Looking at the Cross from God's Perspective
John MacArthur
Romans 3:24-31
I had on this
particular trip for the last month the
opportunity to be with unbelievers more than I
normally would be, to be in their presence and
to be somewhat disconnected from the normal
circle of Christian friends in which I live and
move and have my being. And it continued to make
me grateful for the salvation that God has given
to me, to see how people without Christ struggle
through life trying to fill it with some
meaning. To realize at the same time that I was
so privileged, I was unworthy of that privilege
and that God in His infinite grace had designed
to save me was cause for great joy. And so, I
have done a lot of thinking about just the
simplicity and the center focus of Christianity
which is the death of Jesus Christ on the cross
and what it means in my own life. As one who
teaches the Bible and studies it and who writes
books and who gets into theology and
commentaries, it's easy for me to get swept away
in the waves of minutia that I deal with and it
was very good for me just to be somewhat
isolated and very often in a context of
unbelievers and to be brought back to the
reality of the simplicity of my relationship to
Jesus Christ provided by His death on the cross
and His resurrection.
At the same time
I'm very much aware of the fact that churches
are filled with people who...who don't really
understand that saving message. That is
continually brought home to me. I had occasion
when I was back in Maryland at a Bible
conference on the Chesapeake Bay to be reminded
daily by people who were there that they had
attended churches for years and never come to a
personal relationship with Jesus Christ until
they had listened to Grace To You and heard a
clear, clear message on the gospel. I continue
to be astounded, I guess, that people can exist
in churches over long periods of time and not
know the saving truth.
I shared with you
that on one of my vacations in the past I had
the occasion to read Ian Murray's book on
Jonathan Edwards and I read that book with great
interest because at the end of it, though he was
the greatest theologian maybe this nation has
ever produced, certainly one of its profoundest,
and though for twenty-two years he preached at
the church at North Hampton the unsearchable
riches of Christ and expounded the Scripture and
was God's primary instrument in the great
awakening, and though he was faithful to preach
the whole counsel of God, after twenty-two years
as pastor his church voted him out. And the
reason they voted him out was that he wanted to
demand that no one take communion unless they
had confessed Jesus as Lord and Savior. They
thought that was excessive. And so they voted
him out and there he was after twenty-two years
of teaching theology and doctrine in its great
profundity to that people, he realized that
there were unconverted people when he came and
there were still enough unconverted people
twenty-two years later to vote him out of the
church. Perhaps if he were to go back again he
might have preached more messages on the simple
gospel, lest someone somehow would miss the
message that is at the heart of our faith.
It is in the
light of that that I want to ask you to turn in
your Bibles to Romans chapter 3 this morning and
I want to take us back to the beginning, if I
might. It's been a long while since we took a
Sunday-morning look at the work of Jesus Christ
on the cross. The time has come for us to review
that.
Now the death of
the Lord Jesus Christ can be viewed in several
different ways and from several different
perspectives, as you well know. Most frequently
when we examine the death of Jesus Christ we do
it from our viewpoint. We come to the cross and
see it through man's eyes. We see the cross of
Jesus Christ as that act by which Christ
provided salvation for us, by which He saved us
from sin and death and hell and the power of the
flesh, by which He delivered us from the kingdom
of darkness and put us in the kingdom of His
dear Son, by which He ushered us into that place
where we're blessed with all spiritual blessings
in the heavenlies, by which He delivered us from
the wrath to come, by which He took us who were
enemies and made us friends of God, by which He
granted to us eternal life and all that it
involves. We see it from our viewpoint. It could
be looked at that way and legitimately so.
We also could
come to the cross and look at it from the
viewpoint of the holy angels. The angels, by the
way, look at the cross and they are searching
over the cross and they're examining it and
looking into the atoning work of Christ, trying
to comprehend and understand its great profound
mysteries, mysteries which they cannot fully
understand because they will not fully
experience because holy angels need no
redemption. And they see in it the wonder and
the majesty and the glory of the mind of God and
the goodness of God and the love of God as He
provides for unworthy sinners. Theirs is a
fascinating perspective.
We could look at
the cross from the standpoint of Satan and his
demons. They see the cross as that point in
which the Son bruised the serpent's head, that
point in which the one who had the power of
death, Satan, was destroyed by the One who now
carries the power of death, the Lord Jesus
Christ, who is the alpha and the omega, the
beginning and the end. Demons see the cross
through their own eyes. They thought it was
their moment of victory and in one split second
Jesus showed up in the pit to announce His
triumph over them and He has openly displayed
His victory over principalities and powers and
rulers and so forth. We could look at the cross
from the vantage point of demons.
We might even
look at the cross through the eyes of Jesus
Christ. We might even see it as He must have
seen it. There it was that He was to bear the
sins of all the world in His own body and we
could go through the excruciating agony of that
kind of sin bearing and that rejection and hear
Him cry, "My God, My God, why have You forsaken
Me?"
We could also see
the cross as the moment of His glory for He
said, "If I be lifted up, I'll draw all men to
Myself." We could also see it as the
verification of His word because He promised
that He was going to die and there His promise
came to pass. We could also see it as the moment
of His greatest triumph when He indeed bruised
the serpent's head. We could see it as the great
demonstration of His love for He said, "Greater
love hath no man than this, that a man lay down
his life for his friends."
You can look at
the cross, as it were, through your own eyes.
You could look at it through the eyes of holy
angels, fallen angels, through the eyes of
Christ Himself and see its glory.
But for this
morning, I want us to look at the cross in its
relationship to God, to God Himself, God the
Father. What did it mean to God? We know what
Jesus' death meant to us. We know what it meant
to the holy angels, it gave them a new verse to
their great hymns of praise. We know what it
meant to the demons, it was the end of their
control of their own destiny. We know what it
meant to Christ. But what did it mean to God?
What did the death of Christ mean to God? How
did it represent God? How did it glorify God?
What is His perspective on that great event?
And to understand
that, look at Romans chapter 3 and follow as I
read in verse 24. "Being justified as a gift by
His grace through the redemption which is in
Christ Jesus whom God displayed publicly as a
propitiation in His blood through faith. This
was to demonstrate His righteousness because in
the forbearance of God He passed over the sins
previously committed; for the demonstration, I
say, of His righteousness at the present time,
that He might be just and the justifier of the
one who has faith in Jesus. Where then is
boasting? It is excluded. By what kind of law?
Of works? No, but by a law of faith. For we
maintain that a man is justified by faith apart
from works of the Law. Or is God the God of Jews
only? Is He not the God of Gentiles? Yes, of
Gentiles also, since indeed God who will justify
the circumcised by faith and the uncircumcised
through faith is one. Do we then nullify the Law
through faith? May it never be! On the contrary,
we establish the Law."
Now that great
text tells us what the cross meant to God. What
the death of Christ, the atoning work of Christ,
the blood- shedding sacrifice of Christ meant to
God. Four things stand out. It declared God's
righteousness, it exalted God's grace, it
revealed God's consistency and it confirmed
God's Word.
We are in a
worship service this morning. It is our
intention to worship God. And so it is fitting
that we in worshiping Him look at the cross, as
it were, in relation to Him that we might
worship Him for His righteousness, His grace,
His consistency, and His Law, or His Word.
Let's look at the
first one. The cross revealed God's
righteousness, verse 24. "Being justified as a
gift by His grace through the redemption which
is in Christ Jesus whom God displayed publicly
as a propitiation in His blood through faith,
this was to demonstrate His righteousness." And
we'll stop there for the moment.
Christ died on
the cross to demonstrate or to reveal or to
declare God's righteousness. This is a very,
very essential, a very, very important issue.
Men have always struggled with this matter. Why?
Because when you understand God to be a
righteous God and you understand yourself to be
a sinner, it puts you in a very difficult
position. How can a sinful man be right with
God? This is man's age-old longing, how can I
know God, how can I be forgiven by God, how can
I be right with God...it is that very question
that has spawned religion. Religion is in every
sense an attempt to answer that question, to
solve the cry of the heart of man to appease
whatever deity he may believe in, under whose
authority he feels himself and under whose
judgment he is afraid. How can I be right with
God? Is God a righteous, holy, just God? And if
indeed He is, then how can I appease Him? How
can I satisfy His requirement for holiness,
perfection, justice and righteousness and be
right with Him?
One sinner in a
rather prosaic way put his musings down like
this: "The one wished to dispute with Him, he
could not answer Him one time out of a thousand.
His wisdom is profound. His power is vast. Who
has resisted Him and come out unscathed? He
moves mountains without their knowing it and
overturns them in His anger. He shakes the earth
from its place and makes its pillars tremble. He
speaks to the sun and it doesn't shine. He seals
off the light of the stars. He alone stretches
out the heavens and treads on the waves of the
sea. He is the maker of the bear and Orion, the
Pleiades and the constellations of the south. He
performs wonders that cannot be fathomed,
miracles that cannot be numbered. When He passes
me I cannot see Him. When He goes by I cannot
perceive Him. If He snatches away, who can stop
Him? Who can say to Him...what are You doing?
God does not restrain His anger, even the
cohorts of Rahab cowered at His feet. How then
can I dispute with Him? How can I find words to
argue with Him? Though I were innocent I could
not answer Him. I could not plead with my judge
for mercy. Even if I summoned Him and He
responded, I do not believe He would give me a
hearing. He would crush me with a storm and
multiply my wounds for no reason. He would not
let me regain my breath but would overwhelm me
with misery. If it is a matter of strength, He
is mighty. If it is a matter of justice, whom
will summon Him? Even if I were innocent my
mouth would condemn me. If I were blameless it
would pronounce me guilty."
The musings of a
man who fears he could never be right with God.
Many suggestions are made about how man can be
right with God, we call them religion. But apart
from Christianity, all of them involve human
achievement and works, and they don't satisfy
God. They don't make provision for us and they
don't make us right with Him.
You remember
Bildad, the friend of Job, echoed Job's cry? How
can a man be right with God? How can he be
clean? And you remember Paul on the Damascus
road, "What will you have me to do?" And you
remember those who heard Peter cry, "What shall
we do?" And you remember those in hearing Jesus
who said, "What do we do to work the works of
God?" And you remember the Philippian jailor who
said, "What must I do to be saved?" How can I
connect up with a righteous, holy, just God?
That has always been the cry of man's heart.
Now if God were
just to move down and forgive man, it would
strike a blow against His justice. And someone
would say...well God's justice is whimsical, and
God's righteousness is capricious and He's on
again, off again because some sinners He judges
and damns and some He forgives and you can't
trust His righteousness and you can trust His
holiness and you can't trust His justice to be
absolute.
God wants,
however, you to know that His nature is
immutable in any attribute and that His justice,
holiness and righteousness is immutable and
unchanging and absolutely consistent. And so God
devised a plan which would demonstrate, reveal
His righteousness. Verse 24 says we are
justified, we are made right with God as a gift
by His grace through the redemption which is in
Christ Jesus.
Now listen, there
is nothing any person can do to be made right
with God. There is nothing any person can do to
satisfy God's requirement for holiness and
righteousness. There is nothing any human being
can do to settle God's justice. And so if we
can't do anything, the initiative has to be with
whom? With Him. And so says Paul...we are
justified as a gift by His grace. God gives us a
justification, a righteousness. God gives us a
right relationship with Him. We couldn't do it.
We could never satisfy His righteous demands.
After all, Jesus said, "Be ye perfect even as
your Father in heaven is perfect." And we
remember the words of Isaiah, "All your
righteousnesses are as filthy rags." We could at
our best only be filthy rags. We could never be
perfect, therefore we could never achieve a
relationship with God that satisfied God. So God
had to give us a gift. He had to give us, in
other words, what we couldn't earn. That's a
gift, isn't it? You don't earn a gift. If you
earned it, it isn't a gift, it's pay. So He gave
us a gift.
But in giving us
a gift somebody might say, "God is not then a
just God because it's not just to give you a
gift when you don't deserve it. God is not a
holy God because He's overlooking your sin. God
is not a righteous God because He's tolerating
your unrighteousness. God is accepting you as
you are which means He's lowered His standard."
That would be the accusation. And it would
readily be on the lips of a Pharisee, believe
me. And so says Paul, but God did give us a
gift, it came out of His grace which means it
was undeserved, unmerited and unearned. And He
gave it to us through the redemption which is in
Christ Jesus. The word "redemption" means a
ransom. You know what a ransom is, somebody
kidnaps a child and hauls them off somewhere and
calls up and says..."The ransom is $200,000. You
want to buy this child back, that's the price."
Ransom means to pay a price to buy somebody
back. It was used in ancient times to buy a
slave out of bondage unto freedom.
And so, God says,
"Look, I'm going to give you the gift of a right
relationship with Me, the gift of forgiveness of
sins, the gift of eternal life, but the price
will be paid." And it was paid, He says, in
Christ Jesus. It isn't that God capriciously or
whimsically just shoves His justice aside,
shoves His righteousness aside, His holiness
aside and says I'll love for a while, I'll be
gracious for a while, I'll be merciful a while
and I'll ignore those other things. No. God's
holiness, God's righteousness, and God's justice
can never be set aside. God will always operate
consistent with His nature. And so whatever He
does that is good and gracious and merciful will
also be holy, just and righteous.
How did He do
that? He did it through the price being paid by
Christ Jesus. In other words, He was so holy and
just and righteous that some price had to be
paid for sin. The price was set, death. But He
was so loving, gracious and merciful that He
gave His own Son to pay the price. Justice was
satisfied and so was grace. Holiness was
satisfied and so was mercy. Righteousness was
satisfied and so was love. And so it says then
in verse 25 that God displayed Christ publicly
as a propitiation in His blood. Stop at that
point.
God displayed
Christ publicly...what does that mean? Just what
it says. He lifted Him up where all could see
and He made Him to be a propitiation. That word,
hilasterion in the Greek, means a
satisfaction...a satisfaction. The criticism,
you see, was that God was not righteous, just
and holy if He just overlooked sin because, you
see, the end of verse 25 says, "In the past God
had been forebearing and passed over sins
previously committed." How could He do that and
be just? How could He wink at, as it says in
Acts, the sins of all those generations, how
could He tolerate all of that? Because somebody
was going to pay the price. How could He forgive
sinners? How could He just forgive them and
still be just? Because the price would be paid.
His justice, and holiness and righteousness
would be satisfied.
I suppose to some
people it seemed as if divine justice was
sleeping, as if divine righteousness had gone on
a vacation, as if divine holiness had slipped
into a coma. Men sinned here below and got away
with it. They lived, they prospered. Where were
the wages of sin? What about the soul that sins,
it shall die? And then all of a sudden along
come these preachers saying He's going to
forgive, He's going to forgive, He's gracious
and loving and merciful. He's going to forgive.
And the question immediately arises...Wait a
minute, wait a minute, God is holy and righteous
and He can't just be overlooking sin, it has to
be punished. It can't just be excused. It can't
just fade away. It can't be ignored.
No amount of
optimism, no amount of love or grace or mercy
can put sin aside and stop requiring its
penalty. A holy God could never bypass sin and
be complacent about evil. And even though He
loved the sinner deeply, He cannot forgive the
sinner unless His justice is satisfied. So the
question is...how can a sinful man become
acceptable to a righteous God? Somebody has to
pay the price. And God out of love chooses not
to punish the sinner but to punish His Son,
therefore does He preserve the integrity of His
nature and His reputation and give place to His
grace as well. If the sinner were to suffer for
his own sin, he will suffer eternally and even
eternity cannot pay the price or eternity would
end. But God is gracious and provides a
sacrifice. Jesus Christ died the death that you
deserved. He became sin who knew no sin. He died
in our place. He is our substitute. He had to be
man to die as man, He had to be God to overcome
death and sin. And so the God/Man had to suffer.
Jesus said, "The Son of Man must suffer and be
killed." He knew it. And the early church
preached why Christ must needs have suffered.
The sacrifices of all the bulls and goats
couldn't do it, Hebrews 10 says, "By the blood
of bulls and goats has no flesh been
sanctified."
It isn't animal
sacrifice that did it, that was just a picture
of the sacrifice to come. It isn't human
achievement, nothing you can do will satisfy
God. A price has to be paid, it is the price of
bloodshed and death. Christ paid it.
Psalm 49:7 and
8 says, "None of them can redeem his brother
nor give to God a ransom for him for the
redemption of their souls is costly." The price
is higher than any human being can pay, but it
was paid by Christ. No sinner could atone for
the sins of fellow sinners, so Christ the
perfect One paid the price of divine justice and
bore the sins of the whole world. The death of
Christ then was not only an act of grace, it was
an act of justice.
Would you please
note in verse 25 it says that He is a
propitiation in His blood through faith. And at
the end of verse 26, He is the justifier of the
one who has faith in Jesus. This provision, this
sacrifice of Christ is appropriated through
faith--through faith, through believing. That is
so very essential, so very basic to our faith.
You appropriate the work of Christ by
believing...true faith.
So, God in the
cross puts His justice, righteousness, holiness
on display. So just and righteous and holy is He
that even as much as He wants to forgive the
sinner, He cannot do it unless the price is paid
even if the price has to be paid by His own Son.
That's how just God is. He can never be accused
of being unjust or unrighteous. His justice was
satisfied by the perfect, spotless Lamb who paid
the perfect price. We then were not redeemed by
corruptible things but by the precious blood of
Christ. We see then in the cross the justice,
the righteousness of God.
Secondly, the
cross exalts God's grace. The cross exalts God's
grace. Verse 27...again somebody is going to
pose another question, if this is all God, then
what part do we have in it? And the answer is
none, basically. There is no place for boasting.
"Where then is boasting? It is excluded. It is
excluded." Salvation is totally His work.
Scripture makes that abundantly and profoundly
clear, "For by grace are you saved through
faith, that not of yourselves. It is the gift of
God, not of works, lest any should boast." Every
component in salvation is the work of God. He
even activates, quickens and livens our faith so
that we can believe.
And so, says
Paul, "Where then is boasting? It's excluded."
There isn't any place for boasting, it is left
out all together. "By what kind of law?" verse
27 says. "Of works? No, but by a law of faith."
In other words, if I don't have anything to do
about this, if this isn't by works, how does it
work? When he says "by what kind of law?" let me
help you with that. The word "law" here means
principle, not so much a fiat as we think of a
law like the Ten Commandments or some law that
God has laid down, but a principle, an operative
principle. Used it the same way in Romans 7 and
elsewhere. But he says...All right then, if this
salvation isn't something that I do by my works
and I can't boast about it, then by what kind of
principle does it work? Of works? No, but by the
principle of faith. Only the principle of faith
will exalt God, glorify God because it takes all
out of man's hands. The law here, or the
principle, or the method by which salvation
works is the method, principle, law of faith.
And so when we can do nothing more than just
receive the gift by faith, we know it's the gift
of grace. And so God's grace is exalted here.
The only one who can boast is God, for He by
grace...back to verse 24...has given a gift to
us which we can only receive or reject. We have
no part in it except to take it. He cuts the
ground out from under the feet of those who say
I always do the best I can, I always live a
decent life, I'm a good person, surely God will
not overlook me. And he simply says it's all
God's work.
Then in verse 28,
"For we maintain that a man is justified by
faith apart from works of the law." The only
contribution we make is to believe and even the
believing is a work of God within us. Remember
what Paul said in
1 Corinthians 15:10, "I am what I am
by...what?...by the grace of God." The hymn
writer said, "My hope is built on nothing less
than Jesus' blood and righteousness, I dare not
trust the sweetest frame...that is anything that
man can design...but holy lean on Jesus name."
And so the principle, Paul says, under which we
operate in terms of salvation is a principle of
faith in response to grace.
We look at the
cross, what do we see? God's righteousness on
display as the penalty is being paid, the ransom
price. We look at the cross, we see God's grace
on display, He does it all. Christ pays the
price and God moves toward us in grace giving us
the gift. All we can do is refuse or receive it.
Now, this is the
very heart of salvation, saving faith. And
because he makes such an issue out of it, verse
24 he says "justified by grace;" verse 25, "we
receive it through faith;" verse 26, "we receive
it through faith;" verse 27, "it's not law it's
faith;" verse 28, "it's faith not law." That's a
lot of faith emphasis and because of that I need
to say to you that it is faith that is at the
heart of our Christianity.
Now I want to
give you a little test to help you examine your
faith. I'm convinced that churches are filled
with people who have a kind of faith that
doesn't save them. James called it a dead faith.
Second Corinthians 13:5 says, "Examine
yourself whether you be in the faith." You want
to be sure your faith is real.
Now, as you look
at yourself and you're asking...am I really a
Christian, have I really appropriated this gift
that God gives, have I believed genuinely? What
do you look at in your life to discern whether
your faith is real? What are the marks?
First of all, let
me show you some things that neither prove nor
disprove saving faith, okay? I'm going to give
you a little list of things that don't prove
anything. You could be a Christian, you could
not be a Christian and still have these things.
They don't prove or disprove saving faith. But
you need to know what they are so you're not
deceived.
Number one,
visible morality...visible morality. What do I
mean by that? Well some people, they're just
good people. Some of them are very religious,
like Mormon people who on the outside appear
very moral, or Roman Catholic people or any
other kind of religion. Some people are just
good people. They're honest. They're forthright
in their dealings. They're grateful people.
They're kind people. And they have an external,
visible kind of morality. By the way, the
Pharisees certainly rested on that for their
hope. They're loving people, some of them are
tender-hearted people. But of loving and serving
God, they know nothing and feel nothing.
Whatever the person does or leaves undone does
not involve God. This person is honest in his
dealings with everybody except God. He won't rob
anybody but God. He is thankful and loyal to
everybody but God. He speaks contemptuously and
reproachfully of no one but God. He has good
relationships with everybody but God. He's very
much like the rich young ruler who says, "All
these things have I kept, what do I lack?" This
is visible morality but it does not necessarily
mean salvation. People can clean up their act by
reformation rather than regeneration.
Secondly, another
thing that doesn't prove or disprove saving
faith is intellectual knowledge...intellectual
knowledge. This doesn't prove true faith.
Knowledge of the truth is necessary for
salvation and visible morality is the fruit of
salvation but neither one equal salvation. You
see, you can know all about God and you can know
all about Jesus and who He was, and He came into
the world and He died on the cross and He rose
again and He's coming again, and you can even
know more of the details of His life, you can
understand all of that and turn your back on
Christ. The writer of Hebrews writes to those in
chapter 6 who knowing all of that refused
Christ. In chapter 10 he says, "You're treading
underfoot the blood of Christ by not believing
what you know is true." There are many people
who know the Scripture and who have knowledge
but are bound for hell. i You will never be
saved without that knowledge but having that
knowledge doesn't necessarily save you.
Thirdly,
religious involvement...religious involvement is
not necessarily a proof of true faith. There are
people who have, according to Paul in writing to
Timothy,
2 Timothy 3:5, a form of godliness but
powerless, an empty kind of religion. Remember
the virgins in Matthew 25 who were waiting and
waiting and waiting for the coming of the
bridegroom who is Christ, and they're waiting
and waiting but when He comes they don't go in.
They had everything together except the oil in
their lamps. That which was most necessary was
missing. The oil probably emblematic of the new
life, the indwelling of the Holy Spirit, they
weren't regenerate, they were religious but not
regenerate. You can have external visible
morality, intellectual knowledge and religious
involvement and it may not indicate genuine
faith.
Fourth, active
ministry. Balaam was a prophet, Saul of Tarsus
thought he was serving God by killing
Christians, Judas was a public preacher, Judas
was an apostle. Remember Matthew 7, "Many will
say to me, `Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied
in Your name and done many wonderful works? Cast
out demons in Your name?' And He says to them,
`Depart from Me, you workers of iniquity, I
never knew you.'" Ministry activity, that's not
necessarily a proof of saving faith.
Number five,
conviction of sin...conviction of sin. Lots of
people feel bad about sin. Listen, this whole
world is full of people that are just
guilt-ridden to the core. You know, fifteen
years ago we used to talk about people going to
psychology, going to the psychologist and we
used to say, and it was pretty true from tests,
that most of the people who went to the
psychologist were suffering from guilt. People
used to write books about that. I remember the
Meninger Clinic put out tremendous amount of
material on the fact that all these people were
suffering from guilt.
Well, the
psychologists of the world have absolutely no
answer for guilt because the only answer is the
gospel. What has happened in the last fifteen
years is you don't have any people at all today
who feel guilty because we've come up with a new
psychology that eliminates the guilt. Now all we
do is we displace the guilt on somebody else and
the new therapy is to make the person utterly
irresponsible for any of the guilt that they
might feel inside and to free them from that
guilt and you do that by making the ultimate
virtue pride, the ultimate virtue
self-fulfillment, self-aggrandizement,
self-glory, self-esteem and that eliminates the
need to feel guilty. So we really have come up
with an utterly ungodly, unchristian, unbiblical
psychology that has taken the guilt issue and
eliminated it.
Now what happens
in the church, instead of the preacher standing
up to preach freedom from guilt to guilty
sinners, they expect him to preach self-esteem
to ego-centric people. The whole climate has
changed. And we have been skewed in our message
because we have allowed the philosophy of the
day to create a new kind of sinner who thinks he
feels no guilt. And the most important thing you
can preach to a bunch of sinners is the sin of
their lives and the law of God which they fall
short of and the impending judgment they await.
But that message is not popular because the new
philosophy and the new psychology has long ago
eliminated guilt. We don't have people feeling
guilt anymore because they've learned that
therapy can tell them they can put that guilt on
somebody who did something to them. And now I
don't care who you talk to, when they go into
that kind of situation of counseling they will
inevitably say...I have been abused...I am a
victim...I am not responsible for the way I am.
And so the sinner is dispossessed of his guilt
and dispossessed of a direct approach of the
gospel. I liked...I liked sinners better when
they felt guilty. They were much easier to deal
with.
But there are
some people who do feel guilty, some people who
do feel guilty about sin. Felix trembled under
the preaching of Paul, but never left his idols.
The Holy Spirit convicts many of sin,
righteousness and judgment and many that He
convicts don't respond with true repentance.
Some may even confess their sins. Some may even
abandon their sins and say I don't like to live
this way, I want to shape up, amend their ways,
but not necessarily come to saving faith. That's
reformation, not regeneration and no degree of
conviction of sin is conclusive evidence of
saving faith. Believe me, even the demons are
convicted of their sin that's why they tremble,
but they're not saved.
Number six,
assurance...assurance. Some people say, "Well I
must be a Christian, I feel like one, I think
I'm one." Listen, just think it through. If to
think you're a Christian makes you a Christian
then nobody could be deceived, right? Because as
soon as you thought you were a Christian you'd
be one. So you could never be deceived. The
whole point of Satan's deception is to make
people think they're Christians who aren't.
That's the whole point. Many people feel sure
they're saved, they're not. I'll tell you, there
are millions of Mormons and Jehovah's Witnesses
and Christian Scientists who believe they are on
their way to heaven, they're not. People say,
"God won't condemn me, I feel good about myself,
I have assurance, I'm okay." That means nothing
necessarily.
Number seven, the
last one, a time of decision. I hear people say,
"Well I know I'm a Christian because I remember
when I signed the card...I remember when I
prayed a prayer...I remember when I went forward
in the church service...I remember right where I
was." I've heard people say, "I remember right
where I was the moment I did that." Oh really!
Listen, because you remember a moment doesn't
mean that moment meant anything, doesn't mean
that decision was valid. Nobody's salvation is
verified by a past moment. People have prayed
prayers and gone forward in church services and
signed cards and gone into prayer rooms and been
baptized and joined churches and never had
saving faith.
So those are some
of the non-proofs. They don't really prove
anything. You say, "Well then what does prove
saving faith?" Well let me just give you quickly
a list.
One, love for
God. Now you're talking...now you're talking
down about the heart because
Romans 8:7 says, "The carnal mind is enmity
against God." The non-Christian resents God,
rebels against God down inside. But the
regenerate mind is set to love the Lord with all
heart, soul, mind and strength, his delight is
in the excellency of God who is the first and
highest affection of his renewed soul. God
becomes his chief happiness. By the way, there's
a great difference between such love for God and
the selfish attitude that focuses only on my own
happiness and sees God as a means to my end
rather than as me to the end of glorifying Him.
In fact, Jesus said, "If you love father, mother
more than Me, you're not even My disciple,"
Matthew 10:37.
Do you love God,
do you love His nature? Do you love His glory?
Do you love His name? Do you love His kingdom?
Do you love His holiness? Do you love His will?
Supreme love for God is decisive evidence of the
true faith. Is your heart lifted when you sing
His praises because you love Him?
Secondly,
repentance from sin. The proper love for God
must involve a hatred of sin. That's obvious.
Who wouldn't understand that? If I loved
somebody, you assume that my loving them means
that I seek their well-being, right? If I said
to you I love my wife but I could care less what
happened to my wife, you'd question my love
because true love seeks the highest good of its
object. So if I say I love God then I will have
to hate sin because sin offends God. Sin
blasphemes God. Sin curses God. Sin seeks to
destroy God and His work and His kingdom. Sin
killed His Son. And if I say I love God but I
tolerate sin, then you have every reason to
question my love. I cannot love God without
hating that which is set to destroy Him.
So, true
repentance involves confession, it involves
turning from sin. I should be grieved over my
sin. I should ask myself, do I have a settled
conviction of the evil of sin? Does sin appear
to me as the evil and bitter thing it really is?
Does conviction of sin in me increase as I walk
with Christ? Do I hate it not merely because it
is ruinous to my own soul but because it is
offensive to my God whom I love? Does it...does
it more grieve me when I sin than when I have
trouble? In other words, what grieves me the
most, my misfortune or my sin? Do my sins appear
many, frequent and aggravated? Do I find myself
grieved over my sin more than the sin of others?
That's the mark of salvation, true saving
faith...it loves God, it hates what God hates
which is sin.
Thirdly, it
manifests genuine humility...it manifests
genuine humility. This obviously comes through
in the Beatitudes, the poor in spirit, those who
hunger and thirst after righteousness, those who
in Matthew 18 are like a little child humble and
dependent, those who are in self-denial, willing
to take up their cross and follow Him. The Lord
receives those who come with a broken and a
contrite spirit. James says He gives grace to
the humble. We must come as the prodigal son.
You remember what He said in Luke 15, I think
about verse 21, He said, "Father, I am not
worthy to be called Your Son." There's no pride,
there's no ego about religious achievement,
spiritual accomplishment but genuine humility.
Fourthly, there's
a devotion to God's glory. True saving faith
that manifests genuine salvation shows devotion
to God's glory. Whatever we do, whether we eat
or drink, we are literally consumed with the
glory of God. We do what we do because we want
to glorify Him. Oh sure, we fail in all of these
things but the direction of our life is in
loving Him and hating sin and being genuinely
humble and self-denying and knowing our
unworthiness and being totally devoted to the
glory of God.
Number five,
continual prayer, humble, submissive believing
prayer marks true faith. We cry "Abba Father"
because the Spirit in us prompts that cry.
Jonathan Edwards once preached a sermon titled,
"Hypocrites are deficient in the duty of secret
prayer." It's true. Hypocrites may pray publicly
because that's what hypocrites want to do is
impress people, but they are deficient in the
duty of secret prayer. A true believer with true
saving faith has a personal prayer life, private
prayer life, seeks communion with God.
Number six,
another mark of saving faith is selfless love.
John says if you don't love your neighbor, your
brother or one in need, how are we to believe
the love of God dwells in you? And also in 1
John 3 John says, "If you love God you'll love
whom God loves." And we love Him and others
because that's the response to Him loving us.
John 13 says, "By this men know we're true
disciples by our love for each other."
Number seven,
separation from the world. Paul told the
Corinthians that we haven't received the spirit
of the world, but the Spirit which is from God
and John put it this way, "Love not the world
neither the things that are in the world. If any
man love the world, the love of the Father is
not in him." A true believer is separated from
the world.
Again I say, we
fail in all these areas but these are the
direction of our lives. We aren't perfect. We
haven't arrived. But we love God and want to
love Him more. We hate sin and want to hate it
more. We have a genuine humility and want more
of it. We are devoted to God's glory. We have a
prayer life that is private and personal. We
have a love for others that comes from God and
we find ourselves disassociated from the world
as a general rule.
And then just two
others, spiritual growth is another mark. If
you're a true Christian you're going to be
growing and that means you're going to be more
and more like Christ. Life produces itself. If
you're alive you're going to grow, there's no
other way. You'll improve, you'll increase,
you'll grow because whoever has that new work
begun,
Philippians 1:6, is going to see it
perfected, it's going to go on, it's going to
keep moving. The Spirit is going to move you
from one level of glory to the next. So you look
at your life, you see spiritual growth, you see
the decreasing frequency of sin, the increasing
pattern of righteousness and devotion to God.
And then finally,
obedience...obedient living. Every branch in me
bears fruit...bears fruit, says John 15 and
Ephesians 2:10 Paul says, "Look, you are His
workmanship created in Christ Jesus unto good
works which God has before ordained that you
walk in them." That's obedience. We are saved
unto the obedience of faith.
Look at your
life, do you see all those things, including
selfless love, separation from the world,
spiritual growth and obedience? If so, that's
evidence of a saving faith.
Now back to our
text. The cross declares God's justice and
righteousness. The cross exalts God's grace
which is appropriated by faith. Thirdly, and
just ever so briefly, the cross reveals God's
consistency...the cross reveals God's
consistency. Look at verse 29. What's the point
here? Well, the Jews are going to say...Look, we
are justified by the works of the Law, and now
you're coming along and preaching to all these
Gentiles that they are justified by faith. Does
God have two ways? Does God require works from
us and grace and faith from them? Is God a
merciful saving God toward Gentiles, but a legal
condemning God toward Jews? Do we have two
different means of salvation?
Of course you
realize, don't you, that the Jews believed they
were saved by their works so they were
concluding that Paul was preaching a new way of
salvation which was not consistent with God's
way. Paul says, "Is God the God of Jews only?"
No. "Is He not the God of Gentiles also?" Yes,
and they would have to agree. Yes, God is the
God of all men. Isaiah 54 says the God of the
whole earth shall He be called.
Jeremiah 16:19, the nations shall come unto
Thee from the ends of the earth. They knew that.
Zechariah 2:11, "And many nations shall be
joined to the Lord and shall be My people." They
knew He was the God of Jew and Gentile.
All right then,
since indeed God is one, that's the Greek order
in verse 30, you see He is one at the end of the
verse in the NAS, it really should go with the
word God. Since indeed God is one, He will
justify the circumcised...that's Jews by
faith...and the uncircumcised...that's Gentiles
through faith. Now here you see God's
consistency.
You look at the
cross and you see since indeed God is one, if
God is one God and He is the God of all men and
He is the God of Jews and Gentiles, then He is
one God over all men who will have one way of
salvation. He will justify all by faith. God
saves all the same way and He always
has...always by faith, always apart from works,
He is one God with one way for all men. God
never changes...absolutely consistent.
The cross didn't
introduce a new way of salvation, it simply
covered the sins of all the past believers and
all the future believers who came by faith. How
was Noah saved? Go back, way back to Noah.
Genesis says Noah found grace in the eyes of the
Lord. How was Moses saved? Go all the way back
to Exodus, Moses found grace in the eyes of the
Lord. How was Abraham saved? Romans 4 is all
about that. Verse 3 says, "Abraham believed God
and it was reckoned to him as righteousness."
That's clear back in Genesis 15. Always the
same, by grace through faith, by grace through
faith. In the Old Testament they believed all
that God revealed. They didn't have Christ yet.
They believed all that God revealed. The same in
the new after Christ. No one is, no one has, no
one ever will be saved any other way than by
faith as God graciously offers forgiveness
through the sacrifice of His Son which covers
the sin of sinners before Him and after Him.
So the cross from
God's perspective declares His justice, exalts
His grace and reveals His consistency. Lastly,
this is rich, confirms God's Law...confirms
God's Law. Verse 31, some of the Jews are going
to say, "Oh, all right, salvation is by grace
through faith, forget the Law. There's no Law.
If there's no works then the Law is useless,
pointless. Just why in the world did God go
through all of that? Why did He go through all
of that Law stuff if we aren't saved by keeping
the Law? Do we then nullify the Law?" And he
says, megenita(?) in the Greek, no, no,
no, no, no, may it never be. On the contrary, we
establish the Law.
What do you mean?
Putting Jesus Christ on the cross to pay the
penalty for sin ought to show you how serious
God is about His Law. Even if it took the life
of His own Son to satisfy the demands of that
Law for death for sin, He would pay it. His Law
is holy, His Law is just, His Law is righteous
and Christ's death proves it. Nothing is more of
a reflection of God's Law as holy than the death
of Christ. It was God's Law that put Him there
because all the violations of that Law had to be
satisfied with a penalty and God couldn't
violate His Law or penalty and so He put Christ
on the cross.
And so, God's Law
then is established as holy, righteous, good and
is affirmed as the standard by which we are to
live. Its purpose was to show us sin, it did.
Its purpose was to show us God's pattern for
holy living, it does. Its fulfillment in terms
of the demand for death was paid by Christ, its
fulfillment in terms of the demand for life is
made possible through salvation. What a great
affirmation of the Law. Look at the cross. In it
you see God's justice, God's grace, God's
consistency, you see God's Law. And it's all for
His glory. No wonder the Reformers said, Sola
gratia, sola fide, sola deo, gloria, "By
grace alone, by faith alone for God's glory
alone." And the song writer said, "O what a
Savior is mine, in Him God's mercies combine,
His love will never decline and He loves me."
This, beloved, is
a precious treasure. Salvation not as we view it
or as angels or demons or even Christ views it,
but as God views it opens up to us the avenue of
worship in which we appreciate, adore, express
our love and affection to our great God for what
He has done for us. Let's bow in prayer.
Our Father, one
man has penned it this way, "When I stand before
Thy throne dressed in beauty not my own, when I
see Thee as Thou art, love Thee with unsinning
heart, then, Lord, shall I fully know and only
then how much I owe." We worship You, we adore
You, we express our love and affection to You,
we exalt You for this great salvation which You
have provided for us.
While your heads
are bowed for just a moment, if you do not know
Christ but you desire to receive the salvation
that He offers, the forgiveness of sin and
eternal life, will you in the quietness of your
own heart say...Lord God, I believe in Jesus
Christ, I believe that He God in flesh died on
the cross to pay the penalty for my sin, rose
again, provided perfect satisfaction and I
receive the gift of salvation in His name,
turning from my sin I commit myself to follow
Him. Pray that prayer and may true salvation be
yours this day. Amen.