©2002 Larry Huntsperger Peninsula Bible Fellowship
|
6/02/02 |
The Journey |
Romans 13:11-14 |
6/2/02
The Journey
We did some things last week,
in preparation
for the passage we will look at this morning,
that are
critical to a correct perspective on the passage we will be studying.
In our study last week
we looked at the
nature of the warfare raging in our world,
a warfare
that involves three distinctly different groups.
There is the Creator God,
with all the
angelic forces under His command,
there is Lucifer,
with all the
demonic forces in league with him,
and then there is us - the human race.
We focused primarily on the first two groups last week,
looking at the
conflict between them,
and especially
at how that conflict affects us.
Our study of the 6 principles
that govern life
within the Church
has brought
us to the 5th principle
in
which Paul outlines for us
our role in this battle,
and provides us
with instructions
on how we
can effectively fulfill that role.
We saw last week
that the war
raging around us
is a battle
between God and Satan
for
the hearts of men and women.
But that does not mean we have no part in that battle.
On the contrary,
we have a crucial
part
because God has given each of us
both the right and the ability
to determine who wins that battle in our
own lives.
And Paul’s comments to us in Romans 13:11-14
are designed to
provide us with the information we need
in order to
fulfill our part in this warfare successfully.
Perhaps the easiest way for us to do this
is just to walk
through the passage together statement by statement.
Paul begins this section of his letter in 13:11 by saying,
“Do this, knowing the time...”
OK, the first thing we’re going to see
is that this
passage is directly linked
to the one
that just precedes it.
Paul says, “Do this...”
Do what?
His obvious
intent is to arm us with some information
that will
help us to more effectively fulfill whatever it was
he
has called us to do in the verses just before this.
If you were with us three weeks ago
you may remember
that it was in those verses
that Paul
provided us with THE foundation principle
both for all healthy human relationships
and for the fulfillment of all truly moral
living.
He called us to “love one another”,
but he didn’t
stop there.
He went on to reveal to us
exactly what real
love is.
He showed us that to love another person
is to relate to
them in a way consistent with the moral commandments of God.
Contrary to what the human race has chosen to believe
throughout most of history,
the moral
commandments of God
were not an
arbitrary list of forbidden fruits established by our Creator
that
we were required to avoid
in order to achieve some level of
acceptance by Him.
In reality they are the perfect description
of how one human
being loves another human being.
They are, quite simply, a description of how human
relationships work.
To love another person,
to build a
strong, solid, safe, durable relationship with them,
is to
relate to them according to the pattern revealed to us in the moral
commandments of God.
To hate another person
is to relate to
them
with
actions that are inconsistent with the moral commandments of God.
Now, having revealed this truth to us,
and having then
given us the high calling
of
restructuring our lives and our relationships with those around us
in a way that is consistent with this truth,
the next thing Paul does
is to give us the
added incentive we need
in order to
fulfill this calling.
He says, “Do this, knowing the time...”
It’s as if he is saying,
“My friends, I
know that what I’ve just called you to do
is going to
be really hard stuff for most of you.
It’s going to require many of you
to completely
rethink the way you have been approaching your human relationships,
and it will
demand some difficult choices,
and
some painful rebuilding in many of your lives.
But I want you to know
how vital this
calling is
to the
expression of the life of Christ through you.
It is not just something our Lord wants you to tack onto
your walk with Him.
It is the very
heart of the life He is leading us into.
And so, knowing the importance of what I’ve just said,
I want you to...
“Do this, knowing the time...”
And then he goes on to share with us
just exactly what
time it is.
Do this knowing the time, that it is already the hour for
you to awaken from sleep; for now salvation is nearer to us than when we
believed. The night is almost gone, and the day is near.
Do you know what that is?
That’s an
attitude statement.
That’s where it all begins -
with our building
into our lives
the
attitude presented in those words.
And oh, how I hope you don’t switch into your “church mode”
right now.
How I hope you don’t take what I’m about to say
and tuck it away
into your platitude file.
What Paul says here is not a platitude...
it is not chicken
soup for the Christian soul -
nice words
that never seem to make it into real life.
This is why we took the past two weeks
to prepare us for
our entrance into this passage.
Two weeks ago we talked about how important it is to know
that our lives
are not stagnant -
that there is a purpose and direction to
the work of God’s Spirit in our lives.
Last week we talked about the intense warfare raging around
us.
In this passage right here
Paul takes these
themes
and
presents them to us in a powerful analogy.
He compares our life
prior to our
union with Christ
to being in
a deep sleep.
Prior to our union with Christ
we were living in
our own little dream world,
oblivious to what was really taking place
around us.
We had no awareness of the intense warfare
raging both in
our own life,
and in our
world.
We really believed
the most
important challenges we faced
were the
preservation of “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness”.
We in America actually built our entire social structure
on the belief that
the high calling given to us by God Himself
was that of
pursuing happiness
and
defending our personal rights.
To all such thinking
Paul says, “It’s
time to wake up!
Wake up and
see what’s really going on around you.”
Have you ever fallen into a deep sleep
and then suddenly
woke up
not knowing
where you are
or
what’s going on around you?
Paul’s words here are designed
to create in our
minds
that kind
of feeling that comes
when we come out of a deep dream state and
have to adjust to the reality around us.
And with every growing Christian
there will be
those times,
as we
recognize our blindness from our past lives,
and
become aware of what’s really taking place,
that we will find ourselves thinking, “I
had no idea what was really going on.”
And there is something more here, as well.
Paul doesn’t just call us to wake up,
he tells us what
we are to wake up to.
He wants us to wake up to the journey we enter into in
Christ,
a journey from
darkness into light.
Did you notice that remarkable statement Paul makes in this
passage... “for now salvation is nearer to us than when we believed”?
Statements like that help us see
what damage we
have done to the whole concept of salvation in the church world.
We tend to view salvation as a point in time,
a finished act in
a person’s life.
We are either “saved”
or we are “not
saved”.
Now, it is certainly true
that there is a
point in time
when, well,
as Paul puts it in Colossians 1:13,
God ... rescued us from the domain of darkness, and
transferred us to the kingdom of His beloved Son..”
But the salvation He seeks to bring into our lives
is not a point,
it is a process,
a pilgrimage,
a journey.
I am more saved now than I was a year ago,
or ten years ago,
because my Lord has been able to bring
more of His truth into my life
in a
way that has brought more stability,
more freedom,
less fear,
and less bondage to my weaknesses
than I had in the past.
And my point here is simply this -
don’t ever allow
yourself to loose sight
of the
powerful progressive nature of the salvation God is bringing about in your
life.
If you have entered into Christ,
you have entered
into a journey that is going someplace,
a journey
in which your Lord
is
walking with you through events and circumstances each day
that are carefully selected by Him
to enable you to discover truths about
Him,
and about yourself,
truths that will alter your life profoundly.
We can, of course, refuse His offer of the journey if we
want to.
Our church world is filled with folks
who point to a
salvation experience in the past,
or perhaps
who point to numerous moving religious experiences since then,
but
who’s lives have not changed significantly for years,
or for decades.
They are clothed in the external appearance of Christianity,
and they know all
the words, all the language of the church,
but nothing
ever changes.
If you’re interested
I can tell you
why that happens,
and also
tell you how to avoid it in your own life.
Well, the truth is, even if you’re not interested,
I’ll go ahead and
tell you anyway. :)
I just mentioned that our entrance into Christ
is the entrance
into a journey with Him.
There is a definite forward movement in our walk with Him.
And He tells us clearly where that walk is taking us.
He shares with us
what He is about,
what He is
seeking to accomplish in our lives.
One of the clearest statements of where we are going
is found in
Romans 8:29 where Paul says,
For those whom He foreknew, He also predestined to become
conformed to the image of His Son...
Having already recreated our hearts in righteousness,
our Lord then
shares with us
the process
of changing our thinking
and
our living
into greater and greater conformity to the
image of Christ.
He does this most of all
because He loves
us with an everlasting love,
and because
He wants us free to be the people He created us to be,
and
because all sin,
and all immorality,
and all addictions,
and all lies rob us of that freedom.
But with all of us
there are areas
in our lives
where
change does not come quickly,
or
easily.
And there will be some areas
where that
journey with our Lord into greater conformity to the image of Christ
will
require from us great courage in the face of very real fear,
and
requirs, too, a fierce determination to trust our Lord
more than we trust our feelings,
giving Him the freedom to do
whatever needs to
be done
in order to
bring healing into our lives.
It is not at all uncommon
for Christians to
hit a point in their walk with the King
where they
simply refuse to allow Him
to
lead them through the changing process.
When He knows the time is right,
the Lord will
bring some issue,
or some
area to light -
perhaps a damaged relationship,
or a destructive
behavior pattern,
or an
emotional addiction,
and invite the person to trust Him
to lead them from
bondage into health.
But with each of us
He gives us the
right to say “No way! I’m not going
there, Lord. I’m not getting near that
one.”
And when we do,
our journey, our
forward movement ceases,
and we
stagnate.
And I find it fascinating to see how the human spirit
responds to this resistance to the Journey.
Some people, of course,
just drop out of
the church world altogether.
But many others become fervently or comfortably religious.
There is no better place in the world to hide from God
than behind a
religious facade.
Warning his young friend, Timothy, about such people
Paul wrote:
1TI 1:5 But the goal of our instruction is love from a
pure heart and a good conscience and a sincere faith.
Love from a pure heart - that’s building those love
relationships we’ve been talking about.
A good conscience
- that’s building basic moral integrity into our lives.
A sincere
faith - that’s growing in practical trust in our Lord.
But then Paul goes on to say,
1TI 1:6 For some men, straying from these things, have
turned aside to fruitless discussion,
1TI 1:7 wanting to be teachers of the Law, even though
they do not understand either what they are saying or the matters about which
they make confident assertions.
There it is - those who reject the journey
and then hide
from their rejection
behind a
religious facade.
So how do we prevent falling into such traps?
Well, the simple answer is, “Embrace the Journey”,
but that doesn’t
help much, does it?
During those times when we are resisting the leadership of
our Lord
We are sometimes
so skillful at hiding the truth from ourselves
that we can
easily miss what’s happening consciously.
So, let me tell you what to look for.
Do you have some
struggle,
or some
issue in your life right now
that
you have chosen not to actively share with your Lord?
It may be a relationship that’s all messed up.
It may be some
behavior pattern,
or area of
fear,
or
chronic moral weakness,
or addictive behavior.
Paul himself lists some suggestions in the 13th
verse of this passage we’re studying.
He says,
ROM 13:13 Let us behave properly as in the day, not in
carousing and drunkenness, not in sexual promiscuity and sensuality, not in
strife and jealousy.
It could be any one of a number of things,
but the truth is
you’re pretty sure
you don’t
want God anywhere near that area of your life.
If we could be honest with ourselves
we’d have to
admit that what we’re doing
certainly isn’t bringing about the quality
of life we want.
It’s not meeting our needs.
It’s forcing us
to be sneaky,
to be
deceptive,
to
fear being found out.
It’s creating a tremendous amount of tension
both within
ourselves
and in our
relationships with others.
But still we cling to it
because it’s
familiar,
and because
we are afraid -
afraid of what our God would do if we let
Him in.
So how do we break the power of such lies
and such fears?
How do embrace the Journey?
Paul gives the answer to that question
in the final
verse of this passage.
And it is a truly remarkable verse.
It contains just two instructions,
but taken
together they give us the approach to our Lord
that
guarantees the Journey will never stop.
We’ll look at the first instruction this week
and the second
next week.
The verse says,
ROM 13:14 But put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no
provision for the flesh in regard to its lusts.
Step one...put on the Lord Jesus Christ.
What I will share with you now
is by no means
all that is involved
in what
Paul is telling us in this statement,
but
it is a crucial start.
Paul’s wording here sounds strange to us.
He uses words
that we normally use
to describe
our relationship to a piece of clothing
and
then applies them to Christ.
We understand putting on a shirt,
slipping on a
robe.
But how do you put on Jesus Christ?
When you put on a piece of clothing
you are choosing
to live inside it,
surrounded by its presence.
When Paul calls us to put on the Lord Jesus Christ,
he is calling us
to choose to consciously live with the awareness
that we are
immersed in the presence of Christ.
Whatever it is you’re struggling with,
share it with
Him.
Don’t run from Him,
run to
Him.
You can’t fix it yourself.
You can’t make it
go away.
You’re
tearing yourself up trying to hide it from Him.
Stop trying to be good for Him,
and just rest in
being His.
All I’m really trying to say here is this-
don’t be afraid
to live each day immersed in the presence of your Lord.
You do not have to hide from Him any longer.
You don’t have to
carry that burden any more.
I know you’re afraid of what may lie ahead
if you drop it
into His hands
and allow
Him to lead you through the mess,
but I
promise you
He really does know the way,
YOUR way through
the wilderness,
and His
heart longing
is to
bring you into freedom.
You are, right now and forever IN Christ.
And He has
promised -
there is
therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Him.
There can be no condemnation
because Christ
Himself has already been condemned,
and judged
for your sins,
even that one your are packing around with
you now,
trying so hard to keep out of His reach.
The debt is paid,
the penalty has
been paid for you forever,
and now all
that remains
is
your willingness to rest in His presence with you,
and enter into the Journey with Him.
I guess this says it best, doesn’t it -
MAT 11:28 ¶ "Come to Me, all who are weary and
heavy-laden, and I will give you rest.
MAT 11:29
"Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I am gentle and
humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls.
MAT 11:30
"For My yoke is easy and My burden is light."
When we put on the Lord Jesus Christ
we are, quite
simply,
wrapping ourselves in the conscious mental
awareness
that
we are living every second of our lives immersed in His presence.
We don’t have to go to Him,
we certainly
can’t hide from Him,
nor do we
need to
because our God is not after us,
He is for us,
and...If God is for us, who is against us? He who did not
spare His own Son, but delivered Him over for us all, how will He not also with
Him freely give us all things?
We didn’t get as far as I hoped to with this today,
but we made a
start.
And next week we’ll see if we can’t take it the rest of the way.