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Tag Archives: beach church

The case for faith that works, James 2:14-26

Dec

19

2021

thebeachfellowship

The theme of chapter three is that of faith.  James began by speaking about being rich in faith, as opposed to being poor in faith.  Ironically, he says the poor man is rich in faith, and the rich are poor in faith.  But it was evident that James was speaking of a kind of faith that produces love.  Love being the evidence of faith.  And love that is partial to certain people or shows favoritism is not the love which we are to have as Christians.  But we are to love like Christ loved us, which means that our faith has changed our natural inclinations to become like Christ.

James then indicated that faith in Christ changes us so that we desire to keep the royal law, which is to love your neighbor as yourself. So we understand that when James speaks of faith, he is not speaking of just a theological principle, but he speaks of a practical outcome of our faith. Rich faith, which is true faith, is life changing, in that it produces a new nature that produces works that are like Christ – such as by showing mercy.

In this second half of this chapter, James goes on to further develop the principle of faith, by saying that real faith doesn’t stop at just an intellectual assent, but real faith is living, that is active, and working.  If faith doesn’t produce love, then James says that it is not living faith at all, but dead faith.  Perhaps it can be illustrated in the analogy of a tree, that faith is the root and the trunk of the tree, and love is the branches.  The life of the tree requires both root and branches, they cannot be separated.  For it to be living, fruitful,  it requires both.

So James begins this teaching by asking a question, using a style of teaching similar to Jesus which helps to engage the hearer in his reasoning.  He says in vs14, “What use is it, my brethren, if someone says he has faith but he has no works? Can that faith save him?” The way the question is posed gives us a clue to it’s answer.  The answer is no, faith without works is not saving faith, it’s not living faith, any more than a tree that doesn’t produce fruit is a good tree.

Notice something though in the way James frames this question.  He says the one who says, or claims to have faith.  James doesn’t say that he has faith but no works.  He says the man claims to have faith but no works.  That is a huge distinction. The man claims to have faith, but there is no evidence of it in his life. Now if a man actually had real faith, James indicates that he would have works.  Real faith, saving faith produces works as certainly as a good tree, a living tree, produces fruit.  

But notice what James is not saying. He is not saying that good works produce faith, but that real faith produces works. Again, there is a big difference.  James is indicating in his question that this man does not have saving faith, because there are no works to prove it.  So what good is his confession, or his intellectual assent? Can that type of faith which is only an intellectual assent to the truth, can that faith save him.  And the answer is no, he isn’t actually saved, even though he believes, or claims to believe.

To lay elaborate on that possibility, James gives a hypothetical situation, similar to what he began with in vs 1, a hypothetical situation which is set in the church, where we should be known for our Christian love.  He says in vs 15, “If a brother or sister is without clothing and in need of daily food,  and one of you says to them, “Go in peace, be warmed and be filled,” and yet you do not give them what is necessary for [their] body, what use is that?”

The illustration is set in the context of the church.  Presumably the church is made up of those who are of the faith. In the previous illustration at the beginning of the chapter, we see the possibility in the church of showing favoritism and not true Christian love, depending on the social standing or wealth of someone.  Now in this illustration, we see the example of not necessarily favoritism, but rather neglect, or uncaring disregard for another brother or sister in the church.

The picture James presents is of a desperate person who is without proper clothing or food, basic necessities for life.  And the person who sees them offers them nothing but words, but does not provide anything of substance to supply their need.  Again, James asks the question, “what good is that?”  What use are empty words without providing any help? 

Perhaps in the response of the church member to the needy person there is a hint of the old adage, “God helps those who help themselves.”  Have you ever heard that expression? I think we often use such logic to get off the hook in feeling some obligation to help someone. But is that the way God responds to our needs? No, God doesn’t tell us we need to pull ourselves up by the bootstraps.   But rather, God is merciful, and helps those who cannot help themselves.  Paul says in Romans 5:6 “For while we were still helpless, at the right time Christ died for the ungodly.”  God shows mercy on those who cannot help themselves, and as those who have received mercy, we should also show mercy on those in need. 

So the question is, what use is it to say you have faith, but ignore the need of a brother?  The answer James gives in vs 17, “Even so faith, if it has no works, is dead, [being] by itself.”  Dead faith is no help at all.  And James says that faith without works is dead.  James contrasts living, working, active faith, with faith that is dead, lifeless, and fruitless.  Notice, he says if faith is by itself, it’s useless, it’s dead. Faith and action must go together. Even more to the point, faith that is void of works is not real faith at all.  It is dead. Our faith in Christ made that which was dead come to life, and life produces action, it produces works. 

James is really somewhat like a good lawyer, that has built his case, has asked various questions to illustrate his case, and now he calls someone as a witness for cross examination. Vs.18, “But someone may [well] say, “You have faith and I have works.” “Show me your faith without the works, and I will show you my faith by my works.”

Now there is some interpretative confusion about this verse, because the translators can’t seem to figure out when the quotation begins or ends. There is no punctuation in the original Greek.  But I think the best interpretation is to see that this witness is claiming “You have faith and I have works.”  And then the response of James is “Show me your faith without the works, and I will show you my faith by my works.”

The point is that both faith and works are necessary.  This imaginary witness wants to make an either or situation out of faith or works. Heb 11:1 says about faith, “Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.” And  James says you cannot see faith but you can see the evidence of it.  We can’t “see” someone’s faith, but we can see their works. You can’t see faith without works, but  the evidence of their faith is visible in their works.

We hear in this teaching of James the echo of Christ’s statement concerning the fig tree that had no fruit. He said a tree that doesn’t bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire. It is good for nothing. So those who claim to have faith but no works will hear Jesus say, “Depart from me I never knew you.”

James then adds an illustration of faith without works as an example of dead faith by pointing to the belief of the demons.  He says, “You believe that God is one. You do well; the demons also believe, and shudder.”  When James refers to believing that God is one, it’s a reference to the “shema” the Jewish prayer based on Deut. 6:4 which says, “Hear, O Israel: the LORD is our God, the LORD is one.”  It would have been well known by all Jews, and was in a sense their profession of faith. 

But James shows that such a confession without transformation is useless, it’s dead.  And he shows that by the demon’s belief in God.  The demons believe in the reality of God, and at least they are fearful of Him.  And yet they are not saved by that belief.  Therefore, there must be more to faith than just an intellectual assent to the truth. A lot of people claim to believe in God, but they are unsaved. But to believe in faith means there will be a life changing response to the truth which is shown by one’s deeds.

And so James gives a stinging rebuke to the foolishness of that kind of false faith in vs 20 “But are you willing to recognize, you foolish fellow, that faith without works is useless?” If you think that you can believe in God but it doesn’t require a change in your heart, a change in your life, then you are a fool.  If demons are not saved by belief in God, then it should be evident that faith that is only intellectual is not saving faith either.

Now as James develops his case, he goes on to supply evidence for this principle. And the first evidence comes from the life of Abraham.  James says, “Was not Abraham our father justified by works when he offered up Isaac his son on the altar? 22 You see that faith was working with his works, and as a result of the works, faith was perfected; 23 and the Scripture was fulfilled which says, “AND ABRAHAM BELIEVED GOD, AND IT WAS RECKONED TO HIM AS RIGHTEOUSNESS,” and he was called the friend of God. 24 You see that a man is justified by works and not by faith alone.”

Abraham was considered the father of the Jews, and the father of faith.  The Jews claimed salvation on the basis of being a child of Abraham. But James doesn’t emphasize physical descent, but the concept of righteousness as the result of faith. Abraham was considered righteous in the sight of God because he trusted Him to the point of sacrificing Isaac, who was the son of promise.

But notice that James says Abraham’s faith was working with his works.  It was not one or the other with Abraham.  If he had faith in God, then he had to trust God enough to obey God, even when it seemed contrary to human reasoning.  This idea of trust is essential to faith.  Trust is believing in the truth, but then acting on that faith, putting your weight of action upon it.

I remember an illustration my Mom made years ago when I was a kid in Sunday School.  She showed us a chair, and said “Do you believe that this is a good chair, that it will support your weight if you sit on it?  And we said “yes, we believe it’s a good chair.”  Then she said, “Then sit on it, and let it support your weight.”  When you believe in the chair, that’s faith, when you sit on the chair, that’s trust.  That’s the elementary explanation of faith and trust.

The theological explanation is a bit more involved. There are three elements of faith in classical theology.  The first is the Latin term notitia:  which means believing in the information. It’s an intellectual awareness. The second aspect of faith is what they call assensus, or intellectual assent. I must be persuaded of the truthfulness of the content.The crucial, most vital element of saving faith is that of personal trust. That final term is fiducia, referring to a fiduciary commitment by which I entrust my life to Christ. Like when we put our money in a bank.  That’s a fiduciary institution.  That’s why a lot of banks are called So and So Bank and Trust.  They take care of your money, and put your money to work so that it makes interest.   

So trusting my life to Christ who will work in my life and give me new life is an essential component of faith.  But a lot of Christians stop at the intellectual part.  They never make it to the trusting part. They don’t put their life in Christ’s hands to use as He sees fit, and so consequently there is no life, no growth, no works. 

Abraham, however, not only  believed but he obeyed, he acted in accordance with God’s word. He trusted God’s promises.  And James says the evidence of Abraham’s faith is  you can see that a man is justified by works and not by faith alone. Works are the evidence of faith.  Without evidence of faith, there is no faith.  Or another way of saying it, is faith works. Faith does not stand alone, but faith works.

But let’s make sure we understand an important distinction that may not be apparent in this translation.  And that is, that it is God who justifies.  Man does not justify himself on the basis of his works.  Man cannot justify himself.  Man cannot save himself by his own merit or his works of righteousness.  The Jews thought that if they could keep the law, particularly certain laws above others, then they could obtain righteousness.  

But Paul said in Ephesians 2:8 “For by grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, [it is] the gift of God; 9 not as a result of works, so that no one may boast.”  At first glance Paul seems to go against  what James is saying.  But not so fast.  Read the next verse.  Paul adds, in vs 10 “For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand so that we would walk in them.”  So actually Paul says what James says, that faith and works go together.  Faith produces works, and so faith without works is not really faith at all.

The next evidence that James gives from scripture is that of Rahab the harlot.  What a contrast.  First he showed us Abraham the friend of God, the righteous father of the Jews, the father of the faithful.  Now he goes to the other end of the spectrum, to a Gentile, a woman who was a prostitute.  Vs.25 “In the same way, was not Rahab the harlot also justified by works when she received the messengers and sent them out by another way?”

Rahab demonstrated her trust in the God of Israel by hiding the spies and seeking salvation from their God.  You can read about it in Joshua 2:8-13. Her faith was shown to be living faith because it did something. Her belief in the God of Israel would not have saved her if she had not done something with that faith.  Simply believing in the God of Israel was not enough faith, but faith required action.  She acted on that belief which saved the spies, and saved herself.

The lesson from Abraham is clear: if we believe in God, we will do what He tells us to do. The lesson from Rahab is also clear: if we believe in God, we will help His people, even when it costs us something.

So then having questioned various witnesses, and presented his evidence, James then presents his logical conclusion in vs 26. “For just as the body without [the] spirit is dead, so also faith without works is dead.”  Just as you can have a body with no life ( which is what we call a corpse), so you can have a faith with no life.  And that kind of faith without works is a dead faith, unable to save.

With Christmas around the corner, I can’t help but remember Christmas’s past when I bought one of the kids a toy that was supposed to make some kind of noise, or you turn it on and it would go around in circles on the floor, or something like that.  And inevitably, the wrapping paper comes off and my son or daughter turned on the switch and set the toy on the floor and nothing happened.  And after a minute or two I would feel a tug on my sleeve and look down at this little face that was puckered up about to burst into tears, and hear them say, “Not working.”  The toy didn’t work.  It was not designed just to look at, it was designed to do something, and it didn’t do it.  So the question is, if it doesn’t work, then what use is it?

And that’s what James says here.  Faith without works is dead.  We were designed to work in response to our faith.  Remember what Paul said in Ephesians 2 which we read earlier? “For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand so that we would walk in them.”  We are Christ’s special work of art, that was designed for good works.  And we can only assume that when we don’t work, then we are not really Christ’s.  We haven’t really been remade into a new creation.

We need a faith that works.  A faith that transforms this dead natural man into a living spiritual man.  And that transformation begins when you recognize that you are dead in your trespasses and sins, and you ask for forgiveness and to have the Lord give you new life in Him.  But you have to really mean that; you must want to receive new life, recognizing your old way of life was the way of death.  And because of your faith in what Jesus did to procure your righteousness, God will credit His righteousness to your account, and that righteousness which God gives you results in a regeneration of your spirit, so that you are a new creation, with new desires, and a new capacity for righteousness through the power of the Holy Spirit working in you. That’s a faith that works.  It works out our salvation as we live in the power of the Spirit.  I pray that you have a faith that works. A living faith that will be evidenced by your works.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: beach church, worship on the beach |

Loving your neighbor, James 2:1-13

Dec

12

2021

thebeachfellowship

James is a teacher who is concerned with practicality.  He doesn’t spend a lot of time dealing with lofty theological principles, though he does address them in his letter.  But he spends a great deal of effort to teach us how we are to apply such principles in every day situations.

As a result, James is rather blunt and to the point. If Paul is the general that deals with overall principles and strategies, James is the sergeant who brings them down to the level of the grunt soldier and gets them done. And he doesn’t waste a lot of words doing it either.

From James we learn that true religion is the practice of one’s faith. Faith is analogous to belief.  What we believe is the foundation of our faith.  But religion is how that faith is applied. One way we practice our religion is by going to church.  But of course, our religion is not limited to the church service.  Our religion is applied in daily life.  What we believe affects how we live.

As we finished up the last chapter, James said that our religion might be in vain if we did not practice certain things in regards to our speech.  Our speech then is another means by which we practice our faith.  He said if anyone doesn’t bridle his speech, then his religion is worthless. The idea of bridle there is illustrated by putting a bridle on the horse’s head, to control his movements.  If we don’t control our speech, then it nullifies our good intentions, and even our good deeds.

James then went on to speak about loving our neighbor as illustrated by orphans and widows. Providing relief to orphans and widows is another example of how we should practice our religion.  But as Jesus indicated, anyone who is in need is our neighbor.  

Now to elaborate on that law of loving your neighbor, we come to today’s passage.  In this passage, James tells us that we must guard against loving others with prejudice, loving those who might reciprocate towards us, or guard against loving those who we feel are attractive to us.  But that we should love like God loved us.  That love which Christ had towards us is described in Romans 5:8 which says, “But God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.”

Christ loved us when we were unloveable. I think many Christians at least subconsciously think that God loves them because somehow they are a lovable person.  Talk to the average person for very long about their need for salvation, and they tend to end up saying that they really aren’t a bad person.  Oh, they may have messed up somehow, but deep down inside they are not really all that bad.

The fact is,  they are self deceived. That’s what James said was the case with the person who didn’t bridle his tongue.  He was self deceived. He wasn’t a good person.  His whole person was defiled by that little member, the tongue.  All kinds of wickedness comes out of the mouth, to the point that all your religion, all your “I’m not such a bad person” is absolutely worthless.  

We were saved when we were worthless, sinners, enemies of God,  We hated others, we lied,  we were jealous,  we were angry. Even when we thought we were not so bad and did something good, we actually had evil motives behind our good deeds.  But even though there was nothing good in us,  Christ loved us, and died for us.

Having bad motives, or wicked ulterior motives, is what James is addressing here in this passage.  He says in vs 1, “My brethren, do not hold your faith in our glorious Lord Jesus Christ with [an attitude of] personal favoritism.”  Notice that he addresses this to his brethren. In vs 5 he elaborates on that with “my beloved brethren.” That means he is speaking to fellow Christians, or at least, professing Christians.  In vs 2 he gives an illustration about attending church.  So we know that he is addressing people who claim to be believers. He is speaking to us who hold onto the faith.  But he says we must guard against holding onto our faith, or practicing our faith, or practicing our religion, with an attitude of personal favoritism. 

Now the principle, or the law, is that we are to love one another, especially those of the household of faith.  And what better place to manifest that love towards the brethren than at church?  But James is concerned that we are not loving the way God loves.  We are being discriminatory.  We choose to love those that we find attractive, those that we think are deserving, and more often than not, our motivation is that we want them to reciprocate in the same way towards us.

Jesus gave what is sometimes called the “golden rule.” It says, “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.” Or at least that’s the common translation of it.  Actually, what Jesus said spoke to this very issue, this selective love that shows favoritism.  Jesus said in Luke 6:31-36 “Treat others the same way you want them to treat you. If you love those who love you, what credit is [that] to you? For even sinners love those who love them. If you do good to those who do good to you, what credit is [that] to you? For even sinners do the same. If you lend to those from whom you expect to receive, what credit is [that] to you? Even sinners lend to sinners in order to receive back the same [amount.]  But love your enemies, and do good, and lend, expecting nothing in return; and your reward will be great, and you will be sons of the Most High; for He Himself is kind to ungrateful and evil [men.] Be merciful, just as your Father is merciful.”

Jesus said don’t do kindness because you expect a return, don’t limit your love only to those whom you find attractive to you.  Don’t show favoritism.  But love the way God loves, which is when we are undeserving. Now James is expounding on that principle in this passage.  And he likens it to the way we treat others in the church.  He gives an illustration of that kind of selective love that shows favoritism in vs2.

Vs2 “For if a man comes into your assembly with a gold ring and dressed in fine clothes, and there also comes in a poor man in dirty clothes, and you pay special attention to the one who is wearing the fine clothes, and say, “You sit here in a good place,” and you say to the poor man, “You stand over there, or sit down by my footstool,” have you not made distinctions among yourselves, and become judges with evil motives?”

By the way, the word translated assembly used there can actually mean a synagogue.  The synagogue was not the temple, nor did it serve the purpose of a temple, but it was a meeting place for Jews on the Sabbath and other religious holidays where they worshipped God and were taught the word, and for prayer.  James has ascribed the characteristics of the synagogue to the church meeting, or the assembly of believers.  That’s significant as a template for the church, but I am not going to take the time to expound on that right now, other than to point it out.

The illustration though is one with which most of us are probably familiar.  The church assembles.  People tend to sit in the same chairs, the same tables, week after week.  If someone sits in your spot, you probably wouldn’t say anything out loud, but inwardly you’re probably thinking, “hey, he’s in my seat!”  But in any case, it’s evident in most church services when someone new shows up.  For one, they don’t know where to sit.  Everyone recognizes that they haven’t been here regularly.  

James makes the distinction in his illustration that the person who shows up is rich.  He says you could tell by the gold ring and the fine clothes.  And the church people responded as if he was an honored guest and gave him the choice seat.  You know, in the synagogue, as well as in early churches in Europe and in America, there were specially made seats that were up front that were for the wealthy, or for the church elders, or for the nobles or town officials. Many times those people had paid for those special pews to be made.  Then the rest of the seating was in a sort of economic order as well, with the higher class people up front, and the commoners in the back.

We don’t have that sort of thing today, for the most part.  In fact, nowadays, it would seem that the preferred seating is in the back. But we can understand what James is saying.  He’s saying that the church gives preferential treatment to some people based on certain things, such as their attractiveness, or their financial status, or a host of other possible outward signs that they are like us, or that they are what we would like to be, or because we want them to think well of us. We judge by outward appearances, and we love accordingly.

But God doesn’t love like that.  Remember the story of how David was anointed to be king by the prophet Samuel.  Samuel looked at all David’s brothers, all big, handsome young men, each one capable of being king, at least in appearances.  But God said, Samuel, don’t look at the outward appearance, for God looks at the heart. 

And so consequently, God tends to call the poor and the weak, and the unattractive, and the unsuccessful to salvation.  So Paul says in 1Cor. 1:26-29 “For consider your calling, brethren, that there were not many wise according to the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble;  but God has chosen the foolish things of the world to shame the wise, and God has chosen the weak things of the world to shame the things which are strong, and the base things of the world and the despised God has chosen, the things that are not, so that He may nullify the things that are,  so that no man may boast before God.”

Jesus said in the sermon on the mount, “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of God.” The principle that Jesus wants to emphasize is that true riches are spiritual riches, to be rich in faith has eternal reward.  But too often we look at the physical, instead of the spiritual. James speaks of this principle in vs 5, saying “Listen, my beloved brethren: did not God choose the poor of this world [to be] rich in faith and heirs of the kingdom which He promised to those who love Him?” 

When we surrender our lives to the Lord, we surrender our hold on the world.  Jesus said in Luke 16:13 “No servant can serve two masters; for either he will hate the one and love the other, or else he will be devoted to one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and wealth.”  So when we become disciples of Christ, we usually end up poor in the things of this world.  Because our purpose in this new life is not to accumulate treasures on earth, but treasures in heaven.  But in forsaking the riches of the world we gain riches in heaven, we are rich in faith, and because of our faith, we have an inheritance in the kingdom of God which is far above any riches this world could ever offer.  

I really don’t think that is the attitude of the average Christian today though.  I’m afraid that the average Christian has not really forsaken anything of this world.  Most so called Christians have just attempted to add some Christ to their  lives, but He is not the source of a completely new life. If anything, a lot of people expect that adding Christ to their lives will make them more prosperous, more successful, and more wealthy.  And there are many false prophets that encourage such a belief by preaching what we is called the prosperity gospel. But the Bible teaches the exact opposite. That we become poor in this world that we might be rich in heaven.

However, I don’t think that God necessarily wants us to take a vow of poverty anymore than I think in light of the earlier passage about holding the tongue, that God wants us to take a vow of silence. But I do think that if Christ is in first place in your life, then the pursuit of wealth or retaining wealth, or admiring wealth, is going to take a back seat.  Jesus said it is better to give than to receive. And so if you really believe that, then you spend less energy trying to hold onto money, and more energy trying to use money for the kingdom of God. At the very least, God controls your money, rather than your money controlling you.

But I get the feeling that James doesn’t like rich people very much.  He doesn’t admire riches.  He sees riches as a hindrance rather than a blessing.  The rich young ruler is a good example of that.  Jesus told him to sell everything he owned and give it to the poor and come and follow Him.  The young man went away sad because he had great riches.  We are so conditioned to think that riches are a blessing from God, aren’t we? But in reality, riches can be a hindrance to God.  Riches can be an obstacle which keeps us from truly surrendering to the Lord.

But James doesn’t have much pity for rich people.  Notice what he says about them in vs 6, “But you have dishonored the poor man. Is it not the rich who oppress you and personally drag you into court?  Do they not blaspheme the fair name by which you have been called?”  In honoring the rich man, simply because of his status on earth, they are in effect dishonoring the poor man.  But then James seems to generalize and say that the rich are the ones who oppress and take to court those who are saved. 

Now I don’t know if James knew of some particular event or incident that he was referring to.  But it’s quite possible that his predominately Jewish audience were being oppressed by the Pharisees and the Jewish rulers.  These priests and Jewish officials were notoriously rich, and they made their fortunes by taking advantage of the poor.  A good example of that is seen in the incident when Jesus went into the temple and drove out the money changers.  That was a direct attack by Jesus on the money making business of the high priests. They were taking advantage of the poor, charging them extra for currency exchange that only they could provide and that they required,  and then selling them officially clean animals after they told the poor person that his animal did not meet the criteria. They were taking advantage of the poor, and then in many cases, they were the source of persecution against the church.  James said they blasphemed the name of Jesus.  But yet because of the church’s admiration for riches, they were willing to overlook all that and treat the rich with preference.

But James said this wasn’t just a matter of a mild indiscretion, this was actually a sin, what he called “evil motives.”  And so to show that such attitude is a sin, and a grievous sin at that, he turns them to the law.  The law defines sin.  And the law James chooses to quote is the law of loving your neighbor.  He says in vs 8 “If, however, you are fulfilling the royal law according to the Scripture, “YOU SHALL LOVE YOUR NEIGHBOR AS YOURSELF,” you are doing well.  But if you show partiality, you are committing sin [and] are convicted by the law as transgressors.” 

James refers to it as the royal law; the law of the King, we being His servants. We tend to think of the law as things which we are not supposed to do.  But the law James speaks of is a law of what we should do. When Jesus was asked what was the foremost law, He said,  ‘YOU SHALL LOVE THE LORD YOUR GOD WITH ALL YOUR HEART, AND WITH ALL YOUR SOUL, AND WITH ALL YOUR MIND.  This is the great and foremost commandment. The second is like it, ‘YOU SHALL LOVE YOUR NEIGHBOR AS YOURSELF.’  On these two commandments depend the whole Law and the Prophets.”

What Jesus indicated there is that if you are guilty of breaking the law of loving your neighbor, then you are guilty of all the law because all the law depends upon these two laws. So James says if you are keeping the second part which is to love your neighbor then you are doing well.  But if claim to love your neighbor, but you show favoritism, then you are actually sinning, and guilty of breaking the law.  You cannot love your neighbor and show favoritism to the rich, or towards anyone that you find attractive, or hope to find some reciprocation from.  If you do so, then you are sinning. 

Furthermore, we need to understand that this is the royal law, the King’s edict for the kingdom of God, and that if we are a citizen of that kingdom then we have an obligation to obey the King’s laws.  James calls it the law of liberty.  But the liberty we have is freedom from sin.  The Holy Spirit enables us to keep the law.  But still we may choose to do so or not.  We are not controlled by sin any longer,  and we are supposed to be controlled by the Spirit, but we still may choose to sin. But let there be no mistake, we are not to think lightly of the grace of God and trample underfoot the blood of Jesus so that we think we can sin without impunity, without any consequences.  The law was given to us to keep.  And when we choose not to keep it, we do so to our own peril. We lose our liberty.

So James is going to go on to teach us how we are to think about the law.  He says in vs10 “For whoever keeps the whole law and yet stumbles in one [point,] he has become guilty of all.  For He who said, “DO NOT COMMIT ADULTERY,” also said, “DO NOT COMMIT MURDER.” Now if you do not commit adultery, but do commit murder, you have become a transgressor of the law.”

The Jews of James day made distinctions concerning the law, that some laws were more important than others.  They put the law of the Sabbath, for instance, above other laws as to importance.  The same is true of the Catholic Church today.  They call some sins moral, and some sins venial, as if there are some sins more serious than others.  But notice what James says, he puts the law of loving your neighbor on the same plane as murder and adultery.  And he says that if you break the law on one point, then you are guilty of the whole law. 

Within the boundaries of God’s perfect law of liberty, we have freedom. My son has several aquariums in our house that have all kinds of fresh and salt water fish.  For the fish the water is his natural habitat.  And as he stays within that boundary he has liberty and will thrive.  But if he leaves that water, then he will suffer.  One day my son could not find a particular fish in the aquarium.  Finally after a long time of looking, he found the fish on the floor.  The fish had jumped out of the aquarium and landed on the floor. The fish left his natural habitat in search of freedom, but found only death. That’s a picture of the law of liberty.  The Christian’s natural environment is within the law of God. We have life, we can thrive, we have liberty within the law of God, but if we chose to go outside of it, we lose that liberty.

James says that we are to “So speak and so act as those who are to be judged by [the] law of liberty.”  That’s not an accommodation to sin that James is giving there.  But notice that he says you will be judged according to the law of liberty.  And the law of liberty requires that we stay within it’s boundaries.

So he concludes with this summary about judgment.  He says in vs 13,  “For judgment [will be] merciless to one who has shown no mercy; mercy triumphs over judgment.”  Jesus gave a parable once in response to Peter’s question about forgiveness.  The parable told the story of a man whom the king forgave a great debt because he cried for mercy.  But then the man went out and choked another man who owed him a small sum of money.  When the king heard about it, he called the man to court and said, “ You wicked servant, I cancelled all the debt of yours because you begged for mercy.  Shouldn’t you have had mercy on your fellow servant just as I had towards you? (Matt. 18:32)

The point being that God freely grants us mercy when we ask Him, even when we ask Him again and again and again.  So in the same way, God expects us to show mercy to others, again and again.  But when we refuse, or neglect to show mercy, then God will withhold mercy from us and instead will judge us according to how we have judged others. Jesus said in Matt. 7:2  “For in the way you judge, you will be judged; and by your standard of measure, it will be measured to you.”  That’s pretty scary, when you really examine how you treat others.

But in closing, we are left with a safeguard against such judgment from God. And the safeguard is that mercy triumphs over judgment. If we show mercy then we will be shown mercy. Let us then show mercy towards one another, and love one another without prejudice, that we may be like our heavenly Father who showed mercy to us. 

Posted in Sermons | Tags: beach church, worship at the beach |

Practical instructions for fruitful living, James 1:19-27

Dec

5

2021

thebeachfellowship

Last time we finished up with verse 18 in which James said we were brought forth by the word of truth that we might be the first fruits among His creatures. He is speaking there in the phrase “brought forth” about our new birth, our spiritual birth. We are saved by grace, through faith, given new life in Christ, a new heart, new desires, a new way of living.

Then he says that we might be the first fruits among His creatures. That refers to our new life now that we are saved. He uses the analogy of a plant, which springs up in life, and then bears fruit in kind. And as we are now sons and daughters of God, our lives are to bear fruit which is like God. If we are born of God, then we are to bear the likeness of God, we are to live godly lives.

Godly lives is the produce of our new life in Christ. That’s what theologians call sanctification. We are conformed to the image of Jesus Christ. And as we walk by the Spirit, we produce the fruit of the Spirit. And Galatians 5:22 tells us that the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control.

Now that fruit of our spiritual life is what James now turns to. He gives us several instructions for how we are to live and act, which are the fruit of a godly life. He moves from principles to practices. And I must say that sanctification is something that comes through practice. Sanctification is another way of expressing spiritual maturity. And Hebrew 5:14 tells us that maturity comes through practice. It says, “But solid food is for the mature, who because of practice have their senses trained to discern good and evil.”

So James begins these practical instructions for daily life with instructions concerning our speech. He says in vs 19, “[This] you know, my beloved brethren. But everyone must be quick to hear, slow to speak [and] slow to anger; for the anger of man does not achieve the righteousness of God.”

There is some debate among Bible scholars as to whether that opening phrase belongs to the previous verse, or this verse. I think it’s best translated this way, “My dear brothers, take note of this; everyone should be quick to listen…” In other words, James wants to emphasize that this is something important. Listen up, take note of this.

James thinks that the tongue, or our speech, is important. He will go on to say in chapter 3:8-10 “But no one can tame the tongue; [it is] a restless evil [and] full of deadly poison. With it we bless [our] Lord and Father, and with it we curse men, who have been made in the likeness of God; from the same mouth come [both] blessing and cursing. My brethren, these things ought not to be this way.”

James says the tongue is full of poison. And we know that is true. Who among us have not been severely wounded by something that was said. You know, I still remember a few teachers from when I was in high school that said something that left a scar for decades afterwards. I remember in my junior year of high school, I was the junior class president. This one teacher was one of two advisors for our class. I worked with these teachers on class meetings and activities throughout the year. But this one teacher was a piece of work. She was just a mean woman, and she liked being mean. She waited to the last day of the school year, when I came to get something signed by her, to tell me that I was the worst President that they had ever had. She may have been right, I don’t know. I didn’t do a whole lot other than make a few remarks once a month at our class meetings. But why not tell me something when I could have made improvements? She did it obviously to hurt me. And 40 years later it still stings.

But all of you I’m sure can think of things that have been said in the past to hurt you. I’m sure if you’re like me, you remember three hurtful things for every one good thing that was said about you. So I’m sure we can agree that the tongue is a restless evil and full of poison. But maybe what we haven’t thought of too much is that what we say is important to God.

Notice then what James says. First he says, be quick to listen. I think he actually is talking about listening to the word of God. That’s who we are to take our cues from. I’m constantly being approached by people who want to teach. Who want to speak. But God is saying it’s more important to listen than it is to speak.

But also in practical social situations, we should be quick to listen. Many of our conversations with other people end up being contests in oneupmanship. As you are telling something that is on your heart, the one listening is nodding his head, but actually is thinking of what he wants to say in response. And many times, they end up interrupting you to tell you something that is even more exciting, or amazing, or terrible or whatever, than what you were saying.

If we really practice loving our neighbor, our brothers and sisters in the Lord, then we should be quick to hear, quick to listen, to lend a sympathetic ear. More good can be accomplished in counseling by listening, than by speaking. If you go see a good therapist or psychiatrist you will find that out. They are trained to listen, to prompt their client to speak. And in speaking, the client finds relief many times from his troubles. In the church, the same might be true. James says “confess your sins one to another that you might be healed.” There is great comfort in confession. But confession needs a listener. God wants us to be listeners.

Secondly James says we should be slow to speak. Slow to speak means that you hold your tongue. You don’t respond quickly, but you think about it first. Sometimes, it may mean it’s better not to speak at all. I remember hearing as a kid that you should count to three before responding. Then later I heard you should count to ten when you get angry. I don’t know how long you should wait to speak, but I will say that the longer the better.

And by the way, speaking includes comments on facebook and instagram and other social media platforms. There is a grave danger in those mediums in that what you have written ends up getting passed around to the wrong person. Or some deeper meaning you intended is lost in translation. Things you quickly respond to on social media have a tendency to blow up in your face later on. But what you have written you have written. You can’t take it back.

The same is true of hurtful things you say. You may apologize for it later, and they may say “that’s ok,” but I can assure you that 99 times out of a hundred it’s not ok. They will remember what you said for a long, long time. Be slow to speak. Let me also say this; if you don’t have much to say, people think you are smart. Proverbs 17:28 says, “it is wise for learned men to be silent, and much more for fools.” The quiet person in class always seemed to be the smartest person in class. Or at least we thought so. You seem smart when you’re silent, but when you open your mouth, you reveal your ignorance.

Third thing James says is be slow to anger. Let’s be honest. Anger feels good. We say we let some steam off. That means we had this boiling over in us, and it feels good to let it out and burn someone’s hair off. But James says man’s anger does not bring about the righteous life that God desires.

God is often spoken of in terms like the wrath of God. We sometimes hear about righteous anger. And maybe there is such a thing. I said last week that we must learn to hate what God hates. So there may be a place for righteous anger. But when James speaks of man’s anger, he is saying it’s not righteous anger. It’s anger that comes from impatience, or jealousy, or frustration, from hatred and other sinful desires. Anger is the opposite of the fruit of the Spirit. Rather than our actions, our words being guided by the Holy Spirit, we find ourselves guided by anger, which ends up hurting others. And people don’t respond well to anger. Our goal as Christians is to edify, to share the gospel, to bear testimony of God’s mercies. But if we share our anger instead, even if we think it is well deserved, it doesn’t achieve a good purpose in those people. They are turned off. Proverbs 15:1 says, “A gentle answer turns away wrath, But a harsh word stirs up anger.”

Therefore since anger does not achieve righteousness, James says, “putting aside all filthiness and all that remains of wickedness, in humility receive the word implanted, which is able to save your souls.” Now understand that James isn’t introducing a new command here, but he is building on the previous commands. He is talking about speech, angry, abusive speech, filthy speech, ungodly speech, wicked speech. Put it away. Do away with it.

I know that foul language is a pretty common problem among Christians. I have often been shocked by what I thought were sound, mature Christians,, and yet under certain circumstances they cuss like a sailor. But James says, such things ought not to be. Look again at chapter 3, vs.10, he says, “from the same mouth come [both] blessing and cursing. My brethren, these things ought not to be this way.” Christians cannot speak cursing and blessing at the same time. Even the unsaved people know that a Christian should not speak that way. They may curse along with you, but inwardly they take note of it, and as such they have an excuse why they think that the Christian life is fake, or for show, or hypocritical.

I will promise you this. If you sincerely pray and ask God to help you overcome that sort of speech, I believe the Lord will help you. I believe a Christian can have victory over his speech. And furthermore, God commands that we clean up our speech. And He will not command us to do something that He will not enable us to do.

Now I think as Christians we are to put away all kinds of filthiness, and wickedness, in all forms. But I think specifically James is still talking about speech here. Because he then gives the antidote, which is to receive God’s speech, God’s word, which He says is able to save your souls. Notice though he prefaces that implanting by saying that it must be received with humility. Humility is brokenness. The ground that is broken up is able to receive the word implanted.

Jesus talked about the different kinds of soils in the parable of the sower. He said the seed is the word of God. It’s cast by the preacher over the field, which is the world. Some seed fell on rocky soil, some fell on the by way. Some fell on thin soil and it sprung up but then the thorns choked the life from it so it did not bear fruit. But some fell on good soil. And it found root there, and grew up, and bore fruit. I suggest that the good soil is the soil that was broken up, that had been tilled. That is a picture of humility. Not a proud heart, that must be first, that must say what they think, that must stand up for their rights, that must be independent. But in humility, in brokenness, the word of God can find root, and then when it grows, it bears fruit.

Now we are not saved by our works. Eph. 2:8-9 says, “For by grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, [it is] the gift of God; not as a result of works, so that no one may boast.” But how do we have faith? Paul says in Romans 10:17 “So faith [comes] from hearing, and hearing by the word of Christ.” So the word of Christ is heard, is believed, is received, and it washes us, it transforms us, it saves us. That’s yet another example of how hearing is better than speaking. We need to hear the word of God. We need to read it, we need to listen to it, and we need to heed it.

I heard about a couple that came to church and the woman had been in the nursery or something, and she asked her husband who was leaving the building, “‘What, is the sermon all done?’ ‘No,’ said the man, ‘it is all said, but it is not begun to be done yet.’” It starts with hearing, then receiving, and then applying what you have heard.

To that point, about applying what you have heard, James says in vs 22 “But prove yourselves doers of the word, and not merely hearers who delude themselves.” James will go on to extrapolate from this principle that faith without works is dead. Faith is not just an intellectual exercise. Faith is trust, believing, to the point of doing. Believing doesn’t mean just intellectual assent. But it means acting on what you believe to be true.

The Bible speaks of Abraham as the father of faith. Again and again the Bible says, “Abraham believed God, and He counted it to him as righteousness.” But Abraham didn’t just believe intellectually. He didn’t just give intellectual assent to the idea of God. But Hebrews 11 says that “By faith Abraham, when he was called, obeyed by going out to a place which he was to receive for an inheritance; and he went out, not knowing where he was going.”

If Abraham just gave intellectual assent to God but stayed in Ur of Chaldees, then he wouldn’t have had saving faith. Abraham had faith because he obeyed, he went out of Ur, he packed up and moved out to the place God told him to go. Faith is trusting God enough to act on His word. God does’t just give us His word to inform us, but to transform us.

James then turns to an analogy to help explain this principle. He says in vs 23-24 “For if anyone is a hearer of the word and not a doer, he is like a man who looks at his natural face in a mirror; for [once] he has looked at himself and gone away, he has immediately forgotten what kind of person he was.”

We’re all familiar with looking in the mirror, aren’t we? Some of us like looking in the mirror more than others. I personally don’t like to look in the mirror very much. And consequently, my kids are always pointing out that I missed a spot shaving, or I have hairs growing where hair shouldn’t be, or I am losing my hair. I always think of that country music song by Waylon Jennings, where he said, “I look in the mirror with total surprise, at the hair on my shoulders, and the age in my eyes.” I think he was talking about having long hair, but I tend to see the hair that’s fallen out and laying on my shoulders. So anyway, we look in the mirror and we see our face, our body, and usually we try to improve it, to put makeup on, or pluck our nose hairs, or make an attempt to do a comb over to hide our bald spot.

But when James speaks of the mirror, he is likening the word of God to a mirror in which we see not our physical bodies, but we see our soul in the mirror of God’s word. And when we see the imperfections of our soul, when we see our shortcomings, our sinfulness, we should immediately deal with it. But instead James says, too often we just turn and walk away, and forget what kind of person that we really are as revealed in the word.

The antidote for that, James says, is to look intently at the law of liberty and abide by that law. Vs 25 “But one who looks intently at the perfect law, the [law] of liberty, and abides by it, not having become a forgetful hearer but an effectual doer, this man will be blessed in what he does.”

Don’t be confused by the phrase law of liberty, as if James is giving us the license to live as we please. The law of liberty is simply a synonym for the word of God. In Psalm 19 David says, “The law of the Lord is perfect, restoring the soul. The statues of the Lord are trustworthy, making wise the simple. By them is your servant warned, in keeping them there is great reward.”

God’s law is perfect. His word is perfect. And God’s perfect law gives liberty from the bondage to sin. As we live within the boundaries of God’s law we are free, we enjoy the liberties which God provides in that environment. But when we cross His boundaries, we find ourselves once again a slave to sin. The analogy could be made with the freedom we have in living in America. We are a free people. We celebrate our liberty. But we live in an environment of laws. If we go outside those laws, then we lose our liberty.

James says that there is something even better for us though. He says that when we abide in God’s law, not just hearing it but doing it, then we will be blessed in what we do. God blesses those who obey Him. There is a reward for those who keep the statues of the Lord, David said. Sometimes that reward may come immediately as a consequence of doing right, other times it may be in the future, when God will reward those according to their deeds at the judgement. But God promises a reward for obedience.

Now in keeping the law of God, the perfect law of liberty, we can call that being religious. We are living godly, seeking to live for God, which is the definition of religion. But James says if you don’t control the tongue, control your speech, then your religion is worthless. Vs. 26 “If anyone thinks himself to be religious, and yet does not bridle his tongue but deceives his [own] heart, this man’s religion is worthless.”

It’s a terrible thing to be deceived. We talked about Eve’s deception last week. But what’s worse than that is to be self deceived. Because when you are self deceived, you don’t know that you are deceived. James says if you don’t bridle your tongue, or control your tongue, you have deceived yourself in thinking you are religious through what you think are religious duties, like going to church, or singing songs, or any number of other things you do which you think will please God. But according to God, if you don’t have control over your tongue, your temper, then everything else you do accomplishes nothing.

But James doesn’t want to end this section with a negative, so he concludes with the positive thing you can do, which is pure and undefiled religion. We should be religious, but to practice pure religion, and not defiled, not corrupted by personal pride or personal agenda, then James says we must do the following. Vs.27 “Pure and undefiled religion in the sight of [our] God and Father is this: to visit orphans and widows in their distress, [and] to keep oneself unstained by the world.”

So there are actually two things we must do to have pure and undefiled religion. One is to visit orphans and widows in their distress. James is addressing here the social circumstances and conditions of his day which were epitomized by orphans and widows. These were people in that society that had no guardian or breadwinner in the family. They had no social services from the government that provided for them. In many cases they were destitute, unable to work, unable to provide for themselves. We don’t really have the same situation in our society, at least in America. But we do have the poor. Jesus said the poor you have always with you. There are many people who are destitute in our society. And there are even people in our church that have needs that they cannot meet, that are beyond their means. We may have to look a little harder, but we can find people that are in need of a person who will help them. It may not just be financial, it may be other ways.

My sister is a widow. She lost her husband about 5 years ago. They had been missionaries for about 30 years, and then he came down with a deadly respiratory disease. About three years later after he died, she lost her son to ALS. He was the son who lived closest to her. Now she is not destitute by any means. She has a job teaching piano. But there is a man in the church who has repeatedly given his service to her around her house to fix anything that she needs fixing. He does all the things a husband might have done. He takes her car to the shop when needed. He hangs pictures, fixes the toilet, changes out the washing machine. He tries to serve as a substitute husband for her. I don’t know that that is reproducible for everyone of us. But maybe if we thought about it, we could find someone who could use our help in some way. But in general, I think this command to visit widows and orphans is simply a specific example of the command to love your neighbor as yourself. Loving your neighbor is pure and undefiled religion.

The other part to pure and undefiled religion is to keep oneself unpolluted by the world. Our relationship with the Lord is likened in the Bible to a marriage. But when we gravitate back to the things of the world, the lusts of the world, the wickedness of the world, it’s as if we are cheating on our Lord to whom we owe our complete devotion to. When we are attracted by the world, and we give in to the lusts of the world, then we have in effect committed adultery against the Lord.

I don’t have time to give you a laundry list of all the ways you can sin against God, and follow after the world. I bet you could give me a pretty long list yourselves if you thought about it for a minute. But if I were to just pick the one area that James had in mind, I would bet you that he was thinking about our speech, talking like the world, speaking in anger, speaking rashly, speaking wickedness. That type of speech is a stain on our souls and a blemish on our testimony. And as James said at the beginning, we need to put that away from us, and practice slow speech, quick hearing, and be doers of the word, applying the perfect law of liberty to our lives in practical ways, every day. Let us be doers of the word, that we might receive blessing from the Lord.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: beach church, worship on the beach |

The path of sin and the protection from it, James 1:13-18

Nov

28

2021

thebeachfellowship

James has been talking about trials which everyone faces in life. He calls them various trials.  That indicates that trials come in a variety of ways, in all sorts of difficulties.  James says that a trial is a test of your faith.  And we learned that God uses trials to refine our faith, to strengthen our faith, to prove our faith.  He uses trials to conform us through suffering to the image of Jesus Christ.  He uses trials to mature our faith and sanctify us.

But we have a response in trials. And there are two possible responses that we can make in trials.  One is, by the wisdom which God gives us, to endure the trial without failing in our faith, to be obedient to God even when it seems difficult or not even wise to do so, trusting in Him completely.  The other possible response is to give into the temptation to turn away from faith in God to act according to natural wisdom, or to act in a way that appeals to our carnal nature, to satisfy the lusts of our flesh.

And so we see that’s it’s possible for us to have a trial that turns into a temptation.  A temptation differs from a trial only in the sense that we are induced to sin. James wants to make sure that we don’t fall into temptation.  And to insure that he wants to make sure we understand the origin of temptation as opposed to trials. And so he says in vs 13, “Let no one say when he is tempted, “I am being tempted by God”; for God cannot be tempted by evil, and He Himself does not tempt anyone.”

So trials come through the hand of God, but God doesn’t tempt us to sin.  Because the nature of God cannot be tempted to sin.  He is holy and pure and there is no evil in Him, and He cannot abide with evil. God does not give us trials so that we might fall into sin, but that we might persevere in faith and overcome temptation. 

As 1Cor. 10:13 says, “No temptation has overtaken you but such as is common to man; and God is faithful, who will not allow you to be tempted beyond what you are able, but with the temptation will provide the way of escape also, so that you will be able to endure it.”

So God sends trials, but we need to understand that temptation does not come from God. But rather God has provided a way to endure temptation without succumbing to it. Now James has been teaching us how we are to endure through trials, now he wants to tell us how we might overcome temptation.  And to help us be able to overcome temptation, he will first describe for us the pathway to sin, and then he will show us the protection we have against temptation.

There are five steps on this path of temptation to sin.  The first is what we might call attraction. And we see that attraction indicated in vs 14, as the word enticed.  James says in vs14, “But each one is tempted when he is carried away and enticed by his own lust.”

The source of temptation lies within the human heart. James calls it lust. Lust is a perversion of love, but it still comes from the heart.  Desire comes from the heart. Jesus said in Matthew 15:19, “For out of the heart come evil thoughts, murders, adulteries, fornications, thefts, false witness, slanders.” And the prophet Jeremiah said about the heart, that is is deceitful and desperately wicked, who can know it?” Or who can trust it?

So we see something that appeals to our heart, we are attracted to something that is wrong, to make a wrong choice.  Our eyes see it, and our heart desires it. We find it attractive.  Whatever it may be.  There are two iconic illustrations of temptation in the Old Testament.  One is Eve, who listened to the devil’s lie, and saw that the tree was  good for food, and that it was a delight to the eyes, and that the tree was desirable to make one wise, she took from its fruit and ate; and she gave also to her husband with her, and he ate.  She was attracted to the fruit, she was enticed by her own lusts. Satan certainly played a part in it, but it was her own lusts that enticed her.

The other illustration that comes to mind is that of David, who should have been leading his men in battle, but was home in his palace instead.  And he looked out over the rooftop of his palace and saw Bathsheba, saw that she was beautiful, and he was attracted to her.  He was enticed by his own lusts.

There is something to be learned here.  And that is, you cannot sin without attraction. If you don’t find something enticing, attractive, then it’s going to be difficult to be induced to sin.  That’s why we need to have the mind of Christ, we need to have our desires changed.  And the simple way we do that is through the washing of the word.  We renew our minds, our hearts, through constantly being washed by the water of the word.  And in feeding upon the word of God, our thoughts are aligned with Christ, our hearts are aligned with Christ, so that we learn to love what He loves, and we hate what He hates.  We have to get our attractions reprogrammed. Because we are tempted by what we are attracted to. We need to be careful about what we see, what we look at.  

The second step in the temptation to sin is what we will call deception. We already alluded to it earlier in the case of Eve, when the devil deceived her.  James says in vs 16, “Do not be deceived, my beloved brethren.” The devil is a liar and the father of lies, Jesus told us.  He is called the tempter in scripture.  And his strategy is to lie and to deceive.  

The idea of being deceived that James is referencing here in vs 16 really has it’s origins in the idea of a lure, or bait.  A lure is designed to look good, to smell good, to even taste good.  It has all the appearances of something that is great. Eve thought it was a delight to the eyes, and that it would make you wise, and I’m sure she imagined it would taste pretty good as well. And so she swallowed the lure, hook, line and sinker, and ended up condemning the human race in her sin.

Satan may not always verbally lure you to sin.  But the Bible teaches that he has certainly engineered the world system to entice you, to attract you, and ultimately to hook you.  That’s why James told us in the previous passage that we needed wisdom when we are faced with trials, and that God would willingly give us wisdom so that we might know the way which we should go.  Because if we listen to our natural inclinations, if we listen to the wisdom of the world, then we will find ourselves headed on a path to destruction.

There is another step on the path to sin which I call preoccupation.  That idea is expressed in vs 14, James says when he is carried away and enticed by his own lusts. The idea of preoccupation is expressed by carried away.   It simply means you become obsessed by something.  I have to admit I have an obsessive nature.  If I become interested in something, I get on a roll where it’s all I think about.  If you look at the history of my you tube viewing, you will quickly find out about my obsessions.  And many times, I find that I eventually act on those obsessions and buy something or do something, that I probably would have been better off not doing.  Hopefully, my obsessions are not sinful, but I understand that they can be counter productive.

However, I think James indicates that lusts start in the heart, are fueled by attraction, and then obsessed over to the point where we think about it over and over again.  We visualize it.  We dream about it.  And then one day we actualize that which was first only thought of.  The attraction becomes affection.  We love what we have seen, what we have obsessed over.  But as James indicates, it’s not really love, it’s lust.  It’s become an affection that we think we can’t live without.

We need to guard our affections. John said in 1 John, “Love not the world, neither the things that are in the world.”  As I said earlier we need to hate the things God hates and love the things God loves.  We need to loathe sin, recognizing it for what it is, an affront to God, an insult to Jesus Christ, and a lie of the devil that leads to destruction.

And acting upon our desires is the next step in the progression.  We might call that next step conception. James says in vs 15, “Then when lust has conceived, it gives birth to sin; and when sin is accomplished, it brings forth death.”  That sounds like a summary of David’s sin with Bathsheba.  

James says when lust has conceived.  That’s the point where it goes from merely thinking about it to being acted upon.  We act on our desire.  Maybe we say it was impulse.  Maybe we make the excuse that we did it without thinking.  But those are just excuses.  We were attracted to it, we thought about it, we became preoccupied with it, and then we became carried away in our lusts and acted upon it.

That’s why Paul tells us in 2Cor. 10:5 “[We are] destroying speculations and every lofty thing raised up against the knowledge of God, and [we are] taking every thought captive to the obedience of Christ.”  If we renew our minds, and change our thinking, then we will never get to the point of conception. Paul says we must control our thoughts.  If we control our thoughts, we may be tempted, yet not sin.

Final step on the path to sin is subjection. We come in bondage to that sin. When sin is accomplished, it brings forth death.  That sin now has control over you.  You are no longer living for Christ, but living for the flesh. To be frank, you have become subjugated to the devil.  You become in bondage to your sin.

David neglected his duty as commander in chief of the Israel army.  He put himself in the wrong place at the wrong time, and he made the wrong decision.  Listen, the Lord has given us commandments that we might obey them, that He might preserve us from sin.  When we are obedient to what God has commanded us it keeps us  from the path of sin. His commandments aren’t meant to be a burden to us, but a preservation.  Just like we tell our children, whom we love, who we want to see grow up healthy and wise, we say, don’t play near the road, don’t put that in your mouth, don’t disrespect your elders.  We tell them not because we want to restrict them so they can’t have any fun, so they don’t have any liberty, but because we know that the path to sin is paved with good intentions.  It’s a slippery slope that once you step out on it you find it hard to stop.

Paul said in Titus 2:11-12 “For the grace of God has appeared, bringing salvation to all men, instructing us to deny ungodliness and worldly desires and to live sensibly, righteously and godly in the present age.”  Literally, the word instructing us is better rendered, disciplining us. God gives us his commandments to discipline us,  to keep us from sin and we need to obey them because we respect our Father in heaven and we love Him and for our own good.

Well, thankfully, James does not leave us with only his analysis of the pathway to sin, but he shows us the protection that we have from sin through Christ. And the first thing though we need to know and be familiar with  is the steps of temptation which we just reviewed.  As we study this passage, we need to be able to recognize the pattern of Satan’s strategy.  And as we recognize it, we are better able to resist it.  James says in chapter 4 vs 7, “Resist the devil and he will flee from you.”  And Paul says we are not to be ignorant of the devil’s schemes.  So recognizing the steps to temptation is the first means by which we resist temptation.

Then secondly, James reminds us of the unchangeable goodness of God as a protection against the temptation to sin.  He really doesn’t introduce this next idea, he just presents it in contrast to the conflict that we have in our natures.  In contrast to that, James gives us the nature of God.

He says, in vs 17 “Every good thing given and every perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of lights, with whom there is no variation or shifting shadow.”  Now at first that may seem unrelated to what he has been talking about.  But the issue with temptation is that we tend to become dissatisfied with what God has given us.  That was the problem with Eve, that was the problem with David, and it’s usually in some way or another, the problem with us.  We think that there has to be something better for me.  We start to doubt the goodness of God.

When Satan tempted Eve, he not only maligned God’s word, but he maligned God’s character. He inferred that God wasn’t good because God had kept something good from her.  And that is still Satan’s strategy today.  But James reminds us that God is good all the time.  He has a good plan for us.  He has made good promises to us concerning our new life in Christ.  His motives are good.  His thoughts towards us are good.  And we must be on guard in temptation against the lie of the devil that God has withheld something good from us.

I’ve read that verse a many times and never really thought about the title of God that James uses there.  But my son was reading this text in anticipation of hearing today’s sermon, and he asked what does it mean, the Father of Lights?  I had to think about it for a minute or two.  I tried to say something about Jesus is the light of the world, hoping that would assuage his interest and sound like I knew what I was talking about. 

But after thinking about it for a while, I think it means that God is the source of light, the source of truth, and it’s a constant light, it’s a consistent light.  There is no darkness in Him at all.  There is no changing of His mind. There is no wavering of HIs love towards us. He cannot intend good towards us one minute and then later intend evil towards us.  He can only be good, and what comes from Him is good. And we need to be confident of that and assured of that, so that Satan cannot tempt us to think that God is holding back something from us that actually is good, but He just doesn’t want us to enjoy it.  Or that God doesn’t care about us, and that’s why we are going through such a trial. God’s ways are good, and He gives good gifts to His children.

There is a third thing you need to know to be protected against temptation, and that is you need to be aware of the significance of the new birth.  It’s not just that we need to push back against temptation, but we need what someone has called, the expulsive power of a new affection.  We need the transformation of the new birth that we might have new desires and new attitudes and a new spirit.  We need to be sanctified by the Spirit of Truth.  Sanctification is not just sweeping the house clean, but sanctification is sweeping the house clean and putting in the new furniture. It’s a new way of living, brought about by the new birth and the indwelling power of the Spirit of God.

James speaks of this new birth in vs18, “In the exercise of His will He brought us forth by the word of truth, so that we would be a kind of first fruits among His creatures.”  We have seen how temptation works, that there is a kind of conception that takes place and brings forth sin and death.  But there is another conception that James speaks of which brings forth new life, and new affections.  And that new life brings forth fruit as a new creation of God. We are born again with new affections, with new desires, a new heart.  We take on the nature of our heavenly Father.  

As the children of God we actually have His Spirit living in us.  And as we walk in the Spirit, we are not tempted by the lusts of the flesh. As we yield to the Spirit, we will have power over sin. Sin no longer has control over us.  Paul said in Gal 5:16 “But I say, walk by the Spirit, and you will not carry out the desire of the flesh.”  

Paul goes on to show the contrast between the lusts of the flesh and walking by the Spirit. He says, Gal. 5:17-25 “For the flesh sets its desire against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh; for these are in opposition to one another, so that you may not do the things that you please. But if you are led by the Spirit, you are not under the Law.  Now the deeds of the flesh are evident, which are: immorality, impurity, sensuality,  idolatry, sorcery, enmities, strife, jealousy, outbursts of anger, disputes, dissensions, factions,  envying, drunkenness, carousing, and things like these, of which I forewarn you, just as I have forewarned you, that those who practice such things will not inherit the kingdom of God.  But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness,  gentleness, self-control; against such things there is no law.  Now those who belong to Christ Jesus have crucified the flesh with its passions and desires.  If we live by the Spirit, let us also walk by the Spirit.”

I don’t have the time this morning to unpack all that Paul has said there.  But it’s pretty obvious, that if we walk by the Spirit, we will bear the fruit of the Spirit in our lives. If we walk in the flesh, we will do the works of the flesh.  When we walk in the Spirit according to the word of truth it is the means by which we are protected from temptation.  We have a resource through Christ Jesus,  that will give us the power to overcome temptation.  And that resource is the presence of the Spirit of Christ within us.

And we come to know Him through the word of truth. James says He brought us forth, we were conceived and given birth,  by the word of truth. David said, “your word have I hid in my heart, that I might not sin against you.” We cannot separate the work of the Spirit from the word of the Spirit.  Hebrews 4:12 says that “For the word of God is living and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the division of soul and spirit, and of joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart.” Haven’t we learned that temptation begins at the level of the heart? Then the only way to deal with temptation is to deal with it at it’s origin.  And nothing else can reach the heart like the word of God.

We cannot walk in the Spirit apart from the word of God. David said, “your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path.” And we cannot be protected from temptation without the Spirit working in us through His word, strengthening us, equipping us, and preserving us from evil. Let us pray as Jesus instructed us to pray, “Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.” The protection from temptation we need is to be found in following where the Spirit leads us.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: beach church, worship at the beach |

Rich man, poor man; James 1:9-12

Nov

21

2021

thebeachfellowship

James started off his letter speaking about the need for enduring faith in the midst of trials. Trials are an inescapable part of life.  And James says rather than seeking immediate relief from them, we need to endure them with persevering faith, knowing that God uses trials to refine our faith, so that our faith might be complete, lacking in nothing. Then he adds to that process the need for divine wisdom, so that we might understand God’s purposes and plan for our salvation, that we might have hope and confidence in God’s plan for our lives. 

Today then, as we take up this study in verse 9, we notice it  begins with a conjunction, which ties it to the preceding verse.  The conjunction “but” indicates a contrast to what has come directly before it.  And what came directly before was the statement about double mindedness, which is the description of the man who doesn’t have the wisdom of God, who doesn’t have unwavering faith.  We said last time, such a man is very likely unsaved.  He holds onto the world and tries to have Jesus at the same time, but really doesn’t believe the word of Jesus, or believe that God’s word is truly wisdom.  And so when trials come, he opts out of faith in God, and turns to human wisdom.  He most likely never had saving faith to begin with.

But in contrast to that person, James introduces another kind of trial that believers must endure, and he gives us the wisdom of God concerning this kind of trial, that we may be able to persevere through it.  And the trial that he introduces here is the lack of money, or the trial of being poor.

It’s very certain that the Christians who James is writing to are for the most part very poor in material goods.  It appears that James writes primarily to converted Jews that had been dispersed across Asia as a result of persecution, who were poor because they had to leave everything – their homes and jobs, and escaped with only what they could carry. But whether his immediate audience were Jews or Gentiles, they were predominately poor.  Being wealthy in those days was something that you had to inherit, or it came from a prominent political position.  But being a Christian was almost a certain guarantee that you were ostracized from society, whether Jewish or Gentile, and as a result you were poor.

The apostle Paul, speaking to the Corinthian church, said it was generally true that Chrisitians were poor in comparison to the world.  He said in 1Cor. 1:26-28 “For consider your calling, brethren, that there were not many wise according to the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble;  but God has chosen the foolish things of the world to shame the wise, and God has chosen the weak things of the world to shame the things which are strong,  and the base things of the world and the despised God has chosen, the things that are not, so that He may nullify the things that are.”  I suppose that was the general rule for all the churches in Asia.  Many Christians were even slaves or indentured servants. 

I believe that in James day, there were primarily only two classes of people.  The rich and the poor.  There was not so much of what we think of today as a middle class.  And I believe that we are seeing the elimination of the middle class in our society as well.  But in any event, I think that even the poor in our society would be considered rich in comparison to many other places in the world, and especially in comparison to the way most people lived in James day.  We take for granted many things that they would have considered the utmost luxury.

Nevertheless, for the purposes of this message, I think we can agree with James who divides society into two social divisions, rich or poor.  And in the context of his message about enduring trials with joy, he brings up the trial of being poor.  Notice also that he addresses those people who are poor as brothers.  So he’s speaking to Christians who are poor.  You don’t have to be poor to be a Christian, but I would have to say it helps.  Whereas, being rich is a hindrance to being saved.

You will remember that Jesus said in Luke 18:25 “For it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God.”  If you have ever seen and smelled a camel, then you know that is an impossibility, isn’t it?  I know some commentators and clever pastors have tried to say that the eye of the needle is the name of a very narrow pass through a canyon somewhere in Israel, and a camel had to get on it’s knees to crawl through it.  I happen to think that is not what Jesus is referring to.  He is looking at the rich young ruler who had just turned away from salvation because of his great riches, and he is probably riding away on a camel, which was like the Cadillac of that day. And this young man, who is very rich, probably had a fleet of them in his entourage.

The disciples certainly understood Jesus to not just be speaking of a difficulty, but an impossibility.  They asked, “then who can be saved?”  And Jesus answered, “With people it is impossible, but not with God; for all things are possible with God.”  So being rich does not absolutely exclude you from the kingdom of God, but Jesus did say it is practically impossible.  But thankfully, that which seems impossible to men is not impossible with God. 

But by and large, James indicates that the church is primarily made up of poor people.  And they consider being poor a trial.  He contrasts this Christian brother who is suffering the trial of being poor  to that of the double minded man who loves the world in the previous verse.  James says “But the brother of humble circumstances is to glory in his high position.”

James isn’t deliberately speaking in riddles.  But he’s speaking in a manner of teaching that was common to the Hebrews, which is often seen in the Psalms and Proverbs.  It’s a method where he uses contrast and parallelism to teach a subject.  

He says the brother is in humble circumstances.  That’s a nice way of saying that they were poor.  There is nothing more humbling than being poor.  I can tell you from experience many stories from my past when I experienced humbling circumstances.  God took me from a position of wealth, or at least thinking I was wealthy, to a position of extreme poverty.  And during that time I had to do some pretty humbling things in order to keep food on the table.  I put my wife and kids through many humbling circumstances.  It was a time that left scars which we still deal with even today to some extent.

It was kind of like the experiences that I heard my dad speak of having come through the Great Depression.  People that came through that had a different perspective on money for decades afterwards.  They were often afraid of spending money because they never wanted to go through such times again.

So being poor was a trial that a lot of the Christians were going through.  But James says the man in humble circumstances, or a low economic position,  should glory in his high position.  That phrase “high position” is a reference to his standing with God.  We that are saved have a high position with God.  Peter says we are a royal priesthood.  Paul says in Romans 8:17 that we are the children of God.  “And if children, heirs also, heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ, if indeed we suffer with [Him] so that we may also be glorified with [Him.]  For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that is to be revealed to us.”

So our suffering in poverty is producing for us a weight of glory beyond our comprehension.  Paul says in 2Cor. 4:17-18 “For momentary, light affliction is producing for us an eternal weight of glory far beyond all comparison,  while we look not at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen; for the things which are seen are temporal, but the things which are not seen are eternal.”  We that are poor in this world have our eyes fixed, our hope fixed, on the next world, on that which is eternal. We have a high position with God, though for the time being, we suffer a low position on earth. And in that sure hope we can glory, we can rejoice.

So Peter says in 1Peter 5:6 “Therefore humble yourselves under the mighty hand of God, that He may exalt you at the proper time.”  That’s what James is talking about when he says let the brother of humble circumstances glory in his high position.  We endure the humbling circumstances now, because we know that God will make all things new in the consummation of the kingdom.  We are like princes in exile, but one day the King is coming back in power and glory, and in that day He will set His sons and daughters on thrones to reign with Him in His kingdom.

James says in chapter 2 vs 5, “Listen, my beloved brethren: did not God choose the poor of this world [to be] rich in faith and heirs of the kingdom which He promised to those who love Him?”  Then let us glory in our high position and endure with patience the suffering of being poor, in humbling circumstances.

But the rich man, he is now contrasted with the brother of humble circumstances.  His end is not the same, nor is it better than the poor man.  His faith has been in his possessions.  His dependence is not on God, but on his own resources.  James says in vs 10 “and the rich man [is to glory] in his humiliation, because like flowering grass he will pass away.”

First let’s recognize who this person is who is rich.  Notice that James called the poor man “brother” but omits this term when he introduces the rich man.  It’s possible for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven, Jesus said, but only because God is able to make what is impossible for men, a possibility with God.  But I think in a general manner of speaking, James is likely presenting the rich man in a similar light as the double minded man of the previous passage.  It’s very likely that the rich man is not a true believer.  He has a double minded faith which considers the riches of this world too great to let go of for the sake of the kingdom.

Remember the rich, young ruler? He believed in God.  He was very religious, very moral.  But Jesus said one thing you still lack – sell all you have and give it to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven, and come follow Me.”  And he didn’t do it, because he was so rich.  Now was that man saved or unsaved?  I suggest he left unsaved. And so we might also assume that the rich man James speaks of here is not saved. He might be religious, he might be moral, he might believe in God, but his faith falls short because he depends on his wealth.

Notice also that James says about this rich man that he will pass away.  The poor glory in their future in eternity, but the rich man glories in the present.  But James says something here which is difficult for us to understand, perhaps because it’s somewhat confusing in it’s translation.  He says the rich man should glory in his humiliation.  What I think James is referring to is that he needs to recognize his low spiritual condition.  He needs to realize that his wealth is temporary, and instead lay up treasure in heaven.  

James, you remember is Jesus’s half brother.  And he is obviously familiar with what Jesus taught in Matt. 6:19-21 “Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy, and where thieves break in and steal. But store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust destroys, and where thieves do not break in or steal; for where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” The rich man needs to see that though he is rich in the world’s goods, he is poor in heaven. 

Jesus said in the Beatitudes, “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.”  What that speaks of is recognizing your spiritual bankruptcy.  When you realize you are spiritually bankrupt, then you are able to receive the gift of God, which is the righteousness of Jesus Christ applied to your account. So if the rich man is to glory, then let him glory in his humiliation, in the fact of his spiritual bankruptcy. Humble yourselves under the mighty hand of God, and He will exalt you. And when  he has repented, he may receive mercy, that he may at the last day enter into glory.

I suppose another perspective on this is you can also think of riches as a trial.  I know we are conditioned to think of riches as a blessing.  We say things like “God blessed me with a  financial windfall,” or “God blessed me with a well paying job.”  Whatever the cause may be, we think financial well being is a sign of God’s blessing.  But maybe it’s not.  Maybe it’s a test.  It’s a trial.

So though it may be hard to believe, being rich can be a trial. So many Christians think having money is a blessing.  When in fact it can be a terrible temptation to live independently from God, to not love your neighbor, to be greedy, to be an unfaithful steward, and a host of other ways you can sin against God by putting your trust in this world’s goods. Jesus said, you cannot serve God and wealth. You cannot serve two masters.

1Tim. 6:7-10 tells us that if being rich is not directly a trial, it is at least a temptation.  “For we have brought nothing into the world, so we cannot take anything out of it either.  If we have food and covering, with these we shall be content.  But those who want to get rich fall into temptation and a snare and many foolish and harmful desires which plunge men into ruin and destruction.  For the love of money is a root of all sorts of evil, and some by longing for it have wandered away from the faith and pierced themselves with many griefs.”

There’s that idea of being a double minded man again, and not persevering in faith, but abandoning faith in God and instead trying to hold onto the wisdom of the world.  And the wisdom of the world is that he who dies with the most toys wins.  That money is the means of happiness and contentment and status.  But the Bible tells us the opposite.  Because real contentment comes from spiritual riches, and an eternal perspective. Real status comes from our position in heaven. And the riches of the world cannot obtain those things. 

James then gives an analogy of the way that those who pursue riches will end up destitute. He says in vs11, “For the sun rises with a scorching wind and withers the grass; and its flower falls off and the beauty of its appearance is destroyed; so too the rich man in the midst of his pursuits will fade away.”

James gives us a picture of the flowering grass, which springs up after a rain, but when the sun rises and the hot winds blow across the landscape, the grass quickly withers and the flower falls away.  It’s a picture of the rich man who in the midst of pursuing money will suddenly fade away.  

But notice that James doesn’t say that riches will fade away.  Sometimes that happens as a result of a crash in the stock market, or housing market, or any number of other possibilities. But he isn’t talking here about riches fading away.  He says the rich man will fade away.  Death comes without warning, without keeping schedule.  And death eventually comes to everyone, rich or poor.  And what you spent your life in pursuit of, is left to your descendants to fight over, while you go to meet your Maker. Jesus said, “what does it profit a man, if he gains the whole world, and loses his own soul?”

Jesus gave a parable about such a rich man.  In Luke 12:15-21 we read, “Then He said to them, “Beware, and be on your guard against every form of greed; for not [even] when one has an abundance does his life consist of his possessions.”  And He told them a parable, saying, “The land of a rich man was very productive.  “And he began reasoning to himself, saying, ‘What shall I do, since I have no place to store my crops?’ “Then he said, ‘This is what I will do: I will tear down my barns and build larger ones, and there I will store all my grain and my goods.  And I will say to my soul, “Soul, you have many goods laid up for many years [to come;] take your ease, eat, drink [and] be merry.”‘  “But God said to him, ‘You fool! This [very] night your soul is required of you; and [now] who will own what you have prepared?’  “So is the man who stores up treasure for himself, and is not rich toward God.”

So the poor man, though he is of humble circumstances, is rich towards God.  But the rich man, who is wealthy in the world’s goods, is poor towards God.  He is spiritually bankrupt. He needs to recognize that, to repent and have faith in God, that he may be rich in the kingdom of heaven.

And so James concludes this section about trials with the following pronouncement of blessing in vs 12, “Blessed is a man who perseveres under trial; for once he has been approved, he will receive the crown of life which [the Lord] has promised to those who love Him.”

Trials are a test of our faith, given to prove our faith, that we might exercise our faith by enduring, persevering in our faith towards God.  Our faith is not a wrench by which we manipulate God into giving us health, wealth and prosperity, but it’s a wrench by which God transforms us into the image of Jesus Christ as we share in His suffering. Suffering is a means by which God transforms us from trusting in the world, and in the world’s wisdom, the world’s goods, to trusting totally and completely in Him. 

And once our faith has been approved, we receive the crown of life which the Lord promised to those who love Him.  When James says, “our faith has been approved” he isn’t speaking of earning our salvation through works.  But he is saying that once God has ended the period of testing which He designed to refine our faith, then we will receive the crown of life.  The crown of life I think speaks of our glorification, when we shall be with the Lord at the consummation of the kingdom.  What James is urging us to do is to endure to the end of this life.  We don’t get the promise that somehow God is going to make everything work out here as we go through this trial, so that we can end this trial in a quick fashion and enjoy the rest of our life living in prosperity and good health.  But what he is saying is that we endure these trials to the end. Revelation 2:10 says, “Be faithful until death, and I will give you the crown of life.”

 God tests our faith as we persevere, looking forward to what He has promised, which is eternal life, the crown of life, that we receive in full once the trial of this life is over.  This whole life we live now is a trial. And our trials will be over when our physical life is over.  Then we will receive the promise of the crown of life, the abundant life, eternal life, that God has promised to those who love Him.  Who love Him more than we love this world, love Him more than wealth, more than fame, more than all the material possessions that this life appears to offer. 

If you love the Lord, then you will gladly give up this world in order to have Him. Jesus said in Luke 16:13 “No servant can serve two masters; for either he will hate the one and love the other, or else he will be devoted to one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and wealth.”

I trust that each of you have enduring faith, that will persevere through the trials of this life, whether rich or poor, in sickness or in health, until death one day separates you from this life and you receive the crown of life. “Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy, and where thieves break in and steal. But store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust destroys, and where thieves do not break in or steal; for where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.”

Posted in Sermons | Tags: beach church, worship on the beach |

Seeking Wisdom, James 1:5-8

Nov

14

2021

thebeachfellowship

James is full of these pithy passages which some have called imperatives of the faith. And it’s tempting to take these simple imperatives at face value but somewhat superficially and usually out of context, and expect to use them sort of like a formula, whereby if we do x plus y, we will get z.  And perhaps that is possible, on occasion.  But I don’t think that is James’ intention. 

I imagine that I am not alone in applying such a template to this passage before us today.  There have been a few situations in my life where I have had to take a test of some sort, and was perhaps unprepared.  And this verse would come to my mind as I was beginning the test.  “If any of you lack wisdom let him ask of God, who gives to all men liberally and upbraideth not.”  So I would dutifully pray for wisdom as I took the test, and try my best to have faith that God would give me the wisdom needed. I needed the answers, and I was hoping He would give them to me.  And the verse seemed to indicate that He didn’t care that I hadn’t studied for the test- “He upbraideth not.”  However,  I can’t say that  I ever remember acing any of my tests, or that it was evident that God had given me wisdom to know the answers. 

But James lends itself to that kind of formula approach because James writes in such a way as to present a series of doctrinal, or behavioral statements that he gives as absolute imperatives for the Christian life, and we, failing to understand the context, and accepting them almost superficially, tend to apply them as a formula expecting dramatic results.

For example, there is the well known imperative he gives in chapter 5.  I have heard this one quoted to me dozens and dozens of times in regards to a desire to be healed of some illness. He says in chapter 5 vs 14;  “Is anyone among you sick? [Then] he must call for the elders of the church and they are to pray over him, anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord;  and the prayer offered in faith will restore the one who is sick, and the Lord will raise him up, and if he has committed sins, they will be forgiven him.”  

There you go.  That’s a formula for being healed of any sickness. Guaranteed success if you follow that formula exactly.  I’ve heard messages from many faith healers on these verses who insist that if you follow the formula exactly, then you will be healed.  Well, I hate to be the one to burst your bubble on that one, but when we get to chapter five I will show you that’s not a formula for physical healing as much as it’s a formula for spiritual healing. The word rendered restore in English is translated from the Greek word sozo.  Sozo is translated as “save” 93 times in the KJV, and only 3 times it’s translated as healed. For some unknown reason they translate it as healed in this case.  But I don’t think that the translators necessarily made the right choice.  But I don’t want to go into that now, other than to use it as an illustration of how we like to apply these imperatives to suit our desires, rather than try to understand the context in which it is given.

So then we need to consider these verses in context.  And the context for this passage about wisdom comes from the verses directly before.  Starting in vs 2, James talks about trials of our faith, and God’s purpose in them.  We learned last week that trials come from God, and we are to endure in them, so that God may complete our faith in us.  God uses trials as a means of maturing us in our faith.  And note how James ends that passage, he says, “that you may be perfect and complete, lacking in nothing.”  Lacking in nothing.  That’s a key to understanding vs 5.

Because in vs 5, James says, “If you lack wisdom, ask of God.” Notice the repetition of the word “lack.”  So we go through trials that God may mature our faith, that we would be complete and not lacking in anything.  Then immediately, he tells us something that we may be lacking.  That’s the connection that gives vs 5 and following the proper context.

If you remember we talked about Job last week as an example of suffering trials.  James himself in chapter 5 vs 11 gives us the example of Job as a man who endured under trials. I think God arranged it so that we would study Job on Wednesdays prior to this study of James, because so much of what we learned about Job’s trials and his understanding of all that helps us to better understand James. 

But if you remember, what was Job’s biggest concern during his trials? He had all these terrible things happen to him and to his family.  His friends came and tried to give him counsel.  But Job’s biggest complaint was “what is going on? I have lived a godly life.  I have trusted in God with my whole heart.  I have done acts of righteousness showing pity on others not so fortunate.  But where is God now?  Why has He allowed me to suffer like this?  I am being judged by my friends as a vile sinner who deserves all that has happened to me.  Where is my God?  What is He doing? Why won’t He answer me?”

So the thing that Job most desired as He endured the trials that he suffered was wisdom from God.  In chapter 28 of Job we hear the cry of Job for wisdom.  He cries out in vs12 “But where can wisdom be found? And where is the place of understanding?” And he gives a long soliloquy about the search for wisdom which is more desirable than gold or silver.  Wisdom is the most precious thing.  

And then Job says that God has wisdom.  Wisdom comes from God.  And he ends by saying, “the fear of the Lord, that is wisdom.”  So the great need of Job during his trials was to know the wisdom of God.  He wanted to know what God was doing.  He needed wisdom to endure.

And in that context, James says that if we are to be complete in our faith, nothing lacking, then we need the wisdom of God. We need to know the plan of God, and how we fit in that plan.  We need to know His plans are for us.  We need to know His will, that we may be obedient to it.

So James isn’t talking here about receiving divine cliff notes that will help us get good grades on tests so we don’t have to study.  He’s not speaking of having wisdom to make a bridge or a building and not have the proper education for it.  He’s definitely not talking about having supernatural knowledge whereby we know mysteries about other people’s lives and we can dispense our own pithy statements about what we think God told us so that we can prophesy to other people about events in their life.

No, it’s much more practical than that.  It’s knowing God’s will, knowing God’s plan, knowing what God’s purposes are for our lives, and for the world.  And how do we gain that knowledge? Well, James says, God gives it to us. “But if any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask of God, who gives to all generously and without reproach, and it will be given to him.”  Twice in that verse, James says God gives wisdom to those who ask Him.  

I think the idea of asking God incorporates more of the idea of seeking God.  Jesus said in Matt. 7:7 “Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you.”  The key is to realize that you need  what only God has, and to ask God, to seek God’s wisdom.  It’s recognizing that truth is from God.  The answers to life come from God.  Direction in how to live comes from God.  Life comes from God. Salvation is of the Lord.

So when we turn to God, to seek His wisdom, He will give us His wisdom.  Wisdom is really a synonym for the gospel.  Jesus said concerning Himself and His gospel, in Matt. 12:42 “[The] Queen of [the] South will rise up with this generation at the judgment and will condemn it, because she came from the ends of the earth to hear the wisdom of Solomon; and behold, something greater than Solomon is here.”

Solomon of course, was the human author of Proverbs.  And the whole book of Proverbs is about the wisdom of God in contrast to the fool who does not have that wisdom. The one who listens to wisdom, who acquires wisdom, will be blessed, but the one who disdains wisdom will be destroyed. 

So the truth of the gospel is the wisdom of God.  And we find wisdom when we turn to God’s word.  When we read God’s word we ask Him for wisdom to understand what He is saying.  James is going to address the idea of wisdom again when we get to chapter 3.  But let’s take an advance peek at a couple of verses which I think will help us as we consider this passage.  

He gives a contrast between earthly wisdom and divine wisdom starting in chapter 3 vs 15 “This wisdom is not that which comes down from above, but is earthly, natural, demonic. … So there is a wisdom that is not from God, but is earthly and actually demonic.  It’s wisdom which has as it’s origin the doctrine of demons. Then look at vs 17 “But the wisdom from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, reasonable, full of mercy and good fruits, unwavering, without hypocrisy.”  So there is another wisdom which is from God.  In fact, it is the only true wisdom.  And it only can come from God.

I think it’s also important to make a distinction between wisdom and knowledge. James speaks in chapter three of wisdom as being wise and understanding.  Solomon speaks of wisdom as knowledge and understanding.  Understanding I think is the idea of application of knowledge.  Like I understand how to drive a car.  I don’t just know certain facts about it.  But I understand how those facts are to be utilized.   One theologian said that wisdom is the right use of knowledge. So wisdom is tied to deeds. James said in chapter 3:13  “Who among you is wise and understanding? Let him show by his good behavior his deeds in the gentleness of wisdom.” Behavior and deeds are the proof of wisdom.

Now to the point that wisdom is really speaking of the gospel, we know that salvation is by grace. It’s a gift of God.  And in the same way, God gives wisdom.  Wisdom is a gift of God. James says, He gives without reproach, or without finding fault, or as the KJV says, He upbraideth not.  In other words, God wants you to have His wisdom. God isn’t going to give you a lecture where He says, “This is the last time I’m going to give you wisdom. Last time you didn’t act on it right – you didn’t handle it correctly.  So you better make sure you get it right this time, cause this is the last time.”  That may be the way we speak to our kids, but that’s not the way God treats us.  When we turn to God, when we seek Him, and seek His wisdom, His truth, He will answer us.

Then James adds in vs 6, “But he must ask in faith without any doubting, for the one who doubts is like the surf of the sea, driven and tossed by the wind.  For that man ought not to expect that he will receive anything from the Lord,  [being] a double-minded man, unstable in all his ways.”

Now let’s not forget the context as we try to understand this verse.  James isn’t saying here that if you ask God for a new car, and you ask in faith and don’t let any doubt creep into your mind that God may not give you that car, then you will receive what you ask for.  He’s not saying that the secret to getting your prayers answered the way you want them to be answered is to conjure up a lot of faith, don’t let any doubt that you may not get it enter your mind, and then God will give you what you want.

No, this is not a blanket formula for getting your prayers answered.  James is talking specifically about getting wisdom from God. The wisdom from God.  The answers to life. The way to live.  The will of God, the plan of God.  In short, the gospel of salvation.  When you ask for this wisdom, then you need to come to God without any doubt.  You have to believe in Him with your whole heart.  You need to believe in who God is, that He is, that He has a plan and a purpose for you, and He will accomplish it. You need to believe His word, His promises.

So James says that when he asks, he must ask in faith without any doubting, for the one who doubts is like the surf of the sea, driven and tossed by the wind.  When I read that about being tossed about by the wind and waves in regards to your faith, I am reminded of Ephesians 4:14 which says,  “As a result, we are no longer to be children, tossed here and there by waves and carried about by every wind of doctrine, by the trickery of men, by craftiness in deceitful scheming.” We are not to be like children in our faith.  Remember the whole point of trials was to mature you in your faith.  So a mature faith in God is believing the truth about God.  Faith is not believing in a false knowledge of God.  Faith is founded on sound doctrine, not on false doctrine.  Faith is not a blind believism that is not concerned with truth.

Jude uses that imagery of waves begin tossed here and there to speak of those who were in the church, and yet who really were not saved.  He says in Jude vs 12 “These are the men who are hidden reefs in your love feasts when they feast with you without fear, caring for themselves; clouds without water, carried along by winds; autumn trees without fruit, doubly dead, uprooted;  wild waves of the sea, casting up their own shame like foam; wandering stars, for whom the black darkness has been reserved forever.”  That’s a picture of the unsaved who have no fruit in their life, who have not the fear of God in their life, and consequently they do not have the wisdom of God.  They are destined for eternal black darkness.

Those that seek wisdom without faith in God are like the surf of the sea, driven and tossed by the wind. That man should not think he will receive anything from the Lord. But rather  we should ask for wisdom with faith in who God is and what He has said He will do.  Hebrews 11:6 says, “And without faith it is impossible to please [Him,] for he who comes to God must believe that He is and [that] He is a rewarder of those who seek Him.”

James is saying that it’s possible for people to come to religion, sort of with their fingers crossed behind their back. They want answers to life, they know they need help, and they’re not really sure about God, but they are willing to claim faith in God, if it might help them out of the crisis that they are in.  They are willing to say the prayer, say the right things, go to church, try to follow the teachings of the Bible.  They are willing to do all those things for a while to see if God will help them out of their crisis.  But after a while, when the crisis is still there, their wife has now filed for divorce, the business had to declare bankruptcy, whatever the crisis may be is still there, they lose interest in God and go back to human wisdom. 

James says they never were given wisdom to begin with.  They had an unstable faith.  They had two minds. They were double minded. They thought they could get wisdom from God on the one hand, but still hold onto the wisdom of the world just in case it didn’t work out.   Bottom line, they probably were never saved to begin with.  They went through the motions, hoping that if there is a God He might help them. He never received anything from the Lord.

That man who doubts, James says, he asks God for wisdom but doubts that what God gives is actually wisdom.  They really have never given up their earthly wisdom.  The things of God seem like foolishness to them.  Paul speaks of how the gospel seems like foolishness to them in 1Co 1:18, 21, 23  “For the word of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God. … 21 For since in the wisdom of God the world through its wisdom did not [come to] know God, God was well-pleased through the foolishness of the message preached to save those who believe. … 23 but we preach Christ crucified, to Jews a stumbling block and to Gentiles foolishness.” 

That reveals the difference between asking for wisdom from God and not really having faith in God but actually doubting God. I can’t help but wonder about even some people here in our church, if they have really believed in God by faith without doubting,  or they have just gone through the motions of religion, but inwardly they doubt the wisdom of God and still hold onto to the wisdom of the world.  I think it’s very possible to come to church, to profess you have faith, but actually to still live in the world, think like the world, and you have never received the wisdom from above. 

The double minded man shouldn’t deceive himself into thinking that God will bless him, when he lives like he wants, makes his own decisions, and lives apart from the wisdom of God.  If he has not come to God with a child like faith, believing that He is, and that He is a rewarder of them that diligently seek Him, then God will not grant him the wisdom which is from above. The problem is not that God doesn’t give wisdom in answer to his prayers, but that the man’s doubt prevents God from giving. 

James will address that double minded man again in chapter 4:8-10 which says, “Draw near to God and He will draw near to you. Cleanse your hands, you sinners; and purify your hearts, you double-minded.  Be miserable and mourn and weep; let your laughter be turned into mourning and your joy to gloom.  Humble yourselves in the presence of the Lord, and He will exalt you.”

James speaks there of the need for the double minded man to repent before the Lord.  And He will forgive you.  Your lack of complete faith in God and in His Son Jesus Christ as Lord is a sin that must be confessed and repented of. And that prayer of repentance is a prayer that God always hears, and always answers.  The prayer of repentance is always answered, and God will always forgive on the basis of that prayer of faith. Draw near to God and He will draw near to you. Then when you have humbled yourself before God, He will raise you up.  He will give you the wisdom from above.  He will give you life, even everlasting life.  

Posted in Sermons | Tags: beach church, church at the beach, worship at the beach |

The testing of faith, James 1:1-4

Nov

7

2021

thebeachfellowship

Today we begin our study of the book of James.  We’ve studied James before as a church, but we’ve reached the point where we have gone through the entire New Testament, and so we are now on our second round. But I think that’s a good place to be.  As we learned in Jude last week, we need to be reminded.  We need to remember.  And so I look forward to gleaning more from this harvest than we did on the first.

However, perhaps due to the fact that we have studied James before, I don’t want to spend a lot of time introducing the epistle, nor on it’s human author, who is James.  James doesn’t spend a lot of time introducing himself, for that matter.  He doesn’t mention much about himself.  But we know from our previous study of Jude that James and Jude were brothers.  We should also know by now that James and Jude were half brothers of Jesus. They had the same birth mother, but Jesus was born of the Holy Spirit, whereas James and Jude were born of Joseph.

It would have made sense from a human standpoint for James to have mentioned that he was related to Jesus.  That would be a pretty strong argument for his letter being taken seriously by the first century church.  But, just as in the case of Jude, James doesn’t emphasize his physical relationship with Jesus, but instead emphasizes his spiritual relationship. And that is very striking, and it speaks volumes in doctrinal terms about his view of Christology.

James says that he is a bond servant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ.  That’s a tremendous statement, given the fact that they grew up together in the same household. He knew Jesus as his older brother since his birth.  He saw Him in every kind of circumstance.  However, it’s noteworthy that John chapter 7 tells us that Jesus’s brothers did not believe in Him, initially. It was only after the resurrection that they came to believe in Jesus as Christ the Lord.

But notice James puts Jesus Christ and God on the same plane, and he a servant to both. He says in vs 1, “James, a bond-servant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ.” That’s a tremendous statement of the deity of Jesus Christ, from someone who had every reason not to believe.

The author then is James, the brother of Jude and the half brother of Jesus Christ.  He is not an apostle in the strict sense of the word, as he was not one of the 12. Scholars tell us that James wrote this book about 44 AD.  That would make it the first book written in the New Testament.  James was martyred about AD 62.  The Jewish historian Josephus tells us that he was thrown off the rooftop of the temple, and then stoned and beaten until dead.  Other historic traditions say that James was called Old Camel Knees, because he spent so much time on his knees praying that he developed very obvious callouses on his knees.

James addresses this letter not to one specific church, but to the 12 tribes dispersed abroad.  That would have encompassed the entire church, and it could be argued that it included Gentile believers as well. But in any case, the Jews had been dispersed from Jerusalem into many different regions and cities across the Roman Empire, and they had been dispersed because of persecution against the church.  It’s believed that after the stoning of Stephen that persecution became more prominent and the church in Jerusalem were scattered.

So as James writes to these scattered, persecuted Christians living in predominately Gentile, pagan cities, in a culture hostile to Christianity, his first concern is about dealing with the persecution, bearing with the trials and tribulations that they were experiencing.  That was perhaps the most pressing issue for the church scattered abroad.  Their faith was under attack, as they are being persecuted for their faith.  Their faith is being tried, as they are forced to reconcile what they believed to be true, with the reality of what they are experiencing in living the Christian life. 

But James’s concern is that they become spiritually mature.  His concern is that they live sanctified lives as they grow in the faith. His concern is that their belief brings about behavior that is fitting of a child of God.  And so rather than the Christian life being a sort of all expenses paid pleasure cruise where everything just works out great, he wants to show that God uses the crucible of trials to conform us to the image of Jesus Christ.

To deal with this seeming contradiction in the life of faith, James says in vs 2, “Consider it all joy, my brethren, when you encounter various trials.”  That statement is itself is an oxymoron, if you think about it.  We just finished studying Job in our Wednesday night services.  And we know that Job encountered tremendous trials as a devout believer in God.  He was the most righteous man that was living in his day.  And yet he was beset with one calamity after another.  

It would have seemed totally heartless and calloused if his friends would have said to him, “hey Job, you should consider these trials as all joy.”  We sometimes hear well meaning Christians give that kind of response when they hear of some tragic thing going on in your life.  As if since we are Christians, we should not feel pain or grief and instead be happy over our circumstances, however terrible they may appear.

I don’t think that is what James is advocating here though.  For one, I don’t think happiness and joy are the same thing.  I think happiness is usually a fleeting emotion, whereas joy is a sense of settled contentment.  But maybe we should not be looking at joy as an immediate response to trial.  I think a good way to understand this principle is to consider what Hebrews says about the suffering of Jesus on the cross.  We all realize that the cross is a terrible method of killing someone.  It’s cruel and unusual punishment that is almost unfathomable.  And we know that as Jesus suffered and died on the cross He was not singing “O Happy Day.” I don’t mean to be sacrilegious about His death.  But we know that it was no laughing matter.  At one point, the suffering was so intense, that he cried out, “My God! Why have You forsaken Me?”  There should be no doubt that Jesus suffered during His trial on the cross. Jesus did not exhibit a happy, carefree attitude about the ordeal He was to undergo.  In fact, in anticipation of it, He sweated drops of blood. 

And yet consider what Hebrews says in chapter 12 vs 2 “fixing our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of faith, who for the joy set before Him endured the cross, despising the shame, and has sat down at the right hand of the throne of God.”  Here is the supreme example of how we are to endure trials.  It says, who for the joy set before Him endured the cross.  The joy was not immediate.  As He was suffering in the present, the joy was in the future.  He was willing to suffer in the immediate, looking forward to joy in the eternal.

I think the KJV rendering of the word translated “consider” might be helpful.  In the KJV it is “count”.  Count it all joy.  As in you are counting as actual something that has not yet been realized. But you count it now.  The Spirit is not telling us that we are to go through tragedy or hardship or trails with a smile glued on our face and yelling out “praise the Lord!” as if the situation does not hurt us or make us sad.  But to endure the pain, looking forward to the joy set before us as we come through the situation. Whether we come through the trial and realize joy in this life, or we transpire in the trial are translated to the next life,  death does not prevent that future joy, but only hastens it.

I think this verse in Hebrews helps so much in our understanding of this text in James. Notice the parallel in words, In Hebrews -perfecter, faith, joy, endured.  In James – joy, vs 2, faith, vs 3, endurance, vs 3, perfect, vs 4. That’s a good example of interpreting scripture with scripture.  We can better understand the principle of enduring trials that James is talking about, by examining the illustration of Christ’s suffering as described in Hebrews.

So count it as all joy when you encounter various trials.  That phrase various trials opens up the possibilities to include just about anything.  All kinds of trials.  Every kind of trial. Think of what Job endured, death of loved ones, loss of wealth, loss of health, loss of friendships, criticism. So all kinds of trials are included in this statement.

But wait a minute – I left out an important word in that first part of the sentence.  James says “my brethren.”  That’s a reference to fellow Christians.  We are brothers and sisters in the Lord.  James is addressing fellow Christians.  That’s another false premise of a lot of health, wealth, and prosperity doctrine folks out there who want to claim that as a Christian you should never have any problems.  God will eliminate all your problems.  That was more or less the claim of Job’s friends, wasn’t it? They said Job had problems because he was not much of a man of God.  If he had enough faith, or the right kind of faith, then he wouldn’t have problems like he was having.  Yet that is not what we learned in Job, is it?  Job was righteous, and yet he suffered. He was a faithful servant of God, and yet he suffered tremendous trials.  He had problems counting his trials as all joy.  But in the end he experienced joy because he endured the trials without turning his back on God.

This principle that James proposes also has the support of the apostle Paul and Peter.  Paul says in Romans 5:3, “And not only this, but we also rejoice in our tribulations, knowing that tribulation brings about perseverance. and perseverance, proven character; and proven character, hope;  and hope does not disappoint, because the love of God has been poured out within our hearts through the Holy Spirit who was given to us.”  

And Peter says in 1 Peter 1:6, “In this you greatly rejoice, even though now for a little while, if necessary, you have been distressed by various trials,  so that the proof of your faith, [being] more precious than gold which is perishable, even though tested by fire, may be found to result in praise and glory and honor at the revelation of Jesus Christ.” 

Both of those apostles tell us that trials produces perseverance, and perseverance proven character, or what Peter calls the proof of your faith. It’s the same idea that James conveys in vs 3, “knowing that the testing of your faith produces endurance.”  It’s important to know the truth.  Job wanted to know the truth about God in the midst of his trials.  And it’s important for us to have the right knowledge as we go through trials.  As I have said before many times, our faith is founded on the truth of God’s word, on His promises.  

And so we need to know the purpose of God in the trials of our life.  They are not by chance.  There are no accidents with God. Ultimately everything that happens to us comes by the purpose of God.  So James says that we need to know that God sends these trials to us to test our faith, which produces endurance, or another word, maybe better, is perseverance.  

But what does he mean to test our faith? Is God trying to get us to fail?  I used to think that about some of the teachers I had in high school.  They would give us a test over stuff I didn’t think we had ever covered.  And so I thought they were trying to make us fail the test.  But that’s not what James has in mind here when he says “test.”  What that means is “prove”.

Let’s look again at 1 Peter 1:6 which we saw a few minutes ago, and hopefully get some more insight into what James is talking about.  Peter says, “In this you greatly rejoice, even though now for a little while, if necessary, you have been distressed by various trials,  so that the proof of your faith, [being] more precious than gold which is perishable, even though tested by fire, may be found to result in praise and glory and honor at the revelation of Jesus Christ.”  

In precious metal refining, you take a lot of gold which may be 14k or 18k, which means that it is 517 parts gold per 1000, or 750 parts gold per 1000.  The other parts are non precious metals like brass or copper or something else. So when you send it to the refinery, the gold is melted down in a fire which burns away the dross, and separates that which is base metals from the precious metal.  So what comes out of the refiner’s fire is pure gold without any impurities.  That’s what Peter meant by the proof of your faith, being more precious than gold, which is perishable, even though tested by fire.

The hymn we sing, How Firm a Foundation, has the line in it which speaks of this.  “When through fiery trials thy pathway shall lie, My grace, all sufficient, shall be thy supply. The flame shall not hurt thee; I only design Thy dross to consume, and thy gold to refine.”

And that is what James is speaking of when he says the testing of our faith.  We go through a fiery trial which God uses to prove our faith, or better, to improve our faith.  It takes out the impurities.  The test reveals the evidence of our faith, and purifies our faith.  

And James says that evidence is endurance, or perseverance.  The Greek word for endurance or perseverance is hypomone. It means to bear up under.  Christians very often have the mindset that when trials come, that they want to get out of it as soon as possible.  All their prayer requests are for the Lord to get rid of this trial immediately.  But the fact is that the Lord’s purposes are not always to take us quickly out of the trial but to use it to produce something in us.  So we are to endure the trial.  

That quality of perseverance was illustrated by Job.  However, James isn’t suggesting an attitude of resignation. He’s not advocating an attitude of whatever will be will be. Of fatalism. But he is suggesting perseverance. Resignation is passive, perseverance is active.  Resignation results in defeat, perseverance results in triumph.  Perseverance says as Job said, “though He slay me, yet I will trust in Him.”  It’s not turning away from God in trial, but turning to God, looking unto Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith.

Endurance is a character trait that God wants to build in us.  And He uses trials to do it.  James says in chapter 5:11, “ We count those blessed who endured. You have heard of the endurance of Job and have seen the outcome of the Lord’s dealings, that the Lord is full of compassion and [is] merciful.”

And James says we endure not just for endurance’s sake, but because it brings spiritual maturity.  Look at vs 4, “And let endurance have [its] perfect result, so that you may be perfect and complete, lacking in nothing.” We need to clarify our terms to truly understand what James is talking about here.  The word perfect can almost always be better interpreted as complete.  He’s not talking about somehow reaching spiritual perfection, but spiritual completion.  What does that mean?  Simply speaking, spiritual maturity. 

James says let endurance or perseverance have it’s complete result. “Don’t take the cake out of the oven before the toothpick comes out clean.”  That’s what Susie always tells me when she has to leave the house and I’m home studying, and she has a cake in the oven.  My job when the timer goes off is to stick a toothpick in it and see if it comes out clean.  Simple job.  But if I take the cake out just because the timer goes off and it hasn’t been in long enough then the cake is ruined. 

That’s a bad analogy of what James says is needed in perseverance.  You need to stay in the fire until God’s work is complete in you.  Spiritual maturity takes time, and it takes enduring in tribulation until God has completed His purpose in you.  Three times Paul pleaded with God to take away a thorn in his flesh, which he said was a messenger of Satan to torment him. Whatever the trial was, it wasn’t fun.  But God said, “My grace is sufficient for you, for My power is made perfect, ( or complete) in weakness. (2Cor. 12:8)  There it is again, the idea that enduring trials completes your faith.

James says, let patience have it’s complete result or work. Don’t immediately run around in circles crying to God to get this monkey off your back.  Realize that God is working in the trial to complete your faith.

The word translated “perfect,” in the Greek is “teleion.” It’s a word that was used in secular sources of animals that are full grown.  Here it is used to refer to Christians that are full grown.  Endurance makes a full-grown Christian.  So the Lord is giving you endurance, to put you through a greater test, to make you a stronger Christian, a more mature Christian. 

James says in chapter 3 vs 2, “For we all stumble in many ways. If anyone does not stumble in what he says, he is a perfect man, able to bridle the whole body as well.”  He uses the concept of perfect there to indicate the concept of wholeness.  That is, not lagging behind in any point of their spiritual growth.

That phrase “not lacking in anything is synonymous with the term complete, which expresses the idea that all parts are functioning as they should.  If we endure the trials and the training which God uses to make us complete, then we lack nothing in our faith, so that we might be able to persevere in faith until the end.

Jesus promised that in this world we would have tribulations.  That is going to be part of the Christian experience here on earth.  But if we endure, if we persevere in our faith as we go through the tribulations without doubting God, then we will have a refined faith that will come forth like gold, and that results in bringing glory to Christ, and our glorification.

Paul speaks of that process in Romans 8:16-18 “The Spirit Himself testifies with our spirit that we are children of God,  and if children, heirs also, heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ, if indeed we suffer with [Him] so that we may also be glorified with [Him.]  For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that is to be revealed to us.”

Let’s conclude this study about God’s purpose in trials this morning with the statement  given by Peter in 1 Peter 1:6 which we referenced earlier.  I think it is a good summary of this doctrine.  “In this you greatly rejoice, even though now for a little while, if necessary, you have been distressed by various trials,  so that the proof of your faith, [being] more precious than gold which is perishable, even though tested by fire, may be found to result in praise and glory and honor at the revelation of Jesus Christ;  and though you have not seen Him, you love Him, and though you do not see Him now, but believe in Him, you greatly rejoice with joy inexpressible and full of glory,  obtaining as the outcome of your faith the salvation of your souls.”

Now to Him who is able to keep you from stumbling, and to make you stand in the presence of His glory blameless with great joy,  to the only God our Savior, through Jesus Christ our Lord, [be] glory, majesty, dominion and authority, before all time and now and forever. Amen.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: beach church, worship on the beach |

Reminders from history, Jude 5-10

Oct

20

2021

thebeachfellowship

I said something in our Bonfire Bible Study last Wednesday that I think bears repeating.  I said that there seems to be two basic types of theology out there.  But only one is correct theology, and the other one is wrong, even though it is the most popular.  The most common theology, the most popular theology,  has as it’s premise that God exists to serve man.  They may not say it so crassly, but nevertheless, that is the basics of it.  That God serves man, God loves man, God gives things to man, God helps man.  God is not much more than a miracle working genie who exists to serve man. And so, of course, God cannot judge man, He can’t punish man, because He loves us too much. The other theology, the correct one, has as it’s premise, that man exists to serve God. Man was made for God, to love Him, to serve Him, to do His will, and to live for Him. He is Lord and Master, and we are subject to Him. 

And all of our attempts at understanding of God we try to fit into one of those templates. You might even go so far as to say that all of religion is man’s efforts to control God.  Most of our preaching and teaching falls into that same error.  We try to interpret the Bible to fit our paradigm.  We try to create a message that fits our ideas of what is acceptable, what seems right to us.  If we can develop enough knowledge about God, then we can control God and control the outcome of our dealings with God.

And it is obvious that God allows us to have a go at it.  God doesn’t shut up fools.  God doesn’t always stoop to answer man’s wisdom.  God doesn’t always immediately respond to our foolishness with judgment.  But as Jude shows us in this section of scripture, God promises to judge man’s disobedience, whether it is immediate or in the future. But God will judge rebellion against the truth.

Jude started off his letter by saying that he planned to write concerning their common salvation.  He was planning on writing about the truth they held in common in salvation.  There is truth that leads to salvation, and there is no salvation without holding to those truths. But at the urging of the Holy Spirit, Jude felt the necessity to write about the need to contend for the faith. Because, as we will learn, the faith, the truth that leads to salvation, was under attack.  

Certain persons had crept into the church and sown seeds of bad theology, which served to give license to those who disobeyed the Lord and lived according to their lustful desires.  Particularly the lusts of a sexual nature, and the lusts for money.  Such people, Jude said, were already marked for condemnation because they turned the grace of our God into licentiousness and denied our only Master and Lord, Jesus Christ.

To turn the grace of God into licentiousness means that they disregarded the law of God, especially in the realm of promiscuity or immorality.  They said that they weren’t under law any more but under grace, and therefore what they did in the body does not really matter.  That’s the bad theology; God loves me, God forgives me, and God won’t punish or condemn me. 

The other thing Jude said they did was deny our Master and Lord Jesus Christ. That doesn’t mean that they denied His existence. But they denied His lordship.  They denied His right to reign in our lives.  Again, they had the theology that God exists to serve me, not the other way around.  I don’t have to serve the Lord with my life, my actions, my behavior.  I am captain of my ship.  I can exercise my freedom, my independence, in pursuit of my happiness, and the Lord is going to be ok with that because He just wants me to be happy.

Well, Jude disputes that type of theology.  He says we need to contend for the faith, that is, we need to fight for the true theology.  And furthermore, he says that those who have adopted the bad theology will be judged, and will receive condemnation from God, sooner or later.  Now to support that he is going to give three examples of those that rebelled against God’s truth, and ended up being condemned and punished by God.

In bringing up these history lessons from the past, Jude says that we need to be reminded of them, even though we already know them.  Vs 5, “Now I desire to remind you, though you know all things once for all…”  The point being that as Christians, who know the truth, we nevertheless need to be reminded of the truth again and again, to keep the truth fresh before us. It is far too easy to become complacent about doctrines that once established our faith and now are taken for granted.  It’s like the doctrine of salvation; though we are saved by knowledge of the truth of the gospel, by believing it, yet it is necessary to never let the glories of the cross fade from our view.  In reminding ourselves, whether by song or by scripture, we are brought further along in our sanctification.

Such remembrance also serves to undergird us in the faith, and ensure that we do not make the same mistakes as those before us.  As Winston Churchill once wrote, “Those that fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it.”

The first lesson from history that Jude reminds us of is that of the danger of apostasy. He says in vs 5, “Now I desire to remind you, though you know all things once for all, that the Lord, after saving a people out of the land of Egypt, subsequently destroyed those who did not believe.”

He is, of course, reminding us of the story of Israel, who was delivered from captivity in Egypt by many miracles of God.  God exhibited His power to them again and again.  He gave them His word, His promises, His law.  God dwelt among them.  But nevertheless, they did not believe His word. They were faithless again and again.  They rebelled against Moses. And ultimately, they did not believe that He was able to bring them into the Promised Land, and at the point of entry they rebelled and would not go into the land.

And so God pronounced condemnation upon them, that they would all be destroyed.  We find the record of God’s condemnation in Numbers14: 32, “But as for you, your corpses will fall in this wilderness. Your sons shall be shepherds for forty years in the wilderness, and they will suffer [for] your unfaithfulness, until your corpses lie in the wilderness. According to the number of days which you spied out the land, forty days, for every day you shall bear your guilt a year, [even] forty years, and you will know My opposition. I, the LORD, have spoken, surely this I will do to all this evil congregation who are gathered together against Me. In this wilderness they shall be destroyed, and there they will die.”

This event is also remembered in the Psalms, in Psalm 95 it says, “Do not harden your hearts, as at Meribah, As in the day of Massah in the wilderness, 9 “When your fathers tested Me, They tried Me, though they had seen My work. For forty years I loathed [that] generation, And said they are a people who err in their heart, And they do not know My ways. Therefore I swore in My anger, Truly they shall not enter into My rest.” And the author of Hebrews, quoting that passage, adds, “they did not enter because of unbelief.”

In that passage, we see that disobedience and unbelief are related.  One happens because of the other.  That’s why we must remember that Jesus correlated belief and obedience.  He said if you love Me you will keep my commandments.  Again and again Jesus urged His hearers not only to believe in Him, but to follow Him.  Belief must be tied to obedience.  As John told us in his epistles, you can’t say you have fellowship with God and yet walk in darkness.  You can’t say you believe in Christ and yet disobey Him. You can’t say you believe and yet rebel against His word. And the lesson we are reminded of in this example is that God punished Israel for their unbelief and disobedience.

The second illustration from history of those that received condemnation because of unbelief is found in vs 6.  “And angels who did not keep their own domain, but abandoned their proper abode, He has kept in eternal bonds under darkness for the judgment of the great day.”  Jude is renowned for bringing up obscure facts in this little letter.  And this particular reference is such a one.

Jude is speaking of an incident regarding fallen angels which is mentioned in Genesis chapter 6. In that passage we read, “Now it came about, when men began to multiply on the face of the land, and daughters were born to them,  that the sons of God saw that the daughters of men were beautiful; and they took wives for themselves, whomever they chose.  Then the LORD said, “My Spirit shall not strive with man forever, because he also is flesh; nevertheless his days shall be one hundred and twenty years.”  The Nephilim were on the earth in those days, and also afterward, when the sons of God came in to the daughters of men, and they bore [children] to them. Those were the mighty men who [were] of old, men of renown.”

There are a lot that of questions that have arisen in regards to these verses which many have offered conjecture.  But I think we can safely say that the sons of God refers to angels, which in this case are fallen angels, part of the demons in Satan’s realm, and they took on the form of man so that they could have sexual relations with the daughters of men.  This act was not only rebellion against God, but it also was an attack by Satan upon the object of God’s love, which was the human race, made in His likeness and made in His image.  Satan orchestrated this to destroy the human race. Many theologians believe that this unholy union caused a half human half demonic offspring that was unredeemable and thus God was forced to destroy the human race in the flood. 

Jude goes on to say that those angels who left their proper place, God has kept in eternal bonds or chains under darkness for the judgement of the great day.  The apostle Peter also references this event in 2Peter 2:4-5 saying, “For if God did not spare angels when they sinned, but cast them into hell and committed them to pits of darkness, reserved for judgment;  and did not spare the ancient world, but preserved Noah, a preacher of righteousness, with seven others, when He brought a flood upon the world of the ungodly.”  Because of the way Peter ties the sin of the angels to the flood is evidence that he is speaking of the same event as Jude.

And by the way, I’ve heard people use the Genesis passage to say that man was limited to live 120 years because of that reference God made that His Spirit would not strive with man forever, but man’s days shall be 120 years.  But that’s not actually a reference to man’s lifespan, but a reference to the time left before the total destruction of the flood, which happened 120 years later.

Now there are a lot of rabbit trails that we could go down on this topic.  But let’s not forget what Jude is trying to convey through this example.  The reminder is that of the sin of autonomy, of denying the lordship of Jesus Christ.  To disobey, to rebel is to deny the Lord’s position of authority, to set ourselves up as the god of our own life, to decide what we think is right, or what we think should be ok, and in so doing, to set ourselves in rebellion against God and due for condemnation at the judgement.  If God did not spare angels when they sinned, neither will He spare us.  God put those angels that left their proper abode in eternal chains, in bondage, some believe that refers to a special section of hell, awaiting the final judgement.

In speaking of the angels sin, Jude segue’s into another form of rebellion, which is similar to that of the angels.  And he speaks of that in vs 7, “just as Sodom and Gomorrah and the cities around them, since they in the same way as these indulged in gross immorality and went after strange flesh, are exhibited as an example in undergoing the punishment of eternal fire.” 

Notice than in referencing the sin of Sodom and Gomorrah Jude correlates it to the sin of the angels by saying, “just as.”  “In the same way as these…”  He is saying that the sin of Sodom and Gomorrah was like the sin of the angels, in the same way they were immoral and went after strange flesh.

I won’t take the time to read the account from Genesis 18 and 19 as I’m sure you are all familiar with the story.  But as Jude says, we need to be reminded.  The account says that the report of the sin of Sodom and Gomorrah had reached the point where God was going to destroy the city.  He sent two angels in the bodies of men to speak to Lot and his family and take them out of the city, lest they be destroyed with them.  But that night the men of the city congregated at the door of Lot’s house, demanding that he let them come out that they might have sexual relations with them.

Jude say that they pursued unnatural desires.  The Bible teaches that homosexual desire is unnatural desire.  It is rejecting the authority and design of God.  It is rejecting the command of God. God said in Leviticus 18:22 ‘You shall not lie with a male as one lies with a female; it is an abomination.”  It is a crime against God and man.

Peter spoke of this same event in the same passage we referenced while ago, 2Peter 2:6 “and [if] He condemned the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah to destruction by reducing [them] to ashes, having made them an example to those who would live ungodly [lives] thereafter.”   The point both Jude and Peter make is that God condemned the sin of those people, and brought about destruction upon them, as an example for those that come after them.  That we must not rebel against the command of God, lest we suffer the same condemnation.

Jude says they “are exhibited as an example in undergoing the punishment of eternal fire.” God brought fire and brimstone down upon the city and destroyed every living thing.  But in the final judgement, the fire is eternal, it never goes out, and the soul must endure that punishment forever.

After offering these Biblical  examples of the sins of apostasy, autonomy and immorality, Jude says in vs8,  “Yet in the same way these men, also by dreaming, defile the flesh, and reject authority, and revile angelic majesties.”  “ These men” refers back  those of his day, the objects of his letter, the certain persons who had crept in unnoticed into the church, and used the grace of God as a cover for licentiousness and denied the authority of the Lord Jesus Christ.

He says these men are guilty of the same sins as those of the Israelites who refused to believe, as the angels before the flood, and as the men of Sodom and Gomorrah.  He says these men also by dreaming, defile the flesh, and reject authority, and revile angelic majesties.  

I’m not sure what he means by his statement that they were dreaming.  I suppose it’s a reference to so called prophets who took their stand on visions that they had supposedly seen, which undermined, or over rode the scriptures.  That’s the danger of extra biblical revelation.  It’s not that God did not use visions at times in the past to reveal truth to His prophets.  But the problem is that today dreams and visions are rarely subjected to scripture for authentication.  Let me say this, if your dream is not supported by scripture, then it’s not of God.  Dreams and visions will never go against the scriptures.  But far too often today people claim a dream that they had to supply validation for something that they want to do, which is not aligned with scripture.  In Colossians 2:18 Paul warns against those that take their stand on visions that they have seen, and as such, defraud you of your prize.

Jude says they not only sin by dreaming, but they defile the flesh.  Defiling the flesh is probably a reference to immorality, which covers the gamut of sexual sins.  False doctrine is often used as a covering for immoral behavior.   Jude adds to that they reject authority.  Rejecting authority is tied directly to immoral behavior. But it goes further than just that.  It is rejecting the authority of the scriptures, it rejects the authority even of Jesus Christ, and sets itself up as it’s own authority.  

I can’t help but relate this to many of the mainstream denominations that claim to be Christian but for all intents and purposes have become apostate. They began by denying the authority and inspiration of all the scriptures.  They began to say that some things were simply cultural and we live in a different culture, and so there is no compulsion for us to keep certain restrictions and morals that Paul or other writers spoke of.  And so on that basis they made the decision to allow women as pastors in the church, because that was just a  cultural thing and we’ve gotten so far beyond that today.

And then they took it another step further and said that a homosexual lifestyle is not a sin, and that you can have full fellowship in the church irregardless of your sexual preferences. Then they took it a little further than that and said that since there was nothing wrong with homosexuality then there should be no restraint against ministers who are homosexual. That too should be allowed because we live in a different culture and a different time, and love is love, and God is love, and any scriptures saying otherwise are not to be taken literally.

The problem is that they have rejected the authority of the scriptures.  They have rejected the authority of Jesus Christ; it is His church, and He placed certain restrictions upon it.  And to reject His authority is to sin with the same terrible expectation of judgement that fell upon the Israelites, the angels, and Sodom and Gomorrah.  And if you are still in one of those churches, then I would suggest that you get out like Lot got out of Sodom, lest you end up being condemned along with them.

The third thing Jude says is a characteristic of these false prophets, is that they revile angelic majesties.  I can only assume that he is referencing the account of the angelic messengers who were sought after in the house of Lot by the men of Sodom and Gomorrah.  To revile is to insult.  

Jude says that these men revile angelic majesties.  However, in this case, Jude makes no distinction whether they be holy angels or fallen ones. But he gives us an illustration of reviling an angel, though in this case it is a fallen angel. In vs 9, Jude once again speaks of an event that is nowhere else mentioned in the scriptures.  He says, “But Michael the archangel, when he disputed with the devil and argued about the body of Moses, did not dare pronounce against him a railing judgment, but said, “The Lord rebuke you!”

Its very interesting that Jude says that Michael is an archangel. An archangel, from what little we know of such things, is the highest order of angels in the entire hosts of heaven. The Bible indicates there is a hierarchy of angels. I wish we could spend some time talking about angels and their positions, and look at the other references in scripture to Michael.  I don’t have the time to do that today, however.  But if you’re interested in further research you can look at Daniel 10:13, and 1 Thess. 4:16.  

Our purpose here today, and the purpose of Jude, is not to give a dissertation on angels, but to make the point that certain men in the churches were reviling angelic majesties of which they had no business doing, and did so to their own destruction.

As you probably know, Moses was not allowed to go into the Promised Land, however, God took him up on a high mountain that he might see it from a distance.  And then Moses died and the scripture says that God buried Moses in a place that no one knew.  We can read about that in Deut. 34:5-6 “So Moses the servant of the LORD died there in the land of Moab, according to the word of the LORD.  And He buried him in the valley in the land of Moab, opposite Beth-peor; but no man knows his burial place to this day.”  The indication from Jude, however, is that the devil attempted to claim the body of Moses.  We are not told why, but we might guess that he intended to use it to cause Israel to worship the body of Moses.

The point though that Jude wants to make, is even though Michael is an archangel of God, and has the full authority of that position and incredible power, yet he did not dare pronounce against the devil a railing judgment, but said, “The Lord rebuke you!” Michael relied upon the Lord’s authority, and not his own. 

Jude has told us that we are to contend, or fight for the faith. It is a spiritual battle.  And the manner of Michael’s fight is a model for spiritual warfare. First, we see that Michael was in a battle, such as we are when we contend for the faith. Secondly, we see that he battled in the Lord’s authority.  

Michael did not mock or accuse the devil. God hasn’t called us to judge the devil, to condemn the devil, to mock him or accuse him, but to battle against him in the name of the Lord. That doesn’t mean we go around claiming the blood of Jesus over every thing and every body. But that we contend by the truth of the gospel of Jesus Christ.  In His name comprises all the truth of Christ.

But in contrast to the example of Michael, who would not pronounce a railing judgement upon the devil, these certain men Judes speaks of spoke evil, especially when they rejected authority and reviled angelic majesties. Jude says in vs 10, “But these men revile the things which they do not understand; and the things which they know by instinct, like unreasoning animals, by these things they are destroyed.”

I am reminded by this passage of the seven sons of Sceva, who were casting out demons by the name of Paul.  These were men that were in effect false prophets, who were trying to cash in on what they saw Paul doing, but which they had no authority to do.  And it says in Acts 19:13-16 “But also some of the Jewish exorcists, who went from place to place, attempted to name over those who had the evil spirits the name of the Lord Jesus, saying, ‘I adjure you by Jesus whom Paul preaches.’ Seven sons of one Sceva, a Jewish chief priest, were doing this.  And the evil spirit answered and said to them, “I recognize Jesus, and I know about Paul, but who are you?” And the man, in whom was the evil spirit, leaped on them and subdued all of them and overpowered them, so that they fled out of that house naked and wounded.”

Jude says these certain men revile things they don’t understand, and by those things they are destroyed.  I find it telling that so many false prophets claim to have authority to cast out demons and they love to proclaim judgements that make them seem like a great man of God, with great power over the spiritual realm, when in fact they are often being duped and even controlled by the very powers that they purport to have authority over.

Well, in this last illustration, Jude has given us an example of whom we are to emulate.  We certainly don’t want to emulate the examples of the rebellious Israelites, nor the fallen angels, nor the men of Sodom and Gomorrah, but the example given we should emulate is that of Michael the archangel.  We are to recognize and bow to the ultimate authority who is Jesus Christ the Lord.  We are to contend for the faith which is His gospel.  We are to obey HIs commands.  We are to fight in the strength that He supplies and rebuke sin and licentiousness in the name of the Lord.  And in that way of following Michael’s example, we will ensure that we do not fall into the same condemnation as those who rebelled and did not believe.  

Posted in Sermons | Tags: beach church, worship on the beach |

By this we know, 1 John 4:13-21

Aug

15

2021

thebeachfellowship

Last night after dinner, I found myself in the somewhat unusual position of having finished writing my message and had finished preparing everything for today’s service and so having a couple of hours before bedtime I decided to watch a movie on youtube.  This movie that was suggested to me was billed as a Christian movie.  I know it sounds terrible, but I usually avoid Christian Hollywood style movies.  I can’t really enjoy them because I’m too busy analyzing  their theology, or lack of it.

But this one featured a number of mainstream Hollywood actors, and one of them was an older man who I think is a fine actor and my wife and I have enjoyed many of the Westerns that he has been in over the years.  I was kind of surprised to see his name as one of the leading characters so I decided to watch it.

As those type of movies go, it was probably better than most from a dramatic point of view.  But I’m not sure if I could go so far as to call it Christian.  The other lead actor played a young golfer that was trying to go professional, and he had a meltdown which was broadcast on national TV.  And he ends up being mentored by this older gentleman who of course used to be a pro golfer as well.

But the part that bothered me was that as the older man mentors the young golfer, he is presumably trying to help him turn to God so that he can get a new lease on life. But there is very little mention of God in the movie and no mention of Christ.  There is no mention of sin at all – just some bad attitudes that can affect your golf swing.  There is mention of truth, and once or twice a mention of faith, and a few glances up in the sky. At one point the old man gives him a Bible, but it’s never opened or referred to.  All of that is pretty vague though.

As the movie comes to it’s climax, it seems like the young golfer has some kind of experience.  After a talk with the old man, he starts to tear up, and he looks up in the sky for a moment, and they kind of nod at one another through misty eyes. And then he writes down all the negative stuff that he has thought about himself or others have said about him on a piece of paper, and he buries the paper in a box in a shallow grave.  

Now that’s about the extent of the religious experience in the movie.  Except that after this experience, he starts to say “God bless you” on a couple of occasions.  And of course, after this experience his golf game radically improves and he goes on to win a major pro golf tournament.  So I suppose that is the Hollywood version of what it means to find God.  That’s what it means to be a Christian.  But I’m not sure anyone watching, nor even the character himself could really know for sure what it is that supposedly happened, or why.  But that’s probably indicative of most people’s view of Christianity.  You are in some sort of a crisis in your life, you sort of turn to God to help you, and you hope that somehow God helps you to find yourself, or the best version of yourself, or at least your best golf game.

Well, the apostle John would never cut it as a Hollywood screen writer, I’m afraid.  But he has written a book in which he definitively writes what it means to come to know God, but not just to know about God, but to have fellowship with God, to be reconciled to God, and to have eternal life from God. In the last chapter of this book, John gives us the overarching theme of his epistle.  He says in chapter 5 vs 13, “These things I have written to you who believe in the name of the Son of God, so that you may know that you have eternal life.”

It’s important that you know that you have eternal life.  Not just have some vague experience that you’re not sure what happened, or if anything happened, or that doesn’t actually result in being reconciled to God. John has given in this book a number of assurances of our salvation, so that we may know that we have eternal life.  And to do that, he gives a number of tests which give evidence that you know God, or have fellowship with God.

For instance, he gives some doctrinal tests.  John says you need to have a right view of man in his sin, and a right view of Christ in His salvation. And then there are some moral tests or some behavioral tests. And really they can be summarized as two tests; obedience to the Word of God and love for the Lord and His people. You can, by these, test the validity of your claim of salvation and thereby gain assurance of it.

So as we finish up this chapter John is once again giving us some assurances of our salvation.  And they fit in the two categories of doctrinal and behavioral. So we see three times in this last passage in which John either says or implies the phrase, “by this we know…” Three tests which yield assurances of our salvation.

The first test is in vs 13. “By this we know that we abide in Him and He in us.”  What follows then are the doctrinal tests of our salvation.  That’s what to “abide in Him and He in us” refers to. It’s talking about our union with Christ.  It’s talking about fellowship with God. It’s talking about the life which we have in Christ.

There are several doctrinal distinctions that we must adhere to which provide evidence and assurance of our salvation. And John says that the first one whereby  we know that we abide in Him and He in us because  He has given us of His Spirit. Because we have the Holy Spirit dwelling in us.  Jesus said in John 6:63, ““It is the Spirit who gives life; the flesh profits nothing; the words that I have spoken to you are spirit and are life.”

Now how do you know you’ve been given the Holy Spirit? How do you know that you have received the Holy Spirit? Not because you have experienced some sort of emotional event which made you feel something you thought was supernatural or spiritual. Not because you heard a voice or felt some ecstasy.  But you know that you have received the Holy Spirit because you have the believed the words of Christ, what we call the gospel.

Look at vs 14, “We have seen and testify that the Father has sent the Son [to be] the Savior of the world.  Whoever confesses that Jesus is the Son of God, God abides in him, and he in God.” You cannot believe the gospel apart from the Holy Spirit. Your belief and confession in Jesus as the Son of God is evidence of the presence of the Holy Spirit. 

The Bible tells us that the natural man is spiritually dead because of their sin, and until their eyes and ears are opened to see and hear they cannot believe.  As I talked about last week, the Spirit of God quickens you so that you can believe. Ephesians 2:1 says, “And you [hath he quickened], who were dead in trespasses and sins.” It is the Spirit who gives life to that which is dead. You can’t even understand the scripture properly if you don’t have the Spirit of God in you because that which is spiritual cannot be naturally appraised. And the Spirit gives us new life, and the power or the desire to do what God has commanded us to do. We walk by the Spirit. Not in our strength, but in the strength which God supplies through His Spirit.

So how do I know that the Spirit of God has taken up residence in me? Because I believe what can only be believed if it is revealed by God. And how do you know that you have the Spirit? Because you believe the gospel. And the gospel is what we just read in vs 14 and 15.

Let’s read them again.  This is the gospel in a nutshell; “We have seen and testify that the Father has sent the Son [to be] the Savior of the world. Whoever confesses that Jesus is the Son of God, God abides in him, and he in God.”  John words this carefully and it’s important to take note of what he is saying. It’s not just believing that Jesus was a man who was born in a stable.  But what John says is that God sent Jesus to the world. That means that Jesus was in the beginning with God, that He was God, and then God became flesh, became man in order to be our Savior, to be our substitute who died for our sins upon the cross, that we who believe in Him might receive His righteousness and everlasting life in Him.

And because we believe in Jesus as the Son of God, the Savior, we are made righteous and holy by His righteousness and thereby we can receive the Spirit of God in us.  He abides in us, and we abide in Him. His Spirit abides in us, and we abide in Him by accepting Him as Lord of our life.

The third aspect of the doctrinal test has elements of a behavioral test.  Because you cannot separate doctrine from behavior.  Some people think that you can have a correct doctrinal perspective  and that’s all that counts, your behavior doesn’t really matter.  But the truth is that your behavior comes out of your doctrine. And so we find the third aspect of the doctrinal test in vs 16 “We have come to know and have believed the love which God has for us. God is love, and the one who abides in love abides in God, and God abides in him.”

That means that we have assurance of our salvation because we have received the love of God, and we express that love to God and to one another.  “We have come to know” speaks of our doctrine. We believe the doctrine of the gospel.  And the gospel is that “God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, so that whosoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life.” (John 3:16)  So love is from God to us, and having believed that, we abide in love. We have love for God and love for one another.  And because we abide in love, we abide in God and God abides in us.  The end of vs 16 is almost a word for word recap of what was stated in at the beginning, in vs 13. To abide in Him and He abides in us is another way of speaking of our salvation.

Now the next assurance of our salvation is found in vs 17.  And though he doesn’t begin with exactly the same phrase as before, as in “by this we know…” I think we can safely interpret it to mean the same thing.  John says in vs 17, “By this, love is perfected with us…” Love is perfected with us is yet another way of referring to the completion of our salvation. It’s referring to God abiding in us, and we in God.  For example, back in vs 12, John said, “if we love one another, God abides in us, and His love is perfected in us.” So perfect love, and God abiding in us are both speaking of the same thing; our salvation.  We can have assurance of our salvation because love is completed or perfected in us.

And there are three aspects to this perfected love that John gives us here.  The first one is that we might have confidence in the day of judgment. Not confidence in our golf game, but when everyman will one day stand before the judgment seat of God, we can have confidence.  He says, “By this, love is perfected with us, so that we may have confidence in the day of judgment.”  We can have confidence because of the promise of the gospel.  We that have trusted in Christ have been forgiven of our sins.  You know, that is one thing you should have felt when you were saved.  I’m not big on feelings as measure of your salvation.  But when you know you are a sinner, and you repent and confess that to God, and He forgives you, there is usually accompanied with that forgiveness a sense of a great weight which has been lifted.

In salvation, there needs to be forgiveness.  Some of you here today have perhaps never come to the point of acknowledging that you are a sinner.  You might have come to God thinking you could use some improvement in your handicap, but actually you’re a not such a bad guy.  But the fact is that we all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God.  And because of your sin, you deserved the punishment of death.  By faith we trust in Jesus who took your punishment and in believing in His propitiation for your sins,  you were forgiven.  If you haven’t been forgiven, then you haven’t been saved.

But if you’ve been forgiven for your sins, then you can have confidence in the day of judgment.  Because you know that Jesus paid for your sins. And God will not be guilty of double jeopardy.  He cannot charge you again, because Jesus paid it all.

The second aspect of perfected love is still in vs 17, “because as He is, so also are we in this world.”  “As he is so are we in this world.” That simply means that as Christ is now, invisibly, we are, in this world, visibly. We alluded to that in our last week’s study, which was spoken of in vs 12, “No one has seen God at any time; if we love one another, God abides in us, and His love is perfected in us.”  What John was referring to then was that the world cannot see God, but it can see us.  The world cannot see Christ, but it sees us following in Christ’s footsteps, doing the things Christ did, carrying on the ministry of Christ.  As Christ said that He came into the world to seek and to save those that are lost, so we walk as He walked, and we seek and save those that are lost.  Love received and then poured back out is completed love. And if we love our brothers we will seek to save our brothers.  There is no greater love than that.

Love reaches the world with the gospel of salvation.  Love goes, love tells, love saves. And doing that is evidence of our salvation, and because of our salvation, we may have confidence on the day of judgment.  Because we did what love demands we do. Love is the assurance of our salvation. Love which is perfected is love that is made visible in deeds. We saw that in Chapter 3, Verse 18, “Little children, let us not love in word or speech but in deed and in truth.” Love, even God’s love, can never find its end, its perfection, until it is expressed in a deed or word or compassionate act.

The third aspect of perfected love is because there is no fear in love. Vs18 “There is no fear in love; but perfect love casts out fear, because fear involves punishment, and the one who fears is not perfected in love.”

Perfect love casts out fear. Why, how? Because we are obedient.  Because we do his will.  And his will is to love one another, to reach the world with the gospel.  When we love others as Christ loved us, then we complete love, we have perfect love. When you are obedient in love, out of love, then you don’t fear punishment.  God doesn’t punish us that are saved.  He has punished Jesus already for our sins.  He may correct us, He may discipline us, but He doesn’t punish us that are saved. That may seem like a minor distinction, but it’s actually a very important difference between those that are saved and those that are not. If you have rejected Jesus Christ as your Savior, then your punishment remains on you.  But if you accept Him as your Savior, then Christ has taken your punishment upon Himself so that you may go free.

There is another aspect of this idea of fear though. Many Christians don’t witness or give testimony to the gospel because they are fearful.  But when we obey the command to love, it casts out fear.  God will help you when you commit to obey Him.  And so when you obey you find that the fear goes away, because God is working with you and going before you.  His strength takes away the fear  of rejection or other people’s reactions, because our love for God is greater than our fear of man. 

The last category of the assurances of our salvation is found in vs 19.  And I am going to add the phrase, “By this we know” at the start of the verse because I think it’s implied there.  I can’t be dogmatic about it, but I think I’m right none the less and I hope you will humor me for the sake of my outline.  So let’s read it like that; vs 19, “[By this we know] we love.”

By this we know perfect love. By this we know that we are saved.  By this we know the fellowship with God. God is love.  And we can only say we know God if we have the love of God in us and we express His love to others.  There has to have been a change in our nature, there must have been a new life created in us that has this capacity for love that wasn’t there before.  

And there are three aspects of this love.  First, we love, because He first loved us. Because God loved us, and sent His Son to be the propitiation for our sins, so that He might be the Savior of the world, that we might be made righteous and receive the Holy Spirit to abide in us, because of that love in action, we have the love of God in our hearts.  We love God and love others.  But we need to remember that God didn’t love us because we were lovely. But He loved us when we were enemies of God and sinners, and rebellious.  His love initiated our response.  And our response is love for God and a love for one another.

And that introduces the second point, we have perfect love because we love God. John says in vs 20, “If someone says, “I love God,” and hates his brother, he is a liar; for the one who does not love his brother whom he has seen, cannot love God whom he has not seen.”  In this statement, the foremost commandment is implied, and it’s consequence is indicated. But let’s not miss the foremost commandment in that verse which is understood but not directly stated.

Jesus said the foremost commandment was to love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your mind and your strength.  That is the primary, foremost commandment.  And Jesus said, “If you love Me, you will keep My commandments.” Loving God is first and foremost above every other love.  Jesus said in Matt. 10:37  “He who loves father or mother more than Me is not worthy of Me. And he who loves son or daughter more than Me is not worthy of Me.”  Our love for God is to be preeminent.  Our love for God is expressed by obedience.  It’s the motivation for doing what is pleasing to God.

And the third aspect of this perfect love is we love God by loving one another.  John says in vs 21, “And this commandment we have from Him, that the one who loves God should love his brother also.”  Jesus when He gave the foremost commandment, added that the second was like unto the first, that you should love your neighbor as yourself.

There is a love for one another that certainly includes those of the faith, a love for the body of Christ, His church.  But the love for one another is not limited to just the church. It should be a love for our neighbor, and our neighbor may be a stranger, may be someone we have never seen before, someone we do not know.  But we love them as ourselves.  And Jesus said we should even love our enemies.  God loved us when we were enemies, and we are to love like Christ loved. As John said in vs 17, “because as He is, so also are we in this world.”

John concludes this section by reiterating the command to love.  It’s not an option.  Our motivation to love comes from God’s love towards us.  But because we have that as our motivation does not mean that we always feel like it.  So perhaps that’s why John emphasizes the aspect of the command.  We need to love whether we feel like it or not.  Perfect love is sacrificial, and what we often have to sacrifice is our priorities for the sake of God’s priorities.  We may have to sacrifice our natural attraction for what may not be attractive. But if we love God, then we will keep His commandments.

To reiterate what John said earlier in chapter 3 vs 18, “let us not love with word or with tongue, but in deed and truth. We will know by this that we are of the truth, and will assure our heart before Him.”  Our obedience to His commands are yet another assurance that we are of the truth, that we know God, and that He abides in us, and we in Him.

Well, as we read at the beginning of this message, John has “written these things to you who believe in the name of the Son of God, so that you may know that you have eternal life.” Do you know that you have eternal life? Do you know that? You can know it and be certain of it, and have no fear in the day of judgment.  Believe in Jesus Christ, the Son of God, that He died on the cross for your sins, and that He rose again to give us new life in the Spirit. And you will receive eternal life from God. Jesus paid the price, it’s up to you to receive His forgiveness and His righteousness so that you might abide with Him, and He with you.  

Posted in Uncategorized | Tags: beach church, worship at the beach |

The promise of eternal life, 1 John 2:25-29

Jun

27

2021

thebeachfellowship

John is writing to the Christians in the churches because false doctrine had crept into the church and was deceiving many.  He says that in vs 26, “These things I have written to you concerning those who are trying to deceive you.”  The false doctrine was especially perpetrated on the church by what was eventually called Gnosticism, which means knowledge.  They professed that there was a special knowledge, a secret knowledge of spiritual things, which they wanted to teach the church.  But it was false knowledge, and so John calls them false prophets.  In fact he calls them antichrists back in vs 18.

He says, vs 18 “Children, it is the last hour; and just as you heard that antichrist is coming, even now many antichrists have appeared; from this we know that it is the last hour.” Now John is concerned that the church be able to distinguish between the word of truth, and the lie of the antichrists and false prophets. He is concerned because the deception at it’s worst will keep people from being saved, and at it’s best will keep the saved from spiritual maturity.  And so he has been showing us various tests by which we may discern the truth from the lie, and those that are saved from those that are not saved, but are in reality agents of Satan to deceive the church.

We no longer have gnosticism today, but we have the same old lies packaged under a different wrapping paper, which is being foisted upon the church in our age.  Satan’s tactics are still the same as they ever were. Jesus said he is a liar and the father of lies. He just repackages the same old lies.

Another way that John has shown the difference between the true gospel and the false gospel is his frequent use of contrasts.  He contrasts light and darkness.  The truth and the lie.  Righteousness and sin.

Now as we enter this next section, John gives us another contrast.  He gives us a contrast between the promise of Christ and the false promise of the antichrists and false prophets.  And I urge you as you consider this to let go of the “Left Behind” theology which portrays the anticrhist and false prophet in some dramatic, one world government scenario, in which he sits on the throne of the world and causes all these terrible tribulations to happen.  I’m not here to argue for or against that theology with you this morning.  I happen to think it should be interpreted more symbolically than literally.  But according to the context in which John is talking about them, saying they are already in his day at work in the world, I would encourage you to think of the antichrists and false prophets as the emissaries of Satan’s strategy since the first century until now, which is to deceive and distort the truth, and to lead people into a false religion which intends to overthrow God’s plan of redemption of the world.

So John intends to show us a contrast between the truth and the deception so that we can be discerning and know the truth.  He begins this contrast by saying in vs25  “This is the promise which He Himself made to us: eternal life.”  So the first point in this section is what John calls the promise.  The promise.

To determine if someone is lying you first have to know what they said.  John says that Jesus made a promise to us.  That’s what the gospel is, isn’t it?  A promise from God.  A promise of life.  John says it’s a promise of eternal life.  Eternal life is not just a quantity of life, it’s a quality of life. That’s important to understand. Eternal life is not just a long, long, long time.  It’s spiritual life, it’s abundant life, it’s life in the presence of God, in fellowship with God.  It’s life as God intended it to be at creation.

Now I believe that John is speaking of Jesus Christ making that promise of eternal life.  But as you know, Jesus Christ and the Father and the Spirit are One.  But it’s interesting to see when that promise was made. It wasn’t made for the first time during Christ’s ministry.  It wasn’t even made at creation.  It was made sometime in eternity past.  Paul says in Titus 1:1 “Paul, a servant of God, and an apostle of Jesus Christ, according to the faith of God’s elect, and the acknowledging of the truth which is after godliness;  In hope of eternal life, which God, that cannot lie, promised before the world began.”  So Paul says God promised eternal life before the world began.

God’s plan from eternity past was to create a human race which would be the bride of Christ, which would be body, soul and spirit, and which would be like them, in that they would live forever with Him and love Him and serve Him.  So it says in Genesis 2:7 that God breathed into the nostrils of man the breath of life and man became a living soul.  But as man sinned, and sin entered into the world, that life with God died, the spirit of man died, and man ceased to live in fellowship with God but was doomed to eternal separation from God which is spiritual death.

But the plan of God which was established before creation did not come to an end at that point.  Because the plan of God had planned for that as well.  And the plan was to send Jesus Christ to earth to become man, to become man’s substitute, so that they might be given life, even eternal life, and be restored to fellowship with God.

So Jesus, when He began His ministry, came to fulfill that promise and give eternal life to those that believed in Him. He gave us the promise of life.  And all that He taught, and all that He did, was the basis of that promise.  It was to help us understand that promise, to be able to comprehend that promise, so that we might believe it and be saved from death.

Jesus came for one purpose, to give life to those who had the condemnation of death.  He didn’t come to create a social utopia on earth.  He didn’t come to heal the sick and eradicate disease.  He didn’t come to build a financial empire or to give us great scientific advancements.  He came to give eternal life to those who are dying.  To the people He created, whom He created for His pleasure, to have fellowship with Him, to be His eternal bride, but who had by their choice of sin had rejected Him and received in themselves the penalty of death.  Because He still loved them, He came to give them life, that they that believe in Him might be with Him forever. 

“For God so loved the world, that He gave His only Son, that whosoever believes in Him, should not perish, but have everlasting life.” (John 3:16)

But in order to do that, Jesus had to fulfill the justice of God.  He had to take the place of sinners, and die in their place.  He became our substitute, so that He might be our Savior.  And so He died on the cross, suffering the punishment which we deserved, so that we might be given life.

This is the promise of eternal life.  The gospel is the promise that Jesus made. It is the truth that will set you free.  Jesus said in John 14:6 “I am the way, the truth, and the life, no man comes to the Father except by Me.”  He said in John 10:10, “The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy; I came that they may have life, and have [it] abundantly.”  Jesus isn’t talking about the kind of “abundant life” you hear the false prophets claiming on so called Christian television.  He is talking about spiritual life, which is life with God, which is fellowship with God, which is everlasting life.

But notice in that verse I just quoted from John 10:10, Jesus includes in His promise to give eternal life a warning. He gives a contrast between the promise of life and the lie which results in death. His warning is that there is a thief who comes to steal and kill and destroy.  That’s the deceiver, who John says whose spirit is already at work in the world.  And John follows the same pattern of Jesus and contrasts  the promise of life with the deception that leads to death.  So the contrast to the promise is the deception. Notice vs 26, “These things I have written to you concerning those who are trying to deceive you.”

Last week in the previous section we talked a lot about the deception.  John speaks of the antichrists already being at work in the world. Later on in the epistle he will speak of false prophets and deceiving spirits.  Of our need to test the spirits.  And as I said last week, the way we test the spirits is by the word of God.  There is no other reliable test.  We can’t test the spirits by whether or not they can work miracles.  Jesus said in Matt. 24:24  “For false Christs and false prophets will arise and will show great signs and wonders, so as to mislead, if possible, even the elect.”  So you can’t test them by their miracle powers. Remember Pharaohs wise men did many of the same miracles that Moses did.  The only reliable test is the word of God.

The antichrist is quite simply defined as those who are in opposition to Christ.  They may not appear to be in opposition to Christ, in fact, they may even claim to know Christ, but their opposition is revealed by the fact that they lie.  They distort the truth, they twist the truth and in some cases they outright deny the truth.  Their purpose is to steal, to kill and destroy.  John says beware of the deception.

But the good news is that we have an antidote for the deception.  And that is what John calls the anointing. Vs 27 “As for you, the anointing which you received from Him abides in you, and you have no need for anyone to teach you; but as His anointing teaches you about all things, and is true and is not a lie, and just as it has taught you, you abide in Him.”

Now we addressed this anointing last time, but let’s make sure we understand what he is talking about.  He is not talking about some sort of second blessing. He is not talking about some sort of secondary spiritual experience which completes what was lacking in our conversion.  He is simply speaking of the indwelling of the Holy Spirit which all believers receive upon salvation.

All believers in the Lord Jesus Christ possess the fullness of the Holy Spirit as our birthright.  In fact, whether or not we possess the Spirit is the determining factor of our salvation.  If we have not the Spirit, we are not Christ’s.  Listen to what Paul says in Romans 8:9 “However, you are not in the flesh but in the Spirit, if indeed the Spirit of God dwells in you. But if anyone does not have the Spirit of Christ, he does not belong to Him.”  So if we are saved, then we have the anointing. 

We have the permanent indwelling of the Holy Spirit. His purpose is to bring the word of God to life in us.  His purpose is to teach us.  His purpose is to abide with us.  It’s not something we need to seek.  It’s the Spirit of Christ, whom Christ calls the Spirit of Truth.  He is the reason we that are saved can distinguish the truth from the lie.

Back in vs 20 John said, “But you have an anointing from the Holy One, and you all know (all things).” The Holy Spirit is not given to us sporadically so that we can have some spiritual experience that supposedly confirms our faith.  But He confirms the teaching of the word of God in us so that we might know the truth, that we might distinguish the truth from the lie, and so that we might abide in Him. 

But don’t be mistaken, the way the Holy Spirit teaches us is through the word of God.  He is the author of the word of God.  Peter said “holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Spirit.”  Paul says all scripture is given by inspiration of God.  Inspiration means God breathed.  Spirit is pneuma, which is air, breath. The Spirit of God breathed life into the words that holy men of God wrote down for us, that we might know the truth, that we might worship God in Spirit and in truth.  So we can verify teaching through the word of God.  We can verify the spirits by the word of God.  John says in chapter 4, test the spirits to see if they are of God, because many false prophets have gone out into he world.  How do you test the spirits, the false prophets?  By the word of God which is true, which is immutable, which is unchanging, which is eternal, through the anointing of the Holy Spirit who leads us in the truth.

Now that ministry of the Holy Spirit is what John calls abiding.  Abiding is the antidote to prevent the deception.  The abiding has two aspects.  First of all, notice that the anointing abides in you. Vs 27, “As for you, the anointing which you received from Him abides in you.”  The Holy Spirit is not just passing through.  He’s not temporary.  He is permanently indwelling us that believe. He is the deposit on the promise that God made which is eternal life. 

There are a couple of verses that speak of this.  The first is 2Cor. 1:22  which says, “who also sealed us and gave [us] the Spirit in our hearts as a pledge.( pledge means a deposit or down payment). The other is in 2Co 5:5 which says, “Now He who prepared us for this very purpose is God, who gave to us the Spirit as a pledge.” (or down payment)

So in both verses we see the principle that the Holy Spirit is given to us as a down payment on our eternal life with God.  When you buy a house, you usually have to make a down payment, and that serves as a pledge that you are going to  purchase the house.  You are in effect making a promise, which is guaranteed by a down payment.  That’s what the anointing is that abides in us.  It’s a down payment on the fullness of eternal life which we will receive at Christ’s second coming.

Eternal life is guaranteed by the abiding of the Holy Spirit in us.  And God doesn’t break His promises.  And so the Spirit is given permanently and He will complete in us what He has begun.  But notice John speaks of us abiding as well. Not only does the Spirit abide in us, but we abide in Him.  ““As for you, the anointing which you received from Him abides in you, and you have no need for anyone to teach you; but as His anointing teaches you about all things, and is true and is not a lie, and just as it has taught you, you abide in Him.”

So the second part of this verse speaks of our abiding in Him.  Now what does that mean? To abide in Him means that we are in fellowship with Him, we obey Him, we walk in the light as He is in the light, we walk in the truth.  That’s what John means when he says “as His anointing teaches you about all things, just as it has taught you, you abide in Him.” So we abide in the Holy Spirit by doing what He teaches us. As He leads us through the word of God, we obey His teaching, and in that way we abide in Him. 

It’s like the Old Testament proverb in Amos 3:3 which says how can two walk together unless they be in agreement?”  John said it another way back in chapter 1 vs 6, “If we say that we have fellowship with Him and yet walk in the darkness, we lie and do not practice the truth; but if we walk in the Light as He Himself is in the Light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus His Son cleanses us from all sin.”  So we have fellowship with God when we walk with God, when we don’t walk in sin. That’s abiding.  That’s how we abide in Him, we walk with Him.  We obey His word.

So we have the promise, the deception, the anointing, the abiding, and now the coming. Vs28 “Now, little children, abide in Him, so that when He appears, we may have confidence and not shrink away from Him in shame at His coming.”  Now that’s self explanatory, isn’t it?  If we obey Him, if we walk with Him, if we abide with Him, then we won’t be ashamed when He comes again. 


When I was growing up, I think one of the things I dreaded the most hearing my Mom say was “just you wait until your dad comes home.” That usually came as  the result of a day of fighting with my brother and sisters. Whatever it was, I had been disobeying.  And when Dad came home my Mom was going to tell him what I had been doing.  And there would be consequences.  So on those days, I didn’t run to the door and throw my arms around my dad when he walked in the door.  I hid in my room.  I was afraid to come out.

John says Jesus is coming back.  He is coming back to claim His bride, the church, to live with Him forever.  He is also coming back to judge the world and to make all things new. John says the key to not being ashamed when He comes again is to abide with Him now.  To do what He commands us to do through His Spirit and His word. That’s what it means to walk with the Lord, to be a disciple.  It’s to follow, to fellowship, to obey, to abide in the truth.  And if we abide in Him, then we will not be ashamed at His coming.

So that brings us to the last point, the last assurance that we are not deceived, that we abide with Him.  And that  last point is the righteousness.  Vs.29 “If you know that He is righteous, you know that everyone also who practices righteousness is born of Him.”  So how are we assured that we are the children of God?  How do we distinguish the children of God?  By the fact that they practice righteousness. 

We know that Jesus Christ is righteous.  That should not be open for debate this morning.  But if you have been born again then you are being remade into His image.  In our salvation, we receive His righteousness in exchange for our sins, we receive His Spirit who is given to lead us into righteousness through the word of God and by His anointing. The Holy Spirit also gives us the power over sin, that we might have the power to do that which God commands us to do. 

And so consequently because of this grace which we have received, we practice righteousness.  Practice indicates that you haven’t perfected it yet.  It means that you are a work in progress.  But you have a deposit on what one day will be completed.  That day when Christ returns our sinful nature will be done away with completely, we will receive a new body which will be joined to our renewed spirit, and we will be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is.  Our righteousness will be perfected.  And that righteousness will make it possible for us to have the fullness of life that God promised before the world began.  A life that is abundant, and full, and everlasting.  A life that abides with God forever. 

If you are here today and you recognize in hearing this message that you have not received the promise of eternal life, that you have not received the anointing and abiding of the Holy Spirit, then I urge you to confess your sins, and believe in Jesus Christ for the remission of your sins, confessing Him as Lord and Savior, that you might receive the righteousness which comes through faith in Him.  That is the only way to receive the eternal, abundant life that God has promised.  

As Peter preached on the day of Pentecost;  “Repent, and each of you be baptized in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins; and you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit. For the promise is for you and your children and for all who are far off, as many as the Lord our God will call to Himself.”

Posted in Uncategorized | Tags: beach church, worship at the beach |
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