Romans 8:2 (ESV) For the law of the Spirit of life has set you free in Christ Jesus from the law of sin and death.
The 2 tables of the law, are the guardrails which keep us from going over the edge, when we fail to follow Christ.
1 Peter 2:9–10 (ESV) 9 But you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for his own possession, that you may proclaim the excellencies of him who called you out of darkness into his marvelous light. 10 Once you were not a people, but now you are God’s people; once you had not received mercy, but now you have received mercy.
My wife has worked as a career counselor. And if there is one thing we’ve discussed about this, it is how few people ever truly find gainful employment doing something they really love. Those who do, count it a treasure indeed.
So it is I wonder how often we as Believers reflect on the glorious, holy “employment” we are blessed to have as Christ’s people? I think of this when I read these short verses above. It is easy for us to get caught up with the wonder of God’s electing love and grace, without reflecting on WHY we have been so gloriously blessed.
So we read that Believers are: “a chosen race”; “a royal priesthood”; “a holy nation”; “a people for his own possession” – but these are not ENDS in themselves – as stupendously wonderful as they are. We are indeed all these things if we are in Christ – but it is “THAT YOU”… – do not miss those absolutely crucial words – “THAT YOU”. Why are we all these things? So that we might have the high joy and privilege of proclaiming (making known in word and experience) the “excellencies” of this God who called us out of darkness, into His marvelous light. And He has 2 “excellencies” in mind in particular: 1. Grace. To make it known that God is a God of grace – of lavish, unmerited favor. 2. Mercy. That God is a God of deep, unfathomable mercy toward us and our sinfulness. This is what Peter unpacks in verse 10.
1. Grace. Once we were not a people – but now, we are GOD’S people – His own family. How more “graced” can we be? To have been His enemies, and now to be His children. Beloved – THIS, is grace.
2. Mercy. Once we had not received mercy – we were abiding under the just wrath of God. But now? We have RECEVIED mercy, we have been forgiven. Wondrously, marvelously, miraculously washed in the “soul-cleansing blood of the Lamb.” We are a mercied people.
Can you recall the days before you were graced and mercied in Christ? And can you take a few moments today to discharge your newly appointed occupation making it known that this God in Christ Jesus is abundant in grace for all who come to Him, and immeasurably merciful to all who flee for shelter under His cross?
This, is an occupation of love!
Exodus 25:16–22 (ESV) And you shall put into the ark the testimony that I shall give you. 17 “You shall make a mercy seat of pure gold. Two cubits and a half shall be its length, and a cubit and a half its breadth. 18 And you shall make two cherubim of gold; of hammered work shall you make them, on the two ends of the mercy seat. 19 Make one cherub on the one end, and one cherub on the other end. Of one piece with the mercy seat shall you make the cherubim on its two ends. 20 The cherubim shall spread out their wings above, overshadowing the mercy seat with their wings, their faces one to another; toward the mercy seat shall the faces of the cherubim be. 21 And you shall put the mercy seat on the top of the ark, and in the ark you shall put the testimony that I shall give you. 22 There I will meet with you, and from above the mercy seat, from between the two cherubim that are on the ark of the testimony, I will speak with you about all that I will give you in commandment for the people of Israel.
Let us never forget this – there is but one place where God will meet with us, at the mercy seat, at the Cross.
Exodus 12:15 (ESV) “Seven days you shall eat unleavened bread. On the first day you shall remove leaven out of your houses, for if anyone eats what is leavened, from the first day until the seventh day, that person shall be cut off from Israel.”
The cleaning out of leaven from the homes of the Israelites is one of the most intriguing concepts from the Old Testament. What is really going on here? And to be honest, theories abound. The most popular (perhaps) being that leaven (yeast) is a type or picture of sin. It seeps in, infects the whole and puffs up. However Jesus uses the picture of leaven more positively in Matthew 13:33 as one of the ways to understand the Kingdom. Its not all just one way.
The question I would like to consider here is; how is it being used in this particular text? And I think we see the shades of at least one answer in two following verses – 12:34 (ESV) “So the people took their dough before it was leavened, their kneading bowls being bound up in their cloaks on their shoulders.” And 12:39 (ESV) “And they baked unleavened cakes of the dough that they had brought out of Egypt, for it was not leavened, because they were thrust out of Egypt and could not wait, nor had they prepared any provisions for themselves.”
The simple thought I would like us to consider here is this: Leavening bread takes time – and they were to expect to be leaving right away. The Israelites were to be thinking about their readiness to respond when God led them out, and they were to have nothing which delayed them in their obedience.
Let me then extend this idea to us. Beloved, what area of obedience in your life are you still lagging behind in? What are you waiting for? There is to be no delay in our serving God. He has called, and we must go – now.
Oh, that our hearts and minds would be in a constant state of readiness to follow Him everywhere and at all times.
Father – forgive our tendency to cling to this present world, rather than to abandon it and its values at the sound of your sweet voice in the Gospel. It is the voice of deliverance.
Nehemiah 8:8 (ESV) They read from the book, from the Law of God, clearly, and they gave the sense, so that the people understood the reading.
One more attempt at making one of my most beloved hymns a bit more accessible to a wider audience. From “Be Thou My Vision” –
vs. 1
Be so lovely to me, that you capture my heart
Let nothing else ever take up that part
First in my thoughts every day, every night
Christ above every joy and above every fright
vs. 2
Let me see all truth through the lens of your Cross
All of my wealth in the blood of your loss
Father of all making me your true child
Jesus by dying there, brought me home, reconciled
vs. 3
Father please protect me in the heat of the fight
You are the good in me, Be my delight
Teach me how to trust you and rest in your power
Lift me up to yourself in my faltering hour
vs. 4
Nothing is of value, compared to your grace
You are my treasure both now and always
Although my love is poor as its been from the start
Your love is infinite and redeems my poor heart
vs. 5
High King of Heaven, Lord Jesus the Son
Bring me to you when this life is all done
Let nothing ever tempt me to shrink from your call
Conquer the whole of me and be Ruler of all.
Psalm 23:1, 4 & 5 (ESV) “The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want…Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death…You prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies.”
Temptation lies. Always. It is in believing its lies that we succumb. And 3 of Temptation’s most effective lies are undone in this most familiar of all the Psalms. In it, the Good Shepherd truly shepherds our souls.
Note first, that Temptation begins by asserting that whatever it is it is proposing – is something we NEED. “YOU NEED THIS.” The explanation as to why we “need” it, is never given. It is left for us to supply. It is implied that we’ll be missing something essential however if we do not give in to the desire. We’ll be less whole, less human, less of a man or woman – somehow less than we ought to be without it. And to this lie, Christ our Lord is proposed to us as our Shepherd – and because He cares for us, we “shall not want.” If He hasn’t supplied it, we do not “need” it. We won’t be bereft of something essential. He knows our true needs, and knows them better than we do – and especially more than Temptation does. NO! Christ is our Shepherd – He will not let us lack for anything truly essential.
The second lie Temptation uses to reason us into sin is: “Without it you’ll die.” The loss quotient is ramped up considerably. If I don’t have X, I’ll simply die! Life won’t be worth living! It will do true, irreparable harm to me as a human being. I’ll suffer a mortal wound. LIE! Even though we walk through the valley of the shadow of “death” – we need not fear any evil. Christ is with us! His rod and staff guide and comfort and keep us from the real danger. Temptation has lied again. I won’t die, you won’t die if this particular desire isn’t met. We once again cast ourselves back on to trusting the Good Shepherd who has pledged His very life unto death – to keep us from harm.
The third lie seems ludicrous on the surface – and yet in the moment of temptation, it is most powerful. “You’ll miss out on what is best and be left lacking. And, everyone else will know it.” Temptation moves us with this argument with all of its subtleties. But once again – it is a lie. The truth is, Christ prepares a table – a feast – for us, right there in the presence of our enemies. If only we’ll open our eyes to see it. If only we’ll stop to satisfy our hunger on what He HAS provided, we’ll find no appetite for what He hasn’t. No, maybe our favorite “dessert” won’t be there – but what He has set out will be delicious, and healthful and satisfying. In fact, our cup is SO full, it runs over. But Temptation has convinced us the cup is empty – and will never be filled unless we pursue that which the Shepherd has warned us will kill us.
Trust the Shepherd beloved. He knows us and loves us best. In staying by His side, surely goodness and mercy will follow us all the days of our lives. And at last, we will dwell in His own house – forever.
Psalm 22:1 (ESV) “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me? Why are you so far from saving me, from the words of my groaning?”
Matthew 27:46 has Jesus taking these words as His own upon the cross. Once more His substitutionary work – His acting in OUR place takes center stage. For, these are the words mankind ought to have been crying out to God all along. But we did not perceive how our sin had separated us from Him. In our darkness and hardness, we thought there was but a minor rift – if at all. Our own sense of the uncrossable chasm placed between God and ourselves due to our sin had little impact upon us. We have been so fallen for so long, that we have come to see the pain and sorrow of this present age is just the natural order of things. We do not take in the fact that every ache and pain, every sorrow and grief, every disaster, natural and man made – every tragedy and crime, every atrocity of man screams out to us that something is horribly, horribly wrong. But it did not escape our great Substitute. He fully grasped our dire estate. He groaned out what we were too dull to comprehend. He appeals to the God of Heaven on our behalf. Bids Him to take notice of our dread condition. And He was heard. He uttered these words on the Cross – even as His own blood was atoning for the sin that put Him there. What a marvelous Savior He is.
1 Corinthians 14:18–19 (ESV) “I thank God that I speak in tongues more than all of you. 19 Nevertheless, in church I would rather speak five words with my mind in order to instruct others, than ten thousand words in a tongue.”
Once we’ve been a Christian for a while, we settle pretty easily into the Church culture in which we find ourselves. With that comes a familiarity with certain language – what some dub “Christianese.” Some of that lingo is ours because it is the language of the Bible – and some of it not. And, because many Evangelical Christians also identify strongly with our historical roots in the Reformation and the Puritans, a certain amount of exposure to dated (albeit poetic) phraseology is also included in our hymnody.
Not surprisingly then, some new Christians have a difficult time imbibing all of this and adjusting to it. While someone like myself loves the musicality and cadence of “King James” English, and the sheer beauty of the poetry of many of our hymns – at times, such usage may be inaccessible to our newer bothers and sisters. It may even be needlessly off-putting. After all, our goal is to bring men, women and children to be followers of Christ – not 19th century hymnophiles.
Let me be clear here. I am NOT suggesting we “dumb” anything down. Where Biblical truth is at stake, we must bring people up to it. In that respect, we must educate faithfully. At the same time, we also need to “translate”. We must – without one iota of compromise in terms of content – nevertheless make the eternal and unchangeable truths we preach and teach accessible and understandable to the widest possible spectrum of people who have come to Christ in faith.
Maybe we are not “Judaizers” doctrinally, but are some of us guilty of being “Victorianizers” culturally?
This came home to me very powerfully in a recent exchange. After a worship service, a wonderful new Believer queried – “what does “Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing mean?” ‘ “
It never dawned on me that such phraseology might not be instantly understood – let alone appreciated.
Paul’s caution regarding the exercise of “tongues” in the Corinthian assembly can without damage (I think) be applied to the issue at hand. Do we sometimes “speak in tongues” that do not benefit our brothers and sisters who are either new to the faith, or have no Reformation-Puritan-Victorian reference point? It is worth considering.
In my own consideration of it – I launched out in an attempt to take the august and blessed hymn mentioned above, and translate it for one who may not have been initiated into my own personal preferences. I have no doubt the poetry suffers greatly. But if the germ of the messages meant is conveyed more clearly to some – is it not a sacrifice we may need to make in some cases?
I only ask us to think about it some.
Jesus, source of every blessing, help my heart to know your grace
May your never ending mercy overflow in joyful praise
Teach me how to sing your praises, just like the angels do above
Make your name most precious to me, high above all earthly loves
Up till now your love has blessed me, and you’ve brought me to this place
So I know you’ll bring me safely all the way by your good grace
I didn’t want you when you found me stumbling, lost, outside your love
But your grace broke through and won me, and you bought me with your blood
How I owe you all I am Lord, such a debt I cannot pay
Endless love and boundless mercy make me love you more each day
Still in my sin I fail to feel it, Spirit of God renew my eyes
Capture soul, and mind and body, be alone my highest prize
To your table we have come Lord, to your body and your blood
Symbols of your death at Calv’ry, where you took our place in love
Nailed to the Cross for all our sinfulness, carrying all our guilt and shame
Satisfying all God’s anger, that we might be free from blame
Nailed to the Cross for all my sinfulness, Burying me in your own grave
Rising up to justify me, doing all my soul to save.
Baruch Maoz is a native born Israeli – and a sound baptistic, Reformed theologian. Until quite recently, he pastored in Israel. I met him several years ago at a F.I.R.E. conference in Sharpsburg Georgia. And I was instantly taken by his passion for the Jewish people, the glory of Christ, and his approach to God’s Word.
This book – is profoundly important in dealing with the rise of, and the sometimes strange issues that accompany – the Messianic Jewish movement in America. It is clear, insightful, charitable – and above all Biblical. This is an absolute MUST read.
I cannot recommend it highly enough.
Yep – its that time again. Need to get away and recharge. I need to step away now (even though I am not gone yet) to get things ready for my absence, and hope to be back in the saddle on the 14th of September.
I’ll only be out of the pulpit for 2 Sundays.
Until then – take advantage of the Archives, and/or the links to the many other excellent sites I have listed.
See you soon!