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I invite you to take out your
Bibles and turn with me to 2 Corinthians chapter 13 and hold your place at verse 5. As most of you know, we have
been over the last several months, almost a year now, going verse
by verse through the book of 2 Corinthians. And I have said
for the last two weeks, I've preached around this text, but
I have not yet really dug down into this text because I said
that there was a sense in which, while all passages have a context,
Some passages have so much weight and depth that they deserve a
sermon all to themselves. And that's not something that
we should really be surprised about. Every passage of scripture
fits within a context, and if you preach it out of its context,
meaning if you go against what the context is saying, then oftentimes
you are wrong, and that's the danger when we teach hermeneutics.
We teach people to always stay within the context of a passage
when seeking to understand what it means. But then, and I'll
give you an example of why that's important. Last week, I preached
on the discipline of the church, and I posted a little video where
I called people to participation in the local church, and wouldn't
you know it, someone, well, where two or three are gathered, that
is not an excuse to not be part of a church that's actually misusing
that text, ripping it from its context, and creating a misunderstanding
of that whole passage. So yes, we should understand
all passages within their context. But as I was saying, some passages
also rise above and stand in a way that they can be preached
as unique passages. And we know these passages of
Scripture. John 3.16 is a powerful summation of the gospel. 2 Corinthians
5.21, God made him who knew no sin to become sin for us that
we could become the righteousness of God in him. If you can't preach
that, you don't need to be a preacher. And it rises above and says,
this text can stand on its own. There are many others as well.
John 1, 1. I'm looking forward to going
from 2 Corinthians into the Gospel of John, which I hope to do by
Christmas Sunday, the Sunday before Christmas, and preach
John 1, 1. In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with
God, and the Word was God. What a powerful passage and a
passage that really does rise above and is able to stand on
its own. Well, today we come to a passage like that. We come
to a passage that while it is within the context of 2 Corinthians,
it's in the context of Paul. We've talked about this context
for a year now. Paul is defending his ministry
against those who would call into question the integrity of
the apostle, who would call into question the validity and accuracy
of his message. And he is calling them to repent
of their sin. He's calling them to turn from
the false teachers who have brought them this false message. He's
calling them to recognize who he is as the one who God has
appointed, as the one who has been appointed to not only plant
their church, but to have a special relationship with them in Corinth,
and not to reject his ministry, but to accept it wholeheartedly,
to come underneath the authority of the word of God, which is
being preached by Paul. And toward the end of the book,
he says, examine yourselves. Examine yourselves. And as I
said, the last two weeks I have preached around this text, but
today I'm going to preach this text. We're going to look at
it closely, and we're going to see that Paul is in this command, and it is a
command. It's in an imperative voice,
meaning it's telling us to do something. It's saying, examine
yourself to see if you are actually in the faith. So let's stand
together. Again, reading only this verse,
it says in the ESV, Examine yourselves to see whether you are in the
faith. Test yourselves, or do you not
realize this about yourselves, that Jesus Christ is in you,
unless indeed you fail to meet the test. Father in heaven, hallowed
be your name. Today as I come to you, Lord,
I have many prayers on my heart. but the greatest among them,
Lord, as I always pray. But today, maybe just a little
more. I pray, oh God, that you would keep me from error. I know
the ditches that come in a message like this. The ditch of legalism
is very easy to fall into, but also, Lord, the ditch of licentiousness
is very easy to fall into as we come to a passage like this
that must be understood and must be applied for it is a command
from the word of God, Lord, keep me from failure. Keep me
from falsehood. Keep me from pride and arrogance
to think I know better than you. Keep me from foolishness. Lord, I pray that You would open
up the hearts of Your people to understand Your Word. For only You can do that. I pray
Your Spirit be among us. I pray as I give instruction
in the Word that the Spirit would be the one who does the teaching,
that he would take the Word through the ear, even through the mind,
and plant it in our hearts. And Lord, if there are those
who are here who are believers, I pray that this would be a time
where they, through self-examination, reach an even greater sense of
assurance. But Lord, if there are those
here, and I am confident that there are those here who do not
know the Lord, I pray, Lord, that this passage
would be to them a wake-up call for their spirit. And Lord, that
you, by your spirit, would give them the gift of regeneration,
which would open their heart to believe, and that they would
come under the blessing of trusting the Lord Jesus Christ. Lord,
most of all, I pray for the person who's lying to himself or herself.
The person who does not examine themselves, but rather sits with
confidence and a false hope. Your Word calls those pseudo-brethren,
false brethren. Lord, make it clear to us today, as
we examine not our neighbor, as we examine not our friends,
but we examine ourselves. In Jesus' name, Amen. When we come to this passage,
We notice in the English that it begins in the English Standard
Version with the word examine. However, if you look into the
original language of this particular passage, you will notice a rhetorical
construction that I believe the Apostle Paul was intending for
his audience to understand. Because there are two imperatives
in this passage, the word paretsete, which is the word examine, and
the word dakamatsete, which means to test or to prove. And we're
gonna talk about those definitions in a moment. We're gonna talk
about what we are supposed to do and how those commands work
out. But three times in this passage, the word yourselves
is emphasized. It's the very first word in the
Greek. If you look at the original language,
the first word is houtous, is yourselves, examine. And then
just after the next clause, which is whether or not you are in
the faith, it says, houtous, documazete, yourselves, test. And then later it says, or do
you not recognize yourselves? that Jesus Christ is in you if
you've not failed the test. So the word, the rhetorical device
that Paul is emphasizing in the use of language here, not only
through repetition, but by the placement of the words in the
sentence, is yourselves. It is easy to examine others. and we do
it all the time. Whether or not we are in church
doesn't matter. We have a tendency through the
eye of judgment to level our own thoughts and opinions about
people in our mind all the time. If this passage said, test your
neighbor, every one of us would say, praise the Lord. I do that
in spades. I have no problem testing the
person to my right or to my left. I have no problem examining my
spouse. I have no problem examining my
friends, have no problem examining my parents, and certainly have
no problem examining my kids. It's easy. to examine others. In fact, it's so common that
we would examine others that one of the admonitions of Jesus
Christ in his great Sermon on the Mount, the longest sermon
we have in Scripture from the words of Jesus, he emphasizes
the idea of not judging one another. Now, this doesn't mean we never
ever get to exercise any discernment. And I think that's a wrong way
of applying that passage where people think judge not means
never have discernment, just accept anything, tolerate anything,
never, never come to any conclusions. That's not the case. But there
is a sense in which the reason why Jesus says, judge not lest
you be judged is because it is the very nature of our hearts
to judge one another. And oftentimes very unfairly. very critically and without grace. As one, and I don't remember
who said it, but as one commentator said, we all want to be objects
of grace, but none of us want to be distributors of grace. I noticed I didn't get an amen,
so I'm gonna assume by your silence that you agree. Aren't we though? Aren't we good at judging one
another? Aren't we good at assigning motives?
Always the worst of motives to others and always the purest
motives to ourselves. When someone else does something
we don't like, well, it must just be because they're an awful,
no good, lousy person. But when we do something others
don't like, well, don't they know my heart? Don't they know I'm
a good person? See, this is the way we live. We live in a state, often a constant
state, of criticism against others. But how often are we willing
to be critical of ourselves? Brother Mike preached this text five years ago. How long ago
was it? About that. I listened to his sermon twice
this week. I figured I'd listen to a good preacher and maybe
I'll do better. No, I listened to his message twice just thinking
about what he had said and thinking about what I had already prepared
and seeing if there were some things that maybe he drew out
of the text that I didn't, and as I was thinking about that,
he talked about how much, and he uses that phrase, Sin Sniffers
Association. We want to be Sin Sniffers, right? We want to be the president of
the Sin Sniffers Association, be willing to look into other
people's lives, and we all want to apply the scripture to ourselves. Doesn't everybody say, what does
this text mean to me? Except this one. This is the one text
that when you're in a small group Bible study and everybody's like,
what is this text? Nobody wants to say, this one
is about me. When actually this is the one
that is totally about you. Three times it's about you and
me. Yourselves. Examine. Yourselves. Test. Or do you not recognize yourselves
that Christ is in you unless you indeed fail the test? This is directly pointed at our
heart. And I want to tell you something,
that makes it absolutely unpopular. Because what most people want
me to preach about or any other preacher is to preach about somebody
else. If I walked in today, abortion's
bad. Woo, abortion's bad. We all agree.
Transgender bathrooms is crazy. Woo, we all agree. But what if I said, look at your heart and examine
yourself. Now it's personal. It's easy to look at the craziness
of the world and have an opinion about that. But are you willing
to look at the weaknesses and brokenness of your own heart
and have an honest opinion about that? That's not fun. Last week I preached on church
discipline. That wasn't fun. This week is less fun. Because
you know what? Church discipline is the job
of the church to bring the weight of discipline to bear on those
who are living in unrepentant sin and to call them to repentance.
And if necessary, restrain their participation in the table and
maybe even participation in the body. We understand what discipline
is and why it serves a purpose in the church. But all of that
is preceded by self-examination. Self-examination is the reason
why we come to the table every week. Not the only reason, but
one of the reasons. Does not the very text that tell us how
to take the table say, examine yourself then? Does not, isn't
that what 1 Corinthians 11 says? When you come to the table, examine
yourself. By the way, same word. To examine yourself. Paul says, yourself examine,
yourself test. And I want you to understand
something. This is not unique. This is not the only passage
in Scripture that calls us to self-examination. I just mentioned
1 Corinthians 11, but let's just look at a few other quick passages.
You don't have to turn there, just in your mind. I'm sure some
of these will come to your mind. The Gospel of Matthew has a very
important passage. In Matthew chapter 7, where Jesus
is finishing the Sermon on the Mount, and he starts talking
about those who say, Lord, Lord. Remember them? What does he say? He says, not everyone who says
to me, Lord, Lord, will enter the kingdom of heaven, but the
one who does the will of my father who is in heaven. And then he
says what? Depart from me, you workers of
lawlessness. So what's the heart behind the
passage? Are we true believers or are
we ones who are faking it? Are we genuine or are we ones
who will hear the Lord say, depart from me, I know you're not. Isn't
that the most frightening thing to consider? Isn't that the most
fearful thing that any of us could ever imagine? to face the
Lord and hear Him say, depart from me, I never knew you. 1 John, I remember years ago hearing
a preacher say, 1 John is the no book. You ever heard that? Meaning, it's how you know if
you're a believer. Because it says over and over,
by this you will know. But what does 1 John say over
and over? It tells us that we know these
things because of changes that have occurred in our life. First
John chapter five, verse 13. I write these things to you who
believe in the name of the son of God that you may know that
you have eternal life. So the whole book has been about
that. And then go back to chapter three, verse 10. He says, by
this, it is evident who are the children of God and who are the
children of the devil. Whoever does not practice righteousness
is not of God, nor is the one who does not love his brother.
These are examinations. Self-examinations that the scripture
gives us. And they're not alone. Second
Peter, therefore my brothers be all the more diligent to make
your calling and election sure. For if you practice these qualities
you will never fail. You know what bothers me is I
hear preachers who say you should never question. You should never
examine. And if you think I'm exaggerating,
I'm not. There are those who would say,
if you question your salvation, if you examine your salvation,
you're calling God into question. Well, then what are all these
passages about? Philippians chapter 2, Therefore,
my beloved, as you have always obeyed, so now, not only in my
presence, but also in my absence, work out your salvation with
fear and trembling. What does that mean? Have you
ever worked out your salvation? Have you ever mentally, spiritually
thought through your salvation and examined yourself, asked
questions to yourself? Have you ever done that? James chapter two. almost the
whole chapter, but particularly beginning at verse 14. What good
is it, my brothers, if someone says he has faith and does not
have works? Can that faith save him? And he goes on to say that
faith without works is what? Dead. What does that mean? Some
people say that's just a different type of saving faith. There are
people who say dead faith is saving faith. If you can get
that out of James 2, you are a magician. Because you are pulling a rabbit
out of a hat. because it just ain't there. The problem with the subject
of self-examination is like with almost any subject, you find
yourself in two ditches. And you know, I think it was
Andy who introduced the idea of the two ditches, but I've
done what I often do, and that is I've absconded with it. It made it something I use now,
but it's Andy's, two ditches. The two ditches are how so often,
and it's like this with almost any doctrine. If I take you through
systematic theology, I can show you where almost every doctrine
has two ditches. One that goes too far one way,
one that goes too far the other way. I'm going to be tonight,
starting in our academy, I'm going to be talking about the
first four ecumenical councils of the church, which were the
first four times that the church as a worldwide organization gathered
together to solve a problem. The very first one was the Council
of Nicaea in 325, and it was about the question of, is Jesus
created or not? They came to the conclusion he
is not. He is of the same substance with the Father, eternal, not
created. Right? But then the next question
comes up. Okay, well is he human or not? Does he have one nature
or two? And then you have the monophysite
controversy and the diophysite controversy. Does he have one
nature? Does he have two natures? So you have to come to that conclusion.
You have the Nestorians who come up and the Eutychianism and all
these different things that come up. All these different issues
arise because questions arise. There's ditches on both sides.
The same thing is for this question, the question of self-examination.
Because on one side you have the desperate heresy of legalism. And the desperate heresy of legalism
is that for you to be saved, you have to meet these qualifications,
and there's this list of qualifications, these laws you must keep, and
if you don't keep these laws perfectly, you cannot be saved. And that is a dangerous false
teaching, that you are saved by what you do. We call that
work salvation, and it is heresy. But on the other side, the other
ditch is the ditch of licentiousness. You know me, I love alliteration,
so it's legalism. and licentiousness. Legalism
says you must do this to be saved. You must accomplish this to be
saved. And licentiousness says that
your life in Christ can be devoid of any change. You can continue
to live in sin, meaning license for sin or sin abounding with
no life change and still be saved. Years ago, there was a doctrine
called the doctrine of the carnal Christian. And the carnal Christian
doctrine was taken from 1 Corinthians chapter 3, where the apostle
Paul says that he cannot speak to the Corinthians as spiritual,
but he has to speak to them as carnal, as people in the flesh. And there was a person who grabbed
a hold of that and said, oh, there's two types of Christians.
There's the spiritual Christian and there's the carnal Christian.
And so you can be a spiritual Christian and you can be a carnal
Christian. Well, what do you think that
opened the door for? It opened the door for this idea
that I can be a Christian and have no life change at all. And it opened the door for all
kinds of attitudes towards the subject of obedience as being
absolutely outside the bonds of the gospel, that the gospel
doesn't call for obedience. I've been told that. I've been
told the gospel does not call us to obedience. You know, the Bible actually
says we're to obey the gospel. Isn't that an interesting thought?
We don't just believe it, but we obey it. So the two ditches, the ditch
of licentiousness over here, the ditch of legalism over there,
must have a right understanding. Paul is calling the Corinthians
to self-examination. He is not calling them to legalism
and he is not leaving them to licentiousness. He is calling
them to a right evaluation of themselves. Years ago, I was invited to come
and speak to a Christian school. I didn't get invited back. But it was a group of young people,
high school age. And up until the day of, I didn't
know exactly what I was going to preach. I was the guest of
a friend and so I knew in my mind what I wanted to say, but
I didn't know exactly how I wanted to say it. I ended up preaching a portion
of Matthew chapter 7. Specifically focusing on the
passage I just read a little while ago. Not everyone who says
to me, Lord, Lord, will enter the kingdom of heaven. And my
focus and my reasoning in that message was to say to the young
people, most of you have grown up in church. The reason why
you're in a Christian school is your parents wanted you to
have a Christian education and that's a blessing. Christian
education is a blessing and I'm not against Christian schools.
Don't think that's what I'm saying. I said, there are some of you,
I am confident, who say the right things, but have not had a change
of heart. You have learned the vernacular
of Christianity. You have grown up with the language
of faith, but your heart has not been changed. The teachers were not happy with
me. I could tell by the countenance
on their face. They looked almost visceral and
angry because I didn't come in and affirm the kids as believers,
but I actually said, examine yourself to see if you're in
the faith. How dare you do that? We've told
these kids every day that they're good Christian children. How
dare you come in and cast doubt into their heart? Because the Bible tells us to.
The Bible tells us to examine ourselves, to make our calling
and election sure, to work out our salvation with fear and trembling,
so that we not be the one who on that day faces the Lord and
hears, you have never been known by me. I never knew you. Never. Not, I knew you for a time and
you fell away. But I never knew you. By the way, that's one of my
verses I go to when people talk about losing your salvation.
Jesus said, you didn't lose it, you never had it. I never knew
you. Never. But what of all the things
I did? Did I not do many miracles in
your name? Did I not cast out demons in
your name and do mighty works in your name? Yeah, but you never departed
lawlessness. How amazing are the false teachers
with all of the things they can do? Stir a crowd, gain a following,
raise millions, and yet they have not departed
lawlessness. Examine yourselves. The word examine, the first time,
there's two words, as I said, one is the word examine, the
second is the word test. They are two different Greek
words, and they are, in this context, they are functioning
somewhat synonymously, but they are also, as it were, almost
like a crescendo. If you're not familiar with what
a crescendo is in music, sometimes things start low and they build.
So we'll be singing a song, and like we sang earlier, we drop
down low, and then we build. Well, the idea here, it starts
with the idea of examine, and then it comes to the idea of
test. So there is a building here.
The first word, examine, is often used in the negative sense. If
you read through where it's used in other places in the New Testament,
it's almost always used. The word tempted is used. The
word test is used. The word try is used. In fact, one of the most famous
passages where when James 1 says, let no one say when he is tempted,
I'm tempted by God, that's this word. That's the word, same word
here. Paul is saying, examine. Examine yourself, test yourself. It's in the active imperative,
which means it is a command, it's not a suggestion. And the
test means to ascertain the quality of something, that's the idea.
To see what quality it is. Remember, Throughout this entire
book, Paul has been defending himself against false accusations.
They have been saying the quality of his ministry is lacking, and
Paul has proven that it is absolutely not lacking, but in fact, it
has stood the test, and now he's pointing it back at them. Test
yourselves. Examine yourselves. And it's a command, as I said.
Not a suggestion. So what are we to test according
to this passage? Examine yourself. Test yourselves.
What? What do I test? Whether you are
in the faith. In the faith. This is an important prepositional
phrase, in the faith. When the Bible talks about the
faith, when the Bible talks about what we believe, why we believe
it, it talks about us entering into
something. Not just that we acquiesce to
it, not just that we assent to it, but that we actually enter
into it. Test yourself to see if you are
in the faith. Perhaps a good illustration would
be if we thought just for a moment about Noah. Was he in the ark? Well, if he
wasn't, What would be the result? Destruction. Paul doesn't say test yourself
whether you believe it. Test yourself whether you're
in it. Are you in the faith? Have you entered into this holy
faith, this body of belief that is the faith? The Bible uses
that phrase, faith, with the definite article, the faith,
throughout the New Testament to indicate this thing that we
call the faith. Are you in the faith? And then he says, Test yourself. Prove yourself. The word test
here, documazete in this construction, it literally means to discern
or prove whether or not you are in fact in the faith. The idea
here is the idea of testing metal. It has the idea of applying heat
to test something, and it is in the same exact tense, the
command tense, the tense of the imperative verb. Do this. Test. yourself. Prove yourself. How? How do we do that? What are the
proofs? What's the examination? Is it
a multiple choice? Is it an essay? Am I going to
get a link in an email like we send out in the academy? I want to give you four ways
that I think we can examine ourselves. Four ways that I believe when
Paul says examine yourself, I think there are four things we need
to examine. Four specific examinations that
need to be made in our life to see whether we are in the faith.
Oh, and by the way, there's actually two things that you need to examine.
Are we in the faith and is Christ in us? Because notice what he
says. He says, test yourselves to see whether you're in the
faith or do you not recognize yourselves that Jesus Christ
is in you if you fail not to meet the test or if you don't
fail the test. Ultimately, he says this, are
you in the faith and is Christ in you? Are you in the faith
and is Christ in you? By the way, both of those must
be true if you're a believer. You must be in the faith and
Christ must be in you through the person of the Holy Spirit
who lives and makes his home in your heart. What are the four things? Number one, what you believe. What you believe. Do you understand that what you
believe determines first and foremost if you're in the faith? It's often been said, it doesn't
matter what you believe as long as you're sincere. Well, I got news for you. The guys
who flew those buildings, who flew the planes into the buildings
on 9-11, they were sincere, but they were sincerely wrong. Sincerity
is not the test of truth. You can be sincere and be wrong. So when someone says, it doesn't
matter what you believe, as long as you're sincere, you can tell
them there's a Greek word for that, and it's baloney. What we believe is a test of
whether or not we are believers. I wrote that sentence. Isn't
that the simplest thing? What we believe is a test of
whether or not we're believers. You cannot deny the fundamentals
of Christianity and call yourself a Christian. You cannot affirm
heresy and call yourself a Christian. This is where having a grasp
of the fundamentals is necessary. I didn't bring my whiteboard
today, and I didn't put it on the screen, but most of you,
I think, I know we have guests here, so I say there may be some
who never have, but I do this thing where I put the three circles
up, and I say there's a middle circle, which we say is definitional,
and then there's a second circle that we say is denominational,
and then there's a third circle that I say is what we call adiaphora,
which is simply a fancy word for things that are doubtful
or things that are still questioned and we don't have a certain answer
on, maybe things that can be differed among brothers. The things in the center circle. We call them definitional, because
if you deny them, you are no longer a Christian. What would
some of those things be? Well, we can make it simple. The Bible tells us if we deny
the resurrection of Jesus Christ, we're not a Christian. You know,
that happens every year at Easter time. some egghead from some
seminary will come out and announce why it's not necessary to believe
in a physical resurrection of Christ. If you don't believe in the physical
resurrection of Christ, you are not a Christian. If we're afraid to say that,
we have lost any sense of the wherewithal and the intestinal
fortitude that was required for maintaining the faith. Because
we have to maintain the faith, we have to stand on the truth.
And if you can't say, if you deny the resurrection of Jesus
Christ, you are not a Christian. But it goes deeper than that.
I mean, I don't want to go through the whole list because of time,
but if you want to talk about what the fundamentals are, here's
just a few. Number one, you cannot deny that God exists. That seems
like a very simple one, but there are pastors now who call themselves
atheist pastors. An atheist pastor! Hope in nothing! What a fool! But they're out
there. God exists. God exists in three
persons. That's not optional. I got a young man right now.
He's reached out to me. He's a sweet young man. but he
denies the Trinity. He's what's known as oneness,
which is a historic heresy. It's also called modalism or
sabellianism, and it was a heresy from the 2nd century, 3rd century,
and it continues to today. It's a very common false teaching
about the nature of God. And while I think this is a very
sweet young man, I have told him, I do not believe that you
are in the faith because you are denying Christian truth. I love you. I don't want you
to go to hell. I want you to repent and believe. Say, is the
Trinity necessary? The Trinity has always been recognized
as necessary. I'm going to be teaching. If
you want proof of that, come tonight. In the academy, I'm
going to be looking at the first four ecumenical councils of the
church. It was not, it was not something that was optional.
It was recognized, if you don't believe this, you are simply
not a Christian. Because this is what the Bible teaches. There are other things, other
fundamental things. Justification by faith alone,
I think is fundamental. Which is why we have issues with
Rome, specifically. And when you ask about the gospel,
justification by faith alone, but also the Word of God as our
authority. These are fundamental things.
We can debate all day about baptism and whether or not we should
be baptizing our infants which is a debate within the reformed
community. Obviously, we are Baptists and we don't believe
that, but I don't look at my Presbyterian friends and say,
you are outside of the faith because of that, because that
goes in that second circle. I can look at my non-Calvinist
friends and say, shame on you. No. I can look at my non-Calvinist
friends and I can say to them, hey, I disagree with you, but
I believe you love the Lord. Because that is not a fundamental
thing. But there are fundamental things
we must believe if we are Christians. So when Paul says, examine yourself,
the very first thing we must examine to see if we are in the
faith is do we believe the faith? That's number one, what we believe. Number two, how we believe. Has believing the truths of the
Christian faith changed your life? It's one thing to intellectually
assent to the truth of the scripture. It is another thing for those
truths to change your life. And it is a major distinction.
I really believe this is what James 2 is all about. A lot of
people don't like James 2 because they think that James somehow
mixes faith and works to a point that it denies the gospel. Obviously,
I don't believe that because I believe James is writing under
the inspiration of the Holy Spirit. I don't believe James got it
wrong. But there needs to be an understanding of the balance.
Faith produces works. The fruit of faith is works. The works do not contribute to
justification, but they are a demonstration of our faith. They are the fruit
of imputed righteousness. You cannot, hear this, this is
so important. You cannot affirm genuine faith. if there is no fruit in your
life. Now the fruit may be of differing
amount, but it will not be absolutely absent. Jesus said this, he said,
the seed was sown among the different soils. The first soil was so
hard that it couldn't even penetrate and the birds came and ate it
because it was the pathway. The second soil was a soil which
absorbed it for a little bit and it sprung up for a time,
but it died because what? It had no root. The third, it
sprung up, but it was choked out by the weeds. And the last
was in the good soil and it bore fruit, some 30, some 60, some
90 fold. I may be getting those numbers
wrong because I'm just, is it 30, 60, 90 or something? It doesn't
matter. I don't know either. It's a number
and it gets bigger. The idea is it might be different.
The idea of the fruit might be different. The fruit of my life
might be different than the fruit of your life. But Jesus did tell
us that we will know our brothers and sisters by what? By our fruit. Now the danger of this is it
can be subjective. One may think he's bearing much
fruit and another may think the same person is bearing very little
fruit. So it is important that we do not rest our hope upon
our fruit. But rather, we look to the fruit as evidence of the
hope that we have in Christ. I've often used this illustration,
and I know I'm kind of going over time, but I don't care,
because I have a lot to say. This is important. Y'all get
all six other days. But, you know, the illustration
of... I still think the illustration of the parachute is still the
best one. If I find a better one, I'll
start using it. But I remember this from years
ago. Someone said, I can believe that
a parachute will save me. I can even put the parachute
on. But if I've never stepped out of the plane, I don't really
trust the parachute. And I don't trust the parachute. You want
me to get out of the plane? You better be pulled up to that
little runway thing that lets me walk out. Trust. is demonstrated in how
we live. By the way, the word pistou,
Greek word, which is often translated believe or faith, is best understood
as trust. Because if we think belief is
simply mentally assenting to certain facts, you can believe the facts about
Jesus and not be saved. Now that sounds funny. Believing facts is not the same
as saving faith. Saving faith means you trust
in that person, Jesus Christ. There is a difference between
assenting to the facts and trusting in Jesus. How you believe matters. Number
three. The last two are shorter. Number
three, when we believe. You say, what are you talking
about? How many of you have ever heard
a preacher say, you come down forward, you shake his hand,
they offer you a baptismal certificate. If you ever doubt, here's your
certificate, look at this certificate and hold on to this certificate,
right? Remember when you believed. I don't care when you believed.
I care if you believe today. Now you may think that's wrong,
but let me tell you why. The Bible doesn't command us
to look backward at a time when we believed. It commands us to
say, are we believing right now? John 3 16, I said it earlier.
For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son,
that pas hapistuon, all the ones believing. The phrase, ones believing,
all the believing ones, that phrase is in the present active. They are believing now. Now it's great if you became
a believer at 8. If you became a believer at 10, but I know
a lot of people who say they became a believer at 8 or 10
and are no longer walking with the Lord. I have a question,
good Baptists. What do you do with that? I know what a lot of people do.
One saved, always saved, he's fine. Is he? Is he fine? Or is he demonstrating that his
confession was not a possession of faith? That's a serious question
we all have to ask, right? I mean, how many of you know
someone who made a profession 20 years ago and today has no
desire for Christ? You either have to come to one
of multiple conclusions. Either you believe he got saved
and then lost his salvation and if so, congratulations, you're
a Lutheran. or a Methodist, or a Pentecostal, I just keep going. A lot of people believe that. Or you're a Baptist who holds
so much in the one saved, always saved doctrine that you believe
someone can be saved and it not change their life. That's that other ditch. Or we have to say, that if they
made a profession that has not changed their life, perhaps they
made a profession in haste without a genuine possession of God. Finally and fourthly, we ask,
what do you believe? What you believe? How you believe? We examine what you believe,
how you believe, when you believe, and then lastly, why you believe. This one may sound strange, but
I want you to consider this. Is your belief in Christ born
out of mere duty or is it born out of love? 1 Corinthians 16, 22. I remember
when I preached this text because I preached through 1 Corinthians
years ago and it struck me and it continues to strike my heart.
If anyone has no love for the Lord, let him be accursed. 1
Corinthians 16, 22. If anyone has no love for the
Lord, let him be accursed. Is our faith born out of love
for God or is our faith born out of some sense of duty simply
for expedient sake because I don't want to go to hell? No, I don't want to go to hell. But is my faith simply a get
out of hell life fire insurance policy? Or do I believe and love God? Let me say this. Loving God is not something we
do naturally. You know why? Because the Bible
says our sinful hearts are at enmity with God. If you love God, it's because
He changed your heart. It's because He opened your heart
and gave you an affection for Him. And beloved, I remember
R.C. Sproul said this, he said, when
somebody comes to him and they are worried about the assurance
of their salvation, he says, the first thing he asks them
is, do you love God? Do you love Jesus? Because if you don't love Him, then you're not saved. So we can examine what we believe
and we should. We can examine how it's changed
our heart and we should. We should examine are we actively
living that life of faith now and we should. But we should
also ask ourselves, do I love the Savior? I said I listened to Mike's sermon
this week twice and he twice, he once but I heard it twice,
reminded me of something. When I was preaching through
1 Corinthians, I got to chapter 16. and when it said here, if anyone
has no love for the Lord, let him be accursed and I was convicted because my oldest son who is not yet a believer, I said, I don't know if I ever told him. I don't know if I ever really
expressed to him the need to love God. Certainly, I taught
him to believe and I taught him to trust and he has all the right answers.
He can take any of your theology exams and pass every one of them. But the question is, does he
love the Lord? And the answer right now is no. And I say this only to emphasize
to you fathers, when you are teaching the faith to your children,
do not teach it to them as merely something to believe but a God
to be loved. God loved the world and sent
His only begotten Son and what He wants in return is our love.
Not just the duty of our faith but the love of our heart. Do you love Jesus today? Examine yourselves. Father, may it be that through
your mercy, may it be that we love you. I pray for my son, that you would
save him. I pray for every child in this
room that they would love the Lord. And I pray. for every person here who came
today, maybe thinking they were a believer and they're not. Lord,
I do not want to heap undue burden on anyone. I don't want any believer
to leave with a sense of brokenness and doubt, but I want them to
be encouraged. But Lord, at the same time, I don't want anyone
who's not a believer to leave with a false sense of hope. Lord,
help us to examine ourselves. Help us to know what we believe,
how we believe. Help us to believe now and help
us believe because we love you. In Jesus name, amen. For everyone in the room, whether
you're visiting with us or whether you're a member,
Examine Yourself
Series 2 Corinthians Exposition
| Sermon ID | 122241510367400 |
| Duration | 1:00:17 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday Service |
| Bible Text | 2 Corinthians 13:5 |
| Language | English |
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