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For more media content from Grace
Community Church in San Antonio, Texas, go to gccsatx.com. Media used by permission of HeartCry
Missionary Society. Visit us online at heartcrymissionary.com. Let's open up our Bibles. To Romans chapter 3. Romans chapter 3, verse 23. Before we read our text, let's
go to the Lord in prayer. Father, I pray that in this night you would get glory
for yourself, get great glory for your son. Pray that the Holy Spirit might
fill ever increasing measure She would revive us in Christ, about Christ. That as it is in heaven, so it
would be on earth. Everything in Him, about Him,
for Him. Lord, in our weakness, in our smallness, so finite and incapable. O God, O God, Lord, bring revival. Please. In Jesus' name, Amen. Romans 3.23, For all have sinned and fall
short of the glory of God. being justified as a gift by
His grace through the redemption which is in Christ Jesus, whom
God displayed publicly as a propitiation in His blood through faith. This
was to demonstrate His righteousness because in the forbearance of
God, He passed over the sins previously committed. For the
demonstration, I say, of His righteousness at the present
time, so that He would be just, and the justifier of the one
who has faith in Jesus. Where then is boasting, it is
excluded by what kind of law? Of works? No, but by a law of
faith. For we maintain that a man is
justified by faith apart from the works of the law. We have before us this evening
What many scholars and preachers throughout the ages of the church
have said to be the Acropolis of the Christian faith, the fortified
city of Christianity, the great shining star in Scripture. I
have heard some very godly men say that if they had to lose
the entire Bible and could pick only one passage, this is the
passage they would hold. Because in this passage is found
the very salvation of man. There are words here that are
possibly the greatest words in all of Scripture. And we cannot
understand the Gospel of Jesus Christ apart from understanding
some of these words, some of these things that are said in
this small text. And if you do not understand
the glory of God in the Gospel, how then will you live? How will
you live? So many today. We call them gospel-hardened. They're not gospel-hardened.
They are gospel-ignorant. So many today that are truly
born again, who are looking for motivation and reason and zeal
and a source of Christian life, and they do not understand that
it is found only in the truths of the gospel. And yet they think
they know the gospel. But the gospel in America today
has been reduced down to, as I have said many times, four
spiritual laws and five things God wants you to know. The gospel
is treated. as a small truth, Christianity
101, something that you learn in five minutes and afterwards
you pray a prayer and then you go on to the greater stuff. But
there is nothing greater than the gospel of Jesus Christ and
as it is laid out in this glorious text. And so we're going to take
this text line by line and seek to discover by the grace of God
some of what's buried here. First of all, he says, for all
have sinned. Isn't it quite amazing? Doesn't
this show the lack of discernment on our part and the dullness
of our own hearts? Those of you who are born again,
those of us who are born again, upon hearing all have sinned,
we ought to be falling out of our chairs at this very moment,
worshiping God and giving thanks to God that he has saved us from
such a terrible thing. And those of you who are not
born again, who treat the gospel as something common, or maybe
have gathered unto yourself a sort of gospel that doesn't change
life. You are to fall on your face
in fear, knowing that if God doesn't move on your behalf,
you will stand before Him in your sin, and that is a most
terrible estate. All have sinned. Why don't we
tremble? Why don't we know how terrible
this is? We don't know how much we've
sinned in the same way a fish doesn't know how wet it is. We
were born in sin. We were conceived in sin. We
were born in a fallen world of sin. The only thing we've ever
known is sin. Our society, as Scripture says,
drinks down iniquity like it was water. We also live in a
land that is rampant of the ignorance of God. They have no knowledge
of God. We don't know who God is. We
treat Him as though He were some sort of Santa Claus or a buffoon
of a grandfather. And we do not understand that
He is the Lord of lords and King of kings. Do you know that hell
is of infinite duration? The primary reason is because
every sin you commit is committed against an infinitely worthy
and good God. Sin is sin today. Listen to the
way we speak about sin. We talk about sin against man.
We talk about sin even against nature and animals and trees.
But no one realizes that all sin is ultimately sin against
God. David sinned against his people.
David committed adultery with a woman. David murdered a man,
but in the end he said this, against thee and thee alone have
I sinned. Why is sin so terrible? Because
it's committed against God. Why don't we tremble? Because
we don't know what that means. And why don't we know what that
means? Because we do not know who God is. such a glorious and
blessed being. Imagine this for a moment. God
stands there on the day of creation, and He tells planets to put themselves
in certain orbits in space, and they all bow down and say, Amen,
and obey Him. He tells stars to find their
place in the sky and to follow His decree to the letter, and
they all bow down and obey Him. He tells mountains to be lifted
up and valleys to be cast down, and they bow down in worship.
He tells the brave sea, you will come to this point and you will
come no further, and the sea adores. And God tells you to
come and you go, no! How wicked is our sin! And if it were only an act, it
would be terrible enough. But sin goes much deeper in the
heart of a man. A man does not simply commit
sin. A man is born in sin. Vile and corrupt from the beginning. Let's just go for just a moment.
Go over to Genesis just quickly with me. Chapter 6, verse 5. Then the Lord saw that the wickedness
of man was great on the earth and that every intent of the
thoughts of his heart was only evil continually. Only evil continually. I simply read this text one time
preaching at a university and a young reporter came up to me
and he said, I don't agree with your interpretation. And I said,
young man, I didn't interpret the text. I read it. And he said, well, I don't agree.
And I said, young man, let me tell you something. If I could
pull out your heart right now, if I could take every thought
you have ever had from your first waking moment until this very
hour, if I could take every thought you've ever had, not just your
deeds, but your thoughts, only your thoughts, and I could put
them on a video, And I could show that video here in this
auditorium tonight. You would run off of this campus
and you would never show your face here again because you have
thought things so wicked and so perverted you cannot even
share them with your closest friend. As a matter of fact,
if your closest friend knew some of the thoughts you've had against
him, he would no longer be your friend. And young man, I do not
know that because I'm a prophet. I know that because it's what
the Scriptures say. And I know that like you, I too
am a man. I can say the same thing about
every one of you here tonight. You would spend every ounce of
energy to hide from everyone in this room what has gone through
your mind just in the last hour. Don't tell me Scripture's not
right when it talks about all men having sinned because all
men are sinners. Go to Genesis 8 for a moment. Verse 21, And the Lord smelled
the soothing aroma, and the Lord said to Himself, I will never
again curse the ground on account of man, for the intent of man's
heart is evil from his youth. This can mean evil from childhood,
evil from a babe. Let me share with you something
that a correction officer said a long time ago. He said this,
discovered that human nature is such that imagine for a moment
an 18 month old baby that you're holding in your arms. And that
18 month old baby sees that shiny watch on your wrist and he grabs
for your watch. And you pull his hand away and
say no. He begins to cry and move about in your arms. He reaches
for the watch again. You grab his hand and say no.
He begins to scream and cry. He reaches for the watch again.
You say no. He begins to frail his arms,
even in the direction of your face. I submit to you. that if
that 18-month-old baby had the strength of an 18-year-old man,
he would slaughter you there where you stand, Father, rip
the watch off your arm and walk across your bloody body out the
door without feeling an ounce of remorse. You see, here's something
you need to understand. Hitler was not an anomaly. Hitler
was not a phenomenon. Hitler was what everyone in this
room has the potential of being. And not only that, you need to
understand, even in all the wickedness of Hitler, Hitler was still restrained
by the common grace of God. And you need to know this, that
if it were not for the common grace of God restraining you
in your unconverted state, you would make Hitler look like a
choir boy. What we do not understand is what Scripture teaches about
men. Men are evil. You say, well, I don't agree.
That's because you've grabbed enough of Christianity to stand,
but you don't believe the Bible. The Scripture is testimony against
you and all men. is that we are born with evil. And we are evil. Do you have
to teach a child to lie? Do you have to teach a child
to be self-centered? Do you have to teach a child
to be selfish? Do you have to teach a child to be brutal to
other children? They learn that on their own.
Set them free. Discipline them not and see what
you have in ten years. A monster. Why? Because what
Scripture says is true. And you hold your ears and you
say, I don't want to hear it! I don't want to hear it! In the
same way that a person dying of cancer is in denial and says
to the doctor, I don't want to hear it! I don't want to hear
it! But by cupping the hands over your ears, you close yourself
off from any remedy. The first thing you must embrace
is this, all men are born in sin and given over to sin. And all men are born hating God. You say, well, I never hated
God. Yes, you do. If you did not, if you did not
in your unconverted state hate God, then the Bible is not true.
Because the Bible calls all men haters of God and enemies of
God. You say, but I loved God ever
since I was little. No, you loved an image of God. that you created
with your own mind and you loved what you made. But if someone
would have come to you and pointed out the God of Scripture, you
would have said, I could never love a God like that. So many
times I'll go to people and they say, well, I've loved God all
my life. And I say, can I sit down with you for a half an hour
and just explain from Scripture some of the historical Christian
beliefs about God? And after a half an hour, a good
churchman will say, that's not my God. And I have to say, of
course it's not. But it is the God of Scripture. It is the God of Scripture. Let's
take another look. Let's go on over to Isaiah. Isaiah 64. Verse 6, for all of
us have become like one who is unclean, and all our righteous
deeds are like filthy garments, and all of us wither like a leaf,
and our iniquities like the wind take us away. I helped build
a church years ago in San Pablo near the Colombian border on
the Amazon, and it was a colony of lepers. Have you ever seen
a leper? You ever smelt a leper? If I
brought a leper of the worst sort, there's about three different
kinds of leprosy. If I brought a leper of the worst sort, you'd
smell him before he got out of the parking lot into this building.
If he walked in here, he would be a mass of rotting flesh, body
fluid, pus and blood. When he said all of us are like
one who is unclean, this is possible to reference here. And let's say that all you fine
people say, well, we must do something about this. So you
go to Kansas City to the most exclusive shop. And you buy the
finest silk you can find. And you take that silk and you
bring it back and you wrap that man head to toe in that fine
white silk and you say, Bravo, look what we've done. We've saved
the day. We've made him presentable. But
that silk only lies on that flesh for a few seconds. And the corruption
of that man's body begins to bleed through that fine silk. And that silk becomes as corrupt
as the man himself. That is why all our good works
are like filthy rags before God. Because we ourselves, prior to
conversion, have a heart of stone, a God-hating heart, a heart of
evil, born in sin, given towards sin. That is the testimony of
Scripture. Some of you, in your 60s, 70s,
you heard preaching like this all the time when you were children. But now it seems the new generations
to follow cannot bear with truth. They would rather be deceived
and think well of themselves. But a man who will not accept
his illness cannot be healed. A man who does not have all his
hopes crushed with regard to his own self-righteousness, merit
and worth cannot turn to Christ. We must realize that we are destitute,
and there is only one Savior, and His name is Jesus. We go on back to Romans chapter
3, verse 10, it says, There is none righteous, not even one.
The word righteous in some degree means straight. It's talking
about a standard. To be righteous, you must be
perfectly conformed to a certain standard. If you're not conformed
to that straight standard, you're twisted, you're crooked. Another
word, perverted. The standard is God's nature
and God's law. And the Bible says no one has
conformed himself to the standard of God's holy nature, the standard
of God's holy law. All of us have become twisted
and dislocated. It says also, there is none who
understands, there is none who seeks for God. If you have ever
truly sought for God, it is only because God has sought you first. It says, all have turned aside
together. They have become useless. There is no one who does good,
not even one. How many people, even those who
set themselves inside the sphere of Christianity, will tell you
they're going to heaven because they're not that bad? They're
going to heaven because they are good. But what is the testimony
of Scripture? There is none good. No, not one. None. None. All have sinned. You say, but
brother Paul, I haven't sinned much. How much do you have to
sin? Adam and Eve sinned only one
time and the entire universe was cast into moral chaos and
judgment. You have sinned more times than
you can count on a calculator. If Adam and Eve and even creation
could not escape the condemnation of one sin, how will you escape
the condemnation of all the sins that are heaped upon your head?
You say, but I'm pretty good as far as humans go. But you
will not be judged by human standard. You will be judged by God, a
righteous and holy God. And He has seen your heart. So many people will say, don't
judge me, you don't know what's in my heart. How foolish a statement,
because they would be ashamed if I knew what was in their heart.
Why would they ever want to use their own heart as evidence that
they really are good? Because they hide their heart
from everyone. You don't know me really? Okay,
then let me see you in secret. No, I would never let you see
that. Just the thoughts of our own
mind. accuses us, all have sinned and
come short of the glory of God. So common today to take this
verse and just almost seem to make it humanistic. What does
it mean to fall short of the glory of God? Well, God had a
marvelous plan for all of us, and He had so much invested in
seeing us being filled with glory. But although He had this great
plan, none of us have reached it. I don't think that's the
primary meaning of the text. When we have fallen short of
the glory of God, I think that phrase should be interpreted
in the context of Romans chapter 1, where it says, Although they
knew God, they did not glorify Him as God, nor give thanks.
You were created. Well, let's think, by whom? By
God. And not only were you created
by God, all your faculties, your very existence is sustained by
Him. You owe every breath and every
beat of your heart to God. And the breath is given only
to return in worship, and the heart beats only to serve Him. And yet, look at the testimony
against us. Our minds and our lives are filled
up with searching for our purpose. searching for our dreams, our
goals, our will, what we want. Even those who claim some form
of piety would have to say that in their daily lives they're
practical atheists. God is far from their thoughts.
When they're at business, when they're in the factory, when
they're in the field, when they're working at home, is God the center
of their thoughts? And all they're thinking and
all they're doing, are they doing it for the glory of God? You
say to me, but Brother Paul, no one is that way. That's absolutely
my point. All have sinned. All have fallen
short of the glory of God. Why are men so hollow and so
miserable and so without purpose? Isn't it amazing? Christians
in America are the most wealthy, most protected Christians that
have ever existed in history. And yet you go into all those
so-called Christian bookstores of yours and 85% of the books
are written about how empty we are. Do you want to know why
we're empty? First of all, because the great
majority of those calling themselves Christians are not converted.
But secondly, even those who are Christians are empty for
the very reason Jesus never was. He said, I have food to eat that
you know not of. My food is to do the will of
my Father. Our food is to gain ground on
this planet. Success. Comfort. Fame. Leisure. Youth. Beauty. Us. Us. Us. Us. And the more we get
of us, the more empty we are. Because we were made for something
else. Better said, we were made for
someone else. But we have become twisted and
dislocated. Not only have we sinned, Not
only are we separated from a holy and a righteous God, but our
whole purpose has been rinsed from us. For all have sinned, fallen short
of the glory of God. But now here comes the problem.
It is the greatest blessing you could ever hear. It is the greatest
problem you could ever hear. And what is it? God is just. You say, well, that's good. I
want a just God. I wouldn't want an all-powerful being who is
evil. I want a just God. That's good news, Brother Paul.
No, it's not, because you're not just. You see, here's the
problem. He is a just God. And a just
God, the judge of all the earth, will do right. And in doing right,
His response to you is rather dreadful. Now I know that you've
heard these evangelists over and over on television. How many
times do I hear evangelists get up in the pulpit and say, now
the first thing I want all you good people to know is that God,
unlike those Puritan preachers of yesterday, God is not an angry
God. How many times have you heard
that? God is not an angry God. Okay? Let's just see. Go with me to Psalms chapter
7. Verse 11. God is a righteous judge and
a God who has indignation every day. In some of your translations,
a God who is angry every day. You see, God doesn't need a PR
man to make Him politically correct so that people will like Him.
The Bible says God is an angry God and you ought to fall down
on your knees and praise that He is. Not only is he an angry
God, he is a God who hates. Not only is he an angry God,
he is a God who hates. And you say, yes, Brother Paul,
you're exactly right. God hates the sin and loves the
sinner. Well, that looks good on the
back of a Christian T-shirt, but that's not biblical. The Bible does not say that God
hates the sin and loves the sinner. The Bible says God hates the
sinner. Look in Psalms 5. Just look there
for a moment. Psalms 5. Verse 5. The boastful shall not
stand before your eyes. You hate all who do iniquity. In another translation, you hate
all who do wrong. Now, does it say here that God
hates the sin or that God hates the sinner? You say, Brother
Paul, but what about John 3.16? It's in the book. God so loved
the world. Yes, it's in the book, but so
is Psalms 5. But God is merciful and a loving
God. What about that? Yes, that's
true, and we're going to talk about it, but you can't understand
it until you understand the full counsel of God. God is love,
but this loving God hates. God is merciful, but He is angry. You see, you just can't take
one side of the coin, not just one part of the story. And that's
the problem today. As I said this morning, I one
time preached one whole sermon one night on the holiness of
God. And after the sermon, three men walked up to me and said,
Brother Paul, we got a real problem with you because you preached
an entire sermon on the holiness of God and not once did you mention
the love of God. And I said, well, gentlemen,
last night I preached on the love of God and not once did
I mention the holiness of God and not one of you had a problem
with that. You see, dear people, we're always getting a one-sided
story. But doesn't the Scriptures tell
us that we need the full counsel of God? I'm going to talk about
the love of God tonight in a way possibly you've never known it.
But in order for you to appreciate the love of God, you've got to
understand something. His love is exalted in the same
way the stars are exalted by a pitch black sky. Let me ask
you a question. Where did the stars go this afternoon?
Did someone put them all in a basket and carry them away? How come
when you looked up, you didn't see them? Because there was so
much light. You could not marvel at their beauty. You could not
even see them because there was so much light. In the same way,
you cannot see the stars of God's grace and His love with so much
light. When preachers tell you that
men are so good, the only way to truly appreciate the love
of God and the grace of God is to see the pitch dark blackness
of man. And when you see the pitch dark
blackness of your own heart, and then you realize that God
moved in love for you, it causes you to fall down on your knees
with the greatest esteem and worship God. I have a point to
all this madness. I've got to dig a hole and bury
you deep. I've got to show you how dark
your night and hopeless your situation, so that when I begin
to talk about Jesus, You're filled with admiration. Sometimes I'll pick up a thing
of keys and I'll jingle them before the congregation and I'll
say, does the sound of these keys bring you any joy? Everyone
goes, no. Of course not, because you're
not locked away in a dungeon. If you were locked away in a
dungeon, the sound of keys would bring you great joy. Your heart
would leap with hope. Preachers don't preach about
sin. And they're just about as moral as a doctor who will not
tell his patient he's dying. I want to abase man totally. I want man to see what he is,
so that when we talk about God's love in sending His own Son,
men cry out, Amazing Grace! How sweet the sound! Several
years ago when I was in Peru, someone sent me a tape, Amazing
Grace. I was so happy. I love that song. And I put it
in my little cassette player there, and it went around for
the first verse. I grabbed it out of the cassette player and
threw it right in the trash can. Do you want to know why? Because
it said this, amazing grace, how sweet the sound that saved
a man like me. You know, I think it says sinner
like me and before that it says wretch like me and worm like
me. Behold, every generation man just seems to be getting
better. Men don't need saviors, wretches do. And when you take
away the darkness of man, you take away the glory of the gospel. Have you ever wondered why some
men who were drug addicts and women who were prostitutes and
murderers and all so on and so forth, when they're converted,
they seem to be filled with such a special zeal for God? It's
because they didn't come from a country club. They didn't come
from some religious denomination or religious life where everyone
pretends to be moral, upstanding and deserving of God's love.
They came out of the sewer. And when they heard about the
love of God, their hearts exploded. Now let's talk about God's response.
God is angry. And you say, I don't like that.
You should. I pick up a newspaper and I'm sitting
beside you. I pick up a newspaper. I look
at it and I go with a kind of a smile, a twinkle in my eye,
hey, did you read this? A pedophile molested six boys. Hey, get a kick out of this.
What would you say about me? He'd say, you're sick. What's wrong with you? You should
read that and be so angry. Oh, I should. But God has no
right to be angry. Every day He sees the wickedness
of this world. Every day He sees the filth and
the murder and the crimes and everything else. But in your
book, God has no right to be angry. I tell you He is angry.
He is so angry that on the day He pulls back His mercy and He
comes to judge the world, the great captains of this world
will cry out for mountains to be picked up and thrown on top
of them to hide them from the wrath of the Lamb. What would
you think about a God who could look down at Auschwitz and be
apathetic? Who could give Hitler a hug?
Who can watch the United States of America murder thousands of
babies every day and say, I'm okay and you're okay. He's angry. And if he wasn't angry, he'd
be immoral, just like me. If I read a terrible newspaper
clipping like that and laughed about it or was neutral about
it or said, every man for himself, you know, we're all free. You'd
look at me and say, you're sick. You should be angry. Well, how
much more angry should God be, but not just with the Hitler's
of the world, with you? for all your crimes and trespasses
against Him and His creation. You see? And let's talk a minute
about Psalms, chapter 5. Look at this text. Just look
at the Bible. I have so many people who'll
tell me, I don't believe that. And I say, well, look at the
Bible. No, I'm not going to because I just don't believe that. That's
okay when you're at a university and you're speaking to an agnostic
professor. But someone who claims to be Christian and does the
same thing, there's a serious problem. I just refuse. Look at it. What does it say?
The boastful shall not stand before your eyes. You hate all
who do iniquity. You hate all those who do wrong. You hate workers of iniquity.
These are the different translations. It doesn't say that God's hatred
is directed toward the iniquity or the sin. It says God's hatred
is directed towards the man who commits it. And did not the loving,
lowly Jesus say the same thing? That those who did not believe
in Him, the wrath of God abides upon them. John chapter 3. What
do you think the wrath of God is? Wrath of God in Hebrew comes
from a word. that literally means nostril
or the flaring of a nostril. I, being a farm boy, we raise
Charlay cattle. I know exactly what that means.
We had a couple of two and three thousand pound bulls, perfecto
bulls. You walk across that lot and
that bull flare his nostrils, you know your party is over.
You better run. When it talks about the wrath
of God in the Bible, it's the flaring of the nostrils. That
deity would be so angry! And it says that at the breath
of His mouth, the mountains melt. A young guy one time said, I'll
stand there on Judgment Day and I won't be afraid. And I said,
no young man, you will melt before God like a tiny wax figurine
before a blast furnace. God comes. with hatred against
evil. God comes with anger against
evil. And you say, Brother Paul, but
no, as one lady said one time, she goes, no, God can't hate
because God is love. I said, well, first of all, we
have to go not on philosophical inferences. We have to go on
Scripture. And when Scripture said God hates, you better believe
Him. But second of all, let's be philosophical for a moment.
You say God is love and therefore He can't hate. I tell you that
God is love, therefore He must hate. Do you love Jews? You must hate the Holocaust.
If I told you, hey, did you read about the Holocaust? And you
said, yeah, yeah, I'm pretty neutral about that. I mean, you
know, what anybody wants to do, you know, it's Hitler's idea.
It's okay with me. I would think you a monster.
You'd probably be thrown in jail for a hate crime. If you love Jews, you must hate
the Holocaust. Do you love children? How many
of you have said with your own voice, I hate abortion? Oh, so
you have the right to hate because of all the great love in your
heart. But you think it's strange that God would hate because He
loves. You see, God loves all that is beautiful and lovely
and excellent. Let's just all wrap it up in
one basket. God loves everything that's like Him. That's where
the problem comes from. We have the right to love everything
we choose to love, but we think God ought to love everything
that we love. God loves everything that is like Him because He is
absolute perfection, and He comes with wrath against everything
that contradicts His nature and will. And that is us. Everyone in this room has broken
every law God has ever made. If you don't understand that,
you don't understand Christianity. Now, I want us to go for a moment
to the book of Proverbs. And I'm going to show you the
greatest problem in all of Scripture. Proverbs chapter 17, verse 15. He who justifies the wicked and
he who condemns the righteous, both of them alike are an abomination
to the Lord. Abomination is probably the strongest
word we have in all of Scripture. There's just nothing more horrible
before God than an abomination. And what's an abomination to
God? An abomination is this, he who justifies the wicked.
And he who condemns the righteous, both of them alike are an abomination. Now, let's go back to our main
text. We've looked at, for all have
sinned and fall short of the glory of God. Now let's look
at this. Speaking about Christians, those who have truly been converted,
regenerated by the Holy Spirit, those who have believed in Jesus
Christ unto salvation, he says this about them. Although they
have all sinned and fallen short of the glory of God, they are
justified. Justified. Now what does it mean
to be justified? Justified. does not mean God
treats me just as if I'd never sinned. I know it rhymes and
everything, but that's not the meaning of the word. Justified
does not mean that the moment you believe in Jesus, God makes
you just, perfectly righteous, because if that was the case,
you'd never sin again. Justified means that the moment
the sinner looks unto Jesus with saving faith, that sinner is
legally declared by God to be right before Him. to be righteous
before Him and right with Him. Actually, justification is a
forensic term or a legal term. God the Judge looks down upon
the sinner who places his faith in Christ and declares that sinner
to be legally right with Him. Now, how does that work? Well,
it says this. He said, "...being justified
as a gift by His grace." Now, Paul's being redundant here.
Being justified. Being justified as a gift by
His grace. How are we justified? It's a
gift. It's a gift. Do you know where
it says about the Messiah, they hated me without a cause? Did
Jesus ever give anyone a cause to hate Him? No. You would argue,
no, no, no, no, no. Jesus never gave even the tiniest
hint of a cause for someone to hate Him. They hated Him without
a cause. That's the same word used here.
That the Christian is justified without a cause. That means,
sir, ma'am, Young person, you gave God absolutely no cause
to declare you right. I don't know why God saved me.
Well, I can tell you this, it was not because of you, it was
in spite of you. What worth did God see in me?
Absolutely none. He said, He declared you right
even though you did not give Him a cause to do so. He justified you without cause
by His grace. Now I want you to look at something.
Most religions today... Most religions seek to answer
only one question. Think about it. All the religions
out there, except for some Eastern mystic religions, but most religions
seek to answer only one question. How can a man be right with God?
If you go into some African pagan tribes or South America or even
here in the United States where they're returning to paganism,
and they're offering blood sacrifices to trees and demon gods and everything
else. All over the world, throughout
history, men have had this reality that they were wrong with God,
whatever God they believed in. They had this knowing in their
conscience that there was a problem. And that demonstrates one thing,
that Romans chapter 1 is true. That all men know Enough about
the one true God and enough about His will to know that they have
broken His law and that He is against them and they are against
Him. But let's just interview for a second three men from your
main religions. The reporter comes up to the
Orthodox Jew and says, Sir, if you died right now, where would
you go? Well, I'd go to paradise. Why? I love the law of God. I
am a righteous man. I do good works. I study His
law, love His law, feed upon His law. I am a righteous man. And the reporter goes, OK, I
understand that. OK, Muslim, if you died right
now, where would you go? I would go to paradise. Why?
Because I love the Koran. I have made all the pilgrimages.
I make the daily prayers. I give alms to the poor. So on
and so forth. I am a righteous man. The reporter
says, OK, I understand that. Comes to the Christian, the true
Christian. You have to keep saying that
in America because everyone believes they're Christian. You come to
the Christian and the reporter says, sir, if you died right
now, where would you go? I'd go to heaven. Why? Well, I was born in sin. In sin did my mother conceive
me. I have broken every law that God has ever given. Thoroughly
found, unrighteous, and lacking in merit and worth. I deserve
the deepest, darkest judgments." The reporter says, stop! The
other guys, I understand. They say they're going to heaven
because they deserve to go to heaven. God owes them. God is
their debtor. They've proved themselves worthy.
God must give them heaven. But you, I don't understand,
you're telling me with joy that you're going to heaven, but then
you're telling me you have no worth or merit to go there? How
are you going to heaven?" And the Christian smiles and he says,
because I'm going to heaven based upon the merit and the worth
of another, Jesus Christ my Lord. Now of those three, who gives
glory to God? And who gives glory to men? You see that? This is not about
us. This is not about our morality
and our goodness. This is about Him. I have trouble
with reporters. A reporter came up to me and
says, why are you always talking about sin? I said, because I
want you to love God. He said, what do you mean you
want me to love God? I said, have you never read?
She loved much because she was forgiven much. Sir, you don't
love God much because you don't know how much you've been forgiven,
and you don't know how much you've been forgiven because no one
ever told you how sinful you are. I say, I can invite Bill Gates
to my house to eat a bowl of Cheerios. He won't be kissing
my hands or on his knees weeping in gratitude. But many places
where I have served around the world, if I were to give someone
a bowl of Cheerios, they would fall on their face and kiss my
hands because they were starving and needy. It is only when we
recognize our need and we have dropped all these silly trite
ideas of our own value and worth and righteousness that we can
see the glory of the love of God. It goes on. being justified as a
gift by His grace. How? Through the redemption. I have come to believe, as I
have read some older men, that there are certain words in the
Bible that we ought to be very careful mentioning. We say things
so quickly. Think about this for a moment.
All this fancy singing today. All this Yehu and Hahu and every
kind of singing that's going on. Yeah, that Jesus died for
me! You walk up to me, and I've just
lost my son, and you say, your little boy died! I'll just look at you and go,
what are you? Do you know what you're saying? Jesus died? Should not there
be a dropping of the head, a trembling of the lip, a thought of honor
to the Father who gave His Son? Or can we just sing these silly
southern gospel songs and hoop and holler and do all this stuff? He died! The Father gave His
Son! When you say things like, Jesus
died, shouldn't you stop for a moment or something? My father was in World War II
and fought in some of the most horrible battles. I mean, anyone
else could watch a film on World War II on the History Channel
and just talk about strategy and coldly talk about what happened
and didn't happen, but my dad would just kind of sit there.
Because all his friends died. Guys discussing Vietnam and they're
talking about whether it's right or wrong or political this and
political that and warfare and everything. But the guys coming
out of Vietnam and they hear about it and they go, You can
only talk that way because you weren't there. And sometimes Christians who
come to grasp something of Jesus died, how can you say that with
a hoop holler in your voice, like it was to make it rhyme
in a song? Jesus died. And He says that
we are justified through redemption. To redeem something is to buy
a slave or a captive to pay a price. But the price that was paid was
not emptying coffers in heaven and the streets of gold, tearing
them up and sending them down to pay off the devil. He gave
the blood of His only begotten Son. I remember when my firstborn
son, my child was born, my son Ian. And it was a few days after
his birth, and I was driving back to the farm in my old blue
Ford Ranger truck. And I'd always thought about,
Jesus died, Jesus died. But as some of you fathers know,
the moment I laid eyes on that boy, my boy who was born, I mean,
I'd have fought an army for him. I would have died a thousand
deaths for him. I'd have thrown my body in front of a train for
him. I couldn't believe it. It was scary. There was so much
love that I had for that little hairless lizard in the cradle. I mean, it was just the most
beautiful thing I had ever seen in my life. And it struck me
for the first time in my life. Not just the son's pain, but
the Father giving His Son. He gave Him to die. I couldn't do that. I wouldn't
give my Son for you. Maybe I would give myself for
you, I don't know. But I would not give my Son for
you. Shouldn't there be some words in the Bible that when
we speak them, we just stop for a moment? Isn't it true that
even the most precious phrases can become nothing more than
empty clichés because we say them over and over without even
thinking about it? I mean, He died. He really died. And it was His
blood shed on that tree that's the only reason The black filth
of your sin can be washed away. That blood on that tree. The slaughter of the Son of God. As one theologian has said, how much does He love you? Look
to the cross. How much did it cost? How vile
and dark was your sin? Look to that tree, it will tell
you everything. So He redeemed us. Redemption
which is in Christ Jesus. One time I was preaching and
a young man came up afterwards and he was all excited and he
goes, you're right brother Paul, Jesus is all we need. And I said,
young man, Jesus is all we have. Outside of Him, there's nothing.
You are either in Christianity, you are either in one realm or
the other. You must understand this. You are either in Adam
or in Christ. You are either in death or in
life. You are either in the flesh or
in the spirit. You are either condemned or set
free. It goes on and on and on. The only thing we have is Christ. I was speaking years ago at Oral
Roberts Seminary. I was invited there, and I don't
know why, but I went. I was invited, I'll go. And I
found some very, very decent Christians there. But one of
them came up to me afterwards and says, boy, you're one of
those old Puritan guys. And I said, what makes you think
that? And he said, your prayer. Because you said this, God, I
come before you in the name of Jesus. And I know that apart
from Him, I have no part with you. In Christ, in Christ. That is why Paul the Apostle
goes wild in the book of Ephesians. He don't even know where to put
the period. He just keeps writing and writing and writing because
it's all in Him, in Him, in Him, in Christ, in Christ, in the
Son, in Him. It's all about Christ. It's nothing
about you. And that is why I love that old
hymn singer who said, nothing in my hands I bring. It's Christ
or nothing. And you better want it that way.
Why? Because if it was 99.99% Christ and 0.01% you, you'd go
to hell. It is Christ and Christ alone. Now, he goes on and he says this. I want to link up verse 24. Being
justified. Well, let's link the whole thing
up. Sinners. Wicked people, verse 23. Verse
24, God justified us when we were wicked. Proverbs 17, 15,
the problem. Anyone who justifies the wicked
is an abomination to God. Now think about Proverbs for
a moment. Look what it's teaching us. Anyone who justifies a wicked
man is what? An abomination to God. But what
have we been rejoicing in the last few minutes? God justified
us even though we were wicked. Does anybody see a problem? If
God says that anyone who justifies the wicked is an abomination
before Him, then how can God justify you being wicked without
becoming an abomination? And that is the greatest problem
in all the Scripture, and that is what the Gospel of Jesus Christ
is all about. The greatest dilemma in all the
Bible is this. If God is just, He cannot forgive
you. You say, well, why not? That question just shows that
you are a child of this age who knows nothing about justice.
Let me give you an example. You left part of your family
at home. You return tonight about 10 o'clock and you find that
they've been slaughtered, violently slaughtered. You walk through
the door and the man who's done it has blood on his hands and
he's strangling the life out of your last child. with the
force of a bull. You come running across that
room, you charge that man, you grab him and you throw him to
the ground. You call the police and you hand this violent murderer
of your entire life, everything you've ever lived for, he has
dashed to pieces. You hand him over to the police
and the police take him to the judge. And as were all the townspeople
are in that courtroom, the judge looks down at the man who slaughtered
your entire family and says this, I'm a very loving judge and I
never get angry with anybody. You're free to go. I forgive
you. What are you going to do? Is
everybody in the courtroom going to come together, hold hands
and sing Kumbaya? What are you going to do? I'll
tell you exactly what you're going to do. You're going to
jump right off of that seat and you're going to go, I demand justice.
You're going to write the congressman, the senator, the president. You're
going to go into the newspaper. You're going to go to the television
and you're going to say, there is a judge sitting on that bench
that's more wicked than the man who slaughtered my family. Because
a judge is supposed to do right. He's supposed to do justice.
He cannot justify the wicked. See the problem? You would demand
justice from your own judges, but you get mad when someone
tells you that God is just. The greatest problem in the Bible
is this, if God is just, He cannot forgive you without becoming
wicked. The question of all the Scripture. See, this is what
I mean when I say people don't understand the gospel today.
When was the last time you heard this? Like I always go to students,
especially over in Europe, I say, why did Jesus die? They say,
well, because of our sin. Okay, why did Jesus die? Well,
because of our sin. No, you're not answering the
question. You've got to go deeper than that. Why is the sin a problem?
Well, because sin's wrong. No, that's not the problem. The
problem is this. God is a just God and He's the judge of all
the earth and He must do right. He must be consistent with His
own character. God is holy and just. If He looks
over sin and sets the wicked free, He's just as contemptible. He's just as wicked. as that
judge I just described. So the greatest problem in all
the Bible, the divine dilemma of all of inspired Scripture
is this, if God is just, He cannot forgive you. So the question
is, how can God justify wicked men and still be just? Sometimes I've heard evangelists
say this, God could have been just with you, but instead of
being just, He was loving. Do you know what that means?
God's love is unjust. Do you see that? People say a
lot of stupid things. God's great love for you caused
Him to turn His back on His own justice and sin in order to save
you. That is the problem. How can
God be just? and at the same time justify
wicked men. Now let me say something. It's
important that you understand. God must be just not because
there's this law that's even greater than God over Him to
which He must conform. Some universal law of justice
that God cannot break. That's not what the Bible teaches. God must be just because He is
just. God must be consistent with who
He is. He is a just God. He cannot do
injustice, even in the name of love. God's love is holy. God's love is just. So the question
is, how can God be just and justify the wicked? The answer is found
in this one word. Verse 25, propitiation. Other than the names of God,
I would submit to you this is the most important word in the
entire Bible. And yet, if I were to hand out
pieces of paper and tell you, each of you now define for me
what is the word propitiation, most people wouldn't be able
to do it. You see, we're not gospel hardened, we're gospel
ignorant. It's the most important word in the Bible, yet most people
don't know it. The most important concept in
all the Bible is how can God be just and the justifier of
the wicked, yet some of you have never heard it. It says, "...whom God displayed
publicly as a propitiation." God displayed Christ publicly
to put away sin. Now, Martyn Lloyd-Jones said
that God placarded His Son. Just like when you go through
Missouri and you see all those billboards out in the fields
everywhere. You can't even see the nature for all the billboards
that are out there. Those are placarded everywhere.
Signs everywhere you look. God placarded His Son. in the
center of the world, the most important religious city on the
face of the earth. There in the crossroads, a cross
was lifted up and His Son was nailed to it. Now why did God
publicly display His Son? Because God was doing a lot more
than just saving men on that tree. We're going to talk about
that in just a little while. But let's go on. Whom God displayed
publicly as a propitiation. What is a propitiation? A propitiation
is a sacrifice made in the place of the guilty party that justifies
or satisfies the justice of God and makes it possible for God
to forgive wicked men. A sacrifice made in the place
of the wicked so that justice that demands their death God's
justice will be satisfied and His wrath, holy hatred against
sin, will be appeased. And it's all done so that He
can now freely forgive. And that sacrifice was Christ. Now, let's talk about the death of
Christ for a moment. We know that the one who dies
on that tree must be a man. We know that, don't we? Because
the blood of bulls and goats will not take away our sin. It is Adam who has sinned. It is Adam's race that has fallen. It is a son of Adam who must
die in the place of the guilty. We know that. A man must die
on that tree. But then again, more than a man
must die on that tree. The one who dies on that tree
must also be God. Now let's look at this for just
a moment. Let's just look. Why must the one who dies on
that tree be deity, be God in the flesh? Be God the Son, the
Son of God. Why? Well, first of all, a small
statement in the book of Jonah. Salvation is of the Lord. Isaiah is quite clear. God shares
the title of Savior with no one. That is why the doctrine of the
Jehovah Witnesses is such an abomination, because they say
that God created an innocent creature to go down and save
men. to put away sin. And if that's
the case, then it is a creature that has saved us. But what you
need to understand is Christ was no creature, but the Creator,
the eternal Son of God, who stepped down out of heaven, did not consider
equality with God a thing to be grasped, but came down from
heaven. He did not lay aside His deity. He laid aside the glory and privilege
of His deity. He did not become something less
than God, but He became something God had never been. He took to
His divine nature, human nature. He took to Himself flesh and
He became a man. And He went to that tree as the
God-man. And He died on that tree as the
God-man. And He rose again from the dead
as the God-man. And the one that we call Savior
is not just man, but He is God. And so, the words of Jonah remain
intact. Salvation is of the Lord. Why is it that the one on that
tree must be God? Well, just look at this for a
moment. The one on the tree must lay down his life. You say, well, a man can do that.
No, he can't. An angel can do that. No, he
can't. Why? Let's say you need a car. And
I'm driving one I've borrowed from the pastor. And I see your
great need. So I give you the pastor's car.
I've not given you my life. I've not given you my car. I've
given you something borrowed from another. From where does
the life of a man come? It comes from God. Angels, do they have life inherent
in themselves? No. But Jesus said, I have authority
to lay down this life of mine and take it up again. The one
who dies on that tree must lay down his life, not life borrowed
from another, real life. Why must the one on that tree
be God? Who else but God can withstand the wrath of God and
rise again? The mountains melt before the
wrath of God. The rivers dry up before the
wrath of God. Nations are destroyed before
the wrath of God. One day all the universe will
be dissolved into fire by the wrath of God. Who but God can
withstand the wrath of God and rise again? Why must the one
on that tree be God? I was speaking at university
years ago, and after speaking, question and answer, this student
stood up, he was kind of angry, and he said, I've got a problem
for you, preacher. I said, okay. How can one man suffer for a
few short hours on that tree? and pay for the sins of a multitude
of men and save them from an eternity in hell. It isn't right."
And I just began to cry. I said, young man, thank you
for asking that question because the answer is my most favorite
answer. That one man could suffer for
a few short hours on that tree. and save a multitude of men from
an eternity in hell because that one man was worth more than all
of them put together. When theologians talk about the
perfect sacrifice of Christ, they're not just saying He was
sinless. They're also talking about the
infinite value of the life given. You take a gigantic cosmic scale,
you put everything in it that you can find. You put stars and
galaxies, suns and moons and planets and earth, mountains
and molehills, moths and men, crickets and clowns, everything
you can find, dusts. and rocks of granite, everything
you can find of creation, and you put it in a scale, and you
put Jesus on the other side, and He outweighs them all. It's
His value. He's God. His worth cannot be valued, nor
can it be emptied or compared. You see the preciousness of Christ. Someone had to die there that
was a man. Someone had to die there that
was God. And Christ fulfills both of those. Let's talk about
His death. It says in His blood, propitiation
in His blood, He had to die. Not swoon, not suffer, not sleep. Had to give up His life. He had
to die. But how? I was in Europe several years
ago and I was teaching. Actually, a bunch of gypsy missionaries.
And it was in a Germanic seminary, and after teaching I was rather
tired, and I went into the library, and I was looking for a book
to read. Everything was in German. I was trying to find something
to read. And finally, I found a book called The Cross of Christ.
It wasn't Stott's book. It was another one, one I'd never
heard of before. It said The Cross of Christ. So I opened
up the book, and I began to look through it, see what the author
was saying. And this is what he said. When
Jesus Christ was on that tree, God looked down from heaven and
saw the suffering that was inflicted upon the Son of God by the hands
of the Romans, and He counted that as payment for our sins. That is heresy. That is heresy. But if you listen to most preaching
today, that's all you'll ever hear. when Mel Gibson's film
came out about the passion. I never saw the film. I have
no desire to wrangle about it or nothing. I couldn't go see
it. But while all that was going
on, a very famous preacher came on the radio one day when I was
working on the farm. I turned up the radio, I sat
back in the truck listening, and he said, because of all this
about the passion and the movie, I just felt that it would be
good for me to take this teaching time that I have on the radio
with you every day and explain to you the real meaning of the
cross. And I thought, oh, praise God! He spent half an hour talking
about everything that the Romans did to Jesus, and then said,
because of that, our sins have been paid for. He talked about
the beatings and the clubbings. He talked about the whip and
the cat of nine tails. He talked about Christ crawling
up to the tree. He talked about Him being thrown
down. He talked about the nails and the crown and the cloak.
He talked about the spear in his side. He talked about suffocation
of crucifixion. He talked about absolutely everything.
But I want you to know, I don't want to take anything away from
the physical sufferings of Christ, but the man totally missed the
gospel. If you're saved here today, you
are not saved because the Romans nailed Jesus to a tree. You are
not saved because the Jews whipped Him or beat Him. If you are saved
here today, it's because when He was on that tree, He bore
our sin and His own Father crushed Him. We are not saved because
of what the Romans did to Jesus. We're saved because of what God
did to Jesus. He slaughtered His only begotten
Son. Think about it for a moment.
He's on that tree and he cries out, My God, my God, why hast
thou forsaken me? I hear so many preachers say,
God, the father looked at his son and when he saw all the wounds
and the suffering, he turned away because he couldn't bear
to see it anymore. That is a romantic lie. That's not what Jesus said. Jesus himself bore witness that
the father utterly forsook him. Why? Because he became sin. He was bearing your sin. He became
the scapegoat. He became the worm. He became
the serpent lifted up in the wilderness. Read for a moment. Turn to Psalms 22 for just a
second. Look at verse 1. My God, my God,
why have you forsaken me? Far from my deliverance are the
words of my groaning. O my God, I cry by day, but you
do not answer, and by night, but I have no rest. Yet you are
holy. In the first two verses, he cries
out to God. And that's his complaint. My
God, my God, why have you forsaken me? And then he gives an argument
in verse 4. In you our fathers trusted. They
trusted in you and you delivered them. They cried out to you and
were delivered. They trusted in you and were
not disappointed. His argument is this. Father,
there's never been a time in the history of your covenant
people, Israel, that a man cried out to you and you forsook him.
But here I am hanging on this tree, your only son, the Messiah.
Why have you forsaken me? And then he answers his own question
in verse 3. Yet you are holy, verse 6, and
I am a worm. I am worm. Under the law, the
nation of Israel, the leaders would come out, the elders of
Israel, and they would lay their hands upon a goat, symbolically
transferring. imputing the sins of the people
to the head of the goat. One goat would be slaughtered,
another would be driven outside the gates of the camp to wander
in the wilderness and die. So the writer of Hebrews said
that Jesus Christ suffered outside the gates of the city, forsaken
of God and forsaken of God's people, the bearer of sin. The triagion, the three times
holy one. Don't you understand? Have you
ever read Isaiah 6? In the year that King Uzziah
died, I saw also the Lord high and lifted up, and His train
filled the temple. And above Him stood the seraph, each having
six wings. With two He covered His face, and with two He covered
His feet. And with two He did fly, and one cried unto another,
Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of hosts. The whole earth is
full of His glory. And the post of the door moved with the voice
of Him who cried, and the house was filled with smoke. John chapter
12 tells us that the God that Isaiah saw was the Son of God. Isaiah saw His glory. And this glorious one that the
greatest archangels in heaven cannot even look at because of
His loveliness and His beauty and His purity. The seraphs are
called burning ones in Hebrew. They do not burn by their own
fuel. They're only a reflection of
the burning holiness of the Son of God. The reflection of His
beauty. And yet this one left a throne.
A throne where His entire robe filled everything that is to
be filled, where His glory without measure filled everything in
the earth and sky and even hell. And He left that throne, and
He became a man, and He went to the tree, and He who knew
no sin became sin for us. The law says, curse it as everyone
who does not abide by all the things written in the book of
the law so as to perform them. Do you know what it means to
be cursed? It's a hard one. You have to go all through the
Old Testament. It's just hard. You have to stay up all night
for nights to figure this one out. How can you communicate
to a people what it means when God curses them? It says, first
of all, cursed is every man who does not abide by all the things
written in the book of the law to perform them. That means that
prior to your conversion, you were under the very curse of
God. Do you know what it means to be under the curse of God?
This is the only way I can define it. It means that the sinner
is so vile and so sickening and wicked and loathsome, not only
before a holy God, but a holy heaven, that the last thing that
sinner will hear when he takes his first step into hell is all
of creation standing to its feet and applauding God because God's
rid the earth of him. Yet the Scriptures say, but Christ
redeemed us from the curse of the law. He became a curse for
us. Don't you see? You say, Brother
Paul, my heart is so hard I can't weep. Then weep for your hardened
heart. He became a curse, the wretch,
a vile thing. And now, Go to the garden for
a moment. Father, let this cup pass from
me. Let this cup pass from me. Drops of blood, sweating, coming
from His brow. Father, let this cup pass from
me. These preachers, they say, oh,
Jesus didn't want to go to that Roman cross. That's a lie. Oh, Jesus. These charismatic
preachers. Jesus was afraid of the devil. Blasphemy. Oh, that
Roman cross, that whip, he didn't want to go to it. Absurd! Let
me ask you a question, just for a second. I want you to think
about this for just a moment. After the death and resurrection
of Jesus Christ, Since that time, it is estimated that 50 million
men and women and children have died for their profession of
faith in Jesus Christ. They've died as martyrs. In the
early church, through up through the time of the Puritans and
the Reformation, do you know? Let's just use the early church
for example. Many of Jesus' followers were
crucified. Not only crucified, they were
crucified upside down. Not only crucified upside down,
they were pitched filled, covered with pitch, and set on fire to
provide lights for the streets of Rome. But many of those followers
of Jesus, in chains being taken off to be crucified, sang hymns
full of joy. Do you honestly believe the captain
of our salvation is in a garden, cowering because of a cross,
even though his disciples went to the same cross with joy in
their heart? Do you think that the captain
of our salvation is so weak? Think, man! Jesus wasn't afraid of a cross
or a nail or a spear or a crown of thorns. What was in the cup? I'll never
forget, at a reformed school, theologically reformed school
several years ago, I went there and I said, well, you've called
me here to preach. I'm here. They said, you'll be
preaching out in the auditorium. I said, wonderful. What ages?
And they said, well, kindergarten to the twelfth grade. And I said,
well, I'm going to be teaching on propitiation. It's kind of
a wide berth, don't you think? They said, it won't be a problem,
Mr. Washer. So I walked out there. And as I was preaching, I stopped
and I said, What was in the cup? What is it that caused Christ
to tremble? And I'll never forget, this little
eight-year-old girl raised her hand. And I said, yes. And she
stood up, stood beside her desk. And she said, Mr. Washer, the
wrath of God was in the cup. God's fierce hatred for all that
is evil was in the cup. A wooden cross? All men are under the fierce,
just wrath of God because of their vile wickedness. Someone
had to drink down that wrath. Jesus Christ on that tree bore
the guilt of His people and stood in their law place. Then all
the holy, just hatred Wrath, judgment and justice of God like
blinding white light came crushing down on the head of His only
begotten Son. Have you never read? And it pleased
the Lord, Yahweh, to crush Him, to grind Him to powder. Imagine
for a moment a dam 10,000 miles high and 10,000 miles wide and
you're standing below the thing. a mile back from the wall. And all of a sudden, in a second,
the wall is pulled away and all that water comes crushing down
upon you. But right before it gets to your
feet, the ground opens up and swallows it down. So the wrath
of God, destined for people, The Son of God took that cup
out of His Father's hand and He drank every drop. And when
He cried out, it is finished, He turned it over and not one
drop fell out. He drank it all. If I were to
summarize the cup of wrath in the Old Testament, it would be
something like this. God saying, because of the wickedness and
the rebellion of the nations, I will send them the full force
of my wrath. I will hand them my cup and I
will make them drink it and they will drink it and they will stagger
and they will die. But on that tree, Christ drank
the cup. You've heard the story of Abraham
and his son. Go up to that mountain and slaughter
your only son. Abraham goes to that mountain
in obedience. He ties his son down. His son
offers no resistance, it seems. The old man goes for the knife,
lays his hand upon the brow of his son, And as the hand comes
down, he is stopped. God will provide. You say, oh, what a wonderful
story. There it was, the animal there trapped by its horns in
the bush. What a wonderful ending to the
story. It wasn't the ending. It was
the intermission. Hundreds of years later on a
hill called Calvary, God the Father laid His hand on the head
of His only begotten Son, and He slaughtered Him. Someone had
to die. You see, this is the cross that
all these modern day preachers put in the back of the store,
and not in the storefront window, because it's a shameful thing,
it's a horrid thing, it's a terrible thing. Some of you are looking
at each other as though, I've never heard anything like this
before. Absolutely, and that's why the cross has so little power
in your life. This is a horrid thing, a vile
thing, not the kind of thing you wear around your neck. Someone had to die. Justice had
to be satisfied. To demonstrate love, God had
to put away sin first. And there was only one way to
do it, the death of the only begotten Son of God. He died. And you see, this is what the
Christian life is all about. Paul says in Romans chapter 12,
he pleads with the people, he says, I urge you, as a pastor
would urge a loving flock, he says, I urge you to do what?
To lay down your life, to offer your life as a living and holy
sacrifice acceptable to God. Paul gives the motivation. He
says to lay down your life because of, based upon the mercies of
God. And what is he talking about?
The thing that ought to motivate you to lay down your life for
Christ are the mercies of God. But in Romans chapter 12, the
mercies of God are referring to the first 11 chapters of the
book of Romans. Where in the first 11 chapters
of the book of Romans, Paul explains everything God has done for us
in Christ. And he's saying, since God has
done all this in Christ, now lay down your life for Him. And
the more you know of this cross, the more you are given to lay
down your life for Him. He's no longer this little accessory
that you put on your life to make it better. He is your life. You are consumed by Him. You
are constrained by Him. Every thought, every judgment,
every word, everything you do. Why do you do this, sir? Why
do you do that, sir? Because Christ has shed His own
blood for my soul. The love of God in Christ constrains
me. He died. Offer up the sacrifice. Creation
sends forth a call. Offer up the sacrifice. One life
to pay for them all. Offer up the sacrifice. The innocent
one must be slain. Offer up the sacrifice and bring
man back to God again. He died. It's amazing what the Spirit
can do when He's here. It's amazing what is not done
when He's not. But Christ died. Those words
should be enough to break your heart into a thousand pieces
and to cast you to the floor and worship. Christ died for
you. But Paul tells us, Scripture
tells us, that He did not remain dead. It is not just the death
of Jesus Christ that saves us. It is the resurrection of Jesus
Christ also that has a great part in this story. If He had
remained dead, there would be nothing. There would be no hope.
All things would be dashed to pieces. But God has vindicated
His only begotten Son by raising Him from the dead. And in raising
Him from the dead, God has set His seal and told us, declared
publicly through the resurrection of Jesus Christ, that His sacrifice
was sufficient to atone for the sins of His people. Christ died. Christ rose again
from the dead. And Christ ascended 40 days later
to the right hand of His Father. The old ancients, the patristics
of the first five centuries, patriarchs, they would always
use the Ascension Psalm, Psalm 24, to describe the ascension
of Jesus Christ into heaven. And this is where we'll bring
this to a close. As evangelicals, rightly so,
we are constantly defending the deity of Jesus Christ. But never
forget this. Jesus Christ was God in the most
complete and full sense of the term. But Jesus Christ was man
in the most complete and full sense of the term. There is one God. and one mediator
between God and men, the man Christ Jesus. A man has sinned. A race of men are fallen. A man
must die. And a man must rise again from
the dead. And then that long-awaited prayer
of Job must be answered. You see, a ladder that reaches
only to the top, Charles Spurgeon tells us, is no good. And a ladder
that reaches only to the bottom will do us no help. We need a
ladder that reaches from the bottom to the top and the top
to the bottom. We need a Savior who is God and man. And that man, that God, that
man, Christ Jesus, rose again from the dead. And on the 40th
day, He ascended up to the right hand of His Father. And for the
first time in all the history of history, a man walked up to the doors
of heaven. and cried out what we find here
in verse 7. Lift up your heads, O gates,
and be lifted up, O ancient doors, that the King of glory may come
in. And all of heaven behind those doors are in utter shock,
in silence, in wonder. Finally, a brave one lifts his
head and begins to speak. Who is this King of glory? Who
dares speak to these doors? No man has ever dared come this
far or lay his hand to the latch of this wall. Who is this King
of Glory? And then all of a sudden, the
Lord, the Messiah, the Christ, the Son of God, the man for us,
cries out, the Lord strong and mighty, the Lord mighty in battle,
lift up your heads, O gates, lift up your heads, lift them
up, O ancient doors, that the King of Glory may come in. And
in the first time of all time, those doors open for a man He walked through those doors,
and everything that has ever been made fell on its face. All
hail the power of Jesus' name. Let angels prostrate fall, bring
forth the royal diadem, and crown Him, Lord of all, crown Him with
many crowns, this Lamb upon the throne. And I can just see him now, walking
up to his father, bold! It was his right! Climbing the
steps of this throne that would make Solomon's throne look like
paper mache. And sits down without even asking
permission. And looks at his father, not
as a question, but as an affirmation, and says, It is finished. And the Father says, Son, it
is finished indeed. This Jesus, whom you crucified,
God has made Him both Lord and Christ of all. Don't think I
will even ask you to make Jesus Lord of your life. That's the
most preposterous thing I could ever tell you to do. Jesus Christ
is Lord of your life. Whether you serve Him or not,
whether you bless Him, curse Him, hate Him or love Him, He
is the Lord of your life because God has given Him a name that
is above every name so that the name of Jesus Christ, every knee
shall bow and tongue confess that He is Lord. Some of you
will bow out of the grace that has been given to you, and others
will bow because your kneecaps will be broken by the one who
rules the nations with a rod of iron. And I'll not apologize for this
God of the Bible. I come from a long line of men,
most of them buried, but all of them well received in glory,
who thinks not about the opinions of men or the way the rest of
the evangelical community is going to walk. I want you to
know there is a God in heaven. And He is worthy of all praise
and glory and honor. And He demands such from you. And He has made it possible in
His glory, in His love, for you to come to Him. And He cries
out, all who are thirsty, come and drink. All who are hungry,
come and eat. Why do you spend your money on
that which will not satisfy? Come and drink from Me, He says. Wine and milk. Based upon the
sure mercies of David, I will treat you good. For my ways are
not your ways, they're higher than your ways. As the seed grows
because water is poured upon it, my word, my promise will
not fail." He commands everyone in this room to repent of their
sins and believe the gospel. To seek Him while He may be found. Brother Paul, can I be saved? I don't know. Let me ask you
a question. Maybe you came here tonight. You came, someone invited you,
the only thing you've been doing is looking at your watch, wondering
when is this going to be over. Your mind has been wandering. You could care less. Christ means
nothing to you, no more than when you entered into these doors.
Then my answer to you is, no, you cannot be saved, at least
not now, because you have no repentance in your heart, no
brokenness over sin, no brokenness over the price that was paid
for you that you might live. But maybe you're saying, Brother
Paul, I came in here tonight, I had no intention of listening
to anything. But maybe during the worship,
God caught your heart and you began to think on eternal things.
And maybe as you heard the gospel preached, you became aware of
your sin and your vileness before a holy God. And then you heard
about Christ and your heart leaped with joy. And you've said to
yourself, I'm the vilest of creatures. Is there hope for me? Yes, there's
hope for you. You have repentance, at least
the seeds of it in your heart. Now you lack one thing. Believe
on the Lord Jesus Christ and you shall be saved. You shall
be saved. You shall be saved. For all who
call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved. And of all those
who have believed in Him, none of them are disappointed. But know this, the clock is ticking,
and time is fleeing, and death and hell are moving. Christ will
return. People tell me, I don't care.
He's not going to return for a thousand years, maybe so. But
you're going to, inside of 25, 50, 60 years, everyone in this
room is going to see Him. Either you're going there or
He's coming here. It really makes no difference. You will see Him.
You will stand before Him. He's coming. And when He comes,
it will be both wonderful and absolutely terrifying. As one
preacher said, I have good news and bad news. The good news is
God is here. The bad news is God is here.
It depends which side of the line you're standing on. He will
come. He will burst forth from this
sky. And the greatest and mightiest of men and all their armies One
glimpse of the One who rides that horse, they will cry out
for mountains to bury them. You see, you need to understand,
His sovereignty and power is such that He sits over everything
with absolute sovereignty. And if all the created universe
Angels and men, demons and devils all turned against Him to fight.
They would have no more strength than if one of them, the weakest
of them, stood alone against Him. They'd have no more strength
than a mite beating its head against a piece of granite. You will be judged. And if your
name is not written in the Lamb's book of life, you will be found
lacking. And you will be cast into hell.
And don't buy into this mess that says heaven's heaven's because
God is there and hell is hell because God's not there. No,
my friend, hell is hell because God is there. Hell is the pure
flaming wrath and justice of God. Have you not read? And the smoke of their torment
ascended up in the presence of the Lamb. It isn't the devil
who rules over hell. It's God who rules over hell.
You say, well, I've never heard of such a thing. I know that's
your problem. That's your problem. Repent. Believe the gospel. The best thing I can do for you
now is turn you away from men and
turn you to God. Seek the Lord till He has saved
you. Seek the Lord. Call upon Him. Believe in Him. But know this, If tonight something
happens in your life and you believe that God has saved you,
I want you to know something. It is not just tonight that is
necessary to give you assurance that God has saved you. Because
if you think God saved you tonight, But you walk out of this church
building and you do not begin to change. And you do not begin
to grow in grace. And you do not begin to grow
in the things of God and desire. And you do not continue walking
with Him. But you fall away like so many others. Know this, you
got nothing here tonight. The evidence of your salvation
is not that one time in your life you prayed a prayer. The
evidence of your salvation is that you continue walking with
Him. And that He who began a good
work in you finishes it. Let's pray. Father, Father, I come before You in
the name of Your Son. What a Son! What a Savior! Glory to God. Oh, for a thousand tongues to
sing my great Redeemer's praise. Oh, hail the power of Jesus'
name. Let angels prostrate fall. Bring forth the royal diadem.
Crown Him Lord of all. Amen. For more media content from Grace
Community Church in San Antonio, Texas, go to gccsatx.com.
The Greatest Words in All of Scripture (True Disciple Conference 8 of 8) www.sbaoc.or
Series True Disciple Conference
To see a professionally edited 11 minute powerful clip of this sermon, go to:
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For more info about Paul Washer go to:
www.heartcrymissionary.com
The audio for this sermon was provided by The Spurgeon Baptist Association of Churches: www.sbaoc.org
This sermon was preached at Fellowship Baptist Church in Onaga, KS.
This sermon was posted by Grace Community Church in San Antonio, TX:
www.gccsatx.com
| Sermon ID | 104072118184 |
| Duration | 1:42:05 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - PM |
| Bible Text | Proverbs 17:15; Romans 3:23-26 |
| Language | English |
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