Biblical Framework
Charles
Clough
Lesson 88
Next week we’ll start moving into the next
great event in the sequence that we are studying, which will be the exile. At that point things will change a little
bit, because all these other events that we’ve studied, the era of Solomon, the
decline of the kingdom, the rupture of the civil war in the nation Israel,
kingdom in decline, all that had to do with stuff going on inside the nation
Israel’s political boundaries; it was all internal. When we get into the exile, we’re back in the world system again;
we’re back into the nations, into paganism.
The Jews will be turned out into this world system. Beginning with the exile we’re going to kind
of revert back to the theme that we left back in the days of Abraham when God
called Abraham out from paganism. We’ll
learn a lot about our own heritage, why the world is shaping up the way it is,
the political forces that are active even now in our own generation, why
international communities act like they do, some of the themes behind the
scenes, etc. It all started with the
foreign minister of Iraq and Iran, who was Daniel. He was one of the few men who has been foreign minister of two
different countries. God revealed to
him, as a high government official what was going on in history; it was very
unusual to have a divine viewpoint historical analysis.
That’s what’s coming up in the exile. I urge
you to read particularly Daniel 2 because we’ll be talking about it next week,
to get a little of the cultural flavor of what life was like in the exile. One of the classic books in the Scripture is
the book of Esther. Look at the first
part of Ezekiel and watch for his vision of the removal of the spirit from the
temple. That’s a critical portion of the Old Testament text. Most people don’t even know it exists, yet
you’ll see that it plays a fundamental role in the way history starts to unfold
beginning in the 5th century.
We want to pull together some of the
doctrinal truths that we have learned through this last event. We spent a long time on the kingdoms in
decline, the role of the prophets, etc. But looking at the big picture so we don’t
lose the forest for the trees here, all these areas of history, from Solomon
down to the divided kingdom, on down to the decline of both the north and
southern kingdom, all this period of history, some 400 years, is basically
concerned with the doctrine of sanctification.
In other words, this is what’s going on inside the kingdom of God. Why
is this important? What ties together
all these stories? We’re not going into
the details; we’re going into the big theme.
So when you read these stories about what went on in Elijah’s day, in
Nahum’s day, in Jonah’s day, etc. plug it into this big picture. The big picture is what does the kingdom of
God look like, how does God reign over His kingdom and how God reigns over His
kingdom teaches us more about His character, and teaches us what pleases Him
and what displeases Him as far as living today in a relationship with Him. That’s why all this history was preserved,
story after story after story, to give hundreds and hundreds of different
facets of how God reigns. This is what
the kingdom of God looks like.
We said that there are two basic models that
the prophets critiqued. All men inside
this kingdom were sinners; all men were fallen. Some men were born again and some men weren’t in ancient Israel.
There are two models, using the leaders as examples, of how to live. One of them was David. David was a sinner, David got out of line,
David was disciplined, David was a believer, but what characterized David’s
model is that he didn’t have to get hit on the head with a 2 x 4 to realize
that he’d sinned. He was sensitive to
his own personal sin and what to do about it.
The issue to review, how to handle that process and how David handled it
was he became convinced, because the word “convict” can be substituted with the
word “convinced,” same meaning. He
became convinced of his sin, and he wasn’t convinced because of peer
pressure. You can’t confess sin because
of peer pressure. You can’t confess sin
because you think that if you don’t somebody is going to get you. You have to do it by faith, and if you do it
by faith you have to be convinced it’s sin.
How do you get convinced it’s sin?
By referencing the Word of God.
David knew the Word of God, he had it
delivered to him in a special applied form by the prophet Nathan, he confessed
his sin and he was restored to fellowship, a very simple model. In contrast to that, in the rest of the
kingdom you had an extra step added in.
What happened as the kingdom began to decline was that people either did
not believe in what was known of the gospel, so you have an increasing percent
of people that unregenerate, or the people who did believe were getting very
sloppy about handling themselves spiritually?
They lived in prolonged carnality, and the longer they lived in
carnality the more screwed up their soul became and the more screwed up their
soul became the harder it was for them to be convinced of their sin. And there can’t be any restoration until
that step occurs.
What we have seen in these four or five
centuries is just how severely God would chasten His people. We said that it’s the destruction of mental
strongholds of demonic idolatries to clear the vision of who God really is. That’s the story of all the suffering that
was going on in these centuries. It’s
there for a purpose. It’s not there
because God gets a big thrill out of doing it, it’s because God wants His
people to come into fellowship with Him and He is serious enough about that to
put us through some suffering to wake us up in order that it take place. That’s how God reigns in His kingdom.
Also note from this time period, one of the
problems these people had as the kingdom began to decline, you see it a lot in
the leadership, the thinking of the men, is that they always trusted some human
gimmick. It was always a foreign policy
solution, it was always an economic solution, it was always some human based
gimmick that would ultimately solve their problems. The prophets tried again and again, every time you try a human
solution to the problem you’re going to get yourself all bound up because God
doesn’t allow you to solve the problem that way. He wants you to solve the problem by coming to Him and walking by
faith. So if you’ve got some gimmick, be assured that it’s going to be frustrating
because He is not going to let us solve problems with gimmick solutions. That
was the whole story of those three or four centuries, one gimmick after
another. We’re going to do it this way;
we’re going to do it that way.
What have we have come to is we’re going to
summarize on the next few pages the doctrine of sanctification, we’ve learned
it before, we studied it a little in the conquest and settlement period, we
studied it in connection with David, but we’re going to do it under the same
topic, if you notice on page 50 we have the phases of sanctification, on page
51 we have the aim of sanctification, page 52 we have the means of
sanctification, also the dimensions of sanctification, and on page 53 the
enemies of sanctification. I’ve lumped
them together into those five areas because each one of those involves slightly
different concepts.
We’ll start with the phases of
sanctification. We’ll review that and
add new information to that understanding from the last four or five centuries
of Israel’s history. We said before
there were two kinds of sanctification, positional sanctification and
experiential sanctification. Positional
sanctification basically is that God puts me in a certain position with respect
to Him and His plan. We don’t feel our
way into that position, we don’t earn our way into our position, the position
is given to us by God’s grace through Jesus Christ. In the Old Testament Christ wasn’t yet fully revealed, so the
position came in through the Davidic Covenant.
Positional sanctification, by way of
position, is not related to our personal experience in the sense that it’s
derived from our experience. No experience we have walking with the Lord could
cause us the position. The position
causes the experience. It’s not the other
way around. This is what’s wrong when
we try to use therapy and other kinds of solutions for personal problems,
because if it’s our position before God that explains details of our life, then
this is the thing that we need to go back to.
It’s this position that gives meaning to the experience. That’s the sequence, you can’t go from
experience back to position; you have to always go from position to
experience.
Example: Israel’s history. Think what we’ve learned. What was the great
covenant that controlled the outlines of every event that ever happened to
Israel? The Abrahamic Covenant, it
promised a land, a seed, and a blessing.
Was the seed involved during those eight centuries of time; were there
any historical evidences or passages of Scripture or dramatic events that took
place that had something to do with the seed?
Of course, from the book of Ruth, what is a Gentile woman, a short story
stuck in the middle of the Bible for?
She’s in the seed; she’s part of the Messianic seed. In that little book, that woman’s life is
defined, not by Ruth, not by her mother, not by Boaz, it’s defined by the
Abrahamic Covenant. That’s the
controlling document. So always remember
that positional sanctification controls experience, experience doesn’t control
position.
Then we went to experiential
sanctification. When we talk about
experience proper, we’re talking about the place where we obey or we disobey
God, and now comes the will of God for us.
The Sinaitic Covenant gave some people say 610 plus commands of how to
do, what to do, when to do, where to do.
That outlined the will of God for the people. So in experiential sanctification we have the issue of personal
obedience and logging time in obedience versus logging time in status
disobedience. It’s the number of hours
logged in obedience mode that strengthens, that builds, that sanctifies. That’s the experience side. But always remember the experience is
defined by the position. Abraham
defines Moses; Moses doesn’t define Abraham.
A third phase of sanctification was
introduced by the prophets because they understood that their history, their
position…, like we have our position “in Christ,” we have the experience of the
filling of the Holy Spirit, but we still live, as Romans 8 says, “with
groanings that cannot be uttered.” The Holy Spirit makes intercession for us,
and we experience pain, sorrow, and we look forward to the day of redemption;
it’s unfinished. We live in tension; we know this is our position, we look down
at our experience, always finding something short, always find failure some
place, always find discouragement and the experience is never totally
fulfilling in the Christian life. So
where’s the resolution. The prophets
said there will be such a thing as ultimate or final sanctification. Ultimate sanctification refers to things
like the resurrection of the body, doing away with all sorrow, sickness, death,
suffering, etc. and that’s the grand finale, that’s the conclusion.
The prophets in eschatology and prophecy
speak of the fact that this position and experience will simultaneously occur
together and they will both be perfectly in harmony. When experience is in harmony with position, that is ultimate
sanctification, and it’s never to be repeated again. It’s over; history is over at that point. That’s the great hope that grows out of the
Old Testament, and it grew out of the Old Testament because of failure. It grew out of the Old Testament because of
discouragement, it grew because of pain, so God would send the ministering
prophets and they begin to point down the road. Jeremiah made that dramatic announcement of the New
Covenant.
Let’s go back to the table where we
summarized the covenants, page 47. The
New Covenant is a phase of ultimate sanctification for the nation. We had the Noahic Covenant, the Abrahamic
Covenant, the Sinaitic Covenant, the Davidic Covenant, then we had the New
Covenant. The New Covenant was given to
Israel and the legal terms of the New Covenant as Jeremiah spoke them was that
there would be national regeneration.
What did he mean by that? It
means that 100% of the people in the nation of Israel would be believers in the
future, 100%. In Elijah’s time how many
were there. God gave a number, He knew,
He had a census; He knew how many people had trusted the Lord and how many
didn’t, who were the real believers and who were the phonies. There were 7,000, it was a number
count. So God said to Elijah, 7,000 people
in the northern kingdom have believed.
Many, many more thousands haven’t believed, but I tell you… then He
looked forward to the future through the other prophets and said there will
come a time, O Israel, when everyone in the nation will be a believer. That’s ultimate sanctification. When that takes place, the Messiah will return,
and it’s the whole kingdom of God, etc.
So there are three phases of
sanctification. We don’t live in
ultimate sanctification, in case you haven’t noticed. It’s a future hope. This
is the role of the prophetic books.
Many people look upon prophecy, where’s the U.S. in the book of Daniel
or something. That’s not the point. The
point of prophecy is to help us endure the present by knowing how the drama
finally ends. You know what’s going to
happen in the story because you read the last chapter. That’s why the prophetic
books are given, to give this as a whole.
Always remember that experience is sandwiched in between the position
that God outlined from eternity past, God had a plan for you, for me, for the
nation Israel, for the church, for the Lord Jesus Christ, and He knew that
forever and ever, backwards. He
revealed that in the Abrahamic Covenant and of course through Christ.
So we have a position, a position that’s
nailed down from eternity past to eternity future. That’s out stability. Our experience derives from that and is
anchored to that position, but nothing in our lives can take away that
position. That’s what Paul argues in
Romans 8, we cannot be separated from the love of Christ by anything, come hell
or high water, nothing can separate us from that position. That’s the power of knowing about our
position in Christ. The New Covenant on
the other hand looks forward to the future, to ultimate sanctification.
Those are the three phases of sanctification,
and just remember those three phases so when you talk about a Bible passage,
here’s three questions you can ask of the text. When you’re in a New Testament passage or an Old Testament
passage, if it’s talking about some area of the Christian life, ask yourself,
what phase of sanctification is it talking about here? A little test. Look at Ephesians, here’s an example of what I’m talking about to
get these categories right. It helps
you understand why things are the way they are in some of these epistles. When you start out in Eph. 1, back in the
days when people used to diagram sentences, Christians used to have a neat
exercise. I knew a Christian teacher
that taught diagramming sentences, subject, predicate, verb, etc. She would to
go to Ephesians 1 and give an assignment to find out where the sentence ends
that starts in verse 3. That’s one
humdinger of a sentence to outline. If
you do it right it’ll take about three sheets of 8½ x 11 paper, all skewed off
to the right before you get to the end of the sentence. What that shows you is
what, in many ways a convoluted guy Paul was when he went to teach. Talk about a guy that may be hard to follow,
this guy was so bubbling over with the depth of the knowledge that he had of
God that it just came out all over the plate, and when he started a sentence he
didn’t even finish it, he just kept on going.
As you look at this sentence that starts in
Eph. 1:3, ask yourself a simple question of the text. Train yourself to observe
the text. This is how you get food out
of the text of Scripture; it’s by bombarding the text with questions, because
you’re really dialoguing with the Lord. He wrote the text, the Holy Spirit
indwells you, the Holy Spirit wrote the text, so if He indwells you He ought to
be able to show you insights into the text, but you have to dialogue with
Him. The Holy Spirit is going to have a
problem with TV minds, because TV minds are looking for some wham bang bells
and whistles and all kinds of things going on.
The Holy Spirit didn’t put the Bible on television, He wrote it and that
means that it takes a certain quietness, a certain reflectivity, and an active
mind… an active mind, not
passive. If you do a temperature on
your own thinking processes, do you ever notice, when is it that you want to go
see television, it’s when you’re tired mentally. That tells you it doesn’t require much energy to sit there and to
receive light and sound.
The problem is you’re not receiving content,
and the Word of God is full of content, and we as Christians today are
struggling to maintain literacy. I
don’t mean formal literacy; everybody can read signs and billboards. I’m
talking about comprehending what we read.
That is a battle, and we have to pray for our children because they are
not being encouraged to delve into content and be active mentally. They’re encouraged to be passive, fuzzy
math, what did three birds sitting on a fence do when two went away, how did
they feel? This is the new math that we
are approaching. Don’t bother to think
about the fact that there are three and two, worry about what went on in the
bird brain when one of them flew away.
With all that background, oh by the way, come to the Apostle Paul in
Ephesians 1:3 and understand the sentence.
There’s a big gap here. This is
why we have a lot of weakness in our own Christian circles; we haven’t even
come to grips with the text because we aren’t mentally equipped to come to grip
with the text.
In this text, think of these questions: three
phases of sanctification, positional, experiential or ultimate. Start in verse 3, skim verses 2, 3, 4, 5, 6,
and ask yourself, which phase of sanctification is Paul talking about in those
verses? “Blessed be the God and Father
of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with every spiritual blessing in
the heavenly places in Christ, [3] just as He chose us in Him before the
foundation of the world, that we should be holy and blameless before Him. In love [5] He predestined us to adoption as
sons through Jesus Christ to Himself, according to the kind intention of His
will.” What’s the emphasis here? Position, it’s all position. Isn’t that interesting that when you start
going through the text further, chapters 2, 3, he talks about one body, one
spirit, then he begins to say in 4:21, “if indeed you have heard Him and have
been taught in Him, just as truth is in Jesus, [22] that in reference to your
former manner of life, you lay aside the old self,” now what is he talking
about? Experience. Which comes first in
the text? Position first, then
experience.
Do you see why psychotherapy has it
backwards? Psychotherapy today is
trying to analyze experience in light of some model, whatever was taught by Dr.
So and So in the latest graduate school course. Then you’re always analyzing experience in light of this model.
Where did the model come from? This is
the model, so we as Christians have to go back to the Scripture and find THE model, the background and
the position.
You’ll also note that Paul speaks of the
future in chapter 1. Notice how he says
[9] “He made known to us the mystery of His will,” etc, verses 11 and 12, “also
we have obtained an inheritance, having been predestined according to His
purpose who works all things after the counsel of His will, [12] to the end
that we who were the first to hope in Christ should be to the praise of His
glory.” See where it says “should be to
the praise of His glory,” that’s the end of the plan. What’s that? Ultimate, positional or experiential? It’s ultimate. So here’s how to take those three phases of sanctification and
use them as devices and tools to analyze the text as you read it.
Going back to the notes, page 51, we come to
the second major area of sanctification, the “aim of sanctification.” These are
all related, you can’t separate them, they’re not airtight one from
another. In God’s sight it’s the
glorification of Him, but when we talk about aim in this context we’re talking
about as far as we as creatures. I drew
a diagram, and look carefully at the diagram and visualize Adam on the left
side where it says “before the fall.”
BEFORE
THE FALL AFTER
THE FALL
Aim of loyalty Aim of loyalty
------------------------
Impediments of
sin
There’s a point here that we want to
remember. Sanctification preceded the
fall. This requires a little bit of
analysis, so let’s go back to our diagram about good and evil. We want to
notice something here. What did God
tell the first man He made? He gave him
duties, have dominion over the earth, rule it wisely, take care of the Garden
of Eden. He had all these different
things that he had to do. Was that
obedience or disobedience? It was obedience. Where was that? It was back prior to the fall.
Was there an issue of experiential sanctification prior to the
fall? Yes there was. What was it? It was to develop historical loyalty to God. Adam and Eve did not come made with
historical loyalty to God. They came with a potential for loyalty to
God, they were sinless people, but just because they were sinless people did
not mean they did not have to go through a process of choosing, of exercising
their chooser in history. And that was
what the test was. The test was given
prior to the fall.
When we come into the New Testament, turn to
Hebrews 2:10, to the Second Adam, the Lord Jesus Christ, and notice a peculiar
verse. This is talking about a sinless
person, no evil, no sin nature, He hasn’t sinned, but in verse 10 it says, “For
it was fitting for Him, for whom are all things, and through whom are all things,
in bringing many sons to glory, to perfect the author of their salvation
through sufferings.” “To perfect,” does
that mean that Jesus had to be perfected?
Yes. Does that mean He was
imperfect in the sense that He was a sinner?
NO, it means that He was in a sort of state like Adam and Eve were, they
were potentially righteous, but they had to exercise choosers in actual real
history, and Jesus had to. Jesus grew
spiritually by His obedience. Heb. 5:8,
notice this one. Even though He is
sinless, “although He was a Son, He learned obedience from the things which He
suffered.” “Learned,” but He’s God and
man, why does He have to learn? He has
to learn because the destiny of man is to generate historic obedience to
God. The aim is always to develop loyalty
and loyalty doesn’t come instinctively, it comes by exercise.
The point is that in this aim of
sanctification we have the ultimate goal is for us to develop this loyalty to
God. We’ll call that obedience,
whatever you want; I just use the word loyalty because it fits the Old
Testament a little bit better: loyalty to God, which equals righteousness. That’s what the word righteousness
means. This is why we are going to be
judged. Believers will be judged in the Bema seat, unbelievers will be judged,
the Great White Throne, but every person will be judged. Why is there a judgment in the future for
all of us? And why is the judgment
about our works? The judgment is to
produce value, to assign value to the righteousness that we showed in
history. There is a judgment and it is
based on works, works borne of faith, and also for the non-Christian the works
borne of unbelief. But you look at the
text and it’s talking about being judged.
What’s the judgment all about?
Again, the judgment is to put a value on loyalty to God.
God thinks enough of this that He assigns a
value to it, and that’s what the judging is all about. He would have done that to Adam and Eve and
He did that to the Lord Jesus Christ.
The Lord Jesus Christ’s righteousness that He generated was exchanged
and applied to us. That’s where we get
our position from, His righteousness.
If Jesus had disobeyed there wouldn’t have been any righteousness to impute
to us. The righteousness that is
imputed to us comes about only because the Lord Jesus Christ used His chooser
correctly throughout all of His life.
So He generated a perfect righteousness and proved the point that a
member of the human race can meet the destiny originally created in Genesis
1. Jesus, as it were, is a test pilot,
He took all the modus operandi that God had for man, put it through the
wringer, faced Satan himself, and proved out God’s program. That’s why the Lord Jesus Christ is the
captain of our salvation. He is the
test pilot that pushed the envelope and proved that it works. So no man from that point forward can say
that God’s assets don’t work. Jesus
proved it does work. He made the case
that the human race was not a bad creation.
He made the case that the Father knew what He was doing when He created
man to do what He wanted man to do.
That’s the ultimate. The diagram shows that after the fall,
sanctification is harder because of impediments of sin, but the process is no
different. There’s still a need for testing, for trials, for opportunities to disobey
or opportunities to obey. It doesn’t go
away after the fall. It becomes harder
after the fall, but it is not something that was created by the fall. The aim of sanctification: and I give some
verses, Psalm 8 is a great passage in the Old Testament to show you that idea.
On page 52 I made the point, what do we learn
that is new from this past period of history?
What has this helped us understand more about the aim of
sanctification? What did we pick up?
What imagery do our minds, our hearts have of the Old Testament history that
we’ve gone through over the past several months? “When the Old Testament prophets revealed the New Covenant in the
kingdom period, they opened up powerful
energy sources for developing a loyalty to God. The fact that God would not only save the
nation from Egypt but also save the nation
from itself showed clearly God’s fantastic love. The fact that after
the Sinaitic Covenant had been conclusively shown to be broken, God would
pursue His people for a final restoration revealing His incomprehensible
grace.” That’s what’s new out of this
portion of the Old Testament. You would
not know that if you did not have Kings, Samuel, Nahum, Jeremiah, Isaiah,
Ezekiel, etc. etc. etc.
What those books give us is an added revelation
of God’s character so that we’ll be motivated out of thankfulness, now out of
fear. Love and thankfulness are far
more potent motivators than fear of the stick.
That’s what these prophets are giving us. The motivation comes about, not from the Sinaitic Covenant where
cursing, cursing, cursing, cursing if you disobey, but the motivation is Israel
I love you, you are like a woman who has gone out and committed adultery, I
welcome you back to my home and to my bed.
That’s the God of the Old Testament. That’s how He feels at this period of time in history. So it gives this powerful thing and I’ve
summarized it with the word gratitude; gratitude grows as revelation grows. You cannot look at how God operates in
history without increased gratitude, and that gratitude itself becomes a mode
of power to live the Christian life.
“In everything give thanks, for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus
concerning you.” It’s hard to give
thanks, and that’s the quickest barometer to know where you stand spiritually.
My wife has done a lot of counseling with
people in all kinds of problems, and one of the first questions she always asks
is, have you given thanks. Duh! If you get that answer, that’s like taking
the temperature, just like the doctor sticks the thing in your mouth and checks
it out. Have you given thanks? That’s
the spiritual thermometer, because that tells you right away what’s going on in
your spirit. You don’t have to go into
a profound analysis, don’t have to have a PhD, just do that simple test.
Next on page 52 we come to the tools that God
uses in sanctification. We want to
understand these tools, because in the history of the church, these tools have
been covered up, and Satan loves to confuse Christians about these tools. He loves to divert attention away from these
tools or have us think that these tools are insufficient and we always need
something else in addition to these tools.
What are the tools: the Word of God and the Spirit of God. The means of sanctification, one was law in
the sense of revelation, and the other was God’s grace. “No one can believe apart from the Word of
God or revealed law.” No matter how
hard you try, you cannot work up faith.
I’m sure you’ve all struggled, I have in my
family, with unbelievers in your immediate family, you sit there and do your
best to witness and you get so discouraged after a while. What does it take? Peer pressure won’t do it, nagging won’t do it, arranging all
kinds of little deals won’t do it. The
only guy that’s good at arranging deals is God, and He has some whoppers,
totally unexpected moves on the chess board, and we have to let Him have that,
because until a heart is opened to content and truth, you cannot believe. You can’t believe, it’s a revelatory thing
that has to happen and it’s a supernatural thing that has to happen. The best thing we can do is live a life that
brings some glory to God in the vicinity of a testimony, and the other thing is
whenever we do speak the gospel try to be as clear as you possibly can and
avoid false issues. Try to major on the
center of the gospel because that’s what has to be understood. The rest will
come, but until the gospel crashes in—“faith comes by hearing and hearing by
the Word of God,” and nothing else, not the word of men, not a lot of
sermonettes, not book reviews, it’s going to be the Word of God that gives
people clarity.
That’s the number one thing, and I point out
in that paragraph, “Thus the Old Testament prophets again and again critiqued
the nation on the basis of Moses’ words.” Underline that, we’ve watched four
centuries of the prophets. How did they
operate when they came to a military crisis, did they say gee, what was course
101 in military tactics at West Point?
They didn’t go to that. That was important but that wasn’t what was
happening. Gee, we forgot Milton
Friedman’s course on Capitalism, or gee, we forgot our history. What they
emphasized was the words of Moses, and by the words of Moses we mean all five
books, not just the law of Sinai. They
critiqued on the basis of the Word of God.
Let’s think about something. If the prophets critiqued on the basis of
Moses’ words, how should we approach our problems? When we critique our lives and we try to see what is going on in
this situation, where do we go? We go to the same source, the Word of God. You may say gee, I don’t know that much
about the Word. Well, use what you do know. The amazing thing is, the more you
use it, the better you know it. You
can’t use ignorance as an excuse, everybody knows something. You couldn’t be here and be saved and not
know something of the Word of God. So you start there and you just keep
building and building. That’s number
one and I quote 2 Tim. 3:16-17. In our day it’s a big debate that’s going on,
it’s going on in seminaries right now.
Certain classes that are training men for the ministry do not
operationally believe this. In theory
they say so, but in practice they don’t.
[blank spot: “All Scripture is inspired by God and profitable for
teaching, for reproof, for correction, for training in righteousness; [17] that
the man of God may be adequate, equipped for every good work.”]
… people have a very diminished view of
this. I know why they do, because
number one they probably never read it, you can tell that by looking at the
book, if you blow dust off of it on the shelf you know they’ve never read it,
but they’re full of opinions about how crummy this book is, and all the errors
in it. I get so tired or hearing all
the errors in the Bible, you always hear that.
What are they? Well, I read
somewhere… yea, right, try reading this first.
The first problem is nobody reads it, and the second problem is we have
TV minds that can’t understand it when they do read it. So with all that going for us that’s why the
Bible appears to be an impotent peripheral piece of literature. It’s peripheral because we’re the ones that
are peripheral, the human race.
The second thing that God uses in
sanctification is the concept of grace.
This is a hard one and it tends to be harder in our own circles, because
after a while you get so hard-nosed about the Scripture that you begin to drift
into a kind of legalism that says I can obey the Scripture with the energy of
the flesh. One of the things that Jesus
was trying to do in the Beatitudes was to take the text of the Old Testament
and explain it, because by the time of Jesus these Pharisees were walking
around, and these guys thought they knew the text, but they didn’t know the
text. They had a very trivial view of
the depravity of man. They had this
arrogant attitude that they knew more than anybody else, that they were so good
and everybody else was down there.
Legalism always does that.
Martin Luther had a great quote in his epistle to the Romans about
legalism and grace. He said that “the
godly people that are the real godly people are more interested in their
shortcomings than their neighbor’s shortcomings.” That’s the mark of grace.
It’s very easy to get an attitude where you
compare your area of strength against Joe’s area of weakness; I always come out
on top because I don’t get into the area where he’s stronger than I am. Legalism violates the grace principle. We saw that, as we point out in the
paragraph. “Again and again the Old Testament prophets went back behind the
Sinaitic Covenant to the Abrahamic Covenant to find their confidence in
God.” I mentioned the tension that went
on in the prophets; I kept saying tension, tension, tension. What tension? Tension between Moses saying Israel if you don’t obey this you’re
going to suffer, with the fact that they were disobeying it, and yet God was
promising a positive destiny for the country and it was full of disobedient
people. Tension!
What did the prophets do? The prophets came back and said Israel, the
only reason why you’re still walking around is because of the promises to the
fathers. When they said that, what did
they mean? The promises to Abraham,
Isaac and Jacob. They didn’t go back to
the Mosaic Law because remember we went through the rib proceeding, the lawsuit proceeding. Why did we do that? To show that on the basis of the law they
had sinned and the law was convicting them.
They had no appeal in God’s courtroom on the basis of that law
code. They had to go behind the law
code to the grace of the Lawgiver. That
was the lesson learned, not just for New Testament times, that was learned in
the Old Testament. Old Testament saints
realized they were sinners in God’s sight.
Last week we went over this, I gave quotes out of the Old Testament, Psalm
143, where they knew very well that standing in God’s courtroom they never
could claim righteousness on the basis of obeyed law. When they faced God they
had to realize that no man, including me, is justifiable in God’s sight on the
basis of obedience to the law. We’ve
all “come short of the glory of God.”
So they had to cast themselves upon God’s grace.
These are the means of sanctification. If you chart your own Christian experience
you will see, if you had the time and could log in a journal everything going
on in your life, and then looked back on that journal, you would see a kind of
swaying motion going on. For a while we
would absorb the Word of God and things are going great. Then we’d start to get a little arrogant and
say I know this, etc., and the boom, we’d have a big disaster or
something. Then we’d pick ourselves up
and we’d come over and walk on grace.
Then we’d wander around out here for a while and get involved in silly
stuff because we didn’t know what the Word told us to do. So the Christian life is kind of going
between these two means and we have to protect ourselves. These are the two key tools: grace and the
Word of God. A local church that honors
those will be blessed.
The last one we want to talk about is the
dimensions of sanctification. We said
life has two dimensions. We have to look again because the Scripture talks
about these, it doesn’t put a label on them so you can read and get off track a
little bit. The best way I know of describing it is to think of growth. You can plot the height of a child as he
grows verses time. There are
spurts. You have growth with time. You look at that curve with a microscope you
perhaps could see where there was some declining health, periods of decline
(not in the height situation, just in the general health situation). It doesn’t stay level, it goes up or it goes
down, and that’s the same spiritually.
So we have to distinguish between the general trend, which is maturity,
growth, versus what is happening in the moment, am I obeying today or
disobeying today. That’s why the Lord
Jesus Christ in the Lord’s Prayer said, “Give us this day our daily bread,” it
doesn’t say give us tomorrows. I always
want tomorrows, Fridays, Saturdays, two weeks from now, but all He ever gives
me is today. That’s because He wants the emphasis on now. I can’t decide what’s going to happen two
weeks from now; I can only decide what’s happening right now.
A woman in our congregation has a neat way of
expressing this, an idea that is very picturesque. She says you walk into the moment, and I don’t know what that
does for you in your imagination, what it conjures up in my mind’s eye is a
room; I think of a series of rooms, and you walk into the moment, you walk into
this room. That’s the present tense, and as we walk into the moment, that idea
that we’ve walked from a room into another one, the next one, the next one and
the next one, what that does is if you think about time as a series of these
rooms, present moments, and you’re walking from one to the next one to the next
one to the next one, what did we say is the attribute of God that corresponds
to time? The one that corresponds to
time is that God is eternal. What does that mean? It means He dwells in all
moments of time. So we’re in this moment;
God already is here, in the next moment.
He already has all kinds of assets there at that moment; He has the Word
of God ready for us. He has His grace
ready for us; He has some problems in there for testing in that room. He’s got all the furniture in that room
before we walk into it. He’s been
there, He’s arranged the furniture; He has the scene all set up. Just like in a play, there is each
individual act and the actors walk into the moment, they walk into the
scene. If we can visualize our lives
the same way, God sets the stage before we get there. If we can just remember that when the stuff starts flying, wait a
minute, that’s part of the scenery, that’s part of what He has all set up in
this room that I’m going to right now, and it isn’t an accident because He
thought about this moment before. In
fact God had all eternity to think about this moment.
We were so busy back here, our minds were
going like this all over the place, and He has very calmly set up this
moment. His promises are true, “all
things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called
according to His purpose.” All of
that’s setting up as stable assets sitting in that room. Then boom, we walk into it, and we see the
stuff flying all over the place, and we don’t stop and see the furniture. The furniture is all the stuff He’s provided
for that one moment. Not for the next
moment. When you go to the next act in the drama, remember the stage, they
change everything, all the different stuff was being changed. The room changes, we go to the next moment,
maybe it’s a whole new set of furniture.
But it’s the same God who is the playwright. He’s the same God who set that scene, who wrote it into place and
we walked into it, after He wrote it.
So it’s kind of a neat idea of bringing out the dimensions of
sanctification.
On page 53 we want to introduce what we
learned new about this. We learned a
little about it when we talked about the conquest and settlement. I want to go to some sobering passages of
Scripture in the New Testament that are analogous to the passages that we
studied in the prophets, where Israel was getting clobbered. I’ve listed them in order and it starts with
Acts 5:1-10, we’ll just highlight some of these verses. All these verses pertain to believers, not
to unbelievers. Acts 5:3, here we have
a man and his wife who were in disobedience, evidently influenced by their
peers, worried about how they might look among the group, not doing their
giving or whatever they were doing as unto the Lord, but worried about what
society thinks, what my peers thing, what my parents, children or what somebody
else thinks, and they faked it, they were trying to produce a phony work. It
was a gimmick situation. “But Peter
said, ‘Ananias, why has Satan filled your heart to lie to the Holy Spirit,”
think about what is implied here. The
word “filled” is the same word used in Eph. 5:18, filled with the Spirit. Wow!
Do you see what this is saying, how far Satan can control a Christian. Powerful stuff here! Satan has filled the heart of a believer to
lie to the Holy Spirit.
Then verse 5, “And as he heard these words,
Ananias fell down and breathed his last,” that is God killing a believer in
discipline. That can happen. Is this strange? No, it isn’t strange.
Think of what we just got through studying for 400 years in Israel’s
history—destruction, military invasion, ravishing of the population, killing
the men, raping the women, taking prisoners of war, all this horrible stuff, people
dying of starvation. Those were all
God’s people, and who was responsible for letting that happen? God was.
Go back to position over experience. What do you do? You don’t go from experience to position,
you don’t argue well God’s clobbering me, therefore I’m not saved. That’s going from experience to
position. You go from position back to
experience; I’m getting clobbered, why? Because I am a Christian and He expects
certain things of me and I’m feeling the Father’s rod, therefore that immediately
suggests what the solution might possibly be.
It’s altogether different than going from experience back to
position. We go from experience; we hop
over to the position then come back to experience.
Let’s go to I Cor. 5:1, another Christian in
the New Testament text. What we’re
looking at is the New Testament analogue to the Old Testament severity of
God. Our God is severe. Here was a case of fornication, incest. This was going on openly and the whole
congregation knew about it, and in verse 5 Paul says, “deliver such a one to
Satan,” look at that, that’s a believer, “deliver such a one to Satan, for the
destruction of his flesh, that,” purpose clause, “his spirit may be saved,”
wow, that’s the ultimate discipline upon a Christian. God doesn’t mess around.
Let’s go to 1 Cor. 11:28-32, we read this
every communion service but it’s sobering stuff here because it applies to all
of us. Look what it says in the
communion passage. Verse 30, “For this
reason many among you are weak and sick,” weak can be mental as well as
physical, “sick, and a number sleep,” a number have died. So can God be nasty in His discipline. Yes, here is how God disciplines. I bet a lot of this occurs and we kiss it
off as medical. I’m not saying that
every medical problem is God’s discipline.
I’ll show you why not, there are reasons for suffering other than
direct. But for now, just notice the
severity of God.
We could go to other verses; I list them for
you in that paragraph, but turn to one
I don’t have listed, 1 Tim. 1:19. This
is a different situation, we’ve seen Ananias and Sapphira in a situation kind
of putting on a phony front, we saw a case where you have incest and all kinds
of flagrant immorality, now here’s a cute on, in verse 19-20 you have a false teacher. “Keeping faith and
a good conscience, which some have rejected and suffered shipwreck in regard to
their faith.” So they’re believers.
[20] “Among these are Hymenaeus and Alexander, whom I have delivered
over to Satan, so that they may be taught not to blaspheme.” Their problem was false doctrine. Once again we have Christians, as believers
turned over to suffering including sickness and all the way to death. This should not surprise us, knowing the God
of the Old Testament kingdom, because this is exactly how He treated His people
then.
We want to conclude referring to the chart on
page 30, lest people draw wrong conclusions.
I want to remind you that there are many reasons for suffering, and you
can’t always go from suffering to thinking there’s a problem. What happens, however, is a simple test, if
there is suffering just do what 1 Cor. 11 says, check our hearts, ask God to
reveal to us if there’s any wicked way in us.
That’s a legitimate prayer, that’s what Paul means when he says examine
yourself, “let every man examine himself,” do a check out, and if there’s
nothing that the Holy Spirit puts on our minds, then it’s not a disciplinary
issue. There are other reasons for
suffering.
The chart on page 30 is just to remind us
there are eleven different reasons why people suffer in the Bible, at
least. The left column is all because
of us, we’re directly involved in those six kinds of suffering. Notice number five and six: suffering
pattern number five is the Fatherly chastening of believers, and we’ve just
seen some very severe examples of that.
We didn’t have time to go into 1 Cor. 3 but there would be suffering
pattern number six, denial of rewards.
The rewards can be denied and that affects our eternal status in the
kingdom of God. That is a disciplinary
function. That’s also for screwing up
spiritually. So God treats us as big
boys and girls. We’re “in Christ” and
there’s such a thing as responsibility.
We’re held accountable.
On the right side, there are five different
reasons why you can suffer; it has nothing whatsoever to do with what you did.
That’s what makes life hard because all of a sudden you get blasted off your
feet and you wonder what did I do to deserve this? Nothing necessarily, in fact, it very well might be that you got
blasted off your feet because God thinks you can bounce pretty well, that you
are ready to take it and that He’s dumping on you for a very important reason,
other things in His kingdom. Look at
the other things in those five reasons.
First one, an evangelistic wake-up call. That would be applying to
unbelievers. Unbelievers walk along
happy, you know, dumb and happy, and all of a sudden everything goes to [can’t
understand word] and some of us have come to Christ that way. Something happened and, you know, it’s great
to look up when you’re lying flat on your back. That’s what that’s talking about.
Number eight, a nudge to advance spiritually,
get us out of our comfort zone to a point where gee, maybe we should trust the
Lord in this situation and we grow.
Number nine, evidence to non-Christian who may be observing you and you
don’t know they’re observing you. Maybe
people in your family, maybe relatives, maybe neighbors, people at work, that
can see how you respond to a pressure situation and they’re thinking to
themselves, hey, wait a minute, I don’t think I could do that, and they’ll come
and say gee, what’s the deal; a witnessing opportunity.
Number ten, another reason for suffering,
evidence for edifying believers. How
one believer will suffer and the rest of us will look at that and we’ll say
gee, God was faithful in her case or his case, therefore I might get into a
situation like that and I know God’s history here, I’ve seen it, I’ve seen God
bless So and So in the middle of that, so that encourages me. That’s another
reason, evidence for edifying believers.
And finally the spooky one, number eleven,
that’s also mentioned in the New Testament, and that is because other eyes are
watching, the unseen principalities and powers are watching. They’re strange ones, there’s a passage in
the Bible that says when you meet together there are unseen eyes watching us,
walking around for some reason. The
angels are learning from us. You
wonder, what can they learn from us?
Apparently they’re learning how God works; probably learning His sense
of humor, and how He deals with us in all the different areas of life. But that can also be a reason for suffering.
When you put all these eleven reasons
together you really can’t unravel it all, you have to revert in practice to the
Lord, is there something here for me to confess, is this the rod of discipline,
the rod of chastisement, or is it some other reason. What we have to conclude from these eleven reasons is we know
enough, not exactly what each microscopic part is but we know that God has
sufficient reasons for allowing this to happen in our life, and there’s eleven
possibilities. So when we think, well God, what are you doing here, think of
the eleven, check them all out. If it
can’t be one of these eleven then He might be possibly working in the
situation, of course. So God is a
reasonable God who loves us, but He also is the God of the Old Testament
kingdom who means business and He wants us to be loyal to Him and He wants that
worse than our personal comfort in the moment.