Foundation for Living - Lesson 5
November 6,
2005
And
this is the record that God has given to us eternal life, and this life is in
his Son. He that has the Son has life; and he that has not the Son of
God has not life. 18He that believeth on him is not condemned: but
he that believeth not is condemned already, because he has not believed in the
name of the only begotten Son of God. For
there is no other name under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved. 8
For by grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God, 9 not
of works, lest anyone should boast. 38 For I am persuaded that
neither death nor life, nor angels nor principalities nor powers, nor things
present nor things to come, 39 nor height nor depth, nor any other
created thing, shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in
Christ Jesus our Lord. 36
For of Him and through Him and to Him are
all things, to whom be glory forever.
Amen.
Before we begin this morning we need to make sure we
are in fellowship so we will have a few moments of silent prayer, to give you
the opportunity to use 1John if necessary. 1 John 1:9 says 9
If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all
unrighteousness.
Confession of sin has to do with the
ongoing life of the believer after salvation. At salvation all our sins are forgiven, we are cleansed; we
have eternal life, which can never be lost. But as we continue after salvation, we still sin, and it is
necessary to be cleansed of that sin, because any sin breaks fellowship with
God, and it also stifles the sanctifying ministry of God the Holy Spirit, which
produces spiritual growth. So we
have to make sure that we constantly stay in fellowship, which means we need to
admit our sin to God, He cleanses us, and we are restored for forward
momentum. So let’s bow our heads
together and pray.
Father, again, we express our
gratitude to You, for all that You have provided for us. You have supplied abundantly for this
congregation, and in the last 18 months of our existence, You have taken care
of so many things for us. We recognize
that all that we have, and all that we are is due to Your grace provision. Father, we thank You that we have Your
word. That Your word is a lamp
unto our feet and a light unto our path.
And that it is through Your word, the light of Your word that we see
light. That it is Your word that
provides the frame of reference for understanding, evaluation and interpreting
of the events of our lives, and gives us an understanding as to where we are
going. Now Father, as we continue our study on the Foundation for Living, that
You have given us in Your word, we pray that You would focus our attention
again on Your word. And that You
would use it through the teaching ministry of the Holy Spirit as He fills us
with Your word, to understand how these principles apply to our lives and You
would encourage us, challenge us and strengthen us with the truth of Your
word. We pray this in Christ’s
name. Amen.
A couple of questions I want to
address this morning that I want you to think about. These are rhetorical questions; I don’t want anybody
answering right off the bat. What
is it that shapes your thinking?
Have you spent time thinking about that? I know many of you have, some of you haven’t. I remember
asking some body once, what exactly is your philosophy of life? The response was, well, I am not a
philosopher.
We all have a
philosophy of life. Some people
have an inconsistent philosophy of life that has not been thought out, and
consists of whatever makes them feel good at the moment. Other people have a rigorously thought
out philosophy of life that has been inculcated in them through parental
training, or a coach, or military training, or something like that. But every decision that any of us makes
in life, the values, the priorities, the way we conduct ourselves, the way we
handle obstacles, the way we face opposition, the way we deal with
disappointment, the way we handle grief and loss, all flows out of that general
frame of reference that comes from a world view. There are basically two world views according to the
Scripture. The Bible says you
either think like man thinks, or you think like God thinks. It is very simple. Some people say there are hundreds of
ways to think. No, there are
basically two ways to think. There
is the way God thinks, and the way man thinks. We call the way God thinks, divine viewpoint. This is the unified viewpoint that is
expressed to us in the Scriptures, in the 66 books of the Bible, from Genesis
to Revelation. It is a unified
view of life. In contrast to that,
there is a human viewpoint.
This is made clear
in Proverbs 14:12 There is a way that seems right to a man, But the end thereof is death.
That word translated ‘way’ is
a word that means path, or road, or taking a particular direction. It emphasizes the fact that in life we
make choices. You choose the path
you are going to follow, the direction you are going to take. You have an option; you can do it God’s
way or man’s way, and man’s way ends up in death. This emphasizes a principle that we need to begin any
endeavor in life with the end in mind.
For those of you who came in the front part of the new church this
morning, you noticed we are activating that principle as you saw all the desserts
laid out on the table there, we are beginning with the end in mind. We may not be having lunch, but
everybody will be satisfied with all the desserts ahead of time.
We have to begin
with the end in mind. Moses
recognized this when he gave his parting speech to the nation Israel in
Deuteronomy 30. At that time we
have Moses’ parting words to the nation Israel. This is not the Exodus
generation; this is the conquest generation, the generation that will go into
the land under Joshua. And so Moses gives a parting speech. There is a rehearsal of the
requirements of the Mosaic Law that is the constitution that is going to
establish the framework for Israel’s life. There is reminder of all the stipulations that God put in
the Law. The regulations, the ordinances, the statutes in the Law. This is to define the way of life that
will characterize the nation Israel as a kingdom of priests, set apart unto
God. Included in that document
there are statements of warnings to the nation if they are disobedient. God specifies the blessings for the nation, but also there
are warnings of discipline if they disobey Him. But they are given the option in Moses’ speech to live
according to God’s way or man’s way.
In Deuteronomy
30:19 Moses says, 19
I call upon heaven and earth as witnesses today against you, - that phrase, heaven
and earth, is not talking about the physical solar system, stars and galaxies,
and the physical planet earth, those are terms that refer to the inhabitants of
heaven and the inhabitants of earth, it is a recognition that these decisions
are right at the center of the angelic conflict -
that I have set before you life and
death, blessing and cursing; therefore choose life, that both you and your
descendants may live;.
Now the focus of
this part of the series is foundation for living, how believers are to live
their lives to grow to spiritual maturity and the basis that God gives us in
His word for doing this. In the
Old Testament, that basis was the Mosaic Law. And Moses is challenging them, saying, You have a choice to
make, and it is a daily choice, an hourly choice. We don’t just make a one shot decision, walk an aisle,
dedicate our lives to Jesus, do anything like that. It is a moment-by-moment decision, are we going to chose
life, or are we going to chose death?
That is the end result. Are
you going to choose to walk according to God’s word, or are you going to walk
according to your own human viewpoint?
Whatever system of thought that may be, whether it is consistent or
inconsistent, the issue boils down to your volition. We need to begin with the end in mind. Whenever we make a decision, it is
going to lead us towards one path or another. That is what Moses laid out for the nation Israel at that
point in their history.
We see how this
works out in the nation Israel.
The more I study the Old Testament, the more I see something that is
just brilliant in the mind of God, in the way He lays out the Old
Testament. It is different from
any other so called ‘religious’ book in the world. When you look at the Old
Testament and the life of Israel, what is happening in the framework of this
nation, and the way it is given to us, it is, at a national level, a picture
for us of what transpires in the life of the individual believer in the church
age. And just as the Old Testament
nation was given a choice, that if they followed the Lord, followed His word
and applied it, there would be blessing and prosperity, or there would be
cursing and judgment and suffering by association, the same is true for the
church age believer. And we
see it work itself out through the history of the nation. That first generation went into the
land, and they followed the principles laid out in God’s word. There were a few mistakes here and
there, you had the sin of Akin where he did not follow the Lord, and there was
divine discipline, and eventually the conquest generation sort of petered out
in terms of their obedience. And
as time went by, they began to compromise, until they reach the end of their
obedience, and they started letting the Canaanites live in the land.
And God judged them
for that. He told them He was
going to leave the Canaanites, certain numbers of the Canaanites, Jebusites,
and Perizzites and the other Canaanite tribes, in the land to test them. This would constantly be a source of
testing for them, to see if the nation would obey God and apply the principles
of the Mosaic Law, the Ten Commandments to worship only God, to do away with
all idols, to stay away from the paganism of the culture, or not. Of course we know that there were
a few periods in Israel’s history when they obeyed and applied the Law, and God
blessed them. Under David, and in
the early years of Solomon, there was tremendous blessing. Then there was a failure, and by the
end of Solomon’s reign, God is going to discipline the nation. There was split that occurred because
they failed to apply the word. The
nation split into a Northern Kingdom and a Southern Kingdom. The Northern Kingdom was known as the
Kingdom of Israel, and the Southern Kingdom was known as the Kingdom of
Judah. Nothing good was ever said
about the Northern Kingdom of Israel during its entire existence. King after king after king was
described by the same phrase, that “he did evil in the eyes of the Lord and
followed in the sins of Jeroboam, the son of Naboth.’ Jeroboam was the first king in the North who led the rebellion
against Reheboam in the south.
Eventually, God came through on His promises to judge the nations. The Northern Kingdom was taken out
under divine discipline in 722 BC, and they were destroyed. After that, there was another period
of, for lack of a better term, revival, or return to the Lord, under
Hezekiah. It was not the most
profound time in Israel’s history in terms of their obedience to the word.
The most profound
time of consistent obedience, at least at a governmental or national level, in
terms of the leadership that was given to Israel, occurred under Josiah, and
this in covered in 2 Kings 23. All
of this is a way of illustrating the principle of doctrinal orientation from
the Old Testament. Josiah became
the king when he was eight years old, just a young boy. But he had tremendous positive volition
toward God. I don’t know how much
doctrine he knew at that point, because there was not a knowledge of the Word. In fact, they did not know where the
Mosaic Law was. It had become
lost. The Book of the Covenant got
buried somewhere in the Temple, stuck back on some shelf, and had been
gathering dust for over a hundred years. Nobody really knew about what God had
promised in the Mosaic Law. There is
no doctrinal orientation whatsoever.
There is no understanding of what the Old Testament taught at all. But they still have the Temple, which
has fallen into tremendous disrepair.
Due to their absorption of paganism, they had erected idols in the
temple to Baal and the Asherah, and they had developed a whole priesthood for
the Canaanites gods and goddesses, that was functioning inside the Temple in
Jerusalem. Not only that, it had
fallen into disrepair due to the fact that several times there had been
military incursions into the South under the fourth stage of divine discipline,
described in Leviticus 26. The
kings in the South had paid tribute, or bought off these invading kings by
taking the gold and silver in the temple, melting it down, and using it to pay
tribute to these invading kings. They had taken gold off of the doors and doorposts of the
Solomonic temple. They had taken
some of the furniture inside the temple and melted it down. It was a tragic place. It was run down. When he was about 16 years of age,
Josiah decided that the temple needed to be refurbished, they needed to go in
and overhaul the whole place and clean it up. In the process, Hilkiah, the high priest, suddenly
discovered something buried behind some rubble in a back room, it was the law
of Moses. He sent it to Josiah who
sat down and started reading it and realized, once again, who Israel was. They no longer knew they were as a
covenant nation to God. They did
not know why God called them as a nation.
All of this had
been lost in the history of Israel.
They had no orientation to history, they had no orientation to reality,
they had no orientation to what God was doing in their life whatsoever. As a result, the whole nation and
society was in a state of collapse.
As at result of reading the Law, all of a sudden, Josiah, as the king,
is now becoming oriented to reality.
He is becoming oriented to history; he knows God has a plan and purpose
for the nation Israel. God has a
destiny for the nation Israel; God has stipulations and requirements and
obligations for the Nation Israel.
The same is true for us; God has a destiny for every believer, an
eternal destiny. But, the only way
you are going to know that is by studying His word. God has obligations and
responsibilities that are incumbent upon every believer in the Lord Jesus
Christ. But the only way you are
going to know that is if you study the word. God has ways in which society is supposed to function. But the only way we are going to know that
is if we study His word. The Bible
is very clear about social institutions, we call them establishment
principles. From the first divine
institution, which is human responsibility, to the second divine institution,
which is marriage, to the third divine institution which is family, to the
fourth divine institution, which is human government and policing our own
society, to the fifth divine institution which has to do with separate national
entities, each of these define what man has to recognize socially, in order for
there to be stability in the human race, in his nation, in his country in order
for that to be perpetuated.
And these
principles are true for everybody, believer and unbeliever alike. The only way we come to know these
things, ultimately, is through the revelation of God’s word. Through empiricism and rationalism you
can approximate the importance of individual responsibility and
accountability. You can, perhaps,
understand something about the importance of marriage and family. But
historically, if you look at cultures that develop from pure paganism, whether
it is in Africa, or tribes in South America, or South East Asia, or in the
Pacific Island, you look at those cultures, and the further they get away from
the word of God and its roots historically, the more marriage and family breaks
down, the more they get into ideas related to polygamy, and matriarchal types
of marriage set ups, where there is not a husband and wife, or a mother and
father. The father comes along and
he is only responsible for getting the mother pregnant, and the child is raised
by the mother’s family, and the father is not present. All of these things represent a
deterioration from the truth. The
more you get away from God’s original design, the more those societies break
down and fall apart. That is why
this issue of same sex marriage is fundamental. If we as believers are going to be salt and light in our
society, that means we act as a preservative and as a source or conduit for
truth into the culture, then that necessitates certain kinds of decisions when
it comes to the voting booth.
Because that is how we, as believers, impact the culture around us. All of that had broken down in Israel;
there was no orientation to the word of God, no knowledge of the word of
God. This is rediscovered, and
Josiah begins to make some changes.
And as a result of discovering the word, it transforms his governmental
policies. It transforms the
structure of government and the values that are being worked out in
society. And this was most evident
at the Temple. They cleaned out
the Temple, cleaned out the idols to the Baaliim, the Asherah. They executed all the priests by
stoning them to death. They went
to the high places where the Temple prostitutes, male and female, plied their
trades up in the groves and the high places, and they tore them down.
When we come to 2
Kings 23:25, the divine viewpoint commentary on Josiah is: 25
Now before him there was no king like him, who turned to the LORD with all his
heart, with all his soul, and with all his might,
The word for
‘turning’ is the same word used in the Old Testament for repenting. That is what repentance means, to turn
away from human viewpoint, and turn to God. It is not an emotional term, or a term of remorse. It is a term related to focus. The same thing is true when you get
into the New Testament. The Greek
word, metanoeo, has to do with
changing the mind. It is making a decision to go from negative to positive, to
trusting God.
So, he did
not turn to the LORD with all his heart, with all his soul, and with all his
might according
to all the Law of Moses; nor after him did any
arise like him.
This was God’s last expression of
grace to Israel before He took them out.
Despite everything Josiah did, the people never became positive. You cannot enforce obedience to God’s
word and positive volition from the top down. You cannot enforce it through
law. The people cannot respond spiritually through some sort of intimidation or
pressure from an external authority.
Even though God blessed and prospered the nation tremendously, during
the period of Josiah’s reign, when he died, they slipped right back into
idolatry because the people never changed. They never oriented to the word of God. The king oriented to the word of God,
but the people never did. As
a result of that, the nation slid further and further into idolatry and
paganism. They were taken out in
divine discipline in 586 BC. There
was the 70 years of the Babylonian captivity, and only a remnant returned to
the land from Babylon at the end of the Babylonian captivity, under two or
three different returns, beginning in about 536 BC. When they returned, they
were so fearful of idolatry as the cause of their failure, that the
hyper-sensitive religious crowd, the legalists, began to focus on all these
different ways they could make sure they did not violate the Mosaic Law again,
an go into idolatry. So they went
from one type of religion to another, a legalistic observance, that again
enslaved the people, but to a different kind of religious system. And this was just external religious
legalism.
Now when Jesus cam along, He had a
confrontation with that external religious legalism, and this is recorded in
John 8. Jesus is now in the Temple area.
The Temple we talked about earlier under Josiah was destroyed by
Nebuchadnezzar and it was rebuilt by Zerubbabel. And
under Herod, it was known as the second Temple. The Temple of Zerubable was
under a reconstruction project; they were making it more magnificent than it
had been since the days of Solomon.
Jesus is teaching there, and there was a crowd of Pharisees and
Sadducees, and as is typical, they are constantly challenging Him on everything
He is teaching. In verse 31, after
Jesus has been in this confrontation with this large crowd that includes the
Pharisees, He is then speaking to a subset of that crowd: believers. He says,
to those Jews who believed in Him - He has a mass crowd here, not everyone is a
believer. Most of them are
Pharisees, but there is a group there that is believers. So John makes it clear, that in this
next statement, He is not addressing everybody in general; He is just
addressing those in the crowd who are believers. And He says
31 “If you abide in My word, you are
My disciples indeed.”
The point that He is
making is, to demonstrate that we are students of the Lord, that is what
disciple means, it is not a word that is synonymous to believer, that if you
are going to demonstrate that you are a student of the Lord, then we abide,
where? In His word. And, as a result of abiding in His word, that is continuing in His word, studying His word, He says in verse 32 And you shall know the truth, and the truth shall
make you free. Now, instantly, in this section we
see there is a correlation between the phrases My word in verse 31
and truth in verse 32.
He is equating the two. The
concept of truth He is appealing to here is not some relativistic truth, that
what is truth for me may not be truth for you. Or, this is truth for me because it works for me, it makes
me feel good, but you have your truth for you that works for you and makes you
feel good. That is the concept of
truth that is popular today in our culture. This is a concept of absolute truth that is grounded in the
communication that comes from the Lord Jesus Christ, and ultimately from God,
and is recorded for us in His word.
So He says, You shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free. In this passage He is reiterating the
truth that man is born into a condition of slavery. No matter what kind of political situation you are under,
you are still a slave if you are a slave to sin. This is what He goes on to say in verse 33. The Pharisees answer Him and say, well,
we are Abraham’s descendants. They
were so caught up with their racial heritage, they thought that just because
they were Jews, physically, they were better than everybody else and were
inherently free.
So, 33They answered him, "We are Abraham's descendants[b] and have never been slaves of
anyone. How can you say that we shall be set free?" And
Jesus answered them and said34, “Most assuredly I say to you, whoever commits sin is
a slave to sin.
So, another thing we note as we go
through the passage, that there is a contrast between knowing truth, that sets
you free, but the slavery is one that is related to the slavery of sin. Now to understand this it takes us back
to a basic concept we have taught already, and that is, what is truth? Truth is the nature of reality. What is reality? Well, the Bible teaches that reality is
what God made it. Reality has its
source in the thinking of God, because God, in eternity past, planned out all of creation, so that every detail in creation interconnects
precisely with every other detail in creation, whether it is the physical
creation, or the spiritual, immaterial realities. Everything is interconnected. But only the mind of God perceives and understand everything,
totally, intuitively and
instantly. He does not have
to learn anything; He knows it all.
The only way we can learn about it is either through experience or
through reason. If we are not
paying attention to what God informs us concerning His creation, then we are going
to be divorced from reality to the degree we are ignoring what God says about
reality. So truth is ultimately
grounded in the mind of God. It is
reality as determined by God as the Creator. God tells us that if we are going to have freedom, we have
to align our thinking with His word.
Another word for aligning our
thinking with His word is the word
orientation. We have to
orient our thinking to His word, or orientation to doctrine. Now this begins, of course, with Jesus
Christ. Jesus said to him, I am
the way the truth and the
life. So if we are going to orient
to truth, if our thinking is going to be founded upon that which is consistent with
the reality that God created, it starts with Jesus Christ.
He said I am the Truth.
He says, I am the way the truth and the life and no one can
come to the Father except by Me.
This is the foundation in salvation,
that we can not have a right relationship with the Creator unless it is through
Jesus Christ, who is the Redeemer.
He paid the penalty for our sins.
We have to orient to that truth which starts with salvation. If you do not start with salvation,
there cannot be orientation to truth.
All other systems are fraudulent.
Some seem to fit better than others, because the
devil is a realist. He knows what
reality is like. So all the
systems he promotes have to include a certain amount of consistency with reality, or they won’t work at all. The
most evil systems we run into are the ones that are 95, 96, or 97 % true.
Because it is the other 2 -3 % that creates the problem, and distorts
everything else. Only the Bible
claims to have absolute and total truth.
We see this in Jesus High Priestly prayer, that He prayed for His
disciples and for the Church, the night before He went to the cross. In that prayer He prays to the Father,
Sanctify them by means of Your truth, Your word is truth. Sanctification is just another word for the Christian life and Christian
growth. How do we grow as
believers? It is by means of Your truth. If we are going to grow as believers, it has to come through an
orientation, or an alignment of our thinking to His word. If we are not aligned to His word, then
we are living in a deceptive world that is divorced from reality, and no matter
what else is going on in our life, we are divorced from reality.
This is the fifth spiritual skill
that I have been emphasizing in this basic series, and the foundational
spiritual skills. We are only
going to cover these first five before we go on to the responsibilities of our
priesthood, which we will begin next week.
The first spiritual skill is
learning to confess sin. We have
to learn to do that. We have to
learn to admit our sins to God and be cleansed so that we can recover spiritual
growth, fellowship with God and the Holy Spirit can continue His sanctifying
ministry. Then we have to learn to
walk by means of God the Holy Spirit.
That is the command of Galatians 5:16, and it works in conjunction with
the filling of the Holy Spirit, which, more precisely, is being filled by means
of the Holy Spirit (Eph 5:18). Then we get into the three foundational skills
for growth. The faith rest drill,
which we discussed two weeks ago, grace orientation, which we covered last week,
and doctrinal orientation.
The faith rest drill focuses on the
dynamic of the walk, which is faith. We walk by faith and not by sight. The emphasis in the faith rest drill is
mixing faith with the promises of God.
We mix our faith with the promises, procedures and principles that are
laid out in God’s word. We walk by
means of the Spirit, the second spiritual skill, and we walk by means of
faith. But faith is never directed
to just itself. It is not just
faith in faith. It is faith in an object. And that object is expressed as God’s
word. This is why we see a
connection between the faith rest drill, grace orientation, and doctrinal
orientation. These three skills
interconnect and overlap with one another. In grace orientation we understand that the principle
dynamic in God’s plan is grace. It
is grace for salvation. It is grace for spiritual growth. In God’ grace, He supplies everything,
which means we have to approach God on the basis of humility and the fact that
He provides everything. It is
based on who He is and what He has done, and not on us. True humility develops into teachability.
Teachability means we have to
submit our thinking to the challenge of God’s word. It is the opposite of arrogance. In grace orientation the emphasis is on submission to the
authority of God, this is why Moses was called the most humble man in the
ancient world, because he was the most authority oriented individual in the
ancient world. When you become
authority oriented to the word of God, you realize that the word of God is
going to dictate to us the nature of reality, how to think, what to think and
what reality is like. We see this
developed in passages such as 2 Timothy 3:15-17. Paul is directing this to his young protégé Timothy. He is reminding Timothy of the
centrality of the Scriptures in his life.
Doctrinal orientation, in other words. He reminds Timothy of the impact of the Scripture in his
life growing up, he says, 15 and that
from childhood you have known the Holy Scriptures. What were these Holy Scriptures? It was the Old Testament, not the New
Testament. When Timothy was growing up, the New Testament had not been written.
So Paul is focusing on the Old
Testament Scriptures, which, he says, are able to make you wise for salvation,
through faith which is in Christ Jesus.
So don’t fall into this trap so many Christians do – well, we live
in the Church age, the Old Testament does not really have value for us. This shows us that the Old Testament
has tremendous value for church age believers. It is not the primary source of teaching for church age
believers, but it is the foundation for everything that is in the New
Testament.
Paul goes on to say
in verse 16, All Scripture is
given by inspiration of God, more correctly, we know that means
that all Scripture is God breathed, it has its source in God, not
in man and is
profitable for four things, for doctrine, the Greek word is
***didaskalia*** which means teaching or instruction; second, for reproof
, ***** to
challenge our thinking. It is
pointing out what is wrong. People
today do not like that. Whatever
you say, do not tell me that I am thinking something wrong. You are going to offend somebody, step on their toes.
They do not want to come to church and be told their thinking is wrong. They don’t want to hear doctrine. They just want to feel good. They want to come and be motivated a
little bit, and be encouraged, and be told how wonderful they are. We do not believe in that here because
it is not Biblical. It moves from
reproof to correction, to straighten people out. Reproof focus on, this is where you are wrong, and
correction is, this is how you straighten it out and get right. And the last phrase is, for
instruction in righteousness. The Greek noun is paideia, and it
means discipline. Another word
that is not real popular today, discipline. Discipline in righteousness, that is experiential
righteousness, application of the word of God in fellowship, and the advance in
the spiritual life.
The purpose is then
given in verse 17, 17
that the man of God may be complete, that is whole, be what God intends you to be, thoroughly
equipped for every good work.
Let’s go back and
point out a couple of things related to what verse 16 says. First, we learn that Scripture is
designed to teach. It is didactic
in nature. It is designed to
instruct, to inform , to give data,
to give facts, to give structure to our thinking. As a result of that, we can say
that the purpose of Scripture is to teach, and the purpose on our side is to
learn. We are to learn. We are to submit ourselves in authority
to the teaching of God’s word, in humility, so we can learn what God has to say
to us. This is not learning for
the sake of learning, for the sake of intellectual stimulation, or the
acquisition of new information, in and of itself. It is not so that we can go home and have doctrinal notebooks
three inches thick and have a whole row of them on our shelves, because we have
taken notes all of these years. There is nothing wrong with that, but it is not
the end in itself. It is designed
toward an ultimate goal. It is not
how much we know, ultimately, it is how much we apply. You always hear somebody come along and
say, if we just applied more of what we know, we know so much already, if we’d
just apply 20% instead of 2 %, we would all be so much better. But that is such a shallow way of
approaching knowledge, because, whatever area of life you are in, whatever area
of expertise, whether you are in construction, or a doctor, or finance,
whatever field you are in, you always know a tremendous amount more than what
you actually use. That is the way
it is in life.
The more we learn,
the more we are going to apply.
But we never seem to apply, at any given time, more that 1 or 2 % of the
entire body of knowledge we have in whatever the field is. But the more you learn in your field as
a whole, the more you are going to apply.
It is not about, well, we need to just apply more of what we know. We need to learn more and more and
more. And that learning challenges
our application. But it does not
stop with learning, it moves toward application. That is the point James makes in the last part of James 1:
it is not prove yourselves doers of the word, it is to become something you
weren’t before, to become appliers or practioners of doctrine, practioners of
the word. That comes from
orienting and aligning our thinking to the word, which is doctrinal
orientation. That is the purpose
of instruction, to help us to know what reality is, what God’s standards are,
what His values are, so we know what we are to align our thinking toward.
The second thing
Scripture is given for is reproof.
To point out the areas where we are wrong headed, where we have wrong
beliefs, where we have picked up ideas that sound good, from the culture around
us, from our parents, teachers, from our peers. These ideas sound good, and they may even work for us, but
they are not truth. They are not
Biblical. They are not part of God’s word. Reproof points out all the areas where we are
wrongheaded. Correction points out
what the correct path is in opposition to the error. And then discipline; we are to discipline ourselves in
righteousness, in the application of the word. This is that ongoing training that God is giving us. That is another possible translation of
paideia. Instruction is a poor
translation; it should be training or discipline in righteousness. This provides the foundation for going
forward. As we go forward, as I
said earlier, we have to begin with the end in mind. What is the end?
Whether you like it or not, the end is given in Romans 8:28
&29. Romans 8:28 is a promise
familiar to many of us.
28 And
we know that all things work together for good to those who love God, to those
who are the called according to His
purpose. 29 For whom He foreknew, He also predestined to be conformed
to the image of His Son.
There is the goal,
from eternity past. God set a
destiny for you, that is what predestination means. Pre means before, and destined has to with your destiny. And
so, before time began, God determined your destiny. And your destiny, as a believer in the Lord Jesus Christ is
to be like Jesus Christ, to be conformed to His character.
The attributes of
the fruit of the Spirit define the character of Jesus Christ, love, joy,
peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, 23gentleness and
self-control. Against such things there is no law.
This is the
character of Christ; that is your destiny. Now, whether you like it or not, God is taking you
that way. Sometimes we want to go
in a different direction and we get into divine discipline. God has to beat us up the side of the
head with a two by four to get us back on the right path. The path He has set before us is
conformity to the character of Jesus Christ. How do we get there?
We get there through walking by means of the Holy Spirit, and walking by
faith. The faith is directed
toward an object, and that object is the word of God. It is only it is only by
learning the mind of Christ (1 Corinthians 2:16) that we can learn to think as God thinks, and thus orient
our thinking to God’s thought and reality. As we advance in the Christian life, laying those
foundational skills, we start with confession of sin, we move to walking by the
Spirit and then we have three skills that inter connect and overlap. Those are
the faith rest drill, grace orientation, we recognize that everything we have
is from God and we must humble ourselves under the mighty hand of God, and as a
result of our humility and teachablity, we put ourselves under the authority
and teaching of God's word, and God's
word then addresses every area of life, so that we learn to interpret
the situations and circumstances
of our life in such a way that we can handle them Biblically.
Two illustrations
from Scripture that you can think about, because they show us how people who
were doctrinally oriented handled problems. The first comes from David. David, faced Goliath. His dad sent him to his older brothers
who were with the army of Saul, and he shows up, and the entire army of Saul,
every one of them is cowering. For
over a month now, Goliath has come out every day shouting this challenge. And nobody is going to go forward and
fight Goliath. Saul is out of
it. Nobody is thinking Biblically,
nobody is doctrinally oriented. David
comes up and as soon as he hears Goliath
shout this challenge, he says, why do you let this uncircumcised
Philistine say this? He is so
oriented to what God has said, in terms of the Abrahamic Covenant and the
Mosaic Law, that he is interpreting the circumstances around him with in the
framework of what God has revealed.
That enables him, then, to know what the solution is, because he is
doctrinally oriented.
The next situation
is the episode in Joshua 2, when the two spies go in to do a recon on Jericho, and they go to Rahab’s tavern, and Rahab, the prostitute, is going to hide them, because
the Gestapo, or local gendarmes are headed to get these spies and throw them into POW camp. She sends them up on the roof, and
course this is where, she is a believer but she does not have a lot of
doctrine, and she comes under the pressure, we see the fact that because she
does not have an orientation to reality through doctrine, she tries to handle
the problem through lying. God
recognizes that we are all failures, and we make mistakes like that, so it does
not create a major problem. But
the doctrinal orientation in the story is what is going on with the two
spies. It is hidden right in one
little verse; most people read
right past it and do not recognize what is going on. While she is down at the
front door lying, saying they already left, they took the road out of here
toward the east, and if you hurry, you can catch them. Now put yourself in the position of the
two spies. You are hiding, your
life could be at stake, you are hiding from the local police who are searching
for you, banging on the door downstairs, so you are taken up on the roof, there
are a lot of bundles of flax and a storage shed and you are hiding. Now what are you doing? Are you going to run over to the
parapet and just kind of listen and overhear the conversation, or are you going
to sit here in prayer, and say, Lord, protect us, we don’t know if they are going to come in or not? How would you respond? If we look at Joshua 2:7&8, the
local constabulary is misled by Rahab, so they take off in pursuit and as soon
as those who pursued them had gone out , they shut the gate.
8 Now before
they lay down, she came up to them on the roof, what have they been doing
while she was down there trying to fend off the Gestapo? They are laying out there bedrolls,
getting ready to go to sleep.
Remember, they are part of the conquest generation; they are not like
the spies at Kadesh Barnea, who were scared to death of the giants and the
fortified cities of the Canaanites.
They learned the principles of the faith rest drill and doctrinal
orientation while they were wandering around in the wilderness. So while she is down there dealing with
the police, they are totally relaxed, totally oriented to doctrine, because
they know that God has promised to give them the land. So they are not up there
praying, listening in to the conversation, trying to figure out that if
anything goes wrong, they can jump of the back of the roof and run away, they
are getting ready to go to sleep.
They have a complete relaxed mental attitude. They oriented to grace,
that God is giving them the land, and they understand His plan for Israel, so
are consistent with that. That is
what doctrinal orientation does for you.
You can interpret the events, the obstacles, the challenges, and the
problems in life Biblically, and handle them correctly through God's solutions.
Father we thank You
for the opportunity to study Your word this morning, to be challenged by it, to
be refreshed by it, and to focus on the fact that You have provided everything
for us. And that Your word gives
us absolute truth. As the psalmist
said, it is in Your light that we see light. Father, we pray that if there is
anyone here this morning that is unsure of their salvation, or uncertain of
their eternal destiny, that they would take this opportunity to make that both
sure and certain. Your eternal
life is based not on what you do, but on what Jesus Christ did on the
cross. Scripture says that the way
to have eternal life is to simply believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, trust Him,
to rest in the fact that He did all the work. There is nothing we can do to add to it, to maintain it; it
is simply a matter of faith alone in Christ alone. Father we pray that You
would challenge us with the things we studied today. And we pray this in Christ’s name. Amen.