I want
to focus our attention this afternoon on a simple but quite profound promise
God makes to us in His word: “The things that are impossible
with people are possible with God.” Luke 18:27. And I want
to link this promise of the Almighty God with the fears many Christians live
with at various times in their lives – fears that roil, that agitate, that
disturb their joy in the Lord.
What are the names of
some of those fears? Well, how about the fear that they can never measure up to
God's standards, that they’ll never become what God wants them to become. Ot they
will never be as intimate with God as they’d like; Or the fear that they aren’t
really rescued from eternal separation from God; Or the fear that they can’t be
fruitful for His kingdom; Or that they’ll never be free from the grasp of sin
which seems too powerful to overcome.
That’s a LOT of fear so
many Christians fall prey to.
But of each of these
fears, God tells the Christian throughout His word – there is no need to give
ANY of those fears a place in our hearts. Why not? Because, for starters, it’s
not who WE are or what WE do that gets us to ‘measure up’ to God's
expectations, or rescues us from eternal separation from Himself, or that makes
us fruitful for the Kingdom.
It’s all about who HE
is – and what HE does that lifts us up to His standard.
I’ll say it again for
emphasis – it is not a matter of who we are or what we do. It is
all a matter of who HE is and what HE does for us – and in us.
This is a critical
point for me and for you to receive into our souls. As St Paul tells us: “For
all the promises of God in [Christ] are Yes, and in Him Amen, to the
glory of God.” (2 Corinthians 1:20a)
Listen – if YOU are in
Christ because of your repentance and faith in Christ’s substitutionary
atonement for your sins, if you’ve been baptized according to His commandment, and
are striving to a holy lifestyle with His help and by obedience to His scriptures
– then be assured by God's sacred and inviolable word: You ARE in Christ, and
all the promises of God to for a holy walk are counted by God as “Yes, and
Amen.”
Which brings us to
today’s message, the theme of which addresses some of the fears that often trouble
our spirits. And the fundamental question from which all of those fears spring
is this: “Is it possible to fail in any part of our walk with Christ,
if we do not WANT to fail?”
I know that’s a rather
broad question, and I will try to unpack the answers to those fears today and
next week. But for now, let me answer that question with one quick statement –
No. It is NOT possible
for ANY Christian to fail in any part of their walk with Christ if they
don’t want to fail. Why? Because it is the supernatural God who holds our hand.
It is the supernatural Creator of worlds and galaxies who holds us in His arms
and guides us in paths of righteousness for His Name’s sake – not for
our sakes.
Listen to these few
texts that remind us of God's utter sovereignty, power, and rule over not only
Creation itself, but also over our individual lives and circumstances.
Jeremiah cries out: “Ah Lord God! Behold, You have made the heavens and the earth by Your great
power and by Your outstretched arm! Nothing is too difficult for You.” (Jeremiah 32:17)
And this
conversation between Jesus and His disciples: (Matthew 19:24-26) “It is easier for a camel
to go through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of
God.” When the disciples heard this, they
were very astonished and said, “Then who can be saved?” 26 And
looking at them Jesus said to them, “With people this is
impossible, but with God all things are possible.”
If we
had time, we could turn to scores of other examples of God's sovereignty and omnipotence
over nature and over our specific circumstances. For example, you might
remember how Sarah laughed when the Lord told her she and Abraham would soon
have their own child (Genesis 18:14); She laughed, but nine months later she
was cradling her son. Or the time Gabriel told the Virgin Mary of her impending
pregnancy by the Holy Spirit (Luke 1:37). At the time, Mary did not understand
how such a thing could happen, but we know it did.
God is
a God of unmeasurable power. Nothing is impossible for Him. And such texts as I
just read ought to offer great encouragement to us when we begin to wonder if
it’s impossible to have the kind of life that God created us to have. Is it really
impossible to fail in a relationship with Christ? Is it really impossible to be
trapped so tightly in sin that we can never be extricated from it? Is it really
impossible to ever measure up to God's standards?
Well, as I just said, ‘No,
it’s NOT possible for the Christian who WANTS to succeed in his or her walk
with Christ to walk with Him. How can I say such a thing? Because God's word says it. THAT’S why His
word is a refuge for us. A hiding place. A sure cleft in the Rock where He
covers us there with His hand. Listen to St John say it: “There is no fear
in love; but perfect love casts out fear, because fear involves
punishment, and the one who fears is not perfected in love.” (1 John
4:18)
So, let’s look at some fears
with which many Christians struggle. These are not in any particular order, and
you might notice some of the fears and the answers to those fears overlap. But
that should not surprise us because life itself is complicated with overlapping
fears and challenges.
First:
it is IMPOSSIBLE for anyone to fail in his or her relationship with Christ if
that person doesn’t WANT to fail. It’s
absurd to think God in unable to keep us in His hands if we want to stay in His
hands. It is unthinkable that God should turn us away because of our inability
to – let’s say, walk a holy lifestyle.
Our
walk with Jesus is not about OUR strength of character. It’s about God's
strength of character. And it is His character, bound up in mercy and
patience toward the sinner, that holds us on that narrow road that leads to
glory. Listen to the Psalmist tell us of our God's patience and compassion for
the penitent sinner:
“The Lord is compassionate
and gracious, slow to anger and abounding in lovingkindness. He will not
always strive with us, Nor will He keep His anger forever. He
has not dealt with us according to our sins, Nor rewarded us according to
our iniquities. For as high as the heavens are above the earth, so great
is His lovingkindness toward those who fear Him.
As far as the east is from the west, so far has He removed our
transgressions from us. Just as a father has compassion
on his children,
So the Lord has compassion on those who fear Him. For He
Himself knows our frame; He is mindful that we
are but dust.” (Psalm 103:8-14)
I hope
you picked up on that last verse: “He Himself
knows our frame;
He is mindful that we are but dust.”
THAT’S
why God gave us His Son – to place on the Savior the punishment OUR sins deserve.
That means WE don’t have to let guilt destroy our joy in the Lord or our confidence
in our relationship with the Father who not only FORGIVES our confessed sins
but actually wipes them from the ledger. He treats every confessed sin as if they
never occurred.
Think
that thought through with me. Whatever you’ve done in your past, whatever evil
you’ve committed and for which you’ve repented – God views them all as if you
never committed them.
So
please, please – don’t let guilt over confessed sins pull you from God's
nail-pierced hands. Satan will lie to us with words such as, “You’ve sinned one
time too often. Don’t fool yourself any longer to think a holy God will forgive
you this time.”
No one
should permit those lies to take root in their minds. Run to the refuge of God's
promises, such as, “If we confess our sins, God is faithful and righteous to
forgive our sins and to cleanse us of all unrighteousness.” (See 1 John
1:9)
It’s helpful
to remember the conversation the Lord had with the apostle Peter, who asked, “Lord, how often
shall my brother sin against me and I forgive him? Up to seven
times?” Jesus said to him, “I do not say to you, up to seven times,
but up to seventy times seven.” (Matthew 18:21-22)
In other words, the
Lord tells us to forgive others an infinite number of times when they ask
forgiveness. And do we think the Lord requires of us something that He Himself
is unwilling to do?
Yes,
it is IMPOSSIBLE for anyone to FAIL in his or her relationship with Christ if
the person does not want to fail. For good reason, Paul wrote to the
Christians at Philippi: “He who began a good work in you WILL COMPLETE it
until the day of Christ.” (Philippians 1:6)
Yet,
for many Christians, their difficulty with that promise is that so many of them
have experienced failed relationships in their past. So they extrapolate those bad
experiences to their relationship with God. Indeed, there may be in this
sanctuary today those who’ve experienced a failed marriage or marriages.
Perhaps some have failed relationships with their children, or with their
parents, or friends. And for years,
those failures have held them captive and convinced them that
even their relationship with God is at risk.
But when
our horizontal relationships between people fail, they fail because of sin. But
God has no sin. And that is why our relationship with Him is absolutely nothing
like human relationships. NOTHING like it. When we offend God by our sins and
we repent, He always and IMMEDIATELY forgives those sins – to the point – as I
said a few moments ago – to the point of counting those sins as if they were
never committed.
How
glorious is that? How freeing is that? When we come to Him in repentance, He
immediately reconciles us to Himself. Immediately. Even before the last
syllable of repentance has crossed our lips.
But Satan
doesn’t want us to know that. And if he can’t trick the penitent into thinking
God won’t reconcile with them, then the devil uses another tact – one which he’s
used for centuries to dupe hundreds of millions of Christians into
believing that although they might be forgiven, God is still going to settle
the score after death in a place called purgatory – an unbiblical invention by
some clergy in the past and which persists to this very moment.
Let me
reiterate the point once more – anyone who WANTS a successful relationship with
the Creator cannot fail to have a successful relationship with Him because the
sovereign, omnipotent God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ will not
permit such a relationship to fail in the life of a person who wants to
walk closely with the Savior.
Well,
I am out of time for today, so we will stop here. We’ll move on through the
list next week of common fears Christians have, but for now, let me close with
this reminder from St Paul’s letter to the Christians at Rome:
Who will separate us
from the love of Christ? Will tribulation, or distress,
or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or
sword? . . . But in all these things we overwhelmingly conquer
through Him who loved us. For I am convinced that neither death,
nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor things present, nor
things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor any other created
thing, will be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in
Christ Jesus our Lord.” (Romans 8:35, 37-39)
And all God's people
say: Amen.