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I would like for us to open up
our Bibles to a passage that means a great deal to me. It's been very helpful to me.
It's found in the book of Romans, chapter 12. And honestly, I must
tell you that it has been the basis, in a sense, of my walk
with Christ. And I hope it will be helpful
to you. Romans chapter 12. First one, therefore, I urge
you, brethren, by the mercies of God to present your bodies
a living and holy sacrifice acceptable to God, which is your spiritual
service of worship. Do not be transformed. Do not
be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing
of your mind so that you may prove what the will of God is,
that which is good and acceptable and perfect. Now, this passage
is so important to me because it speaks not only of a genuine
following after Christ. And what I mean by that is today
following after Christ seems to have more to do in our culture
with doing than being. We honor men because of the size
of their ministry rather than the character of their heart. or their godliness or their progress
in the things of God, the deep things of God. This passage also
helps me because it speaks to me of the motivation. What is
it that should drive me in the Christian life to follow him?
Because I want you to know that our hearts can be very, very
deceptive, especially in the ministry, because our hearts
can drive us for reasons that are not pure. that are not pure. And so this passage for me is
a standard and a great help and a reminder of real Christianity,
of what it means to follow after Christ. Now, let's look at this.
He says, therefore, I urge you, brethren. Now, Paul was an apostle. That is true. But with this this
word here, I urge you, brethren, I beseech you, brethren. Here
we see something very important in the heart of Paul. We see
a passion not only for God, not only for the gospel, but for
people. He cares a great deal about the
people of God. Now, this is a man who has experienced
what we could say, what? I would say I've never experienced
and I would say the great majority of us have never experienced.
He has been given open doors and open windows into the will
of God, into heaven itself. He has a reality to him because
of the revelation that has been given to him. This is a man. Who has an idea of what's really
going on, what's really important, he sees how extreme the human
life truly is. That our relationship with God
is utmost and the using of our life for the glory of God is
utmost. He realizes this is not a game.
This is heaven. This is hell. This is standing
before God. This is eternity. And so when
Paul ministered. There was an urgency about him,
a pleading, he wasn't content to just simply say the truth
and leave it at that. He wanted men to be changed. He wanted them to be moved in
the right direction, especially among the people of God. There's
no doubt we can see in the book of Romans 9, 10 and 11 that Paul
had a passion for his people, the lost people of Israel. He
would consider his own self accursed for them. But we forget that
it's the same Paul who said, do good unto all men, especially
those of the household of faith. If Paul had such a passion for
his lost brother and the Jews, what kind of passion, pastoral
passion did this man have for the Christian? For the people
of God, his heart, his body, his life, his strength was literally
consumed out of his desire for the churches to be pure and for
God's people to walk with him. And so we see that this is not
although although I cut myself off here, although this is the
greatest theological treatise, it's not a systematic theology,
but it is quite systematic. This book of Romans. We see this,
this blending, the theology as it ought to be, and especially
for the Apostle Paul was not some cold intellectual thing.
It ultimately came down to praxis, to the way we live, it ultimately
came down to the glory of God, it ultimately came down to these
are necessary things that God's people may be as God's people. He's pleading with them. Now,
I look out over this congregation. And I see the old and the young. And I have not been given a glimpse
of the things that Paul has seen, but I have done this for many
years and I look out over here and I realize I'm not a prophet,
I can't discern what's in the heart of people, but if this
church is like any other church, there are those of you who are
on the way to glory. There are those of you who are
on the way to hell. There are those of you who are
walking circumspectly. There are those of you who are
probably walking in some very dangerous territory and it's
going to end up hurting your life. There's all kinds of things
going on. There's some of you who will
be caught in vanity fare and spend a great deal of your life
in vanity. and not serve the Lord as you
ought to be distracted, you'll be careless. The things of this
world, the materialism of our own culture, it will grow on
you until you become asleep. And I know that in all of this,
there is this final day when Jesus Christ is going to come
and you're going to stand before him. Don't you know that? It's not a small thing. Because
if it was, then it's either the most extreme thing or all this
is foolishness and we should have just gone fishing today,
eat, drink for tomorrow we die. But this is not foolishness.
This is reality. This is real. Everything out
there, everything out there that the world throws at you is shadow
land. It's the unreal. It's not right. But what we're talking about
here, heaven, hell, life, death, eternity. It's real. It's real. And therefore, how
can we preach these things without a burden in our heart, without
urging you to listen, begging, begging you to listen, pleading
with you to listen? He says, I urge you, brethren. Now, what is he going to urge
them to do? We look down here, he says, to present your bodies
a living and holy sacrifice, that's what he's going to urge
them to do. Now, let's say a little about that and then go back to
something else he's asking you to do. To offer the greatest thing you
can offer. It's an amazing thing if someone, I suppose, were to
come forward and said, I wanted to offer my car. for four missions
or I want to sell my house and give it to the poor. That's that's
quite an amazing thing. We would all applaud, but that's
nothing compared to a man saying, I give myself. You see, even
the devil was right with regard to Job. He says, yeah, take away
everything Job's got. You touch his flesh and you'll
see something else. The greatest thing you can ask
of a man is give away the thing he has only once. And that's
this life. And that's what Paul is doing,
he's saying, look, I'm going to I'm asking you to do something,
and this is an offer, your life is a sacrifice. That means everything
that has to do with your will, your plans, your dreams, your
visions, put it all to one side, say goodbye to it forever and
give yourself to the will of another now. For something like
this to happen. We need a strong motivation.
It takes strong medicine, someone could say, to bring a man to
this this point in his life, to do something like this. What
on earth, what in heaven could motivate a man to give away absolutely
everything that he is? Well, let's look back up now,
he says, I urge you, brethren, by the mercies of God, So what
is the one thing that is to motivate us to do the greatest thing that
is the mercies of God? Now, what does he mean by this?
Well, if you look at the word, therefore, at the beginning of
our text, therefore, I urge you, brethren, by the mercies of God,
this acts as a dividing line between two things in this official. The theology that Paul is laying
down and now taking that theology, how then shall we live? He does
the same thing in the book of Ephesians, the first three chapters
of the book of Ephesians, possibly the deepest theology in all the
Bible, the first three chapters of Ephesians. And then he comes
to chapter four and he says, therefore, therefore, what live
this way? Basically, based upon everything
God has done for you in Christ, based upon this now live this
way. OK, so my motivation. For living the Christian life,
for being a disciple, for taking up my cross, for dying to sell,
for putting away all my dreams, my motivation is what God has
done for me in Christ. Now, if you just glance at the
first 11 chapters of this book. You see, first of all, in the
first three chapters, Paul laying down something very important.
What is man? Or better said, what has he become?
We come down to to finally we get to the bottom of chapter
three, we can say things that are horrid about men, vile, loathsome
beasts, radically depraved, haters of God. Murderers. All of it applicable to each
one of us here, worthy of condemnation with absolutely no recourse,
but to fall on the ground and to place our hand over our mouth. With no attempt at justification.
And then he comes in chapters four and five, the end of three,
four and five, and he tells us of the great work that God has
done for us in Christ and that we are saved by faith. And then
he goes into six, seven and eight explaining for us how that's
worked out and how God has given us many precious promises with
regard to the Christian life and how to grow and be changed
and be conformed to the image of Christ going from glory to
glory. And then he goes in nine and
ten and eleven and it and comforts us with an explanation of the
sovereignty of God working among the people he has chosen. He
lays it all out for us, what God has done for us in Christ.
And then he says, based on this offer your life. Offer your life. One of the greatest needs. In
Christianity today, I would say if I could point out two things,
it would be this to teach who God is. I know that that sounds
novel, but I want you to think about this. How many churches in America
in the last 25 years. Have taught on the attributes
of God. And I don't mean some dry intellectual discourse, I
mean, full of glory and joy, unspeakable to teach on the attributes
of God and then to teach on the cross of Christ. You say, well,
I know all about. No, you don't. You won't know
all about it the first day you stepped into heaven with a glorified
body, you won't know all about the cross of Christ after an
eternity. As a matter of fact, I would
almost submit to you that a great portion of what heaven is all
about is tracking down the glories of God and what God has done
through his son, through the cross of Calvary. You see, that's one of the great
pains I have in America. It just it just kills me that
we've reduced the cross of Christ down to four spiritual laws or
five things God wants you to know are the simple phrase he
died for your sins without any attempt to explain what that
means. And yet they're there in itself. Christ died for our
sins. That's enough for a man of God
to spend Eighty years of his life, 13 hours a day just studying
that passage, and he will not even reach the foothills of Everest.
And see, here's the thing, you can be motivated by so many wrong
things. But none of them are strong enough
to truly lead you into a life of discipleship. But this this
picture, biblical picture of who God is, it's strong enough. There's such glory there, such
amazement, so astounding his person. And then the cross. Greater and greater understanding
and comprehension of this magnificent God who becomes man. Suffers the wrath of almighty
God himself, the prize, the gift that was given to us is absolutely
astounding. And when you take all that, you
don't need other motivations. I, I hear preaching today that
they'll say. You know, come to Jesus and he'll
fix your marriage and come to Jesus and he'll he'll prosper
you and come to Jesus and he'll give you self-esteem and come
to Jesus. And that type of preaching, the
only word I can I can use that I feel when I hear that kind
of preaching is I loathe it. I hate it. I literally despise
it. Come to Christ because he's worthy. I would have no problem telling
a person. Even though it is quite hypothetical, will never be the
case, but I would have no problem telling a person this. Repent
of your sins, even though God sends you to hell because he's
worthy. Believe in his Christ, though he sends you to hell because
he's worthy. Give everything you have all
the days of your life to the glory of God, though he cast
your soul in hell because he's worthy. Of course, we know that
someone who does such things will not be cast into hell. What happened to. He saved me. Don't cheapen the call with something
else. I don't care. It's enough to last me a lifetime,
to push me and motivate me and constrain me a lifetime that
my sins have been forgiven. You're going to cheapen the call
by offering me something else. It's like the time I heard Charles
Leiter in Romania for an hour and a half. I've never seen him
pour himself out like he poured himself out, trying to explain
to people the glory of Christ in heaven and Christ being the
prize of all things. And when he finished, just totally
spent, he said, are there any questions? And a guy raised his
hand and said, what else do we get? But you see, you know, brother
Paul, I need motivation. Many sincere Christians have
told me that I just need motivation. And I understand the question,
because so many preachers are directing you towards things
that are no motivation at all. Well, let me direct you to two
things, the person of God. And the person and work of his
son. And that's all the motivation
you'll need. That's it. That'll last a lifetime just
because it just keeps going. So if you ever thought about
eternity for a moment, I mean, after all, swinging on gates
of Pearl and walking down streets of gold, that's going to get
old pretty quick. I believe that. The only reason
we would not go insane throughout all of eternity out of just utter
boredom. Now, I'm speaking humanly, avoiding
the idea of heaven and time and all these other things, I'm just
speaking humanly. Is that we are going to be chasing
down the glories of an infinite God and it will never reach its
end. We will go forever, a thousand
eternities, an eternity of eternities, and we will never be able to
search him out. And every if we can say such
a thing every day will bring more glory. Which will be so
glorious, we will have to be strengthened in our inner man
to even contain it without going mad. It'll be chasing after him. And
so this is the motivation. That's why after 25, 30, 40 years,
50 years, I've seen them, these men of God who are much more
motivated at the end of their life than at the beginning. They're
not wore out. Their bodies are wore out, but
their inward man is being renewed. And as they see the finish line
come, they go, oh, that I can give more that I can give more.
Why? Because they know him more. They know what this is all about.
It's not something it's not cross in your pocket, it's not a cherry
on top of your cake, it's everything. It's absolutely everything, and
so he says, I urge you, brethren, by the mercies of God. To present
your bodies a living and holy sacrifice, not to present your
body, I think it's very important why he uses this word. I don't
want to be trite, but I sometimes think, you know, the Holy Spirit
had us in mind. Our generation, our age. Of superficiality
and super spirituality. Well, I have Jesus in my heart,
I've given him my heart, even people who are living in blatant
open sin will tell you, well, yeah, but I do really love him.
He has my heart. Well, let's just look at this
statement for a moment. First of all, the heart. Whenever
we talk about the heart and scripture, I mean, in the spiritual realm,
we're not talking about a blood pumping muscle. We're talking
about the very core of our being, the seat, the the place of government
of our entire being, we're talking about the source of our intellect
or our mind, our will. It's the very core of who we
are. It's what we really are. It's
the essence of our person. So you're going to tell me Jesus
has he owns the very core of your being, the essence of everything
you are, the chief seat of your will and your mind and your thinking,
but it's not reflected in any other aspect of your being. He has all of you and none of
you at the same time. Well, he has my heart. Well,
look what's said here, doesn't say to present your heart. Says
to present your body. The whole of you to him. The whole of you to him. The
desire to bring every thought, everything about you into submission
to the Lordship of Jesus Christ. Now, I have to be very careful
here. Why? Because people can when I start what I'm about to
say, they can get into legalism. I mean, we have this ability
that when we start to think, well, I'm going to really take
serious the word of God and I'm going to begin to submit every
aspect of my life to the to the word of God. Somehow we get to
the word of God and run past it and start adding rules and
things that God never placed upon anyone. So we have to be
very, very careful. We're not talking about legalism. You know,
we see Christian groups down through the ages, many of them
very, very sincere that have found, you know, have discovered
just how long a dress ought to be. And that's not what I'm talking
about, but I am talking about the other extreme that in which
our culture finds itself. Jesus has your heart. But there's
very little evidence he has anything else. Again, I mentioned this, I think,
yesterday or the day before that I have a great respect for the
Puritans in their intention To not only do good theology, I
mean, just amazing thoughts about God, but their desire to submit
every aspect of their life, what we could call their practical
life to the word of God, although they were not perfect because
they were men. And I'm sure there were extremes
among them as there are in our day. But but you can see their
their whole character is marked by a desire to submit themselves
in every aspect of their life to the word of God. They didn't
want a lot of loose threads hanging around everywhere. Do you see
that now? Let's just think about it for
a moment. I sometimes I was I don't know how this happened, but I
was asked to teach a state convention of music directors. And I thought,
well, this boy, Lord, you know, I'm not a musician. But I asked
him, I said, I asked him this question, I said. All of you
direct music, you have music ministries, let me ask you a
question. How many of you in this audience
tonight have gone from Genesis to Revelation Studying what God
says about worship. And what he desires in worship. You saw people hang their head.
I mean, now think about it. This is his worship. You see
what I'm saying? This belongs to him. And we already
know we don't really have evidence much of God killing a preacher
in the Bible, but he killed two music directors in Leviticus,
Dan. That's stretching it a bit, but
I like saying that around directors of music. But the point that
I'm making is this, we will do so many things without consulting. Is this what God requires of
me? You know, just let's just think
for a moment, let's start off with the mind. People have Christians
today. And I know this because of my
own personal battles. We wage so many battles in the
mind, in the mind. We let our hearts talk to us
so much. My heart feels this way. My heart
says this. My heart's telling me that all
these things. But my question for you, have
you ever gone through scripture and said to discover what God
says about your mind? How it's supposed to think. What
it's supposed to dwell on. And your heart. No, I don't want
to draw a distinction between the two, but I just use common
terminology. What does Bible say about the
heart, what your heart should entertain? What does it say about
what you should listen to? You know, some of you may not gossip,
but you listen to it. What what does the Bible say
actually about what you can hear and what does it say about your
tongue? What you should be speaking and
what does it say about your eyes? And if you have you discovered,
especially young people, young men and women, what does it say
about your body? What does it say about clothing?
I know that sounds every time someone hears that they look
at me like I'm some 1950s, you know, fundamentalist, you know,
who's been resurrected from the dead. But the Bible does teach
about clothing. It does that doesn't go into
all these intricacies, but it lays down a few biblical principles
that if they'll just be followed, they'll it'll protect you greatly
from stumbling and causing others to stumble. You see, here's what
he's saying, it's not just this mystical, OK, I had this experience
at these meetings and I went forward and I laid it all on
the altar. Listen. First of all, this is not an
altar. Kate, we have an altar. It's the cross. This is not an
altar. Second of all, this is become one of the most psychological
trap. It's a psychological trap that
keeps that hinders the work of God. In what way? The Holy Spirit
begins working possibly genuinely in the heart of a person. There's
a altar call given. They come forward in five minutes.
They lay it all on the altar. They've been cleansed. It's like
a psychological catharsis. They've just been cleansed and
they go back unchanged. Instead of the Holy Spirit dealing
with a person and they're going home and getting in the word
and seeking out godly counsel and everything else and setting
up a thing to really be transformed by the word of God and dealing
with the issue, possibly over a period of months. No, we've
laid it all here on the altar and we can go to Denny's. You
see, that's wrong. He's talking about reality and
isn't that wonderful? You say, well, Brother Paul,
what do you mean? For years, I would see these types of things,
participate in them, leave it all at the altar, all these different
things and just still feel like nothing happened. It was superficial
and nothing lasted. And then to get into the word
and discover, hey, there really is some reality to this Christianity. You don't lay it all on the altar
and the Holy Spirit deals with you about a sin. You start going
into scripture, you get on your knees, you work through it, you
discipline yourself to godliness, you seek out godly counsel and
you deal with the problem. And this is what Paul is talking
about, he presents your bodies. The reality of it is astounding. No longer just get your heart
right. If your heart's right, everything else is going to be
right. And it's actually sitting there and, you know, I love this
passage and I teach this to young ministers all the time is when
we get to, like I said the other day and in First Timothy, chapter
four, he tells us that the world is going to fall apart and that
people following doctrines of demons and all these different
things. And what does he tell Timothy to do to start an evangelistic
crusade or something? No, he says, son, discipline
yourself to godliness, be absorbed in these things. And the things
of the lecture of the word of God. Exhortation study, son,
watch yourself. And your doctrine. Get serious, listen, listen,
young person. But let me say this. I heard someone yesterday say,
you know, I have very limited time and all things like that. And I start reading a good book
like Sharnock or something. It's so huge. I'll never get
through it. The Bible is so big. I start reading in Genesis. I
don't even understand the first verse. I get discouraged. What
you've got to do is you've got to look at this Christian life,
not as a day in your life, but over a course of 20, 30, 40 years. That if you will continue reading
this book, continue it. I mean, sure, you can't cover
a whole lot in an hour a day, but an hour a day over 40 years. Sure, you can't read through
Sharnach and Sharnach in 15 minutes, the existence and attributes
of God. But over a period of a year and
a half, 20 minutes a day, you'll probably work through it. You
see, and then sitting there instead of just going around looking
for some spiritual key that's going to bump you up to another
level, sit there and go, OK, I'm going to start with my heart.
What does God say about my heart? I'm going to memorize Scripture
that deal with the heart. I'm going to I'm going to compare
myself to the canon, to the standard of God's word, to the measuring
reed. I'm going to deal with these
issues of the heart. Or maybe there's something that
that genuinely, you know, is a problem area in your life that
you've not turned over to the Lord. And so you get into Scripture,
you consider it, you study about it, you begin to apply, you begin
to discipline yourself for godliness and work through these things
in a real practical manner. I know it doesn't sound as spiritual
as getting zapped, but it is spiritual. And so he says, present your
bodies. And then he says, a living and
holy sacrifice. Now, we've all heard that story
about it's much easier to be a dead sacrifice than a living
one. That, you know, a dead lamb stays
on the altar and you put a live one up there, he's going to squirm
off every chance he gets. There's some truth to that. There's
also a truth that it's a lot easier to die for Jesus than
it is to live for him. I know a man in Peru whose brother
was martyred after six months of ministry years ago. And the brother became quite
famous for his martyrdom. Just north of Peru. Few people
know that this other brother who didn't get martyred has served
in Peru for an eye on 50 years, no one even knows who he is.
The one brother hardly starts his ministry, gets martyred and
becomes very famous, the other brother works for 50 years, no
one even knows his name. Not only is it easier to die
for Jesus than to live for him, it's easier to do great things
than it is to do small things. And yet the small things are
the important things any fool can preach. The devil is quite
an eloquent fellow. Now, loving your wife, that's
a whole other thing. So I was preaching in in a church. About three years ago that needed
a pastor. And after I finished my first
sermon, the pulpit committee came towards me. You can always
tell who they are. They have those big glasses on
with the eyebrows and the fake mustache and they come toward
you. And and they said the guy just
said, we want you to be our pastor. And I looked at him and I said,
well, just a gleam in my eyes so they wouldn't get mad. I said,
are all of you out of your mind? And they said, well, what do
you mean? I said, you don't know if I love my wife. You don't know if I'm a consecrated
man, you don't know if I play with my children, you don't know
anything about me. How can you say something like
that? That's what it's one of the reasons why our church is
in such problems today. They avoid all the other characteristics
of a godly bishop and they just look at apt to teach and apt
to teach. They don't even look at does
he speak well? Paul didn't speak well, but he had knowledge. Now, so what we're looking at
here, a living sacrifice. I look at this in two ways, first
of all, as a living sacrifice, it's an energized sacrifice.
This is not a work of the flesh. This is a work of the spirit.
This is a person who has been born again by the power of God. Because any other person doing
any other work in the name of God, the name of Jesus, it's
absolutely worthless. So this is a person energized
by the Holy Spirit, renewed in the Holy Spirit, regenerated,
a true Christian who is now bearing fruit, offering himself not by
the power of the strength of his arm, but by the power and
the strength of the Holy Spirit and the God who works in him
mightily. Secondly, another thing about
this is it's it's a living. And it's vibrant. You know, this
this thing, this lackadaisicalness, you know, of all the people,
how could we ever say that we lack motivation? I need someone
to motivate me. You need a motivational speaker.
No, you need to know who God is. You need to know his Christ. You need to know their glories.
To become living, we ought to be zealous people. We should
be precise people. I think one of the reasons why
why all the the the measurements and things of the temple. For us to see that that when
we strive to serve the Lord, we ought to be a very exacting
people, a precise people, a people who, in a sense, strive to do
this with excellence, to do our best, to give our all. We look at people who are overly
zealous, we think today, and we make fun of them instead of
saying, look, where is our zeal? I mean, I could take or I don't
know where to go, but many of you could probably take me to
some football game and I would watch you act like some sort
of distorted fool. You'd be beside yourself. Looking
absolutely ridiculous and yet barely a grunt out of you in
worship. So there's this idea of being
made alive by Christ, but there's also this idea of continuing
to renew our mind in the things of God that we serve him with
with it, with a strength and with a zeal, with a joy. One of the one of the things
that hinders this. Is the damning effects of the
charismatic movement on the reformed brethren? Now, what do I mean
by that? The charismatics are all about
prosperity and promises and all these different things, and they're
presuming upon God in the sense that they're believing things
he never promised. And they're motivated by many
things that are carnal and materialistic. But because we don't want to
be like them, many times we have forgotten. That there are great
and precious promises in the Bible for those who serve the
Lord. There's exciting things awaiting
us, not only in the next life, but in this one, no one out gives
God, no one out blesses God. There are many things he has
promised us. Those who leave houses and lands
and mothers and fathers, they receive much more, not only in
the life to come, but in this life and persecutions. I can tell you, you know, I used
to, in the flesh, I would sow. You looked at me and boy, you
just saw a martyr. Man, there's a guy who works
all the time and he doesn't even got holes in his pants and everything
else. He's just so holy in every way.
He's just giving it all for Jesus. And I realized that the whole
thing was just a pile of flesh. And then I learned something
from a dear friend of mine, George Mueller. Although he lived with
great frugality and he gave away, was not materialistic by any
means. This is what he said one time.
I don't want anyone to see me tired and wore out and worried
and tattered and unkept, because I would not want them to think
that my master was not a kind master. part of the motivation, part
of the zeal. And this is OK if the heart is
right, is is what awaits me. I mean, there are great things
awaiting the believer. There are great promises of God,
of his care, of his providence, of his blessings. He loves his
children. And he cares for them and gives
them gifts, great gifts. And we should not be ashamed
of that just because other people take the doctrine of prosperity
and twist it into some hellish heresy. God blesses his people,
so we should be living, and I want to finish here, we should be
holy. Holy. Now, just really briefly,
I think there's a great misunderstanding with regard to holiness today.
I ask a guy, what is holiness mean? And they'll go, well, you
know, they'll basically say sinless without sin. And then I'll ask
him, well, what is righteousness? Well, you know, sinless without
sin, and I'll go, well, do you see a problem there? I think that holiness, I think
we're missing the point in the root, it means to be separate,
to be separated. And I think that holiness has
more to do with the condition of the heart and the God wordness
of our lives. A man is holy. Because he is separated from
the things of this world, the things that contradict the will
of God. But that is not the extent of
his holiness. That is only a means to an end. He is separated from those things
with intent and purpose to be separated unto God. It is a desire for him. So you
can be a rule keeping Pharisee and not be holy because holiness
has this idea of recognizing the supremacy, the uniqueness
of God, of seeing God as worthy above all things and as being
drawn to God. So we're offering ourselves to
him and it's not a burden, it's not some grinding wheel upon
wheel endeavor. It is like the woman of the alabaster,
just broken and pours out everything, just extravagant upon his feet,
calculating nothing while all the Pharisees stand over there
and calculate the price. This is foolish. No, it's take
my life, not OK, take my life. No, it's take my life. And one
other thing that's not in this text, but is worth mentioning. Whenever I've held on to my life,
it was like holding on to manna another day, just turned into
rot. I mean, I've held on to my life,
not only before I was saved, there were many times I tried
to recover it during and after my salvation. It's mine. And everything I've claimed is
mine, rotted in my hands. The motive of another motivation,
not quite as great, but it is there is this I've seen what
I've done with my life. It's right. Might as well give
it to him. Because there's never now, listen
to me, if you're a Christian, you'll have to see what I'm saying
here. There has never been a time. In my life. When I refused to do what God
was asking me to do. That I didn't walk away from
their feeling as though I was going to throw up. And there's
never been a time in my life when I did what God told me to
do, even though I was terrified that I did walk away literally
so full of joy that I was walking on air. You know the same. All right, let's pray. Father,
thank you for your word, please help us, Lord, in Jesus name,
amen.
Following Christ
Series 2008 True Discipleship
| Sermon ID | 1028091017550 |
| Duration | 44:50 |
| Date | |
| Category | Conference |
| Bible Text | Romans 12 |
| Language | English |
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