets will help to solve her problem. But if your heartburn diagnosis was inaccurate then your solution will not only be ineffective, it may kill her. Because her chest pains may have nothing to do with the large pizza she just ate all by herself, she may be having a heart attack. Again, our solutions are only as adequate as our diagnosis is accurate.

So that’s what we’re going to do tonight. We’re going to focus on the problem. What’s wrong with the world? What’s wrong with this world where fathers abandon their children? What’s wrong with this world where children all over the world go hungry? What’s wrong with this world where people die because they have no access to clean water? What’s wrong with this world where CEO’s can lie and cheat their way to wealth while their employees are overtaken by poverty? What’s wrong with this world where every one of us knows people who have been sexually abused? What’s wrong with this world where governments get away with murdering their own people? What’s wrong with this world where marriages fall apart? What’s wrong with this world where we are betrayed, and lied to, and hurt by the words and choices of others?  What’s wrong with the world?

Whether we know it or not we all have an answer to that question. Even if we’ve never voiced our diagnosis, even if we’ve never consciously identified our diagnosis, we have one. And we live every moment of our life in light of that diagnosis. At the core of your being you have a deeply held belief about what is wrong with the world. And that belief determines how you think, how you speak, and how you live. You know where this comes through the clearest? It comes through the clearest at the coffeehouse. Something as simple and as “unspiritual” as our coffeehouse conversations reveals our theology – it reveals what we think is wrong with the world. Now sometimes we don’t notice that because we don’t spend much time intentionally talking about what we think is wrong with the world. Instead, we spend most of our time talking about what we must do to make our personal world better or what others must do to make the entire world better. We tend to speak about the solutions instead of the problem. But as soon as we start talking about the solutions we reveal what we understand the problem to be.

In my time at the coffeehouse I’ve heard people offer many solutions. I have heard people say that we say we need more education, or that we need our party to obtain political power, or that people just need to be more loving, or that we just need to work harder to be better people, or that we need to go to church more frequently. But here’s the thing. None of these solutions will work. None of these solutions will work because none of them are based on accurate diagnosis of the problem. The problem is not ignorance, the problem is not politics, the problem is not that we haven’t been as loving as we should be, the problem is not that we haven’t been trying hard enough to do right, the problem is not that we haven’t been fulfilling our religious duties — the problem is sin. According to the Bible, according to God’s Word, THE problem is sin.

This is uncomfortable to hear, of course, whether in a church, a coffeehouse, or anywhere. We fight against this diagnosis because none of us wants to think that we are the problem and not the solution. Because of that, some of you are writing this diagnosis off as false right now. But in reality the fact that you want so much to prove this diagnosis false is evidence that it is true. To say that our core problem is anything other than sin requires that you literally write off the entire Bible as utterly useless. Apart from the first two chapters of the Bible the whole subject of every paragraph in the Bible is the problem of sin and what God is doing about it. To say that our core problem is anything other than sin requires that you do away with this entire book. It also requires that you do away with all of human history. With all of the world’s wealth, with all of the world’s education, with all of the world’s healthy families, with all of the world’s love and generosity, with all of the world’s religious devotion, with all of the world’s politics, we have yet to make any progress. Murder, genocide, poverty, hunger, racism, divorce, war, selfishness – they haven’t gone away. In many cases they have grown stronger. To say that our core problem is anything other than sin requires that you do away with the Bible, it requires that you do away with human history, and lastly, it requires that you do away with your own experience. Why is it that you still haven’t become the person you want to be? Why is it that you find yourself doing things that you judge other people for doing? Why is it that you still sometimes go against your own conscience? It’s not that you’re not trying hard enough. No matter how hard you try you still fall into the same thinking and the same behavior. To say that the core problem is anything other than sin is to throw out the Bible, throw out human history, and throw out your own experience. This is why it has often been said that the Biblical doctrine of original sin is the only doctrine of the Bible that can be proven empirically. Even if you’re not convinced of this there is more than enough evidence to make it worth looking into. So let’s do that together tonight. Let’s take a closer look at God’s diagnosis of our core problem. Let’s take a close look at sin. Specifically, we’re going to answer three questions: what is sin, how does sin work, and how do we fix it. Let’s start by looking at the nature of the problem and asking, “what is sin?”

What is Sin?

Sin is the core problem that needs to be solved. But what is sin? The words that our Bible translates as “sin” literally mean “failing to obey authority” or “missing the target.” This is important to grasp. If sin is failing to obey authority or missing the target this means that God and God’s will are the measure of sin. Our culture is not the measure of sin. Popular opinion is not the measure of sin. How other people live is not the measure of sin. My particular strengths and weaknesses are not the measure of sin. God and his will are the measure of sin. To sin is to turn from both. To sin is to turn both from God and his will. Think about this with me for a minute. This is the Biblical picture of sin. And it is different from how most people think of sin. Both religious people and irreligious people most often think of sin as a behavioral problem. We generally think that to sin is to behave in the wrong way or to not behave in the right way. This is why we think we can solve the problem through education and effort. If sin is simply a behavioral problem then once we learn what the right behavior is all we have to do is make the effort to do it. So we seek out more sermons, and more books, and more television that will tell us what to do and how to do it. But that solution won’t work. Because sin is not primarily a behavior problem. At its root, sin is a worship problem. We see this in the first human sin ever committed. Do you remember how the story of Adam and Eve unfolds? Let’s look at Genesis 3:1-6.

“Now the serpent was more crafty than any of the wild animals the LORD God had made. He said to the woman, ‘Did God really say, ‘You must not eat from any tree in the garden’?’ The woman said to the serpent, “We may eat fruit from the trees in the garden, but God did say, ‘You must not eat fruit from the tree that is in the middle of the garden, and you must not touch it, or you will die.’ ‘You will not certainly die,’ the serpent said to the woman. For God knows that when you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.’ When the woman saw that the fruit of the tree was good for food and pleasing to the eye, and also desirable for gaining wisdom, she took some and ate it. She also gave some to her husband, who was with her, and he ate it.”

God created Adam and Eve as good. They were in right relationship with him and with each other. He walked with them. He talked with them. He gave them everything they could ever need. And, because of that, they worshiped him. But then something changed. Suddenly they were no longer in a right relationship with God or each other. Suddenly God no longer walked with them and talked with them. Suddenly they were hiding from God and cast out of his presence. So what happened? The traditional answer is that they ate the fruit. And that’s true. They did eat the fruit that God clearly told them not to eat. But that’s not the main issue. If you read the story carefully you’ll see that the real issue is not that they ate the fruit. The real issue is that they gave their worship to creation instead of to the Creator. That happened first. And then they ate the fruit because of that. The behavior problem was simply a symptom of the worship problem. Let’s take a closer look at how it went down.

What happens first? The first thing that happens is that the serpent tells the woman to believe him and doubt God. And she does. That’s a worship problem. She chose to trust a created thing more than she trusted the Creator of all things. What happens second? Second she decides to disobey God and eat the fruit. But why? Look at verse 5, “For God knows that when you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.” She decided to eat the fruit because she wanted to be like God. She wanted to be able to determine what was good and what was evil. She wanted to take herself — a created thing — and make it greater than the Creator of all things. That’s a worship problem. What happens third? Eve eats the fruit and encourages her husband to do the same. That’s a behavior problem. But the behavior problem came third. The only reason Eve ever sinned in her behavior is because she had already sinned in her heart. She had given her trust and her worship to created things instead of to the Creator of all things.

What is sin? Sin is turning from God and his will. It is a worship problem first and a behavior problem second. Let’s look at one more passage that drives this home. Turn to Romans 1:22-25.

“Although they claimed to be wise, they became fools and exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images made to look like mortal human beings and birds and animals and reptiles. Therefore God gave them over in the sinful desires of their hearts to sexual impurity for the degrading of their bodies with one another. They exchanged the truth about God for a lie, and worshiped and served created things rather than the Creator-who is forever praised. Amen.” – Romans 1:22-25

Look at the chronology here, look at the cause and effect. The first thing we see, in verse 23, is that human beings have committed idolatry. We have failed to worship the True God. But we haven’t stopped worshiping. We’ve just put other things in his place. And the consequence of this, as we see in verse 24, is sinful behavior. It’s because we have a worship problem, it’s because we have not made the True God the object of our worship, that we are given over to the sinful desires of our hearts and to all sorts of bad behavior. And that’s the real issue. The real issue is not our behavior problem, it’s our worship problem. Verse 25 explains it beautifully. It says we “worshiped and served created things rather than the Creator.” This is our problem. This is the source of every problem in the world. Human beings have chosen to give to creation what belongs to Creator. We have lived for ourselves and for other created things instead of living for the Creator of all things.

Since our sin problem is really a worship problem and not a behavior problem it can’t be solved by simply changing our behavior. So education can’t fix it. Human effort can’t fix it. Sermons that just tell us what to do can’t fix it. In fact, these things can actually make it worse. Because though they can teach us to do good things they may be teaching us to do good things for the wrong reasons. Instead of doing good things as an act of worship to God we might be doing good things so that we can feel good about ourselves, or we might be doing things so that we can get what we want from God or other people, or we might be doing good things out of guilt, or we might be doing good things out of fear, or we might be doing good things so that God or other people will accept us or love us. That stuff doesn’t look like sin to the human eye. It looks like good deeds and acts of righteousness. But God sees it for what it is. He sees it as sin because he sees that it is done in service to someone or something other than him.

When we understand what sin really is – when we understand that it is a worship problem and not just a behavior problem – we start to see just how sinful we really are. We start to see that we are far more sinful than we ever dared to believe. You don’t need to be a Christian to see that. Whether you believe the Biblical testimony or not you know that even your good actions are often done out of impure, self-serving motives motives. What is sin? Sin is turning from God and his will. It is to trust in someone or something else to give you pleasure, security, meaning, value, identity, and joy. That’s the nature of sin. And that is the core cause of every problem in your world and every problem in the entire world.

How Does Sin Work?

 So we’ve defined what sin is. Now the question is how does sin work? Sin is the root cause of all of our problems but how does sin work? We could talk about this for weeks but for tonight we’re just going to look at three ways that sin does its work in us and in the world.

First, sin works universally. Sin works universally. What this means is that sin is at work in every single person on the planet. Sin doesn’t just work in the religious or in the irreligious, it doesn’t just work in the rich or in the poor, it doesn’t just work in the powerful or in the powerless, it doesn’t just work in the conservative or in the liberal – sin is alive and at work in every single person on the face of the earth. I love the imagery of Romans 3:9-12.

“What shall we conclude then? Do we have any advantage? Not at all! We have already made the charge that Jews and Gentiles alike are all under the power of sin. As it is written: ‘There is no one righteous, not even one; there is no one who understands; there is no one who seeks God. All have turned away, they have together become worthless; there is no one who does good, not even one.”

Sin works universally, in all of us. Read a few verses down and in verse 23 you’ll find this communicated again, “For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.” How does sin work? It works universally so that not one of us is righteous, not one of us seeks God, not one of us does good, all of us have turned away, all of us fall short of the glory of God. None of us want to hear this about ourselves. But it can’t be denied. The Scriptures are clear. Human history is clear. Your own experience is clear. You can’t point to a single person that was not under the power of sin. Including yourself.  Especially yourself. Why? Because sin is universal. It’s universal because it is in our nature. It’s in our nature because our father, Adam, sinned and he passed this on to us. It’s explained this way in Romans 5:12, “Therefore, just as sin entered the world through one man, and death through sin, and in this way death came to all people, because all sinned…”

Now that’s uncomfortable. It’s uncomfortable to believe that we are not sinners because we sin but, rather, that we sin because we are sinners. It’s who we are. That is a very unflattering thing to believe.  So we try to find another explanation. We can’t deny that sin is universal so we try to find some other way to explain why it is universal. The most common way this is done is by arguing that the reason all people sin is because sin is a learned behavior. This argument claims that human beings are basically good but we have been corrupted by our environment. This explanation is attractive because it tells us that we’re not sinners, we’re good people who happen to sin because we live in a sinful society. But while this explanation is attractive it is obviously false. If human beings are basically good and sin is a learned behavior then where did the first person learn sin from? If we’re only sinful because we live in a sinful society how did the first society become sinful? Sin cannot be a learned behavior, sinful society cannot be the cause of sinful people, because sinful people created sinful society. Thus, sin is universal. Every one of us is sinful by nature and we inherited that nature from Adam, the first sinner.

How does sin work? It works universally. Sin also works totally. When we say sin works universally we mean that all human beings are sinful. When we say sin works totally we mean that every part of every human being is sinful. We’re not saying that every part of us is as bad as it could be but that no part of us is as good as it should be. To say that sin works in us totally is to say that sin has infected our mind, our heart, our will, our motivations, our emotions, our bodies – every part of us. Sin works in us totally so that every part of us is sinful. Let’s look at two Scriptures that explain this for us,

“I know that good itself does not dwell in me, that is, in my sinful nature…” – Romans 7:18

“…Everything that does not come from faith is sin.” – Romans 14:23

In the first passage, Paul writes that there is no good in who we are as human beings. Now the word “good” can be used in many different ways. Of course it’s “good” that you haven’t killed anyone. It’s “good” that you often do generous things. Those things are good compared to what you could do. But they are not truly good. And the second verse explains why. Even what appears to be good is not truly good if it is motivated by anything other than true faith in the True God. Every one of us – religious and irreligious – often does good things for the wrong reasons. We often do them for reasons more than or less than pure faith in God. We often do them for reasons more than or less than true love for God, and his will, and his glory. Which means that even our greatest goodness is actually impure. And if even our greatest goodness is actually impure how impure is the rest of us? Sin works in us totally so that our mind, our heart, our bodies, our will, our emotions, our motivations – everything in us has been tainted by sin. No part of us is truly good.

How does sin work? Sin works in us universally. Sin works in us totally. And, lastly, sin works in us disablingly. To say sin works in us disablingly is to say that sin makes us moral quadriplegics – it makes us utterly unable to do what is right. Look at how the Scriptures explain this,

“The sinful mind is hostile to God; it does not submit to God’s law, nor can it do so.” – Romans 8:7

“..For I have the desire to do what is good, but I cannot carry it out. For I do not do the good I want to do, but the evil I do not want to do-this I keep on doing.” – Romans 7:18-19.

In our sinful nature we are moral quadriplegics. We do not and cannot do what is right. The Scriptures give this testimony again and again. But let’s just say, for the sake of argument, that you don’t believe the Scriptures to be God’s Word. You still know this to be true. You have a conscience. Your conscience tells you what is right and what is wrong. You say that you want to do what is right but time and time again you go against your own conscience. Even when you know what is right you do not do it, you cannot do it. In addition to having a conscience you also have a mouth. And your mouth often condemns other people for things they’ve done. Your mouth condemns liars, your mouth condemns the proud, your mouth condemns the selfish. By doing that you show that you know what is right and what is wrong. And yet time and time again you are guilty of the very same things you condemn others for. Even when you know what is right you do not do it, you cannot do it. If I were having this conversation with a friend at a coffeehouse I’d ask them, “Why is this the case? Why is it that even when you know what is right and you say you want to do what is right you don’t do it?” It’s interesting that when I ask that question most of my Christian and non-Christian friends give the exact same answer. “I’m only human, and humans make mistakes.” There are two problems with that answer, though. The first problem is the word “mistake.” Is it really a mistake if you willfully choose to do the same thing over, and over, and over, and over again even though you know it’s wrong? Is that a mistake? No, that’s willful rebellion against what you know to be good and true. The second problem is the phrase “I’m only human.” That’s not an explanation for why you continue to do what is wrong when you know what is right. The phrase “I’m only human” doesn’t even have any meaning until you can tell me why it is that humans do wrong when they know what is right? Science can’t tell us why we do that. Animals don’t do that. What is it that’s unique to humans that leads them to do what is wrong when they know what is right? Only Christian theology can answer that question. And here’s how Christian theology answers it. You don’t do what is wrong when you know what is right because “You’re only human, and humans make mistakes.” You do what is wrong when you know what is right because you are a slave to sin. Here’s how Jesus explains it,

“Jesus replied, “Very truly I tell you, everyone who sins is a slave to sin.” – John 8:34

Why do you do what is wrong when you know what is right? Because you are a slave to sin. You are a moral quadriplegic. To ask you to do anything other than sin is like asking my 10 month-old son to write a 30 page essay on the second law of thermodynamics. It’s asking the impossible. It’s asking you to do what you cannot do.

How Do We Fix It?

Let’s review what we’ve covered so far. We started by asking, what is sin? All sin, at its root, is a worship problem. It flows from hearts that find their ultimate meaning, their ultimate fulfillment, and their ultimate pleasure in creation instead of in Creator. To sin is to turn from God and his will. That’s what sin is. Then we asked, how does sin work? We said sin works universally (so that every one of us is infected with it), it works totally (so that every part of us is infected with it), and it works disablingly (so that not one of us has the ability to overcome it). Now we will look to our third and final question, how do we fix it?

How do we fix the sin problem? How do we fix all that is wrong with us and all that is wrong with the world? The answer is…we can’t. We can’t fix it. Remember, it’s not a behavior problem. If it were a behavior problem we could easily fix it but it’s not, it’s a worship problem. It’s a worship problem that is universal – it affects all of us – there’s not one person we can call on to fix the problem because all people are equally infected with it. It’s a worship problem that is total – it affects every part of us – there’s not one part of us that can see clearly enough to find a solution because every part of us has been infected with sin. It’s a worship problem that disables us – it renders us absolutely crippled – so that we are powerless to do anything other than continue sin. How do we fix it? We can’t.

And yet we try. And the funny thing is religious people and irreligious people we try to deal with the sin problem in the exact same ways. We think that education will break us free. So we go to the schools that promise to give us the knowledge we need to succeed, we read the books that promise us the keys to contentment, we listen to the sermons that promise to tell us the 5-steps to a good marriage, or the 3-steps to financial health, or the secret to living a life of purpose. But if we’re paying attention we will eventually see that education hasn’t solved our problem. So we think the key to breaking free is to work harder than we have been. So we take all of the information that we’ve gathered and we try to work as hard as we can to put it into practice. I just need to be more disciplined in my finances, I just need to be more patient with my spouse, I just need to be more committed to my job, I just need to be a more loving person, I just need someone to hold me accountable, I just need to read my Bible more, I just need to pray more, I just need to go to church more. But if we’re paying attention we will eventually see that all of our hard work has not eliminated the problem. We still do the things we are trying so hard not to do, we still fail to do the things we are trying so hard to do, our relationships are still a mess, our world is still corrupted. The education hasn’t worked, the extra effort hasn’t worked so we think if we could just change our circumstance we can break free. “Oh, if my candidate just gets elected,” “Oh, if my pastor just spends more time with me,” “Oh, if I could just get married,” “Oh, if I could just get divorced,” “Oh, if I could just relocate to another city then my problems would be solved, then I’d be willing and able to do the things I know I should do.”

This is what comes out in our coffeehouse conversations. We’re always talking about what we need to do in order to fix our problem. But these solutions we offer will never work. Because they fail to properly diagnose the problem. The problem is not that you don’t know what you should do – you do know. The problem is not that you aren’t working hard enough to do it – no matter how hard you work you don’t have the ability to do it. The problem is not that you’re just in the wrong circumstance – your problem will remain the same no matter what circumstance you’re in. Your problem is you! Your problem is that you allow people and things other than Jesus Christ to rule over your heart and wherever Jesus Christ does not rule sin does! Your problem is not that you don’t know enough, not that you don’t work hard enough, not that you’re in the wrong circumstance of life. Your problem is that you are sinful to the core of your being and you can’t do anything about it.

That’s not something you want to hear, is it? That’s not something you want to believe about yourself, is it? That’s not something you want to admit, is it? And yet believing it and admitting it is the one thing that will solve your problem. The only way the sin problem will ever be solved is if we admit that we are the problem, that we are disabled by sin, and that we need someone outside of us – someone who is not disabled by sin – to save us from our own sin, to save us from the sins of others, and to save from the righteous judgment of a Holy God. Let us do away with all of this nonsense that says being a Christian is about being a good person. Being a Christian is not about being a good person. Being a Christian is about admitting that no matter how hard you try you can never be a good person. It is that honest and accurate self-awareness that leads you to cry out, “God…save me.” And when we speak those words in faith that is exactly what he does.

See, God is not a part of the sin problem. He is not in any way shape or form complicit. He is completely free from sin and entirely untainted by it. Because he is the only truly free being, because he is the only being who is untainted by sin, he is the only being who can do anything at all about the sin problem. And what can he do to fix the sin problem? The most obvious way that God can fix the sin problem is to destroy sinners. If he wipes us out then the sin problem is solved. And of course he has every right to do that. He created us and we have rebelled against him and what he created us for. Our sins against him are so numerous that is evidence of his mercy and grace. He has every right to judge us, he has every right to give us an eternity in Hell, he has every right to snatch the breath out of your lungs right at this very instant. He can do that and the sin problem will be solved once and for all. Or he can do something else. He can devise a way to destroy sin without destroying sinners. But the only way this can be done is if God destroys a fully righteous person who deserves life in place of totally sinful people who deserve death. And since he alone is righteous what that really means is that he would have to destroy himself in order to save the very people who hate him, deny him, and reject his authority. To do so would be an act of love, humility, and self-sacrifice beyond human comprehension. Yet this is the solution God chose.

Instead of destroying sin by destroying sinners he chose to destroy sin by destroying his own innocent Son. God the Father clothed God the Son in human flesh and sent him to live in a sinful world. God the Son, Jesus Christ, was filled with God the Holy Spirit and lived a life of perfect righteousness. Even in a sinful environment, surrounded by sinful people, and endless temptations Jesus did not once turn from God the Father or from God the Father’s will. Even when that meant dying a criminal’s death on a cross. Because Jesus was fully committed to the Father and the Father’s will he willfully went to the cross and he willfully died in your place so that you could live. Not only that, he willfully took your sin upon himself so that you could be given his righteousness. Not only that, he willfully took God’s wrath for your sin upon himself so that you could be given God’s reward for his righteousness. You see, God didn’t solve the sin problem by reaching out and crushing sinners, he solved the sin problem by becoming sin and being crushed by and for sinners. Three days later Jesus rose from the dead showing that sin and death had no hold over him. Forty days later he ascended into heaven, returning to his seat next to the Father, so that he could bring his people into God’s presence. Through all of this Jesus purchased your freedom from death and your freedom from judgment because he purchased your freedom from sin.

If you’re not a Christian this gospel message may contradict the beliefs you came in here with. But maybe it’s time for you to let go of those beliefs. We’ve already seen tonight that they don’t conform to reality and they don’t work, all of the evidence is consistent with the Biblical teaching on sin. Which means that Jesus and his gospel are your only hope. If you’re a Christian you’ve already trusted in this message for your salvation. But the danger is that many of us stop there. We trust in the gospel for our salvation and then we trust in ourselves for our sanctification, we trust in ourselves to become more holy. But that is sin, and it doesn’t work. Christians, Jesus is not only your only hope for salvation, Jesus is the only hope for your marriage, Jesus is the only hope for your singleness, Jesus is the only hope for you finances, Jesus is the only hope for your work, Jesus is the only hope for dealing with difficult people, Jesus is the only hope for every problem in your life because every problem is a sin problem and Jesus and Jesus alone gives you victory over sin. Christians and non-Christians let’s stop trusting in more education and more effort and let us trust in Jesus and Jesus alone.

 

 

 

 

 

A Seat at the Table

June 18th, 2009 | Posted in articles | Comments Off
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The following article is an excerpt from a 2008 sermon given by Cole Brown.

I have spent most of my life as a nerd. And I have very vivid memories of what that looked like, especially in my middle-school and high-school days. My least favorite part of the school day was lunchtime. That was everyone else’s favorite part of the day, right? Everybody was excited to sit down and talk with their friends at lunch. But lunchtime was miserable for me. Because I didn’t really have anyone to sit down and talk with. I remember often walking into the cafeteria with my lunch and scanning the room for a place to sit. I would see the girl I had a crush on and I would want to go sit by her. But there was no seat at the table for me. I would see the guys who I admired and I would want to go sit by them. But there was no seat at the table for me. Finally, I would see the nerds who gathered together at the far table. But there was no seat at the table for me there, either. Sometimes I was just too much of a nerd even for the other nerds. On most days there was no seat at any table for me so many times I would end up eating my lunch outside and alone. I think it goes without saying that this was painful for me.

Unfortunately, this type of division and separation doesn’t end with high-school. Certainly it takes on different forms as we get older but it still remains. Some of us still feel like outcasts. Some of us still feel like we’re excluded from the table. And some of us still create these divisions. We still want to separate ourselves from certain groups of people or certain types of people. So which of these are you? Are you the one who often feels excluded from the table? Or are you the one who excludes others from the table? You probably don’t want to hear this but most of us are both. God’s Word has a lot to say about this. We’ll see this t as we look at the story of Peter and Cornelius found in Acts 9:32-11:18.

The Prologue

The story of Peter and Cornelius is the longest narrative found in the entire book of Acts. As Luke tells us this true story he takes us from one location to another, from one scene to another, much like a movie. And, much like a movie, this narrative is packed with tension and conflict. This tension and conflict produces change in these characters so that by the end not one of them is the same as they were at the beginning.

The prologue directs our attention to Peter. In Lydda he found a man who was paralyzed and bedridden for eight years. He healed him in the name of Jesus Christ and people all over the city turned to faith in the Lord. He remained in Lydda telling people about Jesus until two men from Joppa came to him and urged him to come back to Joppa with them. He did. And when he arrived he saw Dorcas lying dead while women mourned. Peter prayed for her, Jesus raised her from the dead, and people throughout Joppa turned to faith in the Lord. And Peter stayed in Joppa, continuing to tell people about who Jesus is and what Jesus has done. The prologue presents Peter to us as a powerful witness of Jesus Christ. As one who went from place to place preaching Jesus and healing people in his name – even raising one woman from the dead. That’s impressive, isn’t it? Well, as impressive as that is, it is nothing compared to what Peter will do as this story unfolds.

Scene 1 – Cornelius’ Vision

Fade in to scene one to reveal Cornelius in prayer at three in the afternoon. He is introduced to us as an admirable character. We are told that he and all his family were devout and God-fearing. He gave generously to all who were in need and he prayed regularly to the True God. In other words, Cornelius was sympathetic to the theology of the Jews and the ethics of the Jews. And all of this is very significant. Because Cornelius is not a Jew. He’s a Gentile. Even worse, he is a Roman Centurion, meaning he commands the army that occupies Israel. Worse still, he lives in Caesarea. The Jews hated Caesarea. They called it “the daughter of Edom,” partially because the city had more Gentiles than Jews. So it is interesting that we find Cornelius praying at 3 in the afternoon, one of the traditional Jewish prayer times. And it is beyond interesting – it is amazing – to see how his prayers are answered.

In the midst of his prayer God gave Cornelius a vision. Cornelius distinctly saw an angel of God who came to him and called him by his name. “Cornelius!” As should be expected Cornelius stared at him in fear. He asked, “What is it Lord?” The angel answered, “Your prayers and gifts to the poor have come up as a memorial offering before God. Now send men to Joppa to bring back a man named Simon who is called Peter. He is staying with Simon the tanner, whose house is by the sea.” The angel did not tell Cornelius why he should send for Peter. He did not tell him what Peter was supposed to do for him, or what Peter was supposed to tell him. The information he gave him was sparse at best. But here we see again Cornelius’ faith, we see again his trust in the God of Israel, though he himself was not a Jew. Because Cornelius does not wait to act until he receives specifics. Cornelius acts in response to the little revelation he has been given. Let me say that again: Cornelius acts in response to the little revelation he has been given. He called two of his servants and a devout soldier who was one of his attendants and he sent them to Joppa to bring back Peter, just as the angel had told him to do.

Scene 2 – Peter’s Vision

Fade out of Caesarea and fade into scene two to reveal Peter, in Joppa, praying on the roof. Now, if you drove by my house and saw me praying on the roof you might think was something was wrong with me. And there would be something wrong with me because I have a debilitating fear of heights. So much so that I find it hard to even stand on a chair to change a light bulb. But my fears and inadequacies are not the point. The point is that praying on the roof was a normal practice in Peter’s day and time. The roofs were flat and there were stairs outside of the house leading up to them. So Peter is praying on the roof and as he is praying he receives a vision, just as Cornelius received a vision as he prayed. Peter saw heaven opened and something like a large sheet being let down to earth by its four corners. It contained all kinds of four-footed animals, as well as reptiles and birds. As Peter saw this image he heard a voice, “Get up, Peter. Kill and eat.” The text tells us that Peter was hungry and he did want to eat – but he wasn’t going to eat that. So Peter replied, “Surely not, Lord! I have never eaten anything impure or unclean.” Now, Peter’s not just being a picky eater as some have accused me of being. Peter is also not just trying to be a good Portlander and turn vegan. Peter’s trying to be a good Jew. As a Jew he knew that many of the animals before him had been deemed unclean and impure in Old Testament Law. And the dietary laws of the Old Testament were not a matter of preference or even health. They were a matter of identity, a matter of holiness and purity. Peter refuses to eat the food before him because Peter wants to obey God. But God is now speaking to Peter and giving him new revelation. The voice speaks again, “Do not call anything impure that God has made clean.” Notice that the voice doesn’t say, “Do not call anything impure that is clean.” He says, “Do not call anything impure that God has made clean.” It’s not that Old Testament Laws were always invalid. It is that something has changed. God has taken what was previously impure and he has made it clean. “Do not call anything impure that God has made clean,” the voice says. And then, to emphasize just how serious this message is, God gives Peter the same vision three times. Little does Peter know, God has sent him this vision to prepare him for what will come next.

Scene 3 – The Messengers Arrive

Fade out from Peter’s roof and fade into scene three to reveal Cornelius’ messengers arriving at the gate. Unbeknownst to Peter the men begin to call out, asking for a Simon called Peter. Jump cut to Peter, still on the roof, contemplating the meaning of the vision when he hears the Holy Spirit speak clearly, “Simon, three men are looking for you. So get up and go downstairs. Do not hesitate to go with them, for I have sent them.” Peter is given very little information, just as Cornelius was. He’s not told who these men are, or why he should go with them, or where they’re going, or what he should do once they arrive at their destination. But he decides to go down and introduce himself to these strangers. Not because he’s crazy. But because, like Cornelius, he trusts in God. Tracking shot of Peter standing to his feet, walking down the stairs, and calling out to the men, “I’m the one you’re looking for. Why have you come?” At this point Peter finally gets some specific information. “We have come from Cornelius the centurion,” they answered. “He is a righteous and God-fearing man, who is respected by all the Jewish people. A holy angel told him to ask you to come to his house so that he could hear what you have to say. Peter still doesn’t know precisely what’s going on. But he knows God is in this. And he’s beginning to see that his vision has something to do with this. So he invites them into the house and the next day he sets out with them toward Caesarea.

Scene 4 – Peter and Cornelius Meet

Fade out of Joppa, fade into scene four to an interior shot of Cornelius’ home in Caesarea. His house is packed with all of Cornelius’ relatives and close friends. He’s brought them there to hear the message God will speak to him through Peter. And as Peter walks through the door he sees Cornelius and he sees all of his guests and he still enters the house. Now you might think, “Well, yeah, why wouldn’t Peter enter the house. That’s what he came there for.” And that’s true. But Peter also wanted to live as a faithful Jew. And as a faithful Jew it was unlawful for Peter to walk into a houseful of Gentiles and visit with them. To do so would make Peter unclean. It would make him impure. It’s almost impossible to overemphasize the severity of this division. To put it simply, there was no place at Peter’s table for Gentiles. And Cornelius, and his relatives, and his friends knew this. So when Peter walked into the house they must have been baffled. They must have been asking themselves, “Why? Why is this Jewish man coming into our home? Doesn’t he know we’re not Jewish?” Of course he did. And in any other circumstance Peter would not have been there. But something had changed. Something had changed in the way God dealt with his people. Something had changed in Peter. And this was clear as he began to speak, “You are well aware that it is against our law for a Jew to associate with Gentiles or visit them. But God has shown me that I should not call anyone impure or unclean.” This is the pivotal verse of this entire narrative. “God has shown me that I should not call anyone impure or unclean.” The gravity of this statement is overwhelming. Peter is saying that the Law – the Jewish Law – has been made void. And that now Gentiles have a place at the table with Jews, and people of any and all types have a place at the table with God. In the verses that follow Peter will explain how Jesus made this possible. He does that by preaching the gospel. The gospel that gives men and women a seat at the table with God. The gospel that gives men and women a seat at the table with each other.

That gospel begins with the message of Jesus’ perfect life. Peter explains that Jesus went around doing good and setting people free from their slavery to the devil. Following a discussion of Jesus’ life of righteousness, Peter takes them to the center of the gospel message, he tells them that Jesus – though righteous and innocent – was hung on a cross and killed. But the gospel doesn’t end there, of course. Peter continues to tell them that three days later God raised this same Jesus from the dead and allowed Peter and others to witness the physically resurrected Christ with their own eyes. This gospel, Peter says, has three consequences. First, he says that Jesus commands that the message of his life, death, and resurrection be proclaimed to all people! Second, he says that Jesus is the Judge of the living and the dead, which is a frightening thing. And this is what makes Peter’s third point so glorious. Peter says, third, that everyone who puts their faith in Jesus Christ receives forgiveness of their sins. In other words, Peter is saying that Jesus Christ has himself fulfilled the demands of the Law and received the wrath that comes from failing to meet the demands of the Law. He did this in our place and then rose from the dead so that our sins could be forgiven and so he could present us to God as clean and acceptable. The dietary laws no longer matter. The national identity of Israel no longer matters. What a person eats does not make them clean or unclean. Where a person is from does not make them pure or impure. Apart from Jesus Christ every single one of us is unclean and impure. But, in Christ, even the filthiest of us is made clean and pure. There is a seat at God’s table for anyone and everyone who gives their trust to Jesus Christ.

Jump cut from Peter to his audience as he continues to speak. In mid-sentence Peter’s speech is interrupted by a houseful of Gentiles praising God and speaking in languages they do not know. Instantaneously, Peter recognizes what has happened. God has filled these Gentile men and women with his Holy Spirit. God has saved these Gentiles. God has made these Gentiles part of his holy community, part of the people of God. And he has done it without demanding that they become Jewish. He has done it without demanding that they be circumcised. He has done it without demanding that they meet a certain standard of righteousness. He has done it without demanding that they change the way they eat, or dress, or groom themselves. He has done it purely and simply on the basis of their faith in his Son, Jesus Christ. Peter recognizes this. So he has every one of them baptized in the name of Jesus Christ. And then he stays with them for several days, living with them and eating with them. There was a seat at God’s table for every one of them. And because of that Peter and Cornelius were able to sit at the same table as well.

Scene 5 – The Jewish Christians Approve

Fade out of Cornelius’ house, fade into Jerusalem – scene five — as Peter returns. As we’ve said already tonight, the significance of this event cannot be overemphasized. Jews believed that Gentiles could be saved – but only by becoming Jewish in their culture and in their practice. Until they became Jewish proselytes no Jewish person was to eat with them. Ever. To do so would be to make yourself unclean and impure in God’s eyes. So when Peter returned to Jerusalem the Jewish Christians were upset with him. They criticized him. “You went into the house of the uncircumcised and ate with them,” they said. So Peter told them the whole story. He told them about his vision. He told them about Cornelius’ vision. He told them how the Holy Spirit came upon his Gentile audience just as it came on the Jewish Christians at Pentecost. Then he asked, “If God gave them the same gift he gave us who believed in the Lord Jesus Christ, who was I to think that I could stand in God’s way?” When the Jewish Christians heard this they agreed. “So then, even to Gentiles God has granted repentance that leads to life.” Even to the Gentiles. They were amazed that God had granted the Gentiles a seat at his table.

Scene 6 – Your Response

Fade out of Jerusalem fade into scene six: Close up. No…extreme close up. On you. Peter and Cornelius’ story is over. But the story is not. The story continues. And now the camera is on you. How will you respond to the story? How will you respond to who Jesus is and what Jesus has done? Will you allow everyone a seat at your table? Will you treat everyone as though they may have a seat at God’s table? Will you – like Peter – repent of your favoritism and prejudice? “Oh, he must be talking to someone else,” you say, “I know I am not prejudiced.”  And that is precisely why we must talk about this. Because, of course, you’re probably not overtly prejudiced. You are not waving the banner of the Ku Klux Klan or of the Black Israelites. But that does not therefore make you innocent. Though you are not overtly prejudiced in all likelihood you have prejudices that you are not even wholly aware of. These prejudices influence where you go to church, where you live, where you send your kids to school, who you date, who you pursue friendships with, how you trust people, how you classify people when you first encounter them, who you share the gospel with, and who you feel most comfortable around. Think about this. Why do you sit where you sit when you go places? Why do you converse with the people you converse with when you’re at work? School? Why? Why do you find it easier to trust some people than others? Why are you open to sharing the gospel with some people but not with others? Why?

As Peter spoke with Cornelius he said these words, “I now realize how true it is that God does not show favoritism but accepts those from every nation who fear him and do what is right.” In light of that, Peter repented of his favoritism. You must likewise repent of yours. You must repent of your racial favoritism, your tendency to give more attention and trust to those who look like you. You must repent of your cultural favoritism, your tendency to give more attention and trust to those who share your cultural style, language, and values. You must repent of your generational favoritism, your tendency to respond differently to one age group than another. You must repent of your interest favoritism, your tendency to give preferential treatment to people who have the same interests as you. You must repent of your national favoritism, your tendency to give preferential treatment to America and Americans at the expense of other nations. You must repent of your financial favoritism, your tendency to treat those of a certain financial status differently than those of another. You must repent of your lifestyle favoritism, your tendency to treat people differently based on their past or current lifestyle.

You must repent of all favoritism. But the truth is, this is easier said than done. On Friday I found myself in line at the Post Office. There were two clerks serving customers. One of them clearly shared my cultural background. One of them clearly came from a different cultural background. I was next in line. And I thought to myself, “Man, I hope the white lady calls me up first because she’s going to be easier to communicate with.” Moments after I had that thought God reminded me of this story in Acts and I had to repent. This favoritism and prejudice is so deeply ingrained in most of us that we’re not even aware that it exists! We are born into this world at odds with God. And because we’re at odds with God we’re at odds with everything God has created. Including each other. The source of our favoritism, the source of our prejudice, is our idolatry – our desire to find our value and our identity in something other than God himself. And there is no human cure for this problem. No amount of education, no amount of dialogue, no amount of human experience can erase the things that divide us from each other because none of these things can erase the things that divide us from God. The only cure, the only solution, is not a human one but a divine one. And that is this: that God became like us, and came to us, in order to save us. God sent his son, Jesus Christ, who is both fully God and fully man. Jesus did what we’re supposed to do but cannot do. He lived every instant of his life in right relationship with God and, as a result, he lived every instant of his life in right relationship with all of God’s creation. We failed to do this. We couldn’t do this. So he did this for us. He did this so that his righteousness could be counted as our righteousness. Then, Jesus received what we’re supposed to receive upon himself. He received upon himself all of God’s wrath for your favoritism, for your prejudice. He received upon himself all of God’s wrath for all of your sin and rebellion. In doing this, Jesus, who was eternally united with God, willfully separated himself from the Father so that you – who should be eternally separated from God — could now be united with him. The innocent and perfect Jesus was judged. The innocent and perfect Jesus was cast out. The innocent and perfect Jesus was cut off so that you wouldn’t have to be. Jesus willfully excluded himself from God’s table so that you could finally have a seat at God’s table. And then Jesus rose from the dead defeating death, and evil, and sin’s power over us once and for all. Jesus then ascended into heaven where he is right now preparing a banquet for his people where we will sit at the table and feast with God himself, celebrating who Jesus is and what Jesus has done for his people.

You see it doesn’t matter who you are. It doesn’t matter if everyone ignores you. It doesn’t matter if everybody seems to love you. It doesn’t matter if the people you know have all rejected you. It doesn’t matter if everyone accepts you. It doesn’t matter how much evil you have done in your life. It doesn’t matter how much good you have done in your life. If you reject Jesus Christ God’s wrath remains upon you and you will be excluded from his table forever. But if you believe in Jesus – if you worship him – God’s wrath has been removed from you and placed on his own son, and you have been adopted as God’s child. If your faith is in who Jesus is and what Jesus has done you have a seat at God’s table right now, you have a seat at God’s table when Jesus returns, you have a seat at God’s table forevermore, and that seat can never be taken away from you.

And because Jesus has made a seat at the table for us we must make a seat at the table for everyone. It’s the appropriate response to what Jesus has accomplished. When Jesus removed the division between you and God he removed the division between you and your brother, between you and your sister. By making peace between you and God Jesus has made peace between you and me so that no matter how different we are we can share a seat at the same table. Peter realized that and Peter repented. Let us do the same. And let this be visible in word and in deed.

All Things in Common

June 18th, 2009 | Posted in articles | Comments Off
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The following article is an excerpt from a 2008 sermon given by Cole Brown.

Have you ever wondered why Christians go to church? Have you ever wondered why Christians – all over the world — gather together in public buildings and in private homes on a regular basis? Have you ever wondered why with all the changes in the world these things have not changed?

I have. And I think that Acts 2 can help us to answer these questions.

In Acts 2 we see Jesus pour out his Holy Spirit upon his people. We know from Jesus’ teaching that the Spirit’s primary purpose is to testify of who Jesus is and what Jesus has done. He does this, as we see in Acts 2, by empowering cowards to publicly proclaim the message of who Jesus is and what Jesus has done and by empowering the faithless to put their trust in this very message. Before Acts 2 concludes we see that the Holy Spirit testifies about Jesus in still another way. He testifies about Jesus by creating local church communities that are united in their common devotion and in the common fruit this devotion produces.

“They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and to fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer. Everyone was filled with awe at the many wonders and signs performed by the apostles. All the believers were together and had everything in common. They sold property and possessions to give to anyone who had need. Every day they continued to meet together in the temple courts. They broke bread in their homes and ate together with glad and sincere hearts, praising God and enjoying the favor of all the people. And the Lord added to their number daily those who were being saved.” — Acts 2:42-47

Common Devotion

In Acts 2:42 we see that the Holy Spirit testifies about Jesus by uniting his people together in common devotion. As these people responded to the gospel we are told that they then devoted themselves to the Apostle’s teaching, to fellowship, to the breaking of bread, and to prayer. This new community was united in their devotion to the Apostle’s teaching. They listened to it, they reflected on it, they talked about it. We know from the book of Acts and from the rest of the New Testament that all of the Apostle’s teaching really boiled down to two things: the gospel of Jesus Christ and how to live in light of the gospel of Jesus Christ. So as the Holy Spirit empowered people to place their faith in Jesus Christ he also gathered them into a community of people who together shared a common devotion to the teaching of the gospel and to the teaching of how to live in light of that gospel. They were also united in their devotion to what Luke calls, “the breaking of bread.” This phrase includes two activities that actually took place simultaneously. They broke bread in the sense that they shared meals together. They relaxed, they reclined, they enjoyed good conversation and good Popeye’s chicken together. They also broke bread in the sense that they shared communion, the Lord’s Supper, together. As they ate their meals together they took the time to celebrate their unity and the source of their unity in Jesus Christ. They took the one loaf that symbolized Jesus’ one body, of which they all were a part, and they broke it and shared it to remind each other that it was Jesus’ broken body and Jesus’ shed blood that united each of them with God and with each other. They shared meals together and they shared the meal together. The Holy Spirit also united them in their common devotion to prayer. They prayed formal prayers, they prayed informal prayers, they prayed with each other, they prayed for each other. We see here in Acts 2 that the Holy Spirit has come. He has united the Church together. And this unity is seen in their common devotion to gospel teaching, to eating and taking communion together, and to prayer.

Notice what you do not see here. It does not say that after the Holy Spirit came the people were united in their common devotion to a certain style of music. It does not say that after the Holy Spirit came the people were united in their common devotion to a certain style of preaching. It doesn’t say anything about being united because of a common race, or a common ethnicity, or a common culture, or a common age, or a common style of dress. No! It says that these people were united in their common devotion to the gospel, in their common devotion to prayer, and in their common devotion to Jesus and to each other. If the Holy Spirit only unites black people with black people, young people with young people, and rock fans with rock fans then the Holy Spirit really didn’t need to come, all of that happens naturally. But that’s not what the Holy Spirit does. The Holy Spirit unites people who would never otherwise be united. The Holy Spirit unites people who may otherwise be at odds with each other. The Holy Spirit unites people who may have nothing in common – other than Jesus. This is what we see the Holy Spirit doing in Acts chapter 2 and this is just what the rest of the Scriptures say he will do, also. In 2Corinthians 13:14 Paul writes, “May the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all.” In Ephesians 4:3 he says, “Make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit through the bond of peace.” Jesus has sent the Holy Spirit and everything has changed. The Holy Spirit has empowered the weak to boldly proclaim the message of who Jesus is and what Jesus has done. He has empowered the faithless to put their trust in who Jesus is and what he has done. And he has united the uniteable into one people who are commonly devoted both to Jesus and each other.

Common Fruit

Clearly, only the Holy Spirit can create a community like the one we read about in Acts 2. You can have the best event planners in the world, you can create the most exciting environment imaginable, you can flood everybody’s mailbox with flyers, you can send out e-vites to every email address you can get your hands on – but no matter what you do you cannot manufacture this type of community. You cannot make people who previously had no desire to be around each other suddenly choose to spend much of their time together. You cannot make people who previously had nothing in common suddenly share all of this in common. And because this type of community cannot be manufactured – because it so uncommon – people respond to it. And that’s what we see in the following verses. We see that the Holy Spirit has given Jesus’ people a common devotion and this devotion produces common fruit. We’ll look at four aspects of this fruit tonight.

The first is that they were acutely aware of each other’s needs. Verses 44 and 45 explain, “All the believers were together and had everything in common. They sold property and possessions to give to anyone who had need.” Because they were devoted to Jesus and each other they were devoted to meeting each other’s needs in the name of Jesus. When one of them needed something – needed anything – the others saw it as their responsibility to meet that need. They didn’t blame the person in need and say, “Well, if you wouldn’t have had that baby out of wedlock then you wouldn’t be in need.” They didn’t pass them off to the government and say, “I’ll drop you off at the welfare office so you can fill out the paperwork and get some government cheese.” They didn’t pass them off to the church leadership and say, “Oh, you should talk to Pastor about that, maybe he can help.” No, they saw the need and they joyfully jumped at the opportunity to meet that need themselves. And it wasn’t just small needs, although those were met to. There were some significant needs. So significant that the people in the community willingly sold their own property and their own possessions in order to provide for the others in the community. They weren’t commanded to do this. The Scripture doesn’t demand that we do this specific thing. They wanted to do it because through the work of the Holy Spirit they had been united to Jesus and united to each other. They wanted to do it because they shared a common devotion to Jesus and a common devotion to each other. And it made sense to them that just as Jesus gave up his riches for them they should give up their riches for each other. Again, this type of community cannot be manufactured. This community is created by Jesus through the Holy Spirit.

A second consequence of their devotion to Jesus and each other is found in verse 46. It says, “Every day they continued to meet together in the temple courts. They broke bread in their homes and ate together…” Not only did they share fellowship together. They shared fellowship together everyday. They did this formally (in the temple) and they did this informally (in their own homes). These people who previously had no interest in spending time together were now spending day after day together. These people — who just like you and me had their own lives, and their own jobs, and their own family — went out of their way to make time for each other. And again it wasn’t just something they did at church – in the temple. They opened their homes to each other. They shared their meals with each other. If they would have had cars they would have car pooled together. If they would have had the Wii they would play Dance Dance Revolution together. If they would have had TV’s they would have watched The Wire together. This wasn’t something they had to be told to do. This is something they chose to do. It was the natural consequence of being mutually devoted to Jesus. They were mutually devoted to each other. This type of community cannot be manufactured. This community is created by Jesus through the Holy Spirit.

Perhaps the most amazing thing of all is this: they were filled with joy. Verses 46 and 47 say this, “They broke bread in their homes and ate together with glad and sincere hearts, praising God and enjoying the favor of all the people.” As a community of people their hearts were glad, their hearts were sincere, and they praised God in it. Can you imagine that? I mean, honestly, would you be filled with joy if you sold your house and your possessions to pay my bills? Would you be filled with joy if you spent most of your time with me? If I asked you what would fill your heart with gladness those probably aren’t the first things that you would list. But these men and women were glad. And they praised God. Because he had not only united them to Jesus, he had united them with each other.

This community, this fellowship through the Holy Spirit, had a tremendous impact on the believers themselves. They were filled with gladness and they praised God. But it also had a tremendous impact on the non-Christians in their community. Once again, verses 46 and 47 say this, “They broke bread in their homes and ate together with glad and sincere hearts, praising God and enjoying the favor of all the people.” Do you see that? That’s an incredible statement isn’t it? Could we say that about the people in our culture? Probably not. Our culture doesn’t tend to look at Christians with approval. Our culture generally looks at Christians with disapproval. Why the discrepancy?

I dare say that it is partially because non-Christians today do not see the common unity and devotion that non-Christians saw with the Church community in Acts 2. They don’t see churches where rich and poor, and black and white, and young and old, and conservative and liberal, and rappers and rockers are purposefully spending time together, and sharing themselves and their stuff with each other, and devoting themselves to prayer and the gospel together. What they see is the black church and the white church, the rich church and the poor church, the young church and the old church, the rap church and the rock church separated from those who are unlike them and only coming together, even with their own, just once a week or twice a week to get something for themselves instead of to share themselves with the others. That’s not all that attractive. Non-Christians can get that anywhere. What they cannot get anywhere is a community of people commonly devoted to Jesus and each other every day and at all times in spite of having none of the obvious things in common.

That is attractive. People notice that. People listen to that. This is so different from what we tend to think is attractive about any given church. We think people will be attracted to the music. Or people will be attracted to the shouting. Or people will be attracted to the silence. Or people will be attracted to the preaching. Because, unfortunately, this is what we’ve become attracted to. But this is not what attracts non-Christians to Jesus and to his community. What attracts people is the gospel and the fruit of the gospel. When we are glad to spend time together and enjoy giving ourselves and our things to each other we provide a picture of the gospel – a picture of how Jesus has laid down his riches, his glory, and his life for us. When we are united together with people who are unlike us we provide a picture of the gospel – a picture of how Jesus has reconciled us to God and to each other. Jesus himself said in John 17:23 that when the world sees Christians truly united together in community the world will know that Jesus is who he says he is and that he loves us. The Holy Spirit testifies about Jesus by uniting us together in common devotion. Somehow, the gospel becomes more attractive and more believable when the truth of the gospel is not just heard but seen. Verse 47 says, “[they enjoyed the] favor of all the people. And the Lord added to their number daily those who were being saved.”

Common Repentance

This is a wondrous picture of a true community formed by the Holy Spirit. These Christians were united as one. They had a common devotion to hearing and studying and discussing the gospel message. They had a common devotion to celebrating this gospel by sharing the Lord’s Supper together. They had a common devotion to sharing intimacy together by sharing meals together. They had a common devotion to praying with each other and for each other. They responded to their unity by choosing to spend much of their time together throughout the week in formal and informal settings. They responded to their unity by choosing to sacrifice themselves and their possessions for each other. They responded to this unity with glad hearts that sincerely praised God for what his gospel had accomplished. And the outsiders who saw this found this very attractive. So much so that many were added to the Church. This is a picture that should make us weep. We should weep because of its sheer beauty. And we should weep because our community doesn’t always look like this community.

Why? Has the gospel lost its power? Has the Holy Spirit stopped uniting the uniteable into one body and one people? Of course not. In fact, the opposite is true. If we are in Christ we share this very same community together right here and right now – even if we cannot see it. It is a matter of fact that Jesus has already united all of us into one body if our faith is in him. It is a matter of fact that Jesus has already made us into one common people if our faith is in him. It is a matter of fact that Jesus has already given us unity and fellowship through the Holy Spirit if our faith is in him. Jesus has done this by uniting us to God through his perfect life lived in our place, his terrible death died in our place, and his resurrection that achieved victory in our place. He once and for all dealt with the problem of sin which is the very thing that kept us locked out of community with God and community with one another. By taking our sin upon himself and giving his righteousness to us Jesus has united us with God, who exists eternally in perfect community as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. By uniting us with God Jesus has also united us with God’s people. End of story. Whether we know it or not, whether we see it or not, whether we feel like we experience it or not we have been made into one community, one people, through Jesus Christ. So the question is not, “do we have this type of community here”? We do. To say that we don’t is to say that Jesus hasn’t done what he says he has done, it is to say that the Holy Spirit isn’t doing what Jesus sent him to do. The question is not, “do we have this type of community here” the question is “will I live like I know this type of community is here.” Will you live in light of what Jesus has already done? Will you live in light of what the Holy Spirit is already doing? Will you live like the men and women in Acts 2? Will you devote yourself – not only to Jesus – but to the people Jesus has united you to?

I know it sounds difficult — especially in our individualistic culture where our lives are filled with so much busyness and so much responsibility. But you really can experience this type of community as you allow the gospel to permeate all of your thinking and living. Instead of living for yourself you are now free to live for others because you know every one of your needs has been met in Jesus. Instead of holding on to your money and your possessions you are now free to give them away because you know all of your security is found, not in them, but in Jesus. Instead of hiding the truth about yourself – instead of being afraid of being known – you are free to be known and to tell the truth about who you are because you know that God has approved of you and accepted you as you are because of Jesus. Instead of devoting all your time and energy chasing this or that accomplishment you are free to devote your time and energy to Jesus’ Church because you know that everything has already been accomplished for you by Jesus. Instead of only feeling comfortable around people who think like you think and look like you look and like what you like you are free to experience community with all types of people because you know we share a common mission, a common inheritance, and a common Lord in Jesus Christ. Instead of thinking that you’re too good for this group of people or not good enough for that group of people you are free to relate with all of us as equals because we are all equally sinful apart from Jesus and equally righteous in Jesus. Instead of looking for the church to serve you you are free to serve the church because you have been perfectly served in Jesus.

Do you see what the gospel does? The gospel of Jesus Christ allows us to give ourselves to community in all of these ways. But it doesn’t just allow for these things. It demands these things. No matter how much you say you love Jesus you cannot truly be committed to Jesus if you are not committed to Jesus’ Church. He did not die to just save an individual here and an individual there. He died to create a new people – his own people – for his own glory! When we resist the community that Jesus gave his life to create we deny him some of the glory he has earned and we deny the world a beautiful, powerful, and attractive picture of what Jesus’ life and death and resurrection have accomplished. So if you are resisting this type of Acts 2 community you must repent for denying your Lord the obedience and the glory that he demands and deserves. And then you can rejoice in the fact that Jesus has already given us true community with God and with each other. And that because of him we are free to live in light of this glorious truth.

Church Discipline

June 18th, 2009 | Posted in articles | Comments Off
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“The Lord disciplines those he loves.” This is a recurring theme in the Scriptures. The process of discipline can be challenging and even painful as God corrects the thoughts, words, and behavior of his people, continually shaping them into the image of his Son. God accomplishes this through a variety of means. He calls his people first to self-discipline. Each Christian is called to compare his life to the Word of God and adjust his life accordingly, aiming to conform to his Savior (James 1:22-25, 2Timothy 3:16). But individual interaction with God through his Word is not the only means that God uses to make his children holy. God also uses his people.  “Brothers,” writes Paul, “if anyone is caught in any transgression, you who are spiritual should restore him in a spirit of gentleness…” (Galatians 6:1). Emmaus Church takes seriously our responsibility to restore those who have resisted God’s call to self-discipline. Our role in this process begins with private confrontation and, when the individual is unrepentant, also requires public rebuke.

The Church must confront sin in all of its forms. This includes sins of commission and omission, sins in word or behavior, and heretical doctrine (Titus 3:10-11, Romans 16:17, 1Corinthians 5). Jesus outlined a process for addressing another believer’s sin in Matthew 18:15-17.

“If a brother or sister sins, go and point out the fault, just between the two of you. If they listen to you, you have won them over. But if they will not listen, take one or two others along, so that ‘every matter may be established by the testimony of two or three witnesses.’ If they still refuse to listen, tell it to the church; and if they refuse to listen even to the church, treat them as you would a pagan or a tax collector.”

As a church, we agree that this is the way for us to approach someone who refuses to appropriate God’s grace for change.  Initially, church discipline should be informal. If a Christian sees sin in a brother or sister that appears to be continual, he should approach that person and inquire about it. If it is found that there is sin and a refusal to repent, then the concerned brother or sister should involve one or two others, which may include an elder. If this group confirms that, in fact, sin continues without repentance then the process must move to formal church discipline.

Formal discipline begins with the elders speaking to the individual in question to confirm the sin and call them to repentance. If change is not forthcoming the elders will inform the church of the individual’s unrepentant sin and urge members to contact the member and appeal for repentance. During this time the member under discipline may not participate in the Lord’s Supper or attend meetings for the purpose of fellowship. Instead, their participation with members should revolve around his need for change. If, after a reasonable period of appeal, no repentance is forthcoming, the elders will again come before the church. This time the elders will inform the church body that the individual is no longer a member of the church and the congregation must now treat them as they would treat an unbeliever. In other words, the congregation should actively love the person in question by spending time with them and urging them to repent of their sin and put their faith in Jesus and his work on the cross.

Church discipline has nothing to do with “shunning” a person. It first involves confronting in love and gentleness and then, if unsuccessful, withholding fellowship. It is not a rejection of the relationship but a change in the nature of the relationship. As long as the person under discipline is not factious or disruptive and is not a harmful influence they are welcome to attend all church meetings that are open to non-believers, with the exception of home communities. The elders may decide to abbreviate or eliminate the process of appeal for repentance if the sin is especially notorious, or if the member proves to be factious, disruptive or leading others into sin or error. In these cases the elders may ask church members to avoid all contact with an individual in order to mitigate his sinful influence.

At times a member may seek to withdraw from the church to avoid church discipline and its consequences.  Just as a good shepherd will go after a sheep that has wandered from the flock (Matt. 18:12-14; Ezek. 34:4,8-16), so shall the elders and members of this church seek to restore a wandering member to the Lord through biblical discipline. Therefore, discipline may be instituted or continued either before or after a member seeks to withdraw from membership if the elders determine that such discipline may serve to guard and preserve the honor of God, protect the purity of the church, or restore the wandering member to the Lord. While the church cannot force a withdrawing member to remain in this congregation, the church has the right and responsibility to encourage restoration, to bring the disciplinary process to an orderly conclusion, and to make a final determination as to the person’s membership status at the time withdrawal is sought or acknowledged. In doing so, the elders, at their discretion, may temporarily suspend further disciplinary proceedings, dismiss any or all charges pending against the accused, or proceed with discipline and pronounce an appropriate censure.

If a member leaves the church while he is under the scrutiny of the disciplinary process or while a censure against him is still in effect, and if the elders learn that he is attending another church, the elders may inform that church that the person is currently under church discipline and may ask that church to encourage the accused to repent of his sin and to be restored to the Lord and to any people whom he has offended. Such communications enhance the possibility that a person may finally repent of his sin, and, at the same time, serve to warn the other church to be on guard against the harm that the accused might do to their members (see Matt. 18:12-14; Rom. 16:17; 1 Cor. 5:1-13; 2 Thess. 3:6-14; 2 Tim. 1:15; 2:16-18; 4:9, 14-15; 3 John 9-10).

Once the elders make a sin publicly known, they also commit to inform the church of repentance and restoration to fellowship as appropriate to the situation and the good of the church.

Christians who attend Emmaus Church and have been excluded from fellowship from another church will not be allowed to participate in fellowship of Emmaus Church unless they repent of their sins, make confession and restitution with their former church, or the elders are able to determine that the former church did not apply church discipline according to Scripture.

Wanna Be Like Jesus?

June 18th, 2009 | Posted in articles | Comments Off
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The following article is an excerpt from a 2009 sermon given by Cole Brown.

I know it’s customary for Christians to say that we want to follow Jesus and we want to be like Jesus. But do we really want to follow Jesus? Do we really want to be like Jesus? Honestly? I don’t think we do. If we really wanted to be like Jesus our lives would look a lot different. Our lives would look less like the lives of our co-workers and more like the life of someone like Stephen, whose story is found in Acts 6:8-7:60.

Verses 8-10 introduce us to the conflict that will follow, “Now Stephen, a man full of God’s grace and power, performed great wonders and signs among the people. Opposition arose, however, from members of the Synagogue of the Freedmen (as it was called)—Jews of Cyrene and Alexandria as well as the provinces of Cilicia and Asia—who began to argue with Stephen. But they could not stand up against the wisdom the Spirit gave him as he spoke.”

Stephen was just your ordinary, everyday, church-going cat. He was no different from you. He was an Average Joe. But, by God’s grace, this Average Joe had earned quite the reputation with the people. They knew him to be a man full of the Spirit, and full of wisdom, a man full of God’s grace and power. Verse 8 tells us he worked signs and wonders among the people. We know from the rest of Scripture that these signs and wonders were always accompanied by an explanation of the gospel. It was because Jesus lived, and died, and rose again that these things were happening. Well, this message about Jesus being Lord and God was terribly offensive to the Jewish leadership. So a number of them, from a certain synagogue, rose up to oppose Stephen. They argued with him, and argued with him, and argued with him. But they could not refute him. No matter how much they tried to trip him up the Holy Spirit continued to give him wisdom as he spoke. They could not out-argue him. Sound familiar? This is the same thing that happened when the Jewish leaders repeatedly challenged Jesus. Again and again they tried to argue with him and again and again he responded with wisdom, putting his challengers to shame.

Stephen is learning what it means to be like Jesus.

You may remember what happened to Jesus when they could not out-argue him. They made up lies about him and had him arrested for crimes he did not commit. And they did precisely the same thing to Stephen. Read verses 11-14, “Then they secretly persuaded some men to say, ’We have heard Stephen speak words of blasphemy against Moses and against God.’ So they stirred up the people and the elders and the teachers of the law. They seized Stephen and brought him before the Sanhedrin. They produced false witnesses, who testified, ’This fellow never stops speaking against this holy place and against the law. For we have heard him say that this Jesus of Nazareth will destroy this place and change the customs Moses handed down to us.’” They brought Stephen before the Sanhedrin, the governing council of Israel, just as they had brought Jesus before the Sanhedrin in Mark 14. They accused Stephen of denying Moses and the Temple, just as they accused Jesus of the same things in Mark 14. They produced false witnesses to lie and testify that Stephen had committed blasphemy, just as they produced false witnesses to lie about Jesus in Mark 14. The most powerful men in the entire nation are unjustly trying Stephen for crimes he did not commit.

Stephen is learning what it means to be like Jesus.

There’s no doubt that Stephen knows where this could be heading. He knows what happened when his Lord stood before these same men. He was beaten and he was murdered. Given the circumstances you might expect Stephen to get defensive. You might expect him to answer the charges and show that they are false. But he doesn’t. In fact, he says nothing at all to defend himself. Instead, he corrects their theology and promises God’s coming judgment. It’s no coincidence that when Jesus stood before this same council he did the same thing. He was asked to explain himself and answer the charges against him but he said nothing. When they asked him again he still did not defend himself. Instead, he corrected their theology and promised God’s coming judgment. If survival was your ultimate goal you could never say this. But if being like Jesus was your highest goal then you could.

Stephen is learning what it means to be like Jesus.

Stephen’s answer to the charges is a sermon and it’s the longest sermon recorded in Acts. As you read the sermon in Acts 6:15-7:53 you will see that Stephen does not defend himself. Instead, he defends a true view of who God is. And he does this by reminding the Jews of their own history and their own Scriptures. His sermon has three main points. First, Stephen shows that God is not limited to a certain geographical region. He is not just God of Israel, he is God of all. Second, Stephen shows that God is not limited to a certain man made temple. He does not dwell in religious buildings. He dwells in the heavens and all of the earth is his footstool. Third, Stephen accuses the Jews of being a rebellious and stiff-necked people. They always resist the Holy Spirit…even to the point of rejecting every prophet he has sent…even to the point of rejecting, betraying, and killing the Messiah who was sent to save them. As you can probably imagine, that didn’t go over very well. Verse 54 says that when they heard this they were furious and gnashed their teeth at him. Stephen had to know this wasn’t a good sign. But he saw another sign. He saw something that they did not see. Look at verses 55, 56, “But Stephen, full of the Holy Spirit, looked up to heaven and saw the glory of God, and Jesus standing at the right hand of God. ‘Look,’ he said, ‘I see heaven open and the Son of Man standing at the right hand of God.’” In what the world would call a moment of great shame, Stephen experienced a moment of great glory. The fury of his opponents paled in comparison to the greatness of Jesus whom Stephen saw with clarity. “Look,” he said, “I see heaven open and the Son of Man standing at the right hand of God.” It’s interesting that the Bible usually presents Jesus as seated at the right hand of God. But here he is standing at the right hand of God. This is a picture of Jesus rising up as judge to vindicate Stephen and to condemn those who oppose him. And the Jews know that this is what Stephen is saying. Just as they knew that Jesus was saying the same thing when he described a similar vision. When the high priest asked him if he was the Christ, the Son of the Blessed One, Jesus replied, “I am. And you will see the Son of Man sitting at the right hand of the Mighty One and coming on the clouds of heaven.” The point of both visions is that Jesus is Lord and judge. He is even Lord and judge of the Sanhedrin who have set themselves up as judges over both Jesus and Stephen. By explaining this vision Stephen is guaranteeing his death just as Jesus did when he explained a similar vision.

Stephen is learning what it means to be like Jesus.

When Jesus said he would be seated at the right hand of God the high priest tore his clothes, labeled him a blasphemer, and condemned him to death. Hours later they would drag him outside of the city to symbolize he had been cut off from his people and they would put him to death. When Stephen said he saw Jesus at God’s right hand they all covered their ears, yelled at the top of their voices, rushed at him, and drug him out of the city to symbolize that he had been cut off from his people. Then they began to stone him to death.

Stephen is learning what it means to be like Jesus.

As he was dying at the hands of his own people Stephen prayed to Jesus, “Lord Jesus, receive my spirit.” Does that sound familiar? As Jesus was being put to death by his own people he prayed, “Father, into your hands I commit my spirit.”

Stephen is learning what it means to be like Jesus.

As the stones continued to assault his body he dropped to his knees, knowing death was moments away, and he cried out, “Lord, do not hold this sin against them.” Again, we are reminded of Jesus who moments from his death prayed, “Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing.” This goes against every fiber of our being. We struggle to forgive people for hurting our feelings and here’s Stephen forgiving his enemies even as they kill him for a crime they did not commit. It is so far from who we are.

But Stephen is learning what it means to be like Jesus.

We Say We Want to Be Like Jesus

The question for you is this: do you want to be like Jesus? I know that if you go to church you’ve been trained to answer “yes” to that question. But I don’t want you to answer without first thinking very carefully about what I’m asking you. Do you want to be like Jesus? We have just read about a man who wanted to be like Jesus and we have seen what that cost him. So in light of that I ask you again, do you want to be like Jesus?

Those of us who are Christians call ourselves Christ-followers, we call ourselves followers of Christ. But have you noticed that we spend most of our time pursuing what Jesus avoided and avoiding what Jesus pursued?

Jesus pursued God. Because Jesus chose to live his entire life in pursuit of knowing God and pleasing God he avoided the things that would hinder that pursuit. He avoided the pursuit of comfort for comforts sake, he avoided the pursuit of fitting in for the sake of fitting in, he avoided the pursuit of worldly success, he avoided the pursuit of worldly pleasures. We do the exact opposite. We say we want to pursue God and, yes, we will pursue God but only to the point that pursuing God allows us to continue our pursuit of comfort, continue our pursuit of fitting in, continue our pursuit of worldly success, continue our pursuit of worldly pleasures. We say we want to know and please God and part of us does. But more than that we want to avoid discomfort, we want to avoid being rejected, we want to avoid failure, we want to avoid suffering. And, because of that, we can’t really follow Jesus. We can’t really be like Jesus until we’re willing to be like Jesus in his discomfort, and be like Jesus in his rejection, and be like Jesus in his failure, and be like Jesus in his suffering. If this is part of what it means to be like Jesus do you want to be like Jesus?

Stephen did. And Stephen was. And why? Is it because Stephen was a super-Christian? No. Is it because the first-century Christians had something that we don’t have? No. Stephen was an Average Joe. He was just a guy who volunteered in his local church. He was just a guy who loved Jesus and used whatever gifts he had to serve Jesus’ people. In these ways he really was no different from most of you. And that should encourage you. You can do what Stephen did. You can be like Jesus. Because God has given to you the same thing he gave to Stephen. If you are a Christian God has given you the faith to believe in who Jesus is and what Jesus has done, just as he did for Stephen. And if you believe in who Jesus is and what Jesus has done God has also filled you with his Holy Spirit, just as he did for Stephen. This means that if you worship Jesus you have both the motivation and the power to do what Stephen did.

Stephen did what Stephen did because Stephen believed what Stephen believed. Stephen believed the gospel. Stephen believed that the God who he rejected nonetheless chose him. Stephen believed that the God who should have hated him and judged him instead hated and judged his own son, Jesus, in Stephen’s place. Stephen believed that the God who should have been eternally separated from him instead chose to dwell in him by his Holy Spirit. Stephen believed that through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ he had been made righteous in God’s eyes, he had been made acceptable to the God of the universe, he had been united to the Creator of all things, he had been made alive in Christ though he was previously dead in his sins. Because Stephen believed these things he rightly believed that God is the Ultimate Good, the Ultimate Love, the Ultimate Pleasure. And he gave his life to the pursuit of this pleasure.

Contrary to popular belief, Christianity is not a religion that places restrictions on pleasure. To the contrary, Christianity opens the door to the greatest of all pleasures. Christianity invites us to know and pursue pleasure by knowing and pursuing Jesus Christ, the creator of all pleasure. You could even say that Christianity is a hedonistic religion. If you’re not familiar with hedonism it is the philosophy that pleasure is the highest good and highest aim of human life. If you need further clarification about the philosophy of hedonism just turn on BET for an hour. On BET, and on most American television, the pursuit of pleasure is presented as the greatest good we can experience and as the greatest goal we can aim for. And you know what? They’re right. The problem is that they misidentify the source of that pleasure. They tell us that if we want to pursue pleasure we should pursue sex, and money, and jewelry, and clothes, and possessions, and success, and achievement, and marriage, and singleness, and freedom, and comfort, and so on. They’ve got the pursuit of pleasure right. But they’ve got the source of pleasure wrong. If we chase pleasure by chasing these things we will miss the very thing we’re chasing. We will miss out on true pleasure. Because we’re chasing pleasure in created things instead of finding pleasure in the creator of those things.

Christianity does not place restrictions on pleasure. Christianity opens the door to the greatest pleasures of all by opening the door to knowing and pleasing God through Jesus Christ. The greatest pleasure in all of the universe is found in knowing and pleasing the creator of all pleasure. This is what enabled Stephen to face what he faced. Though they took away his comfort, and they took away his acceptance, and they even took away his life they could not take away his pleasure. Because his pleasure was not found in created things. His pleasure was found in the creator of all things. This is what the gospel assures us. Which means that if we truly believe the gospel we, too, can do what Stephen did. We can be like Jesus. And we can answer, “Yes, I do want to be like Jesus.” And we can say that knowing that being like Jesus means we must and will suffer. Because through our suffering we actually find pleasure.

I know it sounds ridiculous but it is true. When we suffer as Christians – as our earthly pleasures, and even our lives, are taken away from us – we are actually receiving greater and more lasting pleasures because we are becoming more intimately united to Jesus, the source of all pleasure. Philippians 3:10 says that when we suffer we suffer with Jesus and we come to know him better as a result. Acts 9:4 says that when we suffer Jesus suffers with us and we come to know him better as a result. When we suffer we suffer with Jesus and Jesus suffers with us and we find the greatest of all pleasures in knowing him and pleasing him in life and in death.

This is the one pleasure that cannot be taken away. Do you really want your pleasure to be found in comfort, and the approval of other people, and in worldly success, and in worldly possessions? If you find your pleasure in those things you can lose your pleasure in an instant. The moment you encounter discomfort, or disapproval, or failure, or poverty your pleasure is gone. But if you find your pleasure in knowing and pleasing God your pleasure can never be taken away from you. Not because you have done or will do all the right things. But because Jesus has and Jesus does.

Sanctification

June 18th, 2009 | Posted in articles | Comments Off
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The following article is an excerpt from a 2009 sermon given by Cole Brown.

What does it mean to be holy?

Is it to be a perfect person? Is it to be a good person? Is it to be a loving person? Is it to be a religious person? What does it mean to be holy? And what does it take to become holy? Do you have to talk a certain way? Do you have to dress a certain way? Do you have to go to certain places and not go to other places? Do you have to hang around certain people and not hang around other people? Do you have to be calm and quiet? Do you have to pray a certain amount of time each day? Do you have to withdraw from people altogether? What is holiness and how do you get it?

The Biblical doctrine that answers those questions is the doctrine of sanctification. Sanctification is a word that theologians use to summarize the Bible’s teaching on what holiness is and how we can get it. It is exceedingly important that we understand what sanctification is and how we obtain it becauses, “Without holiness no one will see the Lord” – Hebrews 12:14.

Sanctification – What It Is

What is this holiness, this sanctification, without which we will never see God? The basic meaning of the word is to be set apart, to be separate. So when God describes himself as holy he is using that word to express all that is unique about him, all the distinct aspects of his character and his nature that set him apart from his creation. God’s holiness is his greatness contrasted with our smallness, God’s holiness is his power contrasted with our weakness, God’s holiness is his infinite wisdom contrasted with our foolishness, God’s holiness is his perfect knowledge contrasted with our little knowledge, God’s holiness is his absolute moral purity contrasted with our moral impurity, God’s holiness is his perfect righteousness contrasted with our unrighteousness, God’s holiness is his independence contrasted with our dependence. To say that God is holy is to say that he is set apart from all of creation. It is to say that he alone is God and there is none like him.

Now we can never be holy in the same sense in which God is holy. We will never be as holy as God. But we can be holy like God. We can be set apart. We can be separate. In fact we have to be if we ever hope to see God. So God’s command to you to be holy is a command to separate yourself to your separate God and to separate yourself from all that displeases him. So there is a positive aspect of holiness and a negative aspect of holiness. The positive aspect of holiness is to be devoted to God and to display qualities that reflect his character: love, faithfulness, honesty, patience, kindness, and the like. The negative aspect of holiness is to be set apart from the things that displease him. It is to be detached from false gods and dissociated from the practice of sin. This is how you and I are called to be holy and it’s summarized well in Romans 6:22, “But now that you have been set free from sin and have become slaves of God, the benefit you reap leads to holiness, and the result is eternal life.”

This is the holiness that leads to eternal life. In other words, this is the holiness that allows us to see God. It has a negative aspect (we are set free from sin) and it has a positive aspect (we become slaves of God). Holiness is not one or the other. It is both. The danger we must avoid is the temptation to emphasize one aspect of holiness at the expense of the other. There are those who think they are holy because they separate themselves from certain people, places, and things that they deem sinful. But it is often these people who are the least likely to reflect God’s character of love and generosity and kindness. And that’s not holiness. That’s moralism. On the other hand there are also those who think they are holy because they reflect some of God’s love and generosity and kindness. But it is often these people who are the most entangled in the sins and systems that God hates. And that’s not holiness. That’s humanitarianism. God does not call us to be moralists and he doesn’t call us to be humanitarians. He calls us to be holy. If we are holy we will be both moral and humanitarian but we will also be so much more!

Sanctification – How We Get It

The above definition should provide some clarity about what holiness is. But it should also provide some discomfort. Because if you understand what holiness is you understand how far out of your reach it is. So what can you do? How can you ever be fully devoted to God and the things that please him while being fully dissociated from all the things that displease him? How can you obtain this holiness – this sanctification — without which no one will see the Lord? How can you obtain this holiness – this sanctification — that is so far out of our reach?

The only way you can ever get it is to admit that you can’t get it. The only way you can ever become holy is to admit that you can never become holy. Sanctification – holiness – is not something that you can achieve. It is only something you can receive.

“…I am the LORD, who makes you holy.” – Leviticus 20:8

The Scriptures could not be any more plain. We don’t sanctify ourselves. God sanctifies us. So if you’re looking for holiness you can’t look to yourself, you must look to God. He, and he alone, is able to make you holy. When you forget that only God can make you holy and try to make yourself holy you become anything but holy, you become self-centered and self-righteous. Our only hope to possess the holiness that allows us to see God is to receive it rather than try to achieve it. As the verse says, “I am the LORD, who makes you holy.”

As we continue to study sanctification and holiness in the Scriptures we find that God sanctifies us — God makes us holy — in two different ways. He sanctifies us relationally and he sanctifies us practically. The first thing he does is sanctify us relationally through faith in Christ.

“…We have been made holy through the sacrifice of the body of Jesus Christ once for all.” – Hebrews 10:9-10

“…You were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and by the Spirit of our God.” – 1Corinthians 6:11

“’I will rescue you from your own people and from the Gentiles. I am sending you to them to open their eyes and turn them from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan to God, so that they may receive forgiveness of sins and a place among those who are sanctified by faith in me.’” – Acts 26:17-18

The first passage tells us that Jesus Christ sanctifies us once and for all. It is something that happens instantaneously, completely, and permanently. The second passage tells us that if we are Christians we are already sanctified. It is not something we’re waiting to see happen, it’s something that’s already happened. And in the third passage Jesus tells us that this sanctification comes to us through faith in him. It’s not something we work for, it’s not something that everyone gets, it’s something that is only given to those whose faith is in Jesus Christ. Now, if you’re a Christian, this doesn’t mean that you suddenly stop sinning altogether. Remember, there are two aspects to sanctification. And this is the relational aspect. The relational aspect of sanctification is not about becoming sinless. The relational aspect of sanctification is about being set apart by God as his own special possession.  If you are a Christian you are sanctified, in the relational sense, because God has devoted you to himself and dissociated you from the world.  He has declared that you now belong to him and not to the world. That’s what it means to be sanctified in the relational sense.

But God also sanctifies his people in the practical sense.

“It is God’s will that you should be sanctified: that you should avoid sexual immorality; that each of you should learn to control your own body in a way that is holy and honorable, not in passionate lust like the pagans, who do not know God; and that in this matter no one should wrong or take advantage of a brother or sister. The Lord will punish all those who commit such sins, as we told you and warned you before. For God did not call us to be impure, but to live a holy life.” – 1Thessalonians 4:3-7

This is the practical aspect of sanctification. We saw that the relational aspect of sanctification is something that happens once and for all the moment we first place our faith in Jesus. But we see here that the practical aspect of sanctification is not something that happened back then but something that is happening right now. That’s what we see in that first phrase, “It is God’s will that you should be sanctified.” The relational aspect of sanctification is an event. The practical aspect of sanctification is a process. It’s the process through which we become more and more like Jesus. That’s what the rest of this passage explains. It explains some of the things that we will see if we are becoming sanctified in practice. We’ll avoid sexual immorality, we’ll learn to control our own body in a holy way, we won’t take advantage of others. And this is just the beginning. The practical aspect of sanctification is becoming in practice what God has already declared us to be relationally. It is to become devoted to God in practice just as God has declared us to be his own relationally. It is to become dissociated from sin and all the things that displease God in practice just as he has declared us to be separate from the world relationally. It is, essentially, to become like Jesus in how you think, speak, and act.

This is the holiness without which no one will see the Lord. In other words, unless we become like Jesus we will never see God. Now, if we had to do this in our own power we might as well give up right now. But remember, we don’t. It is God who makes us holy both relationally and practically.

“With this in mind, we constantly pray for you, that our God may make you worthy of his calling, and that by his power he may bring to fruition your every desire for goodness and your every deed prompted by faith.” – 2Thessalonians 1:11

It is God who makes us worthy of his calling, who makes us worthy of seeing him face to face. By his power he gives us the desire to do good and the ability to do good. By ourselves we could never become who God calls us to be. So he works in us to make us who he calls us to be. The very things he demands of us he freely gives to us! If we are Christians we are sanctified relationally and we are being sanctified practically by God and his power.

Sanctification – Our Role

That is reason to rejoice, but it is not reason to relax. The fact that God makes us holy does not mean that we don’t need to worry about pursuing righteousness and fleeing sin. It means we should be more devoted than ever to pursuing righteousness and fleeing sin for two reasons. First, because we know we will succeed by God’s power. Second, because we want to express our gratitude to God for making us holy. As God explains through Paul in Philippians 2:12-13.

“Therefore, my dear friends, as you have always obeyed—not only in my presence, but now much more in my absence—continue to work out your salvation with fear and trembling, for it is God who works in you to will and to act in order to fulfill his good purpose.”

It is God who gives you the desire to pursue holiness and the ability to pursue holiness. But it is also God who gives you the responsibility of pursuing holiness in the power he gave you. There are two false beliefs about holiness that we must fight against. The first false belief about holiness says that you must become holy so that God will accept you. But we’ve already seen that this is false. God accepts his people and declares them to be holy long before they ever live like it. The second false belief about holiness says that since God makes us holy and already accepts us then we don’t have to put a lot of effort into pursuing righteousness and fleeing sin. But we see here that this is also false. God commands us to work out our salvation. At other points in Scripture he issues this direct command, “Be holy for I am holy.” So you must work to devote yourself to God and dissociate yourself from all that displeases him. You must strive to live a holy life. But you are not called to live a holy life so that you can become saint. You are called to live a holy life because you are already a saint through faith in Jesus.