In Eph 1:3-14 Paul writes about stunning truths: God's eternal plan, decided on before the creation of the world, to adopt many children for Himself from fallen mankind - and to unite them with the rest of creation under the headship of His Son, in order to glorify Himself (Eph 1:6, 12, 14).
Then, from v.15, he tells the church in Ephesus what he is continually praying for them. He is so enthusiastic, that he uses word after word to bring it across. Let us now focus on this prayer.
A spirit of wisdom and of revelation (17-19)
If you look closely at this prayer, you notice that Paul is really asking the Father for only one thing - that He will give the Ephesians "a spirit of wisdom and of revelation" (17).
Why is this his plea? Because this will help them in two ways: First, they will grow in their knowledge of God the Father (17). Second, they will understand their inheritance in Christ all the better (18-19).
On this second part of his prayer (their inheritance in Christ) Paul then expands. It involves 3 things (18-19).
First, the hope to which they have been called.
Second, the riches of this glorious inheritance.
Third, the immeasurable greatness of God's power (Gr. dunamis) which is already at work in them, and which guarantees the fulfilment of the hope and the final taking possession of the riches he has mentioned.
So excited he is about this power at work in them, that he uses another 3 words in v.19b to emphasise it. The NASB translates: "working" (energeia - activity); "strength" (kratos - exercised power); "might" (ischus - great inherent might).
This power in Christ's resurrection (20-21)
Paul continues, focussing on the third point above - God's power (20vv). It is the same power which worked in Christ after the crucifixion. It has therefore been manifested before. Just consider what this power was able to do in God's Son. The apostle is so excited about this, that he uses 3 verbs to emphasise it (20, ESV).
One, the Father "worked" this power in Christ (to effectively bring about something) - and in the process created life in Him (NASB: "brought about").
Two, with this power He "raised" Christ.
Three, with this power He "seated" Christ at His right hand in heaven, far above all "rule" and "authority" and "power" and "dominion", and above "every name that is named" - not only in this age, but also in the one to come.
Implications for the church (v.22-23)
Once again the apostle focusses on the church. He can not talk about the glorified Lord Jesus without thinking of His church. Why? Because there is an unbreakable and organic unity and bond between the Head and the body - which means that Christ's sovereign authority of neccesity has enormous implications for His church. And this is what Paul writes about in Ch.2 - in overwhelming terms!
Fallen man's wretched condition (2:1-3)
In order to emphasise the glory of what God does for the Church all the better, the apostle first describes the pathetic and wretched state in which the saved found themselves before their salvation.
Eph 2:1-3 gives us some truths of the most profound theological importance.
According to this 3 things are true of unsaved man - man in Adam.
One, spiritually he is dead in his trespasses (the God-provoking crossing of boundaries set by the Law-giver) and sins (his failures to meet God's standards of righteousness) (1).
Two, he is a slave of the world, the Devil, and the flesh (2-3).
Three, by nature he is under God's wrath (3).
"But God" ... the music of salvation (4-6)
Eph 2:4-6 then is music in redeemed ears.
It starts with words around which man's eternal redemption hinges: "But God ..." (comp. also Rm 3:21; Col 1:22; Tit 3:4).
When they were still powerlessly caught up in the terrible condition of Adam's descendants, God in His mercy did three things:
One, with Christ He brought to life those who had been dead in their sins and trespasses (v.5).
Two, with Christ He raised those who had been under His wrath (v.6a).
Three, they have been seated with Christ in the heavens (6b).
Certain things to be clearly noted
• In 2:5-6 Paul creates 3 new Greek verbs by combining the preposition, "together with" (Gr. sun) with an existing verb. In this way he underlines that these 3 things which happen to believers are completely due to their unity with Christ. This is one of the New Testament's most fundamental emphases.
• All 3 these new verbs are in the past tense. They describe completed facts concerning those in Christ. It implies that, if your are truly in Christ, this very moment three things are true of you - in principle.
One, you, who were dead in your sins and trespasses, have been brought to life.
Two, with Christ you have been raised, and are forgiven and justified.
Three, in principle you are seated with Christ in heaven.
This can only be understood in terms of the believers union with Christ - who was personally and historically brought to life, raised from the grave, and then ascended to heaven.
• The verb "have been saved" (5, 8) is passive. This therefore happens to the sinner; it is being done to him or her. He makes no contribution (9a). This does not mean that he remains passive after salvation; on the contrary. After all, he has been saved exactly for the reason that he would do good works (10).
Furthermore, the verb speaks of a present reality as an outflow of something which happened in the past (the "Perfect tense" = the English "Present Perfect"). This implies that salvation is something permanent.
• All this flow from God's grace (5, 8). And the purpose of this is that our salvation will glorify Christ for all eternity (7).
"Grace" refers to the wonderful favour saved sinners receive from God - in spite of the fact that God was under no obligation to favour them. No-one therefore has any claim to this immense privilege - to the contrary. That is why nobody can glory (9).
Paul's line of argument
The apostle's argument can now be summarised.
• As Christ was made alive (1:20),
So we have been made alive with Him (2:5);
and this was necessary because we had been dead spiritually (2:1).
• As Christ was raised from death (1:20),
só we have been raised with Him (2:6a);
and this was neccesary because we had been under God's wrath (2:3).
• As Christ was seated at the right hand of the Father (1:20),
só we have been made to sit with Him (2:6);
and this was necessary because we had been in slavery (2:2-3).
From what we have seen, it is clear how we should understand the apostle here: when we were made alive out of our state of spiritual death, we were born again And when we were raised from under the wrath of God, we were justified.
But what does it mean when the Bible says that we were made to sit with Christ in heaven?
In 1:21ff the apostle emphasizes that Christ has been seated in a position of authority over the powers of darkness. Without doubt he wants to emphasize that, when we were made to sit with Christ in the heavens, we were also placed in a position of authority - over the flesh, the world, and the Devil and his hosts! This has profound implications - implications we too easily forget.
In closing
Unfortunately we hardly have time for some application. Let us limit ourselves to a remark or two.
• As what has been revealed here is not primarily experiential truth, but ontological truth, we have to embrace it in faith, whether we "feel" it or not. But once you do embrace it, it makes a world's difference. This is why it has been revealed to us.
• If you know for sure that old things have passed away for you, and that everything has become new (2Cor 5:17) - that the Lord has therefore regenerated you in His grace - remind yourself again and again about your sublime position in Christ. Of course there is no place for arrogance and pride in a Christian's life. We are not talking about a man-centred swollen head. But know this:
One, you have been called to fight against sin on the front foot. You do not háve to give in to any temptation. We háve been equipped for victory.
This is not to say that we will never fail. Everyone of us still has much to grow. But I am quite sure all of us can do much better than we do presently, not so!
Two, it is our Father's wil that we bear fruit, much fruit, abiding fruit - to the glory of our Lord. But the moment we start forgetting who we are in Christ, it brings to an abrupt end our fruit-bearing.
Let this truth - that you enjoy a position of authority in Christ - be written on the tablets of your heart, and you will be surprised about the practical outworking of it in your life.
Nico van der Walt
• Nico van der Walt subscribes to the historically respected and internationally recognized 1689 Baptist Confession as well as the Confession of Sola 5, an association of God-centred evangelicals in Southern Africa.
• A study similar to this one is being sent regularly in English or Afrikaans by e-mail to all who have personally requested it.
• Subscriptions, changes of address, cancellations and correspondence: Postnet Suite 148, Private Bag X1, Northcliff, 2115, South Africa.
E: nico.vanderwalt@reformed.org.za ;
Tel. 011 476 2907; 082 848 9396.
• Blogs: http://sermonsheraldstitbits.blogspot.com/ (Eng.); http://antipasherout.blogspot.com/ (Afr.)
• No copyright. Free to preach, or duplicate, or forward electronically.
E-Sermons, Antipas Heralds, and Titbits
Writings of Nico van der Walt to promote the understanding, conviction and practise of God-centred, Christ-focussed and Bible-based truth
Monday, October 6, 2014
Saturday, May 18, 2013
EE 32 - JOHN 17:3 : THE ESSENCE OF ETERNAL LIFE [2]
Last time we tried to come to grips with what it means to know God. It is, however, one thing to define it; it is quite something else to experience it. Let us then consider a number of pointers or guidelines to help us forward on this road of the highest of human callings.
1. I must realise that I have no greater calling than the pursuit of the knowledge of God.
Micah 6:8: "He has showed you, O man, what is good. And what does the LORD require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God" (remember our emphasis last time on the personal relationship with God).
Phil 3:8-10: "... I consider everything a loss compared to the surpassing greatness of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord ... I want to know Christ ..."
The Westminster Shorter Catechism: "What is the chief end of man? Man’s chief end is to glorify God, and to enjoy him forever" (Q&A 1).
2. Let me embrace this fact with both arms: It is God's will to reveal Himself to me and walk in fellowship with me.
This is what lies at the heart of His promises for the New Covenant (Hos 2:18-19; Jer 31:31-34). This is what it is all about: that we shall be His people and that He shall be our God.
3. My focus must be God personally - in other words, the Giver and not the gifts!
Can there be a greater insult than to show an interest in somebody only for what you can get out of him?
4. God can only be known in and through Christ.
This is vital! It can never be overemphasised!
The incarnate Word is God's supreme, perfect and final revelation to us (Jn 1:14; 14:8-9). It is impossible to have a proper knowledge of God without looking continuously and intensely at our Lord Jesus Christ. "The Son is the radiance of God’s glory and the exact representation of his being..." (Hb 1:3). Christ is the clearest window through whom we see who God really is (2Cor 4:6).
Moreover, Christ is the one and only Mediator between God and man. Without Him there is no fellowship with God (Jn 14:6; Acts 4:12; 1Tm 2:5).
5. This revelation comes to us through the Word and the Spirit.
It is so that God's eternal power and deity is evident from nature - His general revelation (Rm 1:20). But this is not sufficient to lead us to a saving and personal knowledge of God. For this we are dependant on His special self-revelation in Christ - as recorded in the Bible. Without the Word we can never know the living God as we should.
This does not mean that I need simply to study the Bible as I would any other book. God's revelation, especially the deep truths of the New Covenant, remains hidden unless we are enlightened by the Holy Spirit. The responsibility to seek the knowledge of God is mine, but I will only make any progress if I do so in prayerful dependence on the Spirit's work (1Cor 2:6-16).
6. Without regular, disciplined and persistent prayer we will not progress one millimetre along this road of the highest calling.
It is after all in prayer that we experience the most intimate fellowship with God.
Question and answer 116 of the Heidelberg Catechism puts it like this: Why is prayer necessary for Christians? Because it is the chief part of the thankfulness which God requires of us, and because God will give His grace and Holy Spirit to those only who with hearty sighing unceasingly beg them of Him and thank Him for them.
7. The knowledge of God will always bring about a measure of emotional experience.
Can there ever be a love relationship without emotion? But here too the norm for all genuine Christian experience applies: it can only be trusted as authentic if it is rooted in Biblical truth.
8. God reveals Himself only to a faith that is childlike and utterly dependant.
Never are we more dependant, and never do we need more faith than when we concern ourselves with His self-revelation. Augustine said, "If you do not believe, you will not understand". it is as simple as that. The old Puritan Thomas Watson said, "Faith is the main artery of the soul".
In this connection Hb 11:6 is of the utmost importance: "And without faith it is impossible to please Him, for he who comes to God must believe that He is, and that He is a rewarder of those who seek Him" (NASB). Man can accomplish much without faith, but nothing that will please God.
Without faith there can be no salvation. But more than that, faith lies at the heart of our daily walk with the Lord. By faith the unseen becomes visible, the inconceivable becomes possible. Faith is the hand with which I take hold of His gifts.
9. God reveals Himself only to the humble.
Do not expect to progress in the knowledge of God if you are a proud and choosy know-all. That is why the Lord Jesus says in Mt 11:25-27: "I praise you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because you have hidden these things from the wise and learned, and revealed them to little children. Yes, Father, for this was your good pleasure ... No one knows the Son except the Father, and no one knows the Father except the Son and those to whom the Son chooses to reveal him."
10. The knowledge of God is not for casual and double-minded seekers.
The knowledge of God is something to which we must "press on" in a resolute, disciplined and persistent manner (Hos 6:3). "You will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your heart" (Jer 29:13).
All the men and women of God throughout the ages, in Biblical times and thereafter, have pursued the knowledge of God with a holy hunger.
This was the case with Moses. Exodus 32-34 make for thrilling reading! Already in 33:11 we read that God spoke to Moses "face to face as a man speaks with his friend". Then Moses comes to a full realisation of the seriousness of his calling to lead his people and he prays, "If you are pleased with me, teach me your ways so I may know you and continue to find favour with you" (13).
To this God then replies, "I will do the very thing you have asked, because I am pleased with you and I know you by name" (17).
But, while Moses is duly thankful that the Lord has granted his request, he is afraid that he may merely have received the ability to know God's ways and to lead the people correctly. Wonderful as this is, there is something that he desires above all else, something without which he cannot live and which he is afraid God will stop short of. What holy boldness he has: "Now show me your glory" (18)!
God responds positively, but not without qualification: yes, He will pass before Moses in all His majesty, but Moses must realise that there are limits. No-one may see God in all His glory and live. Therefore He will cover his servant with His own hand in the cleft of a rock until He has passed by. He will then take away His hand so that Moses may see His back (19-23).
The fulfilment we find in Ex 34:5-7: "Then the LORD came down in the cloud and stood there with him and proclaimed his name, the LORD. And he passed in front of Moses, proclaiming, 'The LORD, the LORD, the compassionate and gracious God, slow to anger, abounding in love and faithfulness, maintaining love to thousands, and forgiving wickedness, rebellion and sin. Yet he does not leave the guilty unpunished; he punishes the children and their children for the sin of the fathers to the third and fourth generation'".
Afterwards, when Moses begged the Lord to remain Israel's God, in spite of their sinfulness, He renewed the covenant with them (10).
Nothing pleases the Lord more than a desire such as the one expressed by Moses. And if we persist in our prayers, the Holy Spirit will increase our capacity to know Him, intensify our longing for Him, and fulfil our desires more and more.
11. Those who are zealous to live a holy life and serve Him in loving devotion, are the ones who progress in the knowledge of God.
Man was created in God's image. That image was seriously marred by the Fall. But this is being restored as part of the redeeming work of Christ. Those of us who are united to Christ are being transformed into His likeness (Eph 4:23-24; Col 3:10). That is why we are commanded to be holy as God is holy (1Pt 1:15-16), and to be perfect as our heavenly Father is perfect (Mt 5:48).
It stands to reason that not all of God's attributes will be reflected in man. Some, however, can come to expression, such as His goodness, mercy and love. And we will be able to develop these traits to the extent that we learn to recognise, admire and worship them in Him.
In this connection the promise of the Lord Jesus in Jn 14:21-23 is of the utmost importance: "Whoever has my commands and obeys them, he is the one who loves me. He who loves me will be loved by my Father, and I too will love him and show myself to him ... If anyone loves me, he will obey my teaching. My Father will love him, and we will come to him and make our home with him."
12. The knowledge of God is for those who have worshipping hearts.
God created and re-created us so that we may worship and glorify Him. This is one of the reasons why the Holy Spirit wants to lead us into an ever deepening knowledge of God. But worship is not only the fruit of this knowledge, it is also a root of it. Why would the Spirit lead us ever higher if we do not show our gratitude and awe by richer worship? Truly, worship and the knowledge of God always walk hand in hand.
13. Those who are serious about the knowledge of God must be content to receive not only good things from Him, but also His discipline (Hb 12).
We come to the knowledge of God not so much on the peaks as in the valleys. We know this not only from the lives of the saints through the ages, but from personal experience.
14. Last but not least, I myself have to walk the mountain track to the peaks of the knowledge of God.
Of course it will help to link arms with my brothers and sisters who have the same passion burning in their hearts. True Christian experience is often corporate by nature. But in the final analysis everybody must carry his or her own pack. There are in any case long stretches of the climb where the ledges can only be negotiated by one person at a time - and increasingly so the higher we progress.
Nico van der Walt
1. I must realise that I have no greater calling than the pursuit of the knowledge of God.
Micah 6:8: "He has showed you, O man, what is good. And what does the LORD require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God" (remember our emphasis last time on the personal relationship with God).
Phil 3:8-10: "... I consider everything a loss compared to the surpassing greatness of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord ... I want to know Christ ..."
The Westminster Shorter Catechism: "What is the chief end of man? Man’s chief end is to glorify God, and to enjoy him forever" (Q&A 1).
2. Let me embrace this fact with both arms: It is God's will to reveal Himself to me and walk in fellowship with me.
This is what lies at the heart of His promises for the New Covenant (Hos 2:18-19; Jer 31:31-34). This is what it is all about: that we shall be His people and that He shall be our God.
3. My focus must be God personally - in other words, the Giver and not the gifts!
Can there be a greater insult than to show an interest in somebody only for what you can get out of him?
4. God can only be known in and through Christ.
This is vital! It can never be overemphasised!
The incarnate Word is God's supreme, perfect and final revelation to us (Jn 1:14; 14:8-9). It is impossible to have a proper knowledge of God without looking continuously and intensely at our Lord Jesus Christ. "The Son is the radiance of God’s glory and the exact representation of his being..." (Hb 1:3). Christ is the clearest window through whom we see who God really is (2Cor 4:6).
Moreover, Christ is the one and only Mediator between God and man. Without Him there is no fellowship with God (Jn 14:6; Acts 4:12; 1Tm 2:5).
5. This revelation comes to us through the Word and the Spirit.
It is so that God's eternal power and deity is evident from nature - His general revelation (Rm 1:20). But this is not sufficient to lead us to a saving and personal knowledge of God. For this we are dependant on His special self-revelation in Christ - as recorded in the Bible. Without the Word we can never know the living God as we should.
This does not mean that I need simply to study the Bible as I would any other book. God's revelation, especially the deep truths of the New Covenant, remains hidden unless we are enlightened by the Holy Spirit. The responsibility to seek the knowledge of God is mine, but I will only make any progress if I do so in prayerful dependence on the Spirit's work (1Cor 2:6-16).
6. Without regular, disciplined and persistent prayer we will not progress one millimetre along this road of the highest calling.
It is after all in prayer that we experience the most intimate fellowship with God.
Question and answer 116 of the Heidelberg Catechism puts it like this: Why is prayer necessary for Christians? Because it is the chief part of the thankfulness which God requires of us, and because God will give His grace and Holy Spirit to those only who with hearty sighing unceasingly beg them of Him and thank Him for them.
7. The knowledge of God will always bring about a measure of emotional experience.
Can there ever be a love relationship without emotion? But here too the norm for all genuine Christian experience applies: it can only be trusted as authentic if it is rooted in Biblical truth.
8. God reveals Himself only to a faith that is childlike and utterly dependant.
Never are we more dependant, and never do we need more faith than when we concern ourselves with His self-revelation. Augustine said, "If you do not believe, you will not understand". it is as simple as that. The old Puritan Thomas Watson said, "Faith is the main artery of the soul".
In this connection Hb 11:6 is of the utmost importance: "And without faith it is impossible to please Him, for he who comes to God must believe that He is, and that He is a rewarder of those who seek Him" (NASB). Man can accomplish much without faith, but nothing that will please God.
Without faith there can be no salvation. But more than that, faith lies at the heart of our daily walk with the Lord. By faith the unseen becomes visible, the inconceivable becomes possible. Faith is the hand with which I take hold of His gifts.
9. God reveals Himself only to the humble.
Do not expect to progress in the knowledge of God if you are a proud and choosy know-all. That is why the Lord Jesus says in Mt 11:25-27: "I praise you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because you have hidden these things from the wise and learned, and revealed them to little children. Yes, Father, for this was your good pleasure ... No one knows the Son except the Father, and no one knows the Father except the Son and those to whom the Son chooses to reveal him."
10. The knowledge of God is not for casual and double-minded seekers.
The knowledge of God is something to which we must "press on" in a resolute, disciplined and persistent manner (Hos 6:3). "You will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your heart" (Jer 29:13).
All the men and women of God throughout the ages, in Biblical times and thereafter, have pursued the knowledge of God with a holy hunger.
This was the case with Moses. Exodus 32-34 make for thrilling reading! Already in 33:11 we read that God spoke to Moses "face to face as a man speaks with his friend". Then Moses comes to a full realisation of the seriousness of his calling to lead his people and he prays, "If you are pleased with me, teach me your ways so I may know you and continue to find favour with you" (13).
To this God then replies, "I will do the very thing you have asked, because I am pleased with you and I know you by name" (17).
But, while Moses is duly thankful that the Lord has granted his request, he is afraid that he may merely have received the ability to know God's ways and to lead the people correctly. Wonderful as this is, there is something that he desires above all else, something without which he cannot live and which he is afraid God will stop short of. What holy boldness he has: "Now show me your glory" (18)!
God responds positively, but not without qualification: yes, He will pass before Moses in all His majesty, but Moses must realise that there are limits. No-one may see God in all His glory and live. Therefore He will cover his servant with His own hand in the cleft of a rock until He has passed by. He will then take away His hand so that Moses may see His back (19-23).
The fulfilment we find in Ex 34:5-7: "Then the LORD came down in the cloud and stood there with him and proclaimed his name, the LORD. And he passed in front of Moses, proclaiming, 'The LORD, the LORD, the compassionate and gracious God, slow to anger, abounding in love and faithfulness, maintaining love to thousands, and forgiving wickedness, rebellion and sin. Yet he does not leave the guilty unpunished; he punishes the children and their children for the sin of the fathers to the third and fourth generation'".
Afterwards, when Moses begged the Lord to remain Israel's God, in spite of their sinfulness, He renewed the covenant with them (10).
Nothing pleases the Lord more than a desire such as the one expressed by Moses. And if we persist in our prayers, the Holy Spirit will increase our capacity to know Him, intensify our longing for Him, and fulfil our desires more and more.
11. Those who are zealous to live a holy life and serve Him in loving devotion, are the ones who progress in the knowledge of God.
Man was created in God's image. That image was seriously marred by the Fall. But this is being restored as part of the redeeming work of Christ. Those of us who are united to Christ are being transformed into His likeness (Eph 4:23-24; Col 3:10). That is why we are commanded to be holy as God is holy (1Pt 1:15-16), and to be perfect as our heavenly Father is perfect (Mt 5:48).
It stands to reason that not all of God's attributes will be reflected in man. Some, however, can come to expression, such as His goodness, mercy and love. And we will be able to develop these traits to the extent that we learn to recognise, admire and worship them in Him.
In this connection the promise of the Lord Jesus in Jn 14:21-23 is of the utmost importance: "Whoever has my commands and obeys them, he is the one who loves me. He who loves me will be loved by my Father, and I too will love him and show myself to him ... If anyone loves me, he will obey my teaching. My Father will love him, and we will come to him and make our home with him."
12. The knowledge of God is for those who have worshipping hearts.
God created and re-created us so that we may worship and glorify Him. This is one of the reasons why the Holy Spirit wants to lead us into an ever deepening knowledge of God. But worship is not only the fruit of this knowledge, it is also a root of it. Why would the Spirit lead us ever higher if we do not show our gratitude and awe by richer worship? Truly, worship and the knowledge of God always walk hand in hand.
13. Those who are serious about the knowledge of God must be content to receive not only good things from Him, but also His discipline (Hb 12).
We come to the knowledge of God not so much on the peaks as in the valleys. We know this not only from the lives of the saints through the ages, but from personal experience.
14. Last but not least, I myself have to walk the mountain track to the peaks of the knowledge of God.
Of course it will help to link arms with my brothers and sisters who have the same passion burning in their hearts. True Christian experience is often corporate by nature. But in the final analysis everybody must carry his or her own pack. There are in any case long stretches of the climb where the ledges can only be negotiated by one person at a time - and increasingly so the higher we progress.
Nico van der Walt
EE 31 - JOHN 17:3 : THE ESSENCE OF ETERNAL LIFE [1]
In the process of becoming a mature Christian I must master many Biblical truths. What is more, my priorities must undergo many adjustments. But the calling above all others, is the unspeakable privilege of growing in the knowledge of God. As the Lord Jesus says here in His high priestly prayer, it is the essence of eternal life. More than anything else it will dominate for all eternity the life of everyone who is savingly united to Christ.
Over and over again the Bible emphasises the importance of the knowledge of God.
In Jer 9:23-24 the Lord says, "Let not the wise man boast of his wisdom or the strong man boast of his strength or the rich man boast of his riches, but let him who boasts boast about this: that he understands and knows me, that I am the Lord, who exercises kindness, justice and righteousness on earth, for in these I delight."
Hosea often deals with this subject. In Hos 2:19-20 (ESV) the Lord promises, "And I will betroth you to me for ever. I will betroth you to me in righteousness and in justice, in steadfast love and in mercy. I will betroth you to me in faithfulness. And you shall know the Lord." The prophet then goes on to mourn the fact that his people are "destroyed for lack of knowledge" (4:6). What is the knowledge he is talking about? He provides the answer a few verses earlier in 4:1: "Hear the word of the Lord, O children of Israel, for the Lord has a controversy with the inhabitants of the land. There is no faithfulness or steadfast love, and no knowledge of God in the land ..." Finally Hosea makes a passionate appeal to his countrymen in 6:3: "Let us know; let us press on to know the Lord." He then backs the call with an assurance from the Lord: "For I desire steadfast love and not sacrifice, the knowledge of God rather than burnt offerings" (6:6).
There are several similar pronouncements elsewhere in the Bible, e.g. Prov 9:10; Ex 33:13 et seq; 2Pt 1:2-3; 1Jn 2:3-4; 4:7-8.
What is this knowledge of God?
❏ To start off, two qualifications.
Firstly, in both Hebrew and Greek the word "to know" carries the idea of knowledge resulting from observation, contemplation and experience. It therefore implies both objective insight and subjective experience. It often carries the meaning of an intimate relationship and intimacy between people. We read, for instance in Gn 4:1 that Adam "knew his wife and she conceived..." (ASV, ESV).
Secondly, if we look at the way knowledge of God is described in the Bible, it is noticeable how often it is tied to an understanding and experience of His attributes and the excellence of His character (comp. Jer 9:24 and Hos 2:18-19, already quoted).
❏ The knowledge of God has three distinguishable but inseparable elements. The extent to which these components are a reality in my life, is the extent to which I know God.
The knowledge of God is
an understanding of that which the Triune God has revealed about Himself,
which hangs together with
an ongoing, conscious and personal walk with Him,
which brings about
an insight into His will and ways.
❏ The first element has to do with understanding that which God has revealed about Himself in Scripture. It is concerned with thought and study. The apostle writes: "And we know that the Son of God has come and has given us understanding, so that we may know Him ..." (1Jn 5:20, ESV).
Because knowledge of God involves much more than mere knowledge of various facts about Him, some think that they can get by without it - a fatal mistake! Why, after all, has God revealed so much about Himself to us?
Without disciplined, thoughtful and prayerful study of what God has revealed about Himself in Scripture one can easily lapse into a quagmire of subjective and one-sided arbitrariness. And the outcome is inevitable: you are misled into creating a god after your own image - leading in effect to idolatry, and all the twisted outcomes in one's life.
He who serves an imaginary God will have to accept imaginary salvation one day!
J.I. Packer has this to say about the study of God's character: “No topic is greater, grander, or more important, and by the same token none is more demanding. It is the theological Mount Everest, and no one ever masters it or does it full justice.”
❏ The second element of the knowledge of God is our personal relationship or fellowship with God. "Enoch walked with God" - like all godly men and women through the ages (Gen 5:22, 24).
My personal relationship with God finds expression in two ways:
on the one hand in my believing identification, my grateful experience, and my reverent recognition of His attributes operating in my life,
and
on the other hand in my believing trust in His promises, my loving commitment to His glory, and my grateful obedience to His commands.
We may never concern ourselves with the theological aspects only. God did not reveal Himself to man merely for the sake of the intellectual and the speculative. No, He revealed Himself to us so that we may worship, love and serve Him accordingly. That is why the Bible, when speaking of God, does not limit itself to abstract statements about Him, but time and again boils it down to experiencing His attributes in personal and ordinary human terms.
The Bible never regards a truth as truly known until it controls the life of the learner. And nowhere is this more apparent than in its teaching about the knowledge of God.
This emphasis helps us to steer clear of lapsing into a mere cerebral and scholastic view about God - a view which may be doctrinally sound but emotionally and spiritually dead.
But then it is also equally important to note that fellowship with God does not consist of having a mere subjective and mystical dialogue with Him.
On the one hand I live in fellowship with God when in faith I view my entire life through the spectacles of the Word and so come to recognise His intimate involvement in all my circumstances and the whole course of my life.
On the other hand I live in fellowship with the Lord when in faith I apply in my life the practical implications of what He has revealed about Himself and his will. In other words, it is my response to His saving initiatives, His ongoing loving faithfulness and His sovereign rule over my life.
In this way the covenant of grace, namely that the Lord shall be a Father to me and that I shall be His child, becomes an everyday experimental reality.
The life of David serves as a beautiful illustration. Take for instance Psalm 139, where he speaks of God's lofty attributes - His omniscience, omnipotence and omnipresence. He however does not do so in abstract terms, but as he himself has experienced them. He mentions the name of the Lord six times in the Psalm, and uses personal pronouns that refer to Him approximately thirty times. He also refers to himself about fifty times. Therefore, in David's innermost experience of his faith there are only two persons involved, the Lord and he himself. That is why he does not talk of "He", but of "you", and not of "people" or "man", but of "I".
❏ The third element has to do with insight into God's will and His ways.
In Ex 33:13 (NIV) Moses pleads with the Lord, "If you are pleased with me, teach me your ways so I may know you and continue to find favour with you"; and in Ps 103:7 we find the statement, "He made known His ways to Moses, His deeds to the people of Israel."
This is about wisdom and ongoing renewal in my way of thinking, which help me to discern clearly my own role in effecting God's will for my life. Nowhere is this principle put more clearly than in Rm 12:2: "Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God's will is - his good, pleasing and perfect will."
However, we are concerned here with more than our personal obedience. What is also involved is insight into how God normally deals with this world, His church and His people. It involves an understanding of His precepts, and how His universal principles are to be applied; what are His preferences and dislikes; what pleases Him or raises His anger.
What do we learn from all this?
This is as far as we go with our theme for the present. Actually we have only put a few foundation stones into place. I propose to talk about the practical guidelines for our pursuit of the knowledge of God next time.
In conclusion I would like to make a single appeal to you: Take time to reflect in all honesty and in detail on everything we have been considering.
Ask yourself whether you are really walking with the Lord in a balanced and Scriptural manner. Are all three elements required for a genuine knowledge of God present in your life? Do you really have a personal relationship with the Lord? Are His fingerprints to be seen in your daily existence? Is He really involved with you personally? Can you recognise it? Is your lifestyle marked by trust in God, by loving dedication to Him, by principled and uncompromising obedience to Him?
Why are these questions so important? I think I have a Scriptural mandate to tell you that if you are a stranger to them, you probably have not received eternal life yet.
Do not simply argue that you have always been a good churchgoer and a believer. Many of us come from backgrounds where lopsided thinking about these matters have been the norm rather than the exception. Often there is either a one-sided emphasis on the purely intellectual, or an over-reaction manifesting itself in emotionalism.
No! No! Examine yourself to ensure that your faith is true and authentic (2Cor 13:5). This is vitally important, because the Bible frequently warns us against false doctrine, self-deception and an expectation about eternal salvation that may prove to be in vain.
And if you fail the test? Then you go to the Lord in humility and plead for His mercy. And persevere until He answers you. He has promised his grace in Christ to people who approach Him like this.
May the Lord in His mercy and through His Spirit grant us the ability to carry out this self-evaluation in a sober, honest and mature way!
Nico van der Walt
Over and over again the Bible emphasises the importance of the knowledge of God.
In Jer 9:23-24 the Lord says, "Let not the wise man boast of his wisdom or the strong man boast of his strength or the rich man boast of his riches, but let him who boasts boast about this: that he understands and knows me, that I am the Lord, who exercises kindness, justice and righteousness on earth, for in these I delight."
Hosea often deals with this subject. In Hos 2:19-20 (ESV) the Lord promises, "And I will betroth you to me for ever. I will betroth you to me in righteousness and in justice, in steadfast love and in mercy. I will betroth you to me in faithfulness. And you shall know the Lord." The prophet then goes on to mourn the fact that his people are "destroyed for lack of knowledge" (4:6). What is the knowledge he is talking about? He provides the answer a few verses earlier in 4:1: "Hear the word of the Lord, O children of Israel, for the Lord has a controversy with the inhabitants of the land. There is no faithfulness or steadfast love, and no knowledge of God in the land ..." Finally Hosea makes a passionate appeal to his countrymen in 6:3: "Let us know; let us press on to know the Lord." He then backs the call with an assurance from the Lord: "For I desire steadfast love and not sacrifice, the knowledge of God rather than burnt offerings" (6:6).
There are several similar pronouncements elsewhere in the Bible, e.g. Prov 9:10; Ex 33:13 et seq; 2Pt 1:2-3; 1Jn 2:3-4; 4:7-8.
What is this knowledge of God?
❏ To start off, two qualifications.
Firstly, in both Hebrew and Greek the word "to know" carries the idea of knowledge resulting from observation, contemplation and experience. It therefore implies both objective insight and subjective experience. It often carries the meaning of an intimate relationship and intimacy between people. We read, for instance in Gn 4:1 that Adam "knew his wife and she conceived..." (ASV, ESV).
Secondly, if we look at the way knowledge of God is described in the Bible, it is noticeable how often it is tied to an understanding and experience of His attributes and the excellence of His character (comp. Jer 9:24 and Hos 2:18-19, already quoted).
❏ The knowledge of God has three distinguishable but inseparable elements. The extent to which these components are a reality in my life, is the extent to which I know God.
The knowledge of God is
an understanding of that which the Triune God has revealed about Himself,
which hangs together with
an ongoing, conscious and personal walk with Him,
which brings about
an insight into His will and ways.
❏ The first element has to do with understanding that which God has revealed about Himself in Scripture. It is concerned with thought and study. The apostle writes: "And we know that the Son of God has come and has given us understanding, so that we may know Him ..." (1Jn 5:20, ESV).
Because knowledge of God involves much more than mere knowledge of various facts about Him, some think that they can get by without it - a fatal mistake! Why, after all, has God revealed so much about Himself to us?
Without disciplined, thoughtful and prayerful study of what God has revealed about Himself in Scripture one can easily lapse into a quagmire of subjective and one-sided arbitrariness. And the outcome is inevitable: you are misled into creating a god after your own image - leading in effect to idolatry, and all the twisted outcomes in one's life.
He who serves an imaginary God will have to accept imaginary salvation one day!
J.I. Packer has this to say about the study of God's character: “No topic is greater, grander, or more important, and by the same token none is more demanding. It is the theological Mount Everest, and no one ever masters it or does it full justice.”
❏ The second element of the knowledge of God is our personal relationship or fellowship with God. "Enoch walked with God" - like all godly men and women through the ages (Gen 5:22, 24).
My personal relationship with God finds expression in two ways:
on the one hand in my believing identification, my grateful experience, and my reverent recognition of His attributes operating in my life,
and
on the other hand in my believing trust in His promises, my loving commitment to His glory, and my grateful obedience to His commands.
We may never concern ourselves with the theological aspects only. God did not reveal Himself to man merely for the sake of the intellectual and the speculative. No, He revealed Himself to us so that we may worship, love and serve Him accordingly. That is why the Bible, when speaking of God, does not limit itself to abstract statements about Him, but time and again boils it down to experiencing His attributes in personal and ordinary human terms.
The Bible never regards a truth as truly known until it controls the life of the learner. And nowhere is this more apparent than in its teaching about the knowledge of God.
This emphasis helps us to steer clear of lapsing into a mere cerebral and scholastic view about God - a view which may be doctrinally sound but emotionally and spiritually dead.
But then it is also equally important to note that fellowship with God does not consist of having a mere subjective and mystical dialogue with Him.
On the one hand I live in fellowship with God when in faith I view my entire life through the spectacles of the Word and so come to recognise His intimate involvement in all my circumstances and the whole course of my life.
On the other hand I live in fellowship with the Lord when in faith I apply in my life the practical implications of what He has revealed about Himself and his will. In other words, it is my response to His saving initiatives, His ongoing loving faithfulness and His sovereign rule over my life.
In this way the covenant of grace, namely that the Lord shall be a Father to me and that I shall be His child, becomes an everyday experimental reality.
The life of David serves as a beautiful illustration. Take for instance Psalm 139, where he speaks of God's lofty attributes - His omniscience, omnipotence and omnipresence. He however does not do so in abstract terms, but as he himself has experienced them. He mentions the name of the Lord six times in the Psalm, and uses personal pronouns that refer to Him approximately thirty times. He also refers to himself about fifty times. Therefore, in David's innermost experience of his faith there are only two persons involved, the Lord and he himself. That is why he does not talk of "He", but of "you", and not of "people" or "man", but of "I".
❏ The third element has to do with insight into God's will and His ways.
In Ex 33:13 (NIV) Moses pleads with the Lord, "If you are pleased with me, teach me your ways so I may know you and continue to find favour with you"; and in Ps 103:7 we find the statement, "He made known His ways to Moses, His deeds to the people of Israel."
This is about wisdom and ongoing renewal in my way of thinking, which help me to discern clearly my own role in effecting God's will for my life. Nowhere is this principle put more clearly than in Rm 12:2: "Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God's will is - his good, pleasing and perfect will."
However, we are concerned here with more than our personal obedience. What is also involved is insight into how God normally deals with this world, His church and His people. It involves an understanding of His precepts, and how His universal principles are to be applied; what are His preferences and dislikes; what pleases Him or raises His anger.
What do we learn from all this?
This is as far as we go with our theme for the present. Actually we have only put a few foundation stones into place. I propose to talk about the practical guidelines for our pursuit of the knowledge of God next time.
In conclusion I would like to make a single appeal to you: Take time to reflect in all honesty and in detail on everything we have been considering.
Ask yourself whether you are really walking with the Lord in a balanced and Scriptural manner. Are all three elements required for a genuine knowledge of God present in your life? Do you really have a personal relationship with the Lord? Are His fingerprints to be seen in your daily existence? Is He really involved with you personally? Can you recognise it? Is your lifestyle marked by trust in God, by loving dedication to Him, by principled and uncompromising obedience to Him?
Why are these questions so important? I think I have a Scriptural mandate to tell you that if you are a stranger to them, you probably have not received eternal life yet.
Do not simply argue that you have always been a good churchgoer and a believer. Many of us come from backgrounds where lopsided thinking about these matters have been the norm rather than the exception. Often there is either a one-sided emphasis on the purely intellectual, or an over-reaction manifesting itself in emotionalism.
No! No! Examine yourself to ensure that your faith is true and authentic (2Cor 13:5). This is vitally important, because the Bible frequently warns us against false doctrine, self-deception and an expectation about eternal salvation that may prove to be in vain.
And if you fail the test? Then you go to the Lord in humility and plead for His mercy. And persevere until He answers you. He has promised his grace in Christ to people who approach Him like this.
May the Lord in His mercy and through His Spirit grant us the ability to carry out this self-evaluation in a sober, honest and mature way!
Nico van der Walt
EE 30 - LK 11:5-13 : THE GENEROUS FATHER
Most Christians wrestle with guilty feelings over the fact that they do not pray enough. Sermons and books about prayer are so challenging that one becomes discouraged before you even start praying.
But this is not the Lord Jesus' approach. Lk 11:5-13, following as it does right after the Lord's Prayer, is wonderfully encouraging. We are invited to approach the Father's throne of mercy with boldness and to do so again and again.
What we are taught here should govern our life of prayer as well as our walk with the Lord. Many of our problems with prayer can be attributed to the fact that we are to some extent ignorant of the truths in this teaching.
A rhetorical question (5-8)
In the original the Lord begins with one long rhetorical question which presupposes the reply: Certainly not! (5-7).
It may be paraphrased as follows: Can any one of you imagine having a friend - to whom you go at midnight to borrow bread, because you have an unexpected guest - who would refuse to get out of bed, sending you away with a number of silly excuses?
This was unthinkable in a culture in which hospitality and good neighbourliness was valued much more highly than today!
In v. 8 Jesus then comes to the conclusion: In view of their friendship the man will of course get out of bed! But even if their friendship were insufficient motivation (what a silly idea!) the petitioner's shameless boldness (Greek) would compel the man in bed to assist him. Undoubtedly the midnight-host will get his bread!
Application (9-10)
In v.9 our Lord issues three injunctions in succession: Ask! Seek! Knock! This is of course really one and the same command, only worded in three different ways.
Each of the injunctions is followed by the assurance that obedience to it will not be in vain. Ask, and you will receive! Seek, and you will find! Knock, and the door will be opened!
In the case of all three verbs the tense used in the Greek text indicates ongoing action. This can be interpreted in one of two ways. Jesus either emphasises that we should keep on praying, or that we should always pray. In the former case the idea would be that we should keep on, persist, and not give up. In the latter He would mean that we should pray always, and not be timid - that we should go again and again to the throne of grace!
All this may look like splitting hairs, but the way in which we interpret these injunctions holds far-reaching implications. The first interpretation would convey the message that prayer is not easy, but that perseverance will ultimately be rewarded. The second would constitute a hearty invitation to ask again and again, with the utmost boldness. Which is the correct interpretation? The answer can be found in the very next verse.
Verse 10 starts with the causal conjunction "for". Jesus is thereby indicating that He is about to explain what He meant in the previous verse.
In the original language the words "ask", "seek" and "knock" are present participles. The idea is therefore that while asking, we receive; while searching, we find; while knocking, the door is opened to us.
What the Lord is therefore saying, is not that we will eventually receive after we have prayed for a long time, but that we will receive while praying. So it's clear. Verse 9 is a hearty invitation and an encouraging assurance: make continual prayer part of your way of life and answered prayers will be a daily reality. The Lord is therefore giving us the assurance that any disciple of his will always be welcome at the throne of grace. He is assuring us of the goodwill and generosity of His Father. This is the main point of the parable.
However, Jesus does not want to give his hearers the wrong impression. He is not suggesting that prayer is a superficial exercise. It is not just a matter of asking at your heart's content. He knows that prayer is sometimes a demanding battle, and that persistence is often essential. This is, in fact, what He teaches in Lk 18:1-8. And here in Lk 11 His careful choice of words balances the encouraging invitation above.
What He is saying, as it were, is, "When you pray, you will sometimes get the feeling that your Father is not there. But seek Him purposely and you will find Him. At other times you may get the feeling that He is ignoring you, but knock with determination, and the door will be opened."
This is exactly the way in which a neighbour will assure you of his goodwill: "If you need me, don't hesitate to call on me - night or day. Just remember, I am sometimes in the back garden, so just come and get me there. And I am a tight sleeper, so don't hesitate to hammer on the door!"
Driving it home (1-13)
Our Lord clearly does not wish us to miss this invitation to pray. Again He uses two rhetorical questions to strengthen his point. Will a father give his son a snake when he asks for a fish, or a scorpion when he asks for an egg? Of course not! Pray therefore, it pleases your Father. Pray! Your prayers will be answered! Pray! It is never in vain!
A final rhetorical question drives the conclusion home. Again the answer is crystal clear: If sinful parents know to give only the best to their children, all the more our heavenly Father!
The Father's great gift
In verse 13 the Lord Jesus gives an unexpected twist to His teaching. Contrary to what may be expected from what He has been saying, He does not promise a general answering of prayers, but specifically the gift of the Holy Spirit.
The promise Jesus makes in Mt 7:7-11 is verbally almost the same, but with a more easily understandable ending: the Father gives good gifts to those who ask Him.
Taking all of the above into consideration, we arrive at three very important truths.
Firstly, the Holy Spirit, in fact only He, is God's great gift to Christ's New Testament church. If we have Him, we do not really need anything else. Whatever God and our calling demand of us, we find in Him.
Secondly, believers know that they receive nothing from the Father except on the grounds of Christ's merit. However, we forget only too readily that we also receive nothing of eternal value save through the working of the Holy Spirit. Every good gift that we receive from heaven is, as it were, delivered by the Holy Spirit.
Thirdly, we receive from the Father only that which the Holy Spirit will deliver. He is holy and will bring nothing that is in conflict with His character. He brings only good gifts. We need to keep this in mind when we pray, or else we may end up asking for something that is in conflict with God's will - and of course not receive it.
Four practical implications
1. Jesus encourages us to pray with boldness, not with presumptuous rashness.
These two attitudes differ like day and night.
To be bold in prayer means to appear before the holy God in trusting faith and expectation, in spite of your remaining sin, solely on the basis of the perfect mediatorship of His Son. It means praying in His Name - without hesitance, timidity or fear, but freely and with assurance. It means to pour out your heart before your Father's throne.
On the other hand, presumption in prayer has to do with an attitude of smug self-assurance and self-centeredness, which knows very little of the fear of the Lord, or one's own unworthiness.
2. Our heavenly Father does not wish us merely to pray, but to pray boldly.
While the danger of presumption in prayer is ever present, the absence of boldness is probably a bigger and more general problem. That is why the Bible encourages boldness more often than it warns against presumptuousness in prayer.
Here in Lk 11 Jesus assures us repeatedly of the Father's benevolence towards His children - ten times over. There is hardly another promise that receives greater emphasis in the Bible.
3. Knowledge of God and His promises is the key to boldness and persistence in prayer.
Although the emphasis in Lk 11 is not primarily on perseverance in prayer, it so happens that we can and will persevere because we are convinced of our Father's generosity. After all, the very reason why you keep on hammering on your neighbour's door until he wakes up, is because you are assured of his goodwill. You would only hesitantly knock on the door of an unfriendly neighbour - and only once or twice - before turning away.
Nothing is of greater importance to our prayer life than true knowledge of God - more particularly His goodness, love, grace and covenant faithfulness towards those who are in Christ. It is because we know God in truth that we pray as we ought to - with boldness.
4. Only white-hot prayers reach heaven; cold prayers freeze before they get there.
This saying of the old Puritans is confirmed by many prayers in the Bible, especially in the Old Testament. Quite often we come across prayers full of holy impatience - almost to the point of blasphemy. Can you imagine praying like this? "Awake, O Lord! Why do you sleep? Rouse yourself! Do not reject us for ever. Why do you hide your face and forget our misery and oppression?" (Ps 44:23-24). "O Lord, where is your former great love, which in your faithfulness you swore to David?" (Ps 89:49). "O Hope of Israel, its Saviour in times of distress, why are you like a stranger in the land, like a traveller who stays only a night? Why are you like a man taken by surprise, like a warrior powerless to save? ... do not forsake us! (Jer 14:8-9)
Surely prayers like these would have been blasphemous had they not sprung from hearts aglow with passion for God's honour. But exactly here lies the secret. Nothing pleases God more than a burning zeal for His glory (Num 25:7-13).
How do we get this intensity of zeal for the Lord and His honour. What leads to prayers like those above? There is only one answer: my heart will burn with love and zeal for the Lord to the extent that I know Him! And the higher the flame of love and zeal burns in my heart, the more will I pray boldly - simply because I can not tolerate the dishonouring of His name.
And of course, the man or woman with a white-hot zeal for God can hardly pray a self-centred and presumptuous prayer!
Nico van der Walt
But this is not the Lord Jesus' approach. Lk 11:5-13, following as it does right after the Lord's Prayer, is wonderfully encouraging. We are invited to approach the Father's throne of mercy with boldness and to do so again and again.
What we are taught here should govern our life of prayer as well as our walk with the Lord. Many of our problems with prayer can be attributed to the fact that we are to some extent ignorant of the truths in this teaching.
A rhetorical question (5-8)
In the original the Lord begins with one long rhetorical question which presupposes the reply: Certainly not! (5-7).
It may be paraphrased as follows: Can any one of you imagine having a friend - to whom you go at midnight to borrow bread, because you have an unexpected guest - who would refuse to get out of bed, sending you away with a number of silly excuses?
This was unthinkable in a culture in which hospitality and good neighbourliness was valued much more highly than today!
In v. 8 Jesus then comes to the conclusion: In view of their friendship the man will of course get out of bed! But even if their friendship were insufficient motivation (what a silly idea!) the petitioner's shameless boldness (Greek) would compel the man in bed to assist him. Undoubtedly the midnight-host will get his bread!
Application (9-10)
In v.9 our Lord issues three injunctions in succession: Ask! Seek! Knock! This is of course really one and the same command, only worded in three different ways.
Each of the injunctions is followed by the assurance that obedience to it will not be in vain. Ask, and you will receive! Seek, and you will find! Knock, and the door will be opened!
In the case of all three verbs the tense used in the Greek text indicates ongoing action. This can be interpreted in one of two ways. Jesus either emphasises that we should keep on praying, or that we should always pray. In the former case the idea would be that we should keep on, persist, and not give up. In the latter He would mean that we should pray always, and not be timid - that we should go again and again to the throne of grace!
All this may look like splitting hairs, but the way in which we interpret these injunctions holds far-reaching implications. The first interpretation would convey the message that prayer is not easy, but that perseverance will ultimately be rewarded. The second would constitute a hearty invitation to ask again and again, with the utmost boldness. Which is the correct interpretation? The answer can be found in the very next verse.
Verse 10 starts with the causal conjunction "for". Jesus is thereby indicating that He is about to explain what He meant in the previous verse.
In the original language the words "ask", "seek" and "knock" are present participles. The idea is therefore that while asking, we receive; while searching, we find; while knocking, the door is opened to us.
What the Lord is therefore saying, is not that we will eventually receive after we have prayed for a long time, but that we will receive while praying. So it's clear. Verse 9 is a hearty invitation and an encouraging assurance: make continual prayer part of your way of life and answered prayers will be a daily reality. The Lord is therefore giving us the assurance that any disciple of his will always be welcome at the throne of grace. He is assuring us of the goodwill and generosity of His Father. This is the main point of the parable.
However, Jesus does not want to give his hearers the wrong impression. He is not suggesting that prayer is a superficial exercise. It is not just a matter of asking at your heart's content. He knows that prayer is sometimes a demanding battle, and that persistence is often essential. This is, in fact, what He teaches in Lk 18:1-8. And here in Lk 11 His careful choice of words balances the encouraging invitation above.
What He is saying, as it were, is, "When you pray, you will sometimes get the feeling that your Father is not there. But seek Him purposely and you will find Him. At other times you may get the feeling that He is ignoring you, but knock with determination, and the door will be opened."
This is exactly the way in which a neighbour will assure you of his goodwill: "If you need me, don't hesitate to call on me - night or day. Just remember, I am sometimes in the back garden, so just come and get me there. And I am a tight sleeper, so don't hesitate to hammer on the door!"
Driving it home (1-13)
Our Lord clearly does not wish us to miss this invitation to pray. Again He uses two rhetorical questions to strengthen his point. Will a father give his son a snake when he asks for a fish, or a scorpion when he asks for an egg? Of course not! Pray therefore, it pleases your Father. Pray! Your prayers will be answered! Pray! It is never in vain!
A final rhetorical question drives the conclusion home. Again the answer is crystal clear: If sinful parents know to give only the best to their children, all the more our heavenly Father!
The Father's great gift
In verse 13 the Lord Jesus gives an unexpected twist to His teaching. Contrary to what may be expected from what He has been saying, He does not promise a general answering of prayers, but specifically the gift of the Holy Spirit.
The promise Jesus makes in Mt 7:7-11 is verbally almost the same, but with a more easily understandable ending: the Father gives good gifts to those who ask Him.
Taking all of the above into consideration, we arrive at three very important truths.
Firstly, the Holy Spirit, in fact only He, is God's great gift to Christ's New Testament church. If we have Him, we do not really need anything else. Whatever God and our calling demand of us, we find in Him.
Secondly, believers know that they receive nothing from the Father except on the grounds of Christ's merit. However, we forget only too readily that we also receive nothing of eternal value save through the working of the Holy Spirit. Every good gift that we receive from heaven is, as it were, delivered by the Holy Spirit.
Thirdly, we receive from the Father only that which the Holy Spirit will deliver. He is holy and will bring nothing that is in conflict with His character. He brings only good gifts. We need to keep this in mind when we pray, or else we may end up asking for something that is in conflict with God's will - and of course not receive it.
Four practical implications
1. Jesus encourages us to pray with boldness, not with presumptuous rashness.
These two attitudes differ like day and night.
To be bold in prayer means to appear before the holy God in trusting faith and expectation, in spite of your remaining sin, solely on the basis of the perfect mediatorship of His Son. It means praying in His Name - without hesitance, timidity or fear, but freely and with assurance. It means to pour out your heart before your Father's throne.
On the other hand, presumption in prayer has to do with an attitude of smug self-assurance and self-centeredness, which knows very little of the fear of the Lord, or one's own unworthiness.
2. Our heavenly Father does not wish us merely to pray, but to pray boldly.
While the danger of presumption in prayer is ever present, the absence of boldness is probably a bigger and more general problem. That is why the Bible encourages boldness more often than it warns against presumptuousness in prayer.
Here in Lk 11 Jesus assures us repeatedly of the Father's benevolence towards His children - ten times over. There is hardly another promise that receives greater emphasis in the Bible.
3. Knowledge of God and His promises is the key to boldness and persistence in prayer.
Although the emphasis in Lk 11 is not primarily on perseverance in prayer, it so happens that we can and will persevere because we are convinced of our Father's generosity. After all, the very reason why you keep on hammering on your neighbour's door until he wakes up, is because you are assured of his goodwill. You would only hesitantly knock on the door of an unfriendly neighbour - and only once or twice - before turning away.
Nothing is of greater importance to our prayer life than true knowledge of God - more particularly His goodness, love, grace and covenant faithfulness towards those who are in Christ. It is because we know God in truth that we pray as we ought to - with boldness.
4. Only white-hot prayers reach heaven; cold prayers freeze before they get there.
This saying of the old Puritans is confirmed by many prayers in the Bible, especially in the Old Testament. Quite often we come across prayers full of holy impatience - almost to the point of blasphemy. Can you imagine praying like this? "Awake, O Lord! Why do you sleep? Rouse yourself! Do not reject us for ever. Why do you hide your face and forget our misery and oppression?" (Ps 44:23-24). "O Lord, where is your former great love, which in your faithfulness you swore to David?" (Ps 89:49). "O Hope of Israel, its Saviour in times of distress, why are you like a stranger in the land, like a traveller who stays only a night? Why are you like a man taken by surprise, like a warrior powerless to save? ... do not forsake us! (Jer 14:8-9)
Surely prayers like these would have been blasphemous had they not sprung from hearts aglow with passion for God's honour. But exactly here lies the secret. Nothing pleases God more than a burning zeal for His glory (Num 25:7-13).
How do we get this intensity of zeal for the Lord and His honour. What leads to prayers like those above? There is only one answer: my heart will burn with love and zeal for the Lord to the extent that I know Him! And the higher the flame of love and zeal burns in my heart, the more will I pray boldly - simply because I can not tolerate the dishonouring of His name.
And of course, the man or woman with a white-hot zeal for God can hardly pray a self-centred and presumptuous prayer!
Nico van der Walt
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
EE29 - ACTS 9:1-9 : WHAT A CONVERSION!
Besides the happenings around the incarnation and death of Christ there could hardly have been an event which had a greater influence on the course of world history than the conversion of Saul, or Paul of Tarsus. After all who, apart from our Lord, has played a greater role in the development of the world's thinking and historical development?
This is indeed the most famous of all conversions. Even non-believers know the story. Luke, the writer of the Book of Acts, writes in some detail about it no less than three times. Here in our text he relates it himself, and later twice reports on how Paul himself describes it in his speeches (Acts 22:1-16; 26:9-18).
A CLOSER LOOK AT THIS CONVERSION
People often talk of a "Damascus Road" conversion, which alludes to Saul's dramatic about-turn to Jesus.
The conversion of one who hated the church.
A dramatic conversion it was indeed. Just think of Saul as he was before the event.
Prior to this chapter Luke refers to Saul three times. In 7:58 it is mentioned that Saul looked after the clothes of those who stoned Stephen. In 8:1 we read that the young Pharisee approved of the murder. And in 8:3 we find his hate-filled persecution of the church.
Luke's choice of words emphasises Saul's bitter and unremitting persecution of Jesus' disciples. Calvin describes him as a wild and bloodthirsty animal.
According to Acts 8:3 Saul "began to destroy" the church. In non-Biblical Greek the word refers to the way in which a wild animal tears a carcass to pieces.
In 9:21 we read that the people were astonished upon hearing that the persecutor of the church had been converted and was preaching the gospel. Is this not the man who "caused havoc" in Jerusalem among those who call on His name? The word they used could be translated as crush or destroy. Paul himself uses the word twice in the letter to the Galatians to describe his obsessive persecution of the church before his conversion (1:13; 23).
Paul was "breathing out murderous threats" against the Lord's disciples (9:1). This expression could also refer to the growling and snorting of wild animals.
No wonder that the apostle in later years said, "In my obsession against them, I even went to foreign cities to persecute them" (26:11).
Truly this was a most dramatic conversion in the fullest sense of the word. Within a matter of days the ferocious wolf turned into a lamb - in fact, a loving and caring shepherd.
The Spirit prepared Saul for this moment.
Was Saul's conversion really an out of the blue happening as people seem to think?
Certainly he was changed in a moment from someone full of burning hatred into a broken man who wanted with all his heart to serve the Lord.
But do not think that the Lord had not spoken to him before he went on that journey to Damascus.
In Paul's version of what happened to him (Acts 26) he said that the Lord had spoken to him as he fell to the ground and said, "It is hard for you to kick against the goads" (14). The image used is that of a sharp instrument used to tame a wild animal. The implication is that the Lord had already for some time been breaking him in.
Are there any indications in the Word that this had been the case? Indeed! The Lord prepared Saul over a period for the Damascus road.
What are the goads against which he kicked?
• We may assume that Paul wrestled with doubts even at the time when he was filled with hate against the Christians.
He was about the same age as Jesus and it is most likely that the young rabbi had seen and heard Jesus. How could this intelligent man, versed as he was in the Old Testament Messianic prophesies, not have wondered sometimes about this remarkable Man from Nazareth?
• Another goad must have been Stephen's martyrdom. This godly man's powerful sermon and strong witness simply must have made an impression on this ardent devotee to Judaism. Quite possibly he was in the meeting of the Sanhedrin when they saw how Stephen's face became like that of an angel (Acts 6:15).
• The sharpest goad in Saul's flesh was, however, his own conscience. He could testify later that he had been faultless as far as legalistic righteousness was concerned (Ph 3:6). But to be outwardly exemplary is one thing; what goes on in your mind is something completely different. That is why Paul admits in Rm 7:7 ff. that he had suffered under what went on in his heart. Especially the tenth commandment - against covetousness - gradually convinced him of his depravity.
Once the Holy Spirit starts working on a person's conscience, it is a matter of time before you capitulate.
What we have to recognize therefore, is that Saul's experience on the Damascus road was not merely a sudden conversion, but had probably been preceded by a long process of conviction by the Holy Spirit.
In his conversion Saul was not completely passive.
The Lord's grace was not so overpowering that it ruled out Saul's will and choice.
Yes, the Lord so humiliated Saul that he fell to the ground. But He did not destroy him. He did not make a robot out of Saul. No, the future apostle's mind and will certainly played a role.
In asking Saul, "Why do you persecute me?", the Lord was addressing Saul's mind and conscience. And Saul was not so overcome that he was unable to talk. He asked after all, "Who are you, Lord?" When the Lord replied, "I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting", the words were etched so deeply in his being that he became and remained for the rest of his life a relentless worker for Christ's honour, gospel, kingdom and church.
Last but not least, Saul could obey a command. He got up and walked to Damascus.
PAUL'S CONVERSION WAS A SOVEREIGN ACT OF GOD
Having said all the above, it must also be stressed that this conversion was an act of sovereign grace on the part of God.
After all, the Lord initiated everything that occurred - the preparatory work, the light from heaven, the voice, the irresistible power. Clearly God decided that the moment had come for Saul's salvation, and thus it was unavoidable.
Furthermore, Paul never tired of stressing in his writings that the Lord had sovereignly taken hold of his life. That is why he wrote in Gl 1:15-16, "God ... set me apart from birth and called me by his grace".
He then goes on to say that God had revealed His Son to him so that he could proclaim the gospel amongst the heathen nations.
Paul's conviction that he had been saved by sovereign grace is strikingly underlined by some of the expressions he uses.
• In Ph 3:12 he says that Christ had taken hold of him. The word also means "to arrest". Ironically, this happened to Paul just before he arrived in Damascus to arrest the Christians!
• In 2Cor 4:6 he compares a true conversion experience to God's sovereign words at creation, "Let light shine out of darkness". Thus, he says, God made His light shine in his heart to give him the light of the knowledge of the glory of God. This, he then says, is the light that shines forth from Jesus Christ.
In 1 Tm 1:14 he writes that the grace of the Lord was poured out on him abundantly. The image he uses is that of a river in flood.
• In this connection Stott in his commentary calls to mind a few metaphors that C.S. Lewis uses in his autobiography (Surprised by Joy) with regard to his own conversion. Lewis writes that the Lord reeled him in like a fish; he felt like a mouse being chased by a cat; it was like a fox being overtaken by a pack of hounds; like a chess player gradually being manoeuvred into a position of checkmate.
WHAT DOES ALL THIS TELL US?
1. Think for a moment of your own conversion.
The circumstances and the manner of every person's conversion to Jesus Christ as Prophet, Priest and King are unique. Each one of us has his or her own story.
It may have been more dramatic or more mundane; it happened to us at different ages; sometimes it happened gradually over a lengthy period, sometimes the fight was over very quickly; sometimes there were tears of remorse, sometimes we were surprised by the joy of our salvation.
But there is always one common factor: it is always a conversion to Jesus Christ! Take Him out of the picture and per definition there cannot be a conversion.
2. Those who are still resisting Jesus Christ must know that there is no way of escaping a meeting with Him.
The Word of God states that every knee shall bow before Him. May the Lord in His mercy grant that you will do so in this present time of grace because millions of people will only come to bend their knees when it is too late.
I cannot therefore let this moment pass. If you are still a passionate opponent of the Holy Spirit I must call on you to turn to the Lord. Do so while you still have time, still have access to His grace. It is free - even to those who hate Christ and his church, like Saul of Tarsus!
3. Those of you who are praying for loved ones, never lose hope - no matter how long it takes!
If the first century's most unlikely candidate for salvation could be turned inside out in the twinkling of an eye, who could possibly evade the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ?
Remember, your prayers are woven into the outworking of God's council!
4. Are you also driven to your knees in adoration at the fact that our King converts ardent enemies to loving and life-long servants?
Truly, for those of us who have been taken hold of by His grace, nothing makes more sense than to love and serve Him with an undivided heart!
Nico van der Walt
This is indeed the most famous of all conversions. Even non-believers know the story. Luke, the writer of the Book of Acts, writes in some detail about it no less than three times. Here in our text he relates it himself, and later twice reports on how Paul himself describes it in his speeches (Acts 22:1-16; 26:9-18).
A CLOSER LOOK AT THIS CONVERSION
People often talk of a "Damascus Road" conversion, which alludes to Saul's dramatic about-turn to Jesus.
The conversion of one who hated the church.
A dramatic conversion it was indeed. Just think of Saul as he was before the event.
Prior to this chapter Luke refers to Saul three times. In 7:58 it is mentioned that Saul looked after the clothes of those who stoned Stephen. In 8:1 we read that the young Pharisee approved of the murder. And in 8:3 we find his hate-filled persecution of the church.
Luke's choice of words emphasises Saul's bitter and unremitting persecution of Jesus' disciples. Calvin describes him as a wild and bloodthirsty animal.
According to Acts 8:3 Saul "began to destroy" the church. In non-Biblical Greek the word refers to the way in which a wild animal tears a carcass to pieces.
In 9:21 we read that the people were astonished upon hearing that the persecutor of the church had been converted and was preaching the gospel. Is this not the man who "caused havoc" in Jerusalem among those who call on His name? The word they used could be translated as crush or destroy. Paul himself uses the word twice in the letter to the Galatians to describe his obsessive persecution of the church before his conversion (1:13; 23).
Paul was "breathing out murderous threats" against the Lord's disciples (9:1). This expression could also refer to the growling and snorting of wild animals.
No wonder that the apostle in later years said, "In my obsession against them, I even went to foreign cities to persecute them" (26:11).
Truly this was a most dramatic conversion in the fullest sense of the word. Within a matter of days the ferocious wolf turned into a lamb - in fact, a loving and caring shepherd.
The Spirit prepared Saul for this moment.
Was Saul's conversion really an out of the blue happening as people seem to think?
Certainly he was changed in a moment from someone full of burning hatred into a broken man who wanted with all his heart to serve the Lord.
But do not think that the Lord had not spoken to him before he went on that journey to Damascus.
In Paul's version of what happened to him (Acts 26) he said that the Lord had spoken to him as he fell to the ground and said, "It is hard for you to kick against the goads" (14). The image used is that of a sharp instrument used to tame a wild animal. The implication is that the Lord had already for some time been breaking him in.
Are there any indications in the Word that this had been the case? Indeed! The Lord prepared Saul over a period for the Damascus road.
What are the goads against which he kicked?
• We may assume that Paul wrestled with doubts even at the time when he was filled with hate against the Christians.
He was about the same age as Jesus and it is most likely that the young rabbi had seen and heard Jesus. How could this intelligent man, versed as he was in the Old Testament Messianic prophesies, not have wondered sometimes about this remarkable Man from Nazareth?
• Another goad must have been Stephen's martyrdom. This godly man's powerful sermon and strong witness simply must have made an impression on this ardent devotee to Judaism. Quite possibly he was in the meeting of the Sanhedrin when they saw how Stephen's face became like that of an angel (Acts 6:15).
• The sharpest goad in Saul's flesh was, however, his own conscience. He could testify later that he had been faultless as far as legalistic righteousness was concerned (Ph 3:6). But to be outwardly exemplary is one thing; what goes on in your mind is something completely different. That is why Paul admits in Rm 7:7 ff. that he had suffered under what went on in his heart. Especially the tenth commandment - against covetousness - gradually convinced him of his depravity.
Once the Holy Spirit starts working on a person's conscience, it is a matter of time before you capitulate.
What we have to recognize therefore, is that Saul's experience on the Damascus road was not merely a sudden conversion, but had probably been preceded by a long process of conviction by the Holy Spirit.
In his conversion Saul was not completely passive.
The Lord's grace was not so overpowering that it ruled out Saul's will and choice.
Yes, the Lord so humiliated Saul that he fell to the ground. But He did not destroy him. He did not make a robot out of Saul. No, the future apostle's mind and will certainly played a role.
In asking Saul, "Why do you persecute me?", the Lord was addressing Saul's mind and conscience. And Saul was not so overcome that he was unable to talk. He asked after all, "Who are you, Lord?" When the Lord replied, "I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting", the words were etched so deeply in his being that he became and remained for the rest of his life a relentless worker for Christ's honour, gospel, kingdom and church.
Last but not least, Saul could obey a command. He got up and walked to Damascus.
PAUL'S CONVERSION WAS A SOVEREIGN ACT OF GOD
Having said all the above, it must also be stressed that this conversion was an act of sovereign grace on the part of God.
After all, the Lord initiated everything that occurred - the preparatory work, the light from heaven, the voice, the irresistible power. Clearly God decided that the moment had come for Saul's salvation, and thus it was unavoidable.
Furthermore, Paul never tired of stressing in his writings that the Lord had sovereignly taken hold of his life. That is why he wrote in Gl 1:15-16, "God ... set me apart from birth and called me by his grace".
He then goes on to say that God had revealed His Son to him so that he could proclaim the gospel amongst the heathen nations.
Paul's conviction that he had been saved by sovereign grace is strikingly underlined by some of the expressions he uses.
• In Ph 3:12 he says that Christ had taken hold of him. The word also means "to arrest". Ironically, this happened to Paul just before he arrived in Damascus to arrest the Christians!
• In 2Cor 4:6 he compares a true conversion experience to God's sovereign words at creation, "Let light shine out of darkness". Thus, he says, God made His light shine in his heart to give him the light of the knowledge of the glory of God. This, he then says, is the light that shines forth from Jesus Christ.
In 1 Tm 1:14 he writes that the grace of the Lord was poured out on him abundantly. The image he uses is that of a river in flood.
• In this connection Stott in his commentary calls to mind a few metaphors that C.S. Lewis uses in his autobiography (Surprised by Joy) with regard to his own conversion. Lewis writes that the Lord reeled him in like a fish; he felt like a mouse being chased by a cat; it was like a fox being overtaken by a pack of hounds; like a chess player gradually being manoeuvred into a position of checkmate.
WHAT DOES ALL THIS TELL US?
1. Think for a moment of your own conversion.
The circumstances and the manner of every person's conversion to Jesus Christ as Prophet, Priest and King are unique. Each one of us has his or her own story.
It may have been more dramatic or more mundane; it happened to us at different ages; sometimes it happened gradually over a lengthy period, sometimes the fight was over very quickly; sometimes there were tears of remorse, sometimes we were surprised by the joy of our salvation.
But there is always one common factor: it is always a conversion to Jesus Christ! Take Him out of the picture and per definition there cannot be a conversion.
2. Those who are still resisting Jesus Christ must know that there is no way of escaping a meeting with Him.
The Word of God states that every knee shall bow before Him. May the Lord in His mercy grant that you will do so in this present time of grace because millions of people will only come to bend their knees when it is too late.
I cannot therefore let this moment pass. If you are still a passionate opponent of the Holy Spirit I must call on you to turn to the Lord. Do so while you still have time, still have access to His grace. It is free - even to those who hate Christ and his church, like Saul of Tarsus!
3. Those of you who are praying for loved ones, never lose hope - no matter how long it takes!
If the first century's most unlikely candidate for salvation could be turned inside out in the twinkling of an eye, who could possibly evade the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ?
Remember, your prayers are woven into the outworking of God's council!
4. Are you also driven to your knees in adoration at the fact that our King converts ardent enemies to loving and life-long servants?
Truly, for those of us who have been taken hold of by His grace, nothing makes more sense than to love and serve Him with an undivided heart!
Nico van der Walt
EE27 - ECCL 12:1 : REMEMBER YOUR CREATOR
Let us look only at the first part of Ecc 12:1: "Remember your Creator..."
In this case the admonishment is directed specifically at young people: "... before the days of trouble come and the years approach when you will say, 'I find no pleasure in them' ".
But this is, of course, a general principle which applies to us all no matter how old we are. So let us look at our text in this way. After all, every Christian, old or young, owes his or her existence and preservation to God our Creator.
THE WORD "CREATOR"
The Biblical concept, to create, is of fundamental theological importance. Throughout the Bible the word has only God as subject - simply because only He can create. We find the verb in the very first verse of the Word: "In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth."
• The word conveys the meaning of bringing about something - out of nothing. It therefore implies that the sovereign God is the Source, Owner, Ruler and Maintainer of everything that exists.
• The word is often used in the second part of Isaiah's prophesy (chapters 40-66), in fact 20 times out of a total of 49 in the Old Testament. This part of the book is one of the most comforting portions in the whole of the Old Testament. These two truths, taken in tandem, underline a most important principle: those of us who truly remember our Creator, should not regard the fact that He rules sovereignly over us as a threat, but as a wonderful source of comfort!
Isaiah 45:17-18 puts it in these moving words: "But Israel will be saved by the LORD with an everlasting salvation; you will never be put to shame or disgraced, to ages everlasting. For this is what the LORD says - he who created the heavens, he is God; he who fashioned and made the earth, he founded it; he did not create it to be empty, but formed it to be inhabited - he says: 'I am the LORD, and there is no other.' "
• Here in Ecclesiastics the word "Creator" is used in the plural form. This is often the case in the Old Testament (Job 35:10; Ps 149:2; Isa 54:5). It also brings to mind Gen 1:26: "Let us make man in our image..."
Without a doubt this is an allusion to the three Persons of the Trinity - who were indeed involved in the creation of all things, and are still involved in their preservation.
• The concept "Creator" emphasizes the most basic relationship in which man can stand to God. This is true of each and every person: He made me!
• The words, "Remember your Creator", are not meant to imply that each one of us has his own creator. There are no other creators! What the writer wishes to stress is that every human being must personally and individually think about the Creator of all. He is therefore saying to his readers, you too are a creation of this Creator!
THE WORD "REMEMBER"
The word is intended to convey more that just thinking, reminding yourself, or remembering that you have a Creator. It has a much wider and fuller meaning. Of course we must be mindful of God, but more than that, we must value and cherish our relationship with Him.
But it goes even further than that: the Christian must, with loyalty and faithfulness, live a life that is evidence of the implications and responsibilities that such a relationship implies.
It indicates an attitude of the heart, not just a mental exercise.
God called upon His people continuously to remember Him. But they failed persistently. Hence His reproach that they had forgotten Him.
In Dt 32 the Lord rebukes His people because of their idolatry with the words, "You deserted the Rock, who fathered you; you forgot the God who gave you birth." (18).
And in Isa 51:12-13 He comforts and encourages them (with a mild reproof): "I, even I, am he who comforts you. Who are you that you fear mortal men, the sons of men, who are but grass, that you forget the LORD your Maker, who stretched out the heavens ...".
HOW WE REMEMBER OUR CREATOR?
Our attitude towards our Maker finds expression in at least five attitudes of heart and ways of living.
1. Acknowledgement
In Him, and in Him alone, you and I have our origin.
By Him I was "fearfully and wonderfully made" (Ps 139:14), He formed my spirit within me (Zech 12:1), He "knit me together in my mother’s womb" (Ps 139:13).
These are the things we must think about and meditate upon over and over again. Look, for instance, at your hands and feet. More than half the bones in your body are located in these four limbs. The hand is capable of an almost unlimited number of functions. The concert pianist uses them to play as many as 120 notes per minute, the surgeon to perform the most delicate of operations. A caressing hand can communicate intense emotion and tenderness. And that same hand is capable of driving a heavy axe deep into a log. And then we have not even considered the brain behind it all!
Marvel at the capabilities of your Creator - and worship Him!
And if you are a true Christian, never think about Him as your Creator without reminding yourself that he is also your Re-creator. Is the greatest of wonders not the heart transplant that you underwent at the moment of your regeneration? That was, after all, the most glorious, was it not!
2. Subjection
God is your Creator and therefore also your indisputable and sovereign Owner. He has absolute authority and say in and over your life. He is the Potter, you are the clay (Rm 9:20-21). He can and will do with you and me as He pleases!
We have no choice but to accept it patiently and submissively - together with all its theological and practical implications.
How threatening this all would have seemed had God not revealed Himself to us as the Most-Benevolent and All-Bountiful. Those of us who are truly His children can trust in Him completely. Those of us who are in Christ can rest assured that everything that happens to us happens for our own eventual good, namely conformity to the likeness of the Son (Rm 8:28-30).
All this takes nothing away from the fact that you and I are answerable to Him and will have to give account to Him. After all, if He is my Maker, I owe Him everything!
Of course this gives rise to the burning question: How can I as sinful being one day stand blameless before Him (Job 4:17; 9:2)? Can there possibly be a more important question?
Let those of us who are in Christ rejoice endlessly that we have in Him the perfect Mediator - that we will indeed stand blameless before our Creator one day, credited with our Substitute's righteousness (Rm 4).
3. Dependence
God is not only my Creator, but also my Keeper - physically, emotionally and spiritually. Would God create someone and then neglect or forget about him or her?
Let us therefore with the greatest confidence offer our prayers and requests and trust and thanks. Approach Him with every need; it pleases and glorifies Him.
To live for yourself and in your own strength is to forget your Creator. To remember Him is to joyfully lay down your so-called independence, and to peacefully and trustingly place yourself in His care.
What a consolation: I have a Father in Christ who looks after me and cares for me - always.
4. Gratitude
Take note of your Creator's kindness. Acknowledge it. Meditate upon it. Train yourself in showing gratitude. What is there in your life that you have not received from Him?
And never forget, you owe it all to the mediatory work and intercession of our Lord Jesus Christ.
5. Devotion
If then everything you are and what you have comes from your Creator, there can be only one suitable response: unqualified and loving obedience. Let it be the single-minded passion of your life. Then you will remember your Creator in the way that pleases Him.
And remember, you cannot devote yourself to your Creator without at the same time devoting yourself to the Son, Jesus Christ. After all, God made the universe through Him (Hb 1:2). And this finds expression in a life of persevering discipleship.
THE ESSENCE OF THE LIFE OF A CREATURE
There can be no deeper or more fundamental transgression before God than to live only for yourself. Not to devote yourself with everything that you have to your Creator in acknowledgement, subjection, dependence, thankfulness and devotion, is criminal to the utmost degree. To ignore your Creator, doing your own little thing, is the most basic and worst of all sin.
The essence of what God demands of us is that we walk with Him. And effectively this means to acknowledge Him in all our ways (Pr 3:6) - in submission, dependence, gratitude and devotion. This is the childlike life of faith on which the Bible so strongly insists.
IMPOSSIBLE FOR NATURAL MAN
To remember his Creator by no means comes naturally to fallen man. On the contrary, since the Fall he has fled from his Creator like a bug from the light. In his fancied independence he pats himself on the back under the illusion that he will be able to cope and work out his own salvation. He either replaces his Creator with all manner of gods made up in his own mind, or else hides himself in religious formalism.
Look around you. If you see a man or woman or child who remembers his or her Creator in faithfulness - whose life is controlled by it from A to Z - you see a person who bears the fingerprints of the Holy Spirit, someone redeemed from the curse of the Fall by Christ's death of atonement. You see a pardoned sinner, lovingly elected by the Father before creation.
Whether you are young or old, do you remember your Creator?
Nico van der Walt
In this case the admonishment is directed specifically at young people: "... before the days of trouble come and the years approach when you will say, 'I find no pleasure in them' ".
But this is, of course, a general principle which applies to us all no matter how old we are. So let us look at our text in this way. After all, every Christian, old or young, owes his or her existence and preservation to God our Creator.
THE WORD "CREATOR"
The Biblical concept, to create, is of fundamental theological importance. Throughout the Bible the word has only God as subject - simply because only He can create. We find the verb in the very first verse of the Word: "In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth."
• The word conveys the meaning of bringing about something - out of nothing. It therefore implies that the sovereign God is the Source, Owner, Ruler and Maintainer of everything that exists.
• The word is often used in the second part of Isaiah's prophesy (chapters 40-66), in fact 20 times out of a total of 49 in the Old Testament. This part of the book is one of the most comforting portions in the whole of the Old Testament. These two truths, taken in tandem, underline a most important principle: those of us who truly remember our Creator, should not regard the fact that He rules sovereignly over us as a threat, but as a wonderful source of comfort!
Isaiah 45:17-18 puts it in these moving words: "But Israel will be saved by the LORD with an everlasting salvation; you will never be put to shame or disgraced, to ages everlasting. For this is what the LORD says - he who created the heavens, he is God; he who fashioned and made the earth, he founded it; he did not create it to be empty, but formed it to be inhabited - he says: 'I am the LORD, and there is no other.' "
• Here in Ecclesiastics the word "Creator" is used in the plural form. This is often the case in the Old Testament (Job 35:10; Ps 149:2; Isa 54:5). It also brings to mind Gen 1:26: "Let us make man in our image..."
Without a doubt this is an allusion to the three Persons of the Trinity - who were indeed involved in the creation of all things, and are still involved in their preservation.
• The concept "Creator" emphasizes the most basic relationship in which man can stand to God. This is true of each and every person: He made me!
• The words, "Remember your Creator", are not meant to imply that each one of us has his own creator. There are no other creators! What the writer wishes to stress is that every human being must personally and individually think about the Creator of all. He is therefore saying to his readers, you too are a creation of this Creator!
THE WORD "REMEMBER"
The word is intended to convey more that just thinking, reminding yourself, or remembering that you have a Creator. It has a much wider and fuller meaning. Of course we must be mindful of God, but more than that, we must value and cherish our relationship with Him.
But it goes even further than that: the Christian must, with loyalty and faithfulness, live a life that is evidence of the implications and responsibilities that such a relationship implies.
It indicates an attitude of the heart, not just a mental exercise.
God called upon His people continuously to remember Him. But they failed persistently. Hence His reproach that they had forgotten Him.
In Dt 32 the Lord rebukes His people because of their idolatry with the words, "You deserted the Rock, who fathered you; you forgot the God who gave you birth." (18).
And in Isa 51:12-13 He comforts and encourages them (with a mild reproof): "I, even I, am he who comforts you. Who are you that you fear mortal men, the sons of men, who are but grass, that you forget the LORD your Maker, who stretched out the heavens ...".
HOW WE REMEMBER OUR CREATOR?
Our attitude towards our Maker finds expression in at least five attitudes of heart and ways of living.
1. Acknowledgement
In Him, and in Him alone, you and I have our origin.
By Him I was "fearfully and wonderfully made" (Ps 139:14), He formed my spirit within me (Zech 12:1), He "knit me together in my mother’s womb" (Ps 139:13).
These are the things we must think about and meditate upon over and over again. Look, for instance, at your hands and feet. More than half the bones in your body are located in these four limbs. The hand is capable of an almost unlimited number of functions. The concert pianist uses them to play as many as 120 notes per minute, the surgeon to perform the most delicate of operations. A caressing hand can communicate intense emotion and tenderness. And that same hand is capable of driving a heavy axe deep into a log. And then we have not even considered the brain behind it all!
Marvel at the capabilities of your Creator - and worship Him!
And if you are a true Christian, never think about Him as your Creator without reminding yourself that he is also your Re-creator. Is the greatest of wonders not the heart transplant that you underwent at the moment of your regeneration? That was, after all, the most glorious, was it not!
2. Subjection
God is your Creator and therefore also your indisputable and sovereign Owner. He has absolute authority and say in and over your life. He is the Potter, you are the clay (Rm 9:20-21). He can and will do with you and me as He pleases!
We have no choice but to accept it patiently and submissively - together with all its theological and practical implications.
How threatening this all would have seemed had God not revealed Himself to us as the Most-Benevolent and All-Bountiful. Those of us who are truly His children can trust in Him completely. Those of us who are in Christ can rest assured that everything that happens to us happens for our own eventual good, namely conformity to the likeness of the Son (Rm 8:28-30).
All this takes nothing away from the fact that you and I are answerable to Him and will have to give account to Him. After all, if He is my Maker, I owe Him everything!
Of course this gives rise to the burning question: How can I as sinful being one day stand blameless before Him (Job 4:17; 9:2)? Can there possibly be a more important question?
Let those of us who are in Christ rejoice endlessly that we have in Him the perfect Mediator - that we will indeed stand blameless before our Creator one day, credited with our Substitute's righteousness (Rm 4).
3. Dependence
God is not only my Creator, but also my Keeper - physically, emotionally and spiritually. Would God create someone and then neglect or forget about him or her?
Let us therefore with the greatest confidence offer our prayers and requests and trust and thanks. Approach Him with every need; it pleases and glorifies Him.
To live for yourself and in your own strength is to forget your Creator. To remember Him is to joyfully lay down your so-called independence, and to peacefully and trustingly place yourself in His care.
What a consolation: I have a Father in Christ who looks after me and cares for me - always.
4. Gratitude
Take note of your Creator's kindness. Acknowledge it. Meditate upon it. Train yourself in showing gratitude. What is there in your life that you have not received from Him?
And never forget, you owe it all to the mediatory work and intercession of our Lord Jesus Christ.
5. Devotion
If then everything you are and what you have comes from your Creator, there can be only one suitable response: unqualified and loving obedience. Let it be the single-minded passion of your life. Then you will remember your Creator in the way that pleases Him.
And remember, you cannot devote yourself to your Creator without at the same time devoting yourself to the Son, Jesus Christ. After all, God made the universe through Him (Hb 1:2). And this finds expression in a life of persevering discipleship.
THE ESSENCE OF THE LIFE OF A CREATURE
There can be no deeper or more fundamental transgression before God than to live only for yourself. Not to devote yourself with everything that you have to your Creator in acknowledgement, subjection, dependence, thankfulness and devotion, is criminal to the utmost degree. To ignore your Creator, doing your own little thing, is the most basic and worst of all sin.
The essence of what God demands of us is that we walk with Him. And effectively this means to acknowledge Him in all our ways (Pr 3:6) - in submission, dependence, gratitude and devotion. This is the childlike life of faith on which the Bible so strongly insists.
IMPOSSIBLE FOR NATURAL MAN
To remember his Creator by no means comes naturally to fallen man. On the contrary, since the Fall he has fled from his Creator like a bug from the light. In his fancied independence he pats himself on the back under the illusion that he will be able to cope and work out his own salvation. He either replaces his Creator with all manner of gods made up in his own mind, or else hides himself in religious formalism.
Look around you. If you see a man or woman or child who remembers his or her Creator in faithfulness - whose life is controlled by it from A to Z - you see a person who bears the fingerprints of the Holy Spirit, someone redeemed from the curse of the Fall by Christ's death of atonement. You see a pardoned sinner, lovingly elected by the Father before creation.
Whether you are young or old, do you remember your Creator?
Nico van der Walt
EE25 - EPH 3:14-21 : AN APOSTOLIC PRAYER [12]
Last time, when we looked at v.19b dealing with our being filled to the measure of the fullness of God, we did not discuss the fact that our full inheritance in Christ will only find perfection at our resurrection. Only then will the full glory that God has prepared for His children from all eternity become a reality. No matter how well we progress in our sanctification in this life, it will always remain only a fraction of our ultimate inheritance.
Just the thought of it compels Paul (in verses 20-21) to burst forth in a lofty song of praise: " … to him be glory ... for ever and ever!"
THE GUARANTEE OF OMNIPOTENCE (3:20)
❏ This song of praise is mainly a rejoicing at the wondrous omnipotence of the Lord (20). Paul is, after all, fully aware of the doubts that sometimes overwhelm us: Will God really be able to fill us with the fullness in Christ that He has promised? Will we really be raised from the dead? Can the children of God really look forward to the glory promised by the Bible? Does God really have the power to raise a body that has been dead for a thousand years?
Here in verse 20 the Word of God gives a very striking answer to all these vexing questions. He could hardly have put it more strongly and with more conviction.
❏ The apostle describes God's omnipotence as seven layers of truth, building on each other:
What God has promised to do for us:
1. He is able to do (He has the power);
2. therefore He can do whatever we ask Him in prayer;
3. it even applies to those things we do not have the courage to ask, but only think;
4. He can do it all (Gr. panta)
5. and He can do even more than that (Gr. huper);
6. even more abundantly (Gr. ekperissos);
7. more abundantly by far (Gr. huperekperissou).
❏ Herein lies the answer to the questions that vex us; herein lies our most wonderful consolation: The omnipotence of the Lord my God will take me to Him one day when the time for my departure from this life arrives. And when the time comes for the resurrection, He will also raise my body in glory, no matter how badly it was ravaged or destroyed at the time of my death or afterwards.
❏ The apostle then continues. What he says is not just wishful thinking. God works "according to his power that is at work within us" (20b). Paul therefore reminds the Ephesians that they have experiential knowledge of this power. It is already at work within them. He does not elaborate on this statement though. He has already done so earlier in the letter, and assumes that what he teaches in chapters 1 and 2 is still fresh in the minds of his readers.
❏ A comparison between this prayer and the one in chapter 1 shows that there is a marked similarity between the two.
In the earlier prayer the apostle prays that his readers may know the riches of God's glorious inheritance in the saints. He then immediately proceeds to talk about God's power - the power that He employs to our benefit (19a).
This power already came into play in Christ's life when the Father raised Him from the dead and seated Him at His right hand in heaven in a position of authority over the powers of darkness (1:20-23).
However, Paul's argument does not stop here, but is continued into the first ten verses of the next chapter. In 2:5-6 he states that what has happened to Christ has also happened to us (past tense!), although in a different sense. We also have been made alive, raised with Christ and seated with Him in the heavenly realms. And this is how Christians know the power of God through experience.
This is all very well, but what is Paul talking about? The key can be found in 2:1-3. As sinners we were dead in our sins (2:1), but were made alive when we were born again and were saved (2:5). Secondly we were under the wrath of God (2:3b), but were made alive like Christ when the Father declared that He was innocent and therefore could not stay in death under His wrath (2:6). And thirdly, we were slaves to the world (2a), the devil (2b) and the flesh (3a) - but have been placed with Christ in a position of authority in the heavenly realms (2:6).
Paul's argument in Eph 1 and 2 is therefore: you may rest assured that God has the necessary power to realise finally and fully the riches of your inheritance in Christ. After all, this power is already at work in your lives. You know the life-changing effects of regeneration, the full assurance of justification by faith, and the reality of victory over sin.
MAY THE FATHER BE GLORIFIED FOR EVER AND EVER (3:21)
❏ It is inevitable: nothing but exalted praise can now follow. Exactly this is what Paul proceeds with.
Let us take a closer look at Eph 3:21.
❏ The words, "to him" (the Father), are accentuated by their position in the sentence.
❏ The "glory" (Gr. doksa) that belongs to the Father is significant.
In Greek the word is closely related to the verb, to make an evaluation. To have glory therefore means to be someone of whom others have a high estimation, someone whom they praise and honour, someone to whom they pay homage.
The Old Testament equivalent (Hb. kabod) is illuminating. The primary meaning of this word is that of weight. To have glory therefore means to be someone who has weight - someone of substance, dignity, magnificence, status and majesty.
Paul's heartfelt wish is therefore that all people should be deeply aware of God's indescribable glory and majesty.
❏ The words "in the church" are meaningful. It can be interpreted in two ways, both of which are probably applicable in this case.
• May the church itself experience it in this way. In other words, may each member be deeply aware of the Father's glory - His power, wisdom (3:10), mercy and love (2:4), and grace (2:5-8).
• May the outside world to an increasing extent see the glory of God reflected in the church. In other words, may the unbelievers become deeply aware of the glory of God as they observe the lives of Christians. May even the angels be overwhelmed by wonder at the rich diversity of God's wisdom when they observe the church (3:10; 1Pet 1:12).
❏ The qualification "in Christ Jesus" must not be missed. It emphasises the fact that the glory and praise given to the Father is inextricably linked with Jesus Christ. Without Him and His work, there would have been no glory given to God. Christ was and still is the only channel through which the Father's glorious work flows.
The apostles never tired of emphasising this truth. Truly, the church (or the preacher) who does not have this truth at the centre its teaching, is not proclaiming the true New Testament message.
❏ Paul then proceeds on the loftiest of lofty notes. It is his passion that the Father be glorified "in all the generations of the age of the ages" (lit.). The idea is that dispensations, each consisting of dispensations, should follow each other continuously for ever and ever. The apostle grabs for words and expressions to emphasise the eternity of God and His dominion.
Forever and ever we, the church of Christ, will sing the praises of our heavenly Father. As we are carried ever higher, from one discovery to the next, our praises will rise from one crescendo to the next. We will take an inexpressible delight and joy in Him. And we will experience an ever present and predominant gratitude before Him.
"When we’ve been there ten thousand years, bright shining as the sun, we've no less days to sing God's praise, than when we've first begun.” [John Newton (1725-1807): Amazing Grace].
❏ How else can Paul close but with the word "Amen"? It is an exclamation: Truly! Certainly!
A FEW THOUGHTS OF APPLICATION
1. The Christian faith is not just a philosophy - a metaphysical pie in the sky.
Those of us who have received true salvation have first-hand experience of the life-changing effects of regeneration, of the boldness and security arising from our justification, of the victory over sin as a way of life. Yes, we often fail. Nevertheless, we know these realities to be predominant in our lives.
2. If then you know the working of this power of God in your life, you have every reason to be sure of your future resurrection in glory.
Yes, we believe and say this in faith, but death to us will not be a jump into a pitch-dark abyss. We have experienced the beginnings of God's salvation, and we know that the hereafter will be a never-ending continuation thereof.
3. God will be and must be glorified in and through the church.
What a responsibility the church has! Let us not underestimate the importance of being part of a church. Doing your own thing in your own little corner, is not in accordance with God's ways. We are, of course, talking of a true church, a loving community of disciples who work arm in arm at knowing and serving the Lord zealously in accordance with His truth and commands.
And if there is not such a church in your town? Then you must be Christ's witness in your community. In principle there is no difference between you and the missionary in a far country. Find other followers of the Lord and plant a New Testament church. Also in your area God has to be glorified in and through a body of true disciples.
4. Take seriously your calling and rejoice in your destiny to glorify your heavenly Father forever and ever.
You say that you are a Christian? Let it then be engraved on the tablets of your heart: to glorify God is what your whole life is about - in fact your whole eternity. Let it be at the heart of your convictions; let it be the aim of all your endeavours; let it be the central passion of your existence!
Nico van der Walt
Just the thought of it compels Paul (in verses 20-21) to burst forth in a lofty song of praise: " … to him be glory ... for ever and ever!"
THE GUARANTEE OF OMNIPOTENCE (3:20)
❏ This song of praise is mainly a rejoicing at the wondrous omnipotence of the Lord (20). Paul is, after all, fully aware of the doubts that sometimes overwhelm us: Will God really be able to fill us with the fullness in Christ that He has promised? Will we really be raised from the dead? Can the children of God really look forward to the glory promised by the Bible? Does God really have the power to raise a body that has been dead for a thousand years?
Here in verse 20 the Word of God gives a very striking answer to all these vexing questions. He could hardly have put it more strongly and with more conviction.
❏ The apostle describes God's omnipotence as seven layers of truth, building on each other:
What God has promised to do for us:
1. He is able to do (He has the power);
2. therefore He can do whatever we ask Him in prayer;
3. it even applies to those things we do not have the courage to ask, but only think;
4. He can do it all (Gr. panta)
5. and He can do even more than that (Gr. huper);
6. even more abundantly (Gr. ekperissos);
7. more abundantly by far (Gr. huperekperissou).
❏ Herein lies the answer to the questions that vex us; herein lies our most wonderful consolation: The omnipotence of the Lord my God will take me to Him one day when the time for my departure from this life arrives. And when the time comes for the resurrection, He will also raise my body in glory, no matter how badly it was ravaged or destroyed at the time of my death or afterwards.
❏ The apostle then continues. What he says is not just wishful thinking. God works "according to his power that is at work within us" (20b). Paul therefore reminds the Ephesians that they have experiential knowledge of this power. It is already at work within them. He does not elaborate on this statement though. He has already done so earlier in the letter, and assumes that what he teaches in chapters 1 and 2 is still fresh in the minds of his readers.
❏ A comparison between this prayer and the one in chapter 1 shows that there is a marked similarity between the two.
In the earlier prayer the apostle prays that his readers may know the riches of God's glorious inheritance in the saints. He then immediately proceeds to talk about God's power - the power that He employs to our benefit (19a).
This power already came into play in Christ's life when the Father raised Him from the dead and seated Him at His right hand in heaven in a position of authority over the powers of darkness (1:20-23).
However, Paul's argument does not stop here, but is continued into the first ten verses of the next chapter. In 2:5-6 he states that what has happened to Christ has also happened to us (past tense!), although in a different sense. We also have been made alive, raised with Christ and seated with Him in the heavenly realms. And this is how Christians know the power of God through experience.
This is all very well, but what is Paul talking about? The key can be found in 2:1-3. As sinners we were dead in our sins (2:1), but were made alive when we were born again and were saved (2:5). Secondly we were under the wrath of God (2:3b), but were made alive like Christ when the Father declared that He was innocent and therefore could not stay in death under His wrath (2:6). And thirdly, we were slaves to the world (2a), the devil (2b) and the flesh (3a) - but have been placed with Christ in a position of authority in the heavenly realms (2:6).
Paul's argument in Eph 1 and 2 is therefore: you may rest assured that God has the necessary power to realise finally and fully the riches of your inheritance in Christ. After all, this power is already at work in your lives. You know the life-changing effects of regeneration, the full assurance of justification by faith, and the reality of victory over sin.
MAY THE FATHER BE GLORIFIED FOR EVER AND EVER (3:21)
❏ It is inevitable: nothing but exalted praise can now follow. Exactly this is what Paul proceeds with.
Let us take a closer look at Eph 3:21.
❏ The words, "to him" (the Father), are accentuated by their position in the sentence.
❏ The "glory" (Gr. doksa) that belongs to the Father is significant.
In Greek the word is closely related to the verb, to make an evaluation. To have glory therefore means to be someone of whom others have a high estimation, someone whom they praise and honour, someone to whom they pay homage.
The Old Testament equivalent (Hb. kabod) is illuminating. The primary meaning of this word is that of weight. To have glory therefore means to be someone who has weight - someone of substance, dignity, magnificence, status and majesty.
Paul's heartfelt wish is therefore that all people should be deeply aware of God's indescribable glory and majesty.
❏ The words "in the church" are meaningful. It can be interpreted in two ways, both of which are probably applicable in this case.
• May the church itself experience it in this way. In other words, may each member be deeply aware of the Father's glory - His power, wisdom (3:10), mercy and love (2:4), and grace (2:5-8).
• May the outside world to an increasing extent see the glory of God reflected in the church. In other words, may the unbelievers become deeply aware of the glory of God as they observe the lives of Christians. May even the angels be overwhelmed by wonder at the rich diversity of God's wisdom when they observe the church (3:10; 1Pet 1:12).
❏ The qualification "in Christ Jesus" must not be missed. It emphasises the fact that the glory and praise given to the Father is inextricably linked with Jesus Christ. Without Him and His work, there would have been no glory given to God. Christ was and still is the only channel through which the Father's glorious work flows.
The apostles never tired of emphasising this truth. Truly, the church (or the preacher) who does not have this truth at the centre its teaching, is not proclaiming the true New Testament message.
❏ Paul then proceeds on the loftiest of lofty notes. It is his passion that the Father be glorified "in all the generations of the age of the ages" (lit.). The idea is that dispensations, each consisting of dispensations, should follow each other continuously for ever and ever. The apostle grabs for words and expressions to emphasise the eternity of God and His dominion.
Forever and ever we, the church of Christ, will sing the praises of our heavenly Father. As we are carried ever higher, from one discovery to the next, our praises will rise from one crescendo to the next. We will take an inexpressible delight and joy in Him. And we will experience an ever present and predominant gratitude before Him.
"When we’ve been there ten thousand years, bright shining as the sun, we've no less days to sing God's praise, than when we've first begun.” [John Newton (1725-1807): Amazing Grace].
❏ How else can Paul close but with the word "Amen"? It is an exclamation: Truly! Certainly!
A FEW THOUGHTS OF APPLICATION
1. The Christian faith is not just a philosophy - a metaphysical pie in the sky.
Those of us who have received true salvation have first-hand experience of the life-changing effects of regeneration, of the boldness and security arising from our justification, of the victory over sin as a way of life. Yes, we often fail. Nevertheless, we know these realities to be predominant in our lives.
2. If then you know the working of this power of God in your life, you have every reason to be sure of your future resurrection in glory.
Yes, we believe and say this in faith, but death to us will not be a jump into a pitch-dark abyss. We have experienced the beginnings of God's salvation, and we know that the hereafter will be a never-ending continuation thereof.
3. God will be and must be glorified in and through the church.
What a responsibility the church has! Let us not underestimate the importance of being part of a church. Doing your own thing in your own little corner, is not in accordance with God's ways. We are, of course, talking of a true church, a loving community of disciples who work arm in arm at knowing and serving the Lord zealously in accordance with His truth and commands.
And if there is not such a church in your town? Then you must be Christ's witness in your community. In principle there is no difference between you and the missionary in a far country. Find other followers of the Lord and plant a New Testament church. Also in your area God has to be glorified in and through a body of true disciples.
4. Take seriously your calling and rejoice in your destiny to glorify your heavenly Father forever and ever.
You say that you are a Christian? Let it then be engraved on the tablets of your heart: to glorify God is what your whole life is about - in fact your whole eternity. Let it be at the heart of your convictions; let it be the aim of all your endeavours; let it be the central passion of your existence!
Nico van der Walt
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