You are an extraordinary person.
You are smart, kind hearted, generous, well educated, and good looking. But,
as a minister of the Gospel, it is my duty to give you the message from God that
all those good things are not good enough. You still bear within your soul the
spiritual death that Jesus calls sin.
Even though we have known of the existance of
sin from the beginning of the human race, Recognizing the existance of sin, in
this generation, has become politically incorrect. Even the best of Churches, the best of Christians, even while preaching today's watered-down version of
the Gospel, have dodged the issue. People use meaningless euphemisms, pretend
that the issue isn't there, or isn't important.
Today's tolerant society has accepted as a normal part
of conversation the common and unrestricted use of every expletive in the English
language.
Words that used to be against the law to say in public,
and would bring the speaker a fine, no longer even cause a shudder of shock or offense.
There is a word, however, that still sets people's
hair on end. This word continues to cause immediate resentment and anger, and
evokes openly hostile response, whether the hearer is a church member or not.
Even dedicated Christians, ordained ministers, invent new phrases, ignore the Bible, and strangle their syntax, in
order to avoid having to use this word, even in sermons from the pulpit.
It is that terrible, unspeakable word, that we are
going to talk about today.
I'm speaking of the dreaded and feared R word.
The prophet Ezekiel gave a sermon on this subject,
in Ezekiel, chapter 18.
Starting at the 19th verse. The soul that sins, it shall die. verse
21. But if the wicked will turn from all his sins that he has committed, and
keep all my statutes, and do that which is lawful and right, he shall surely live, he shall not die. All his transgressions that he has committed, they shall not be mentioned unto him. In his righteousness that he has done, he shall
live. verse 23 Have I any pleasure at all that the wicked should die? saith the
Lord God, and not that he should return from his ways and live?
verse 24. but
when the righteous turns away from his righteousness, and commits iniquity, and does according to all the abominations that
the wicked doeth, shall he live? All his righteousness, which he has done, shall
not be mentioned. In his trespass that he has trespassed, and the sin which he
has sinned, in them shall he die.
It might be good to take a look at the three words
the Bible uses to define and explain sin.
First, there is the word sin. The word sin has two meanings. It has the common meaning of
the bad things we do.
But it also has the deeper meaning of the weakened condition of the human soul that makes us
"not perfect". A very
common expression is, well, we're "only human." The Bible says that God
created man just a little lower than the angels, and crowned him with glory and honor.
And yet
as much as we were originally created to be in the image of God, and in
spite all of the astoundingly brilliant things the human race has accomplished, we still find ourselves locked in a never
ending struggle with an invisible force inside of us that continually pulls on us and drags us away from the glory we were
created for.
Next, we have the word trespass. Trespass means the actual breaking of God's law. Sin
in your soul is the power that tempts you, and makes the trespass look like something you really want to do. And so you give in to the power of sin and commit the
trespass.
There is a third word that God uses to define sin,
and that is the word iniquity. Now what is iniquity? Iniquity is a condition in your soul which causes you to love
your sinful condition and enjoy your trespass. He was wounded for
our transgressions. He was bruised for our iniquities.
We are all sinful.
The weakness of human imperfection makes us tend toward wanting to do the things that God has forbidden us to do. So we commit the deed, and transgress.
And then we find that we enjoy the transgression, and want to do it again. That
is iniquity.
He was wounded for our transgressions. He was bruised for our iniquity. He bore our sins in His body
on the tree.
When God told Adam and Eve, don't touch that tree, He wasn't trying to be mean.
The very creation of man in the image of God required that the man be given a choice to make between obedience and
disobedience.
The creation of Adam in the image of God could not be completed until this new living soul made the choice to follow
that which was good and right and the direction of God. People talk about the
Fall of Adam. In actuality, he never fell.
Because, he was not completed yet. By choosing to disobey his creator,
he fouled up the completing of himself.
The power of sin came into the soul
of Adam, and something died inside of him. Now the spirit part of man
was in a shambles, with all the powers of the dark side fighting for control.
And that weakness for the darkness of sin was passed on to Adam's children. By one man's disobedience, sin came into the human race. A spiritual darkness came into the human heart, and the human race lost its way. We all know the story of the first murder. Cain got
jealous of Able, and killed him with a rock to the head.
Since then the history of the human race has been a history of, murder, betrayal, adultery, theft, abuse, cruelty, backbiting, backstabbing,
selfishness and just plain meanness.
Romans 3:10
There is none righteous, no, not one.
The Lord said, The soul that sins, it shall die.
If the unrighteous shall die, and and there is
not one righteous, than we are all dead.
And that is the part of the message of Jesus
Christ that no one wants to accept. Jesus told Nicodemus, he that believes not
is condemed already, because he doesn't believe in the Name of the Only Begotten Son of God.
He that
believes on the Son has eternal life, he that does not believe shall not see God, because the wrath of God abides on
him. That's pretty heavy stuff. The
natural question anyone would ask is, why? Why does my eternal life depend
on me accepting that the identity of Jesus Christ is God in the flesh? Why can't
I worship somebody else, like Budda, or Krishna, or my honored ancestors, or the Great Pumpkin?
The Bible says that we are all dead in our trespasses
and our sins. Because transgression against God separates us from the life of
God. And if we are separated from the life of God we are dead.
It's like the electric cord on your lamp. It can be the prettiest and most expensive
tiffany lamp ever created.
But you flip the switch on it and nothing happens. You change the bulb
and try it again. You still don't get any light.
You put in another bulb, and yet another bulb. And you begin to
get frustrated. What's wrong with this lamp?
Then you see the cord sitting on the floor. The lamp is not plugged
in to the source of its power. It is a perfect lamp. But it is not going to give one bit of light until it is plugged into the source of its power. But electricity is invisible. How are you going to find it
to plug your lamp into it? Well, you have this wire running through your wall,
and it connects to a socket that receives the prongs on the end of the cord. Insert
the prongs into the socket that is connected to the wire, and you get your light.
But you cannot plug that cord into just any old hole
in the wall. The one dug by your resident mouse won't work.
It has
to be the one connected to the wire. Because the wire has the power in
it. And Jesus Christ is the only God with the power of light in Him.
Your soul needs to come alive by being connected to
the life of God. But God is invisible, just like electricity.
How can you connect to something invisible? By making it visible. And that is what Jesus Did. He made God
visible by making Himself a human body.
Now you recognize that He is the source of power for your soul. Just like
you recognise that the electric socket is the source of power for your lamp. Once
you recognize that the socket is the source of the power, you plug the lamp in.
Once you recognize that Jesus is God in the flesh,
and He is your source of power, to bring your soul to life, then you will receive Him, and plug your soul into His power.
But if you refuse to recognize Him as the source of
your divine power, you will never receive that divine light, and your soul will stay in the dark, and stay dead.
To receive that divine light, you have to stop, turn
your soul around, and go the other way.
John the Baptist had no problem with that dreaded R
word.
Matthew 3. In
those days came John the Baptist, preaching in the wilderness of Judea.
Saying REPENT!
REPENT!
All it means is stop going the way you are going, and
turn around and go the other way.
But the minute someone says that repenting is the way
to find God, all Hell breaks loose. "Don't try to proselitise me!" "Don't try to shove religion down my throat!" Everybody
who has ever heard the Gospel has hollered these words in one way or other. Even
people who finally give in and repent, these words were their first response.
And everybody who reacts this way thinks that they are the first one who thought it up.
I have heard many people, over the years, cry out in frustration, "why doesn't God do something about the evil in the world? Well, actually, He already did. And the
human race has largely been angry at Him about it ever since.
God showed His love for us, in that while we were yet
sinners, Christ died for us, to redeem us from the power of sin. Isn't
that doing something about the evil in the human race?
Even before we cared about it ourselves. Before we knew Christ existed,
He was weeping for us, and shedding His blood for our souls.
But when we hear of his command to "repent", it makes us nervous, it makes us angry. Everybody
loves the account of Jesus making the five thousand fish sandwiches. And I think
everybody's favorite story is the one where he throws the furniture around and throws
out the money changers in the temple. But when He says, turn from your sins,
because they have killed you, and I want to restore life to you, everybody goes into some kind of self defense mode and starts declaring that they are just as good
as everybody else and don’t tell me I need a savior. When Jesus says
“come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest”, He is not dragging you to your
death. He is trying to drag you to your life.
Your job is to stop kicking like a scared mule and let go and let Him do it.
Everybody's favorite sinner is King David. That's because he committed everybody's favorite sin, and people can feel a kindred spirit with him. Let's take a look at what happened. His story is the perfect example of what happens when you don't stop, turn around, and go the other
way.
David started out as a young boy with great talent
and great honor. He would sit out in the field with his father's sheep, and compose
songs of praise to the Lord . He had faith, and devotion, and trueness of purpose. Even while he was fighting the wars with Saul, his father-in-law, that eventually
put him on the throne of Israel, he kept
his faith and his integrity strong and faithful. But he had within him the same
weakness called sin that every member of the human race has.
And one day, he let down his guard.
The first mistake David made, in his dallyance with
Bathsheba, was to forget something very important. Every transgression
of God's law, committed, hurts somebody.
In this case, the injured person was Uriah, Bathsheba's
husband. He was one of David's most honored Generals, and a good friend.
Remember when Mrs. Potipher was after Joseph, in Egypt? Joseph
did not declare, Mrs. Potipher, you're homely as a mud fence and I wouldn't have
you on a bet. No. He said, Mrs. Potipher, your husband trusts me to run his entire
household. I cannot betray his trust.
David should
have thought of Joseph's words, in relation to his treatment of Uriah, and backed off.
Repented.
We see in David's situation the serious destructive
power of sin. It started with one little deception. It's not going to hurt anybody. We're just cheating for one
night. But that one little deception got bigger and bigger. Because that's what sin does. It grows. It gets more complicated. The cheating went on for more than
one night. Now David and Bathsheba
really loved each other. One misstep gets another.
Now, the line is so old and cliched, people laugh at
it. Dear, I'm going to have a baby.
But back in Israel at this time,
adultery was against the law. It was a capital offense. They were a new country, and serious about enforcing the moral law that God had given Moses on Mount Sinai.
So now, David takes one more step downward. There was forgiveness in the Old Testament, even for this. This
was the place where David should have stopped, turned around, and gone the other way.
Repented. But by now David had forgotten all about his noble integrity,
and his faithfulness, and the songs he would sing to the Lord. All he could think
of was hiding his sin.
The only way he could think of was to call Uriah back
home. Give him a military Leave of Absence.
He'd go home and visit his wife, and all would be swept under the rug.
Except that Uriah had a sense of good leadership and
loyalty to his men. He told King David, thanks.
But how can I go visit my wife while my men are sleeping out on the ground with one eye and one ear open and one hand
on their sword.
Now the trap gets tighter. The Spirit of God is shouting at David. Repent. But he doesn't hear. David's
mind sinks even deeper into the dark. Last week, he sent Uriah a
Leave of Absence form. This week he sends him a transfer. Right to the front lines. And as planned, Uriah gets killed. So now he can bring Bathsheba home to the palace, juggle the dates on the calendar,
and issue the palace press release about a new Prince just a few weeks late, and hardly anyone will notice anything.
It all started with a perfectly understandable, universally
understood, weakness of the flesh. But David forgot the R word. Repent. Stop. Turn
around. Go the other way. He kept
going forward, and forward was a downward slide from temptation to transgression to iniquity.
From desire to betrayal, to lust, to adultery, to deception to murder. To God's judgement.
The Prophet Nathan came to David, and gave him a parable. There was a
man in your kingdom who had a little pet lamb. The lamb was gentle and
sweet, and the man's loving companion, even sharing his meals and drinking from his cup.
And he had a neighbor who gave a party. and instead of taking from his
own flock of sheep, he stole his neighbor's little pet lamb, and barbequed it for his guests.
This account made David furious. He ranted and hollered. Arrest that man. Make him pay back four times what he stole.
Nathan looked at him and delared, you are the man. You betrayed your neighbor. You
betrayed your friend. You stole
his one and only pet lamb.
It didn't take David long to make the connection. David had to be knocked in the head,
but he did come out of his self righteous mode, and realized how far he had fallen from decency and honor, and he did,
finally, repent, and the Lord forgave him.
But the Lord could not let this thing just pass. There had to be
a punishment.
Nathan told David that as punishment for this awful thing, Bathsheba's baby was going to die. He added that the evil that was done was going
to rise up in David's household.
Here is another example of the terrible consequences of sin. David had
several children from different wives. And because of this scandal, they all
did not see their father as the sweet psalm singer of Israel,
loving the Lord of heaven. Four
of them followed Daddy's wretched lifestyle example. One of his sons raped one
of his daughters. Her full brother arranged an ambush, and killed the offending
half-brother. Another of his sons raised a rebellion of the people, trying to
dethrone David, and wound up dead, hanging by his hair from a branch of a tree.
If David had been doing his duty of raising his children in the Lord and teaching them by example of right living,
maybe all that horror would not have happened.
It would have been a good thing if David had listened
earlier to
the call of the Lord to his soul.
Repent!
As long as I am telling others to repent, and repentance seems to be a
very rare experience these days, I think I aught to tell you what it feels like.
It was Wednesday, March 13, 1957. 9:10 pm. In a lovely little church on the North side of Chicago.
Figuratively speaking, the Lord, by the Holy Spirit,
grabbed me by the collar, shoved me up against the wall, and
demanded, "do you want to go to Heaven or do you want to go to Hell? You've got thirty seconds to decide. No
second chances. " It scared me half
to death.
I have since learned that this used to be the normal thing, for hundreds
of thousands of people getting saved in revival meetings, since the Wesleyan Revivals.
In the Great Awakenings at the beginning of this country, and the revivals in the early 20th century. People came into contact with the Holy Spirit shining His light into their souls, and they saw the sin
that was there, and the ugly damage sin does to the soul, and why it makes the soul dead.
And it was a seriously emotional experience.
But that night, it was just me, suddenly, kneeling
at that altar, bawling my eyes out like I would never be able to stop.
I had a set of rules of moral conduct that I lived my life by. Never, never steal. Unless I really, really intended to put
it back first thing in the morning.
Never tell a lie. Unless, of course, in self defense.
Never let a boy touch certain parts of my anatomy. Unless, of course,
I was feeling a little reckless. With this sterling set of high moral standards,
I was going to dazzle the world with what a wonderful person I was.
But when the light of the Holy Spirit burst into my
soul, and shined that light on my sins, all I saw was rot.
My life and my sins flashed across my mind like bright
color pictures. My biggest sin, it seems, was my hardness of heart. This was my overall attitude that told God, hey, butt out of my life, I'll live it myself!
And then, there was a certain incident in high school,
that would take to long to explain the details. It involved a situation where
I saw a person being abused and picked on. At the time, it occurred to me that
I should say something. Intervene, and do what I could to stop the abuse and
mistreatment. But I backed out, and changed my mind, telling myself that it was
none of my business.
Fast forward, back to me at the altar, seeing my life
flash in front of me in those rapid fire mental pictures. That incident of thinking
about sticking up for a person being mistreated had lasted no longer than a minute. And I had forgotten it. Yet at this moment
of the Lord's light on my sins, this incident exploded back at me, like an enormous weight that was dragging me to Hell. And the spirit of God shouted at me, every time in
your life, when you have had the choice between doing what was Right, and doing what was Easy, you have chosen the
Easy. And the Lord was very displeased with those choices.
This, the Spirit of God declared, was serious moral
cowardice. In Revelation 21:8, Jesus said, outside of the heavenly city, in the
lake of fire, are the fearful, and the abominable, and all the rest. What
kind of fear will keep you out of heaven? And drag you to to God's eternal garbage disposer? Moral cowardice. The fear of doing what is Right because it will cause you trouble and people might
disapprove of you.
Why do I remember this incident as an example of a
thing judged as sin that needed turning from? Because to me it was a nothing. I was barely aware of it. But to the
Holy Spirit, it was a transgression of the law of God, and that sinful power in my soul that made me choose "Wrong and Easy" would drag me to Hell if I didn't disown
it.
And when you let
your heart break enough to turn to the Lord and ask for His forgiveness of sins, be prepared for this same kind of inner earthquake that will change forever your understanding of the difference between
Right and Wrong.
You will find to your shock that there are "nothings"
in your life, that you are barely aware of, that the Lord sees as huge transgressions that need repenting from, and His forgiveness.
Before the light of the Holy Spirit enters your soul, you are barely aware of what sin is, or why it is so deadly, and offensive to God. That is why it is so hard to convince good, decent, kind hearted, generous people,
that they need to repent. Your reasonable
demand, is, what is it that I have to repent of?
Try repenting of the very first sin I repented of. The attitude of, Hey, God, butt out of my life.
I'll live it myself.
Once you open that door to the Holy Spirit, He will start shining His light on those little nothings in your soul that
pile up to a great mountain of transgressions and iniquities that bar the way between you and Jesus Christ, and drag your
soul to darkness.
Luke 18. Jesus
shows us the difference between a soul that knows how to repent, and a soul that doesn't think
it is necessary. Two men went up to the temple to pray. A publican and a pharisee. Now a Pharisee was a member of
a very strict, religious group that lived by very strict rules and regulations of righteousness. A Publican was a tax collector, and considered to be the lowest and meanest of sinners, because of their
habit of stealing from people.
The pharisee stood and prayed thus with himself. Jesus said the man prayed with himself. That means his prayer didn't go beyond the ceiling.
It was just him talking to himself.
He said, God, I thank Thee, that I am not as other men are, extortioners, unjust, adulterers, or even as this publican. I fast twice in the week, I give tithes of all that I possess.
The Publican, standing afar off, would not so much
as lift up his eyes to heaven. But smote his breast, saying, God, be merciful
to me, a sinner. I tell you that
this man went down to his house justified, rather than the other.
Repenting is something that men are afraid of. But it is a most beautiful valued thing with God.
For with it, you touch Jesus, and deliver your soul to eternal life.