©2001 Larry Huntsperger Peninsula Bible Fellowship
|
7/15/01 |
More About Life Rules |
Psalm 19:7-14 |
7/15/01
More About Life Rules
I want to pick up our study of Romans chapter 8
right where we
left off last week.
Actually, I want to reenter our study
by just pulling
together a few thoughts that came out during our discussion time
following the teaching last week.
We are studying Romans 8:18-30,
a passage written
by Paul
to help
equip the Christian
with some crucial information we need
in order to
handle those times in our lives when we hurt.
The presence of suffering in the life of the Christian is a
certainty.
There is some suffering we encounter
simply because we
live
in a world
drenched in the accumulated consequences of man’s rebellion against God
since the time of Adam.
But, as we saw a few weeks ago,
there are also
some types of suffering
that come
into our lives
as a
direct result of our union with Christ.
There is a measure of pain
that comes with
our willingness
to allow
our God to reshape our character
into
greater conformity with Christ.
There is pain that comes
whenever our God
allows us to see
a little
bit of our world through His eyes.
There is suffering we will sometimes encounter
when we choose to
live a life of moral integrity
in an
immoral world.
And there is pain that sometimes comes
as a direct
result of Satan’s attacks on us.
And in the passage we are now studying in this 8th
chapter
we have seen Paul
preparing us for those times when we hurt
by telling
us 3 things we very much need to know about the future,
and 2
things we very much need to know about the present.
Our study has taken us through those first 3 things we need
to know about the future:
1. The glory that will one day be ours
will vastly
exceed any suffering we go through here and now. (It really is worth it all.)
2. This corrupted world in which we live
will, at the
return of our King,
be put back
exactly as God originally designed it to be.
3. And then last week we looked at the 3rd,
God’s promise
that these physical bodies in which we now live,
bodies
which at times so powerfully resist the life of Christ within us,
will at the return of Christ
be replaced by brand new ones that have
never learned an incorrect thought,
bodies that have
no memories of irrational fears,
or of past
failures,
or
rejections,
bodies that have no life rules recorded within them,
bodies that will
be perfectly matched to our new spirits,
and provide
the perfect means through which those spirits can express themselves.
I want us to move on to the 4th support for
suffering
given to us by
Paul in this passage,
but before we do I just want to add a few more thoughts
to that
discussion we got into last week
about life rules.
If you were not in on that discussion
you might want to
get a copy of last week’s notes.
But in a couple of sentences
let me just say
that we were talking about how one of the greatest enemies to the life of
Christ within us
is the
force exerted upon us
by
life rules we operate on
that form the grid through which we filter
everything that enters our lives on a daily basis.
These life rules
are the whole
spectrum of established
and
unquestioned assumptions
about life,
and human relationships,
and God Himself
that form the backdrop to every response and thought process
we have.
What does it mean to be male?
What does it mean to be female?
Am I funny?
Am I insightful?
Am I worth listening to?
Am I stupid?
Am I smart?
Will I succeed or fail in social encounters?
Can authority figures be trusted?
Each of us have already answered these questions
and countless others like them for ourselves,
and those
answers have already predetermined for us
most of the “choices” we make every day.
There was a book that came out a few years back entitled
“Real Men Don’t Eat Quiche”.
Do you know what that is?
That’s one of
those life rules peaking out into the light.
“Our special today is an excellent ham and spinach Quiche.”
“Oh really?... Yes, well I believe I’ll have a hamburger and
fries.”
Before we leave that discussion on life rules,
I want to tidy it
up a bit with just a few more comments.
First of all, I want to mention that apart from the work of
God’s Spirit within us,
it is very
difficult for us to recognize our own life rules.
By their very nature
they are not at
the conscious level within us.
They are our foundation assumptions
upon which our
conscious reasoning processes are based.
If we grew up in a home environment
that established
for us a life rule
telling us
that family secrets are to be kept secret at all costs
and issues are never to be brought
out in the open and addressed,
then our mind
will invest it’s efforts and energies into finding ways of continuing to keep
issues hidden
rather than
trying to find ways of addressing and resolving them.
If we have a life rule that tells us, “Men can never be
trusted”,
we will enter
each new male relationship
focused on how we can protect ourselves
from this man
rather than
focusing on how we can build
a healthy
trust relationship with this individual.
The life rules within us
predetermine
where we focus
or mental
and emotional energies.
It’s a little bit like what happens in a foot race.
If we enter a race and are told the finish line is at a
certain point,
we don’t invest
our energies in wondering whether that’s really the correct finish line,
we invest
our energies
in
getting there as fast as possible.
Our life rules
tell us where all
the finish lines are.
The problem, of course,
is that some of
the finish lines we have accepted as correct
are
currently forcing us to run
in
the worst possible direction.
So how do we go about recognizing
where and when
our life rules are incorrect?
Let me share with you first
how we do NOT
recognize flawed life rules.
We do not recognize them on the basis
of how we feel.
You see, once something has become a life rule within us,
even if it is
highly destructive,
it will
feel like it is right,
and anything that violates it
will feel all
wrong.
A woman who enters her adult years
with a life rule
that tells her
that men
will be abusive to women
will actually
feel at home in an abusive relationship with a man.
And men who are kind, and gentle,
and considerate,
and in no
way abusive
won’t seem like “real
men” to her.
The truth is,
nothing can feel
quite so emotionally terrifying
as when one
of our life rules is challenged,
whether it is a valid rule or not.
So how do we go about recognizing flawed life rules?
I want to read for us
a portion of the
19th Psalm
and I want
us listen closely to what the Psalmist says.
PSA 19:7 ¶ The law of the Lord is perfect, restoring the
soul; The testimony of the Lord is sure, making wise the simple.
PSA 19:8 The precepts of the Lord are right, rejoicing
the heart; The commandment of the Lord is pure, enlightening the eyes.
PSA 19:9 The fear of the Lord is clean, enduring forever;
The judgments of the Lord are true; they are righteous altogether.
PSA 19:10 They are more desirable than gold, yes, than
much fine gold; Sweeter also than honey and the drippings of the honeycomb.
PSA 19:11 Moreover, by them Your servant is warned; In
keeping them there is great reward.
PSA 19:12 Who can discern his errors? Acquit me of hidden
faults.
PSA 19:13 Also keep back Your servant from presumptuous
sins; Let them not rule over me; Then I will be blameless, And I shall be
acquitted of great transgression.
PSA 19:14 Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of
my heart Be acceptable in Your sight, O Lord, my rock and my Redeemer.
Now look at this -
David tells us
that the Word of God
has the
ability to restore a damaged soul,
it can make us
wise
where we
are simple,
it can bring us
joy at the heart level,
and it can
enlighten our eyes to the way things really are.
Then David asks the same question we are asking this
morning,
“Who can discern his errors?”
What person has the ability
to see himself
honestly?
And the implied answer to the question
is, “None of us.”
We can’t do it.
But then David goes on to reveal the solution to our problem
when he says to
God Himself,
“Acquit me of hidden faults.”
That word “acquit”
means to purge or
to cleanse.
And what David is telling us
is that none of
us have the ability
to look at
ourselves honestly and objectively.
We just simply can’t do it.
But then he goes on to tell us
that the
combination of two things in our life
can do for
us
what we could never do for ourselves.
One of them is the written Word of God,
and the other is
the direct, personal intervention of God Himself in our lives.
And I love the way David unites those two
as he moves
through that Psalm.
He begins by talking about the Word of the Lord
and what it can
accomplish in our lives,
but by the time we get to the end of the Psalm
David is involved
in this intimate, personal conversation with God Himself
about all
of these blind spots
that
he knows exist within himself,
asking God Himself to personally intervene
and bring him into freedom.
And my point in all of this
is simply that
our hope of finding freedom from those destructive life rules within us
rests in
God’s ability to apply His truth to our lives
in a
way that provides us with both the courage
and the path for rewriting those rules.
Our part in the process
is to do the same
two things David does in this Psalm.
First, he affirmed his absolute trust and confidence in the
truth of the Word of God.
In other words,
he says to
himself and to His God,
“Look, I know that my life is filled
with all sorts of
places where right now
I believe
differently from what is true.”
In the terms we are using for our teaching this morning,
he could say, “I
know I have a number of life rules recorded within me
that are
completely wrong.”
But then he goes on to say to the Lord,
“So here’s the deal.
Every time You show me
some place where
You and I disagree,
I’m going
to choose to believe You’re right and I’m wrong.”
Now, it is dangerous for me to say what I have just said
because, as soon
as we get near this whole business of trusting or believing the Word of God,
there is
this little religious switch
that
goes off in our minds,
a switch that automatically flicks us onto some kind of a
mindless religious auto-pilot
in which we nod
solemnly to ourselves
acknowledging that we do indeed
accept the absolute truth and authority of
the Word of God in our lives.
Holding an intellectual doctrinal affirmation of the truth
of the written Word is great,
but it is simply
not going to work at that level with what is going on here.
David is not modeling for us some sort of passive
intellectual doctrinal affirmation
of the
inspiration of Scripture.
He is saying that he knows what happens when we enter into a
true, growing walk with God-
we will encounter
a life-long series of conflicts
between what we currently accepts as true
and
what God tells us is true.
And each time another one of those conflicts comes up
our hope for
forward movement
depends upon our actively choosing to
trust what God says rather than what we feel or believe.
Let me give you an example.
I mentioned earlier in this study
that a very
common life rule
held by
many people
is
that authority figures cannot be trusted.
Those who hold authority over us
are viewed as the
enemy,
and
submission and defeat are considered to be the same thing.
One of the very few things I recall from my high school
history class
is the teacher’s
bold proclamation
that “Power
corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.”
We live in a society
that firmly
believes
the rights
of the individual to pursue life, liberty, and happiness in any way we choose
over-rides any
obligation we may have to submit to authority.
We as a culture
feel very
comfortable
with an
approach to life in which we pick and choose which laws we will
and will not
abide by.
If, in our estimation,
some law is
oppressive,
or unreasonable,
or
illogical,
or just plain stupid,
or if it infringes upon our right of self
expression,
then we simply
ignore it.
This is the culture in which we live.
And then as Christians,
we come to the
Word of God,
and we hear
God saying,
1PE 2:13 ¶ Submit yourselves for the Lord's sake to every
human institution, whether to a king as the one in authority,
1PE 2:14 or to governors as sent by him for the
punishment of evildoers and the praise of those who do right.
1PE 2:15 For such is the will of God that by doing right
you may silence the ignorance of foolish men.
1PE 2:16 Act as free men, and do not use your freedom as
a covering for evil, but use it as bondslaves of God.
1PE 2:17 Honor all people, love the brotherhood, fear
God, honor the king.
And all of the sudden we are faced with the same choice that
David faced -
who do I believe?
myself, my
feelings, and my culture?
or my
God?
And the truth is, that’s one of the easier issues.
The hard ones are the ones in which
we begin to hear
the voice of our God
speaking to us with words of intimacy and
love,
words that, if we
accept them,
will
challenge the central belief pillars of our existence.
ZEP 3:17 The Lord
your God is in your midst, A victorious warrior. He will exult over you with
joy, He will be quiet in His love, He will rejoice over you with shouts of joy.
What if that is true?
I mean REALLY
true?
What if the God who is,
the God who spoke
and brought into being all that is,
what if
that God is not just aware of your existence
as
one of His billions of created beings,
but what if He is
right now with you,
in your
midst as a victorious warrior?
What if, right now, this day, this minute
this God is
exulting over you with joy?
What if, even as I speak,
He is
encompassing you in His quiet love?
What if He is rejoicing over you with shouts of joy?
If that was really true,
if God Himself
really loves you at that level,
and is
involved in your life at that level,
it would mean that all those voices
that
have been telling you for so long
that you really don’t matter all that much
are wrong.
It would mean that all of your frantic efforts
to try to find
peace with God are unnecessary.
It would mean that right now,
as your
Victorious Warrior,
He is going
before you,
preparing the way for you,
and leading you into the path
that He knows is perfect for you,
and all of that anxiety you feel about the future,
and all of that
stress does not have to be.
Let me share with you
the way it really
is.
From the instant you entered this world
your Creator
began drawing you to Himself,
seeking to
reveal to you
your desperate need for Him,
and His eternal longing to embrace you in His love.
And then, once you acknowledged your need for Him and
invited Him in,
He then began
going before you,
preparing a path
that
would lead you into greater and greater healing
from the lies
that have kept you in bondage.
And all the time He has been saying,
“Trust Me...trust
Me...trust Me.”
And countless times along the way
there will be
times when the direction He leads
conflicts with some life rule within us,
and it will feel all wrong.
And when those feelings hit,
our hope and our
security rest in knowing
that He
alone knows how to lead us into the freedom we long for,
and
He alone loves us enough to bring us through.
Well, some time ago
I started to say
that our part in the process is two-fold.
First of all, we, like David,
must choose to
trust what our God has said
more than
we trust those life rules recorded within us.
And then, second, we must invite our God, on a daily basis,
to lead us
through the healing process.
Our God will never force us to heal,
nor will He
demand that we enter into freedom.
With each of us the road to freedom
is by invitation
only, one day at a time,
our invitation to our God that He take His truth and once again, this day, apply it to our lives personally.