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Father, we thank you for gathering
us here in your providence, in your will, to hear your Word
tonight. Lord, encourage our hearts. We
pray that you'll lift us into a higher plane, into a closer
walk with yourself, not by some bypass method, but by the means
of grace that you've ordained. by the power of your Spirit working
through the Word. And may there be some little
text, some little truth, that will bring the answer that some
may be seeking. Lord, speak tonight. Give help
in the pulpit and in the pew. We ask in our Savior's name.
Amen. Amen. 2 Peter chapter 2 is our portion,
and we are continuing on the subject of false teachers and
how they, through various ways—subtle, cunning, crafty ways—seek to
deceive and to destroy. The word that I majored on last
week was the word pernicious. And I described it as a slippery
word. It's oily. It's a kind of a word
that there's no one synonym that will do it. It's the word for
destroy, for destruction, for waste. And these false teachers
are working by pernicious ways. They destroy souls. And we wondered,
where did they get their energy from? Why do these men use religion
with such vibrant zeal for their cause? And we went to 2 Corinthians
11, and we saw how the very angels of darkness can be transformed
into messengers of light, and we see the devil's power at work. Now, we have to agree tonight
that we're living in a very difficult period of church history, and
these days are getting rapidly worse and worse. I look over
my days in Canada, and I see a vast change in this nation
concerning biblical things and the gospel. The very foundations
of society have been and are continuing to be torn up and
destroyed. Some must ask, if the foundations
be destroyed, what can the righteous do? And it becomes a crushing
and a straightening pathway that we have to walk. We see this
destruction in politics. We see it in the leadership of
men who set themselves according to principles and philosophies
that are contrary to the truth of the Bible. We see it in the
lack of leadership. We see it in the confusion that
there is in various countries that have no one help from God.
And yet, there seems to be chaos in the making. We see it in the
loss of morality. abortion, and now euthanasia,
doctor-assisted suicide. In Ontario this week, the first
permission in that province of an elderly person who was granted
doctor's assistance to end their lives. We also see it in the
soaring rate of suicide. I talked about that a little
last week. We see it in the apathy that there is toward spiritual
things and the gospel. We don't see a generation today
of people who long for prayer. Prayer meetings are by and large
empty. The seats are empty. There's
but the little remnant who gather to pray. We may call an extra
prayer meeting and get a little short-term surge of interest,
but that too soon fades out. God's people are content to live
on a very low level of commitment. Church membership. Why bother? Put yourself under authority
to men? Why do such a thing? Let's be a free agent. Let's
be independent. Let me do my own thing. This
age of autonomy is really the harvest of the seeds of feminism
and humanism that has been sown for well over a decade, two decades
or more. A hundred years ago, certainly
prior to World War I and up to World War II, churches were still
living on the assets of revival. Now the history of revivals in
the Western world has been the 1800s, the 19th century. The
days of Moody and Spurgeon and many who witnessed God turn nations
back to God in a mighty way. But then things began to peter
out. Our grandparents and our parents
where members attended large denominations. Denominations
that were bulging with people going to church and seeking to
live at least in the moral boundaries of Christianity. They were salt
and light in the nation. They had a voice even in politics. Christian politicians were not
the rare, but very often the common thing. They were days
of Christian statesmen, Christian educators, who influenced the
youth of their day and often saw them walk in a good path. In my little bit of research,
I suppose that E. C. Manning would be the very
last politician preacher in Canada. He was already an elderly man
when I came to Canada nearly 32 years ago, and he was on radio,
I remember, on a Sunday afternoon listening to Ernest C. Manning. He, by the way, was
known as the longest-serving politician in Canada, and up
until a point in all of the world. He served in the legislature
of Alberta for 25 years, from 1943 to 1968. As a young man, he went along
to a Bible school that was run by William Eberhardt. And he
was the first to graduate from that Bible school. And in 1930,
he took to radio preaching, and then later became a politician.
And all of that while, he was a farmer outside Edmonton. And so he was a man of business,
a man of politics, and a man preaching the Word. Just try. to elect such a Christian to
political office today, he wouldn't get off the ground. And I say
this, therefore, to let us see how far this country has moved
from its Christian moorings. I sometimes have the opportunity
to drive around Canada BC, of course, somewhat, Alberta, somewhat,
and in Ontario. And what do you see? You will
see united churches that are closed, congregations that have
merged, and it's in a survival attempt to provide ministry in
lonely parts of the country. I know there's a population shift
towards cities. And I know that there are many
demands to try and keep a church going. I know of a Presbyterian
church in St. Albert in Saskatchewan, and just
last year it was sold for one dollar, and the congregation
merged with the United Church. Now, it was sold for a dollar
because it needed renovations that would cost well over a million
dollars, and so it was something of a liability. But a man I know,
Pastor Dave Webster, he is a Baptist pastor, Beulah Baptist Church
in Saskatchewan, he got to know about this building and his congregation
bought it for a dollar. And just at Christmas time, they
had their very first services. And if I know Dave Webster, he
didn't spend a million dollars on the renovations. I know that
he was able to keep it going and so on. Now, we free Presbyterians
are just a little drop in the bucket when it comes to the vastness
of this country and the great work that needs to be done to
see it turned back to God. And to be a Christian in 2016
is a very daunting thing. We're cutting against everything
in society. And peer pressure is very, very
powerful. It's hard. to be the only one
that stands up for the Lord Jesus. It's hard for teenagers in school.
It's hard in the workplace. And it's getting hard in some
churches to stand up for the Lord Jesus and let His name be
magnified. Now, it's hard to stand for the
truth and to tell men that this world is under judgment. And
that brings me now to 2 Peter 2 and verse 3. The very last part of that verse,
whose judgment now of a long time lingereth not, and their
damnation slumbereth not. And so to speak in those terms,
and maybe to have your Bible open at your workplace, and at
the lunch hour conversation comes around to such things, and you
tell them, did you know that this world is under God's judgment? My! you would feel the wrath
of man in a very short time. And the church that dares to
preach this will certainly not be the popular church. It'll
not be the megachurch. It'll not be the church with
the crowds and the vast funding and the prosperity things that
we spoke of last week. Yet this is what gives relevancy
to the Christian message. This is why we must preach the
gospel. This is why we must reach the world that's blind and perishing
in their sin, because there is wrath, and God is angry with
the nations that forget Him, and we are called to raise the
alarm and stand for Him. Now, before we get into this
message, you might be asking, but how did this happen? How
can the nations of the Western world—Britain, various countries
in Europe, North America, U.S. and Canada—how can they have
all the assets and the best blessings of gospel Christianity and then
blow it? and fall into what we're really
seeing, a return to paganism, man-centered, humanistic thinking. Well, it didn't happen overnight.
And I would trace it back to Darwinism, 1859, the publication
of that book, The Origin of Species. And as Darwin put out that book
in the scientific realm to try and explain the origin of things,
there were liberal theologians that were rubbing their hands
because they now not only had a theology, they had science
to back up their liberalism. The Oxford Movement in England
behind the Anglican Church in 1850 was certainly fast at work. Now, the Oxford Movement produced
what we call High Anglicanism. High Anglicanism is kind of—well,
my mother described it as just a paper wall between it and Roman
Catholicism. I remember as a boy her explaining
it that way. Then there came the Ecumenical
Movement. The seeds of it, really, were in 1920s through missionary
endeavors to try and unite Protestants and Roman Catholics to bring
Christianity to the nations. And that blossomed into 1948,
the birth of the World Council of Churches, this movement of
one world church. But to bring about unity, it
would cost truth. And that, again, brought things
terribly down. The other thing we have to realize
is that there have been no major revivals in the 20th century.
Think on this. We're living in a day when there
has not been a mighty outpouring of God's Spirit in a national
or even in a city-wide scale in a hundred years. The history
of God's church is like a graph that goes up and down and up
and down, and now the graph has been going down, down, down for
a hundred years. And we are living in dark, desperate
times, and we're called to preach the gospel in an evil day. And
our mission and our ministry is not to stick our head in the
sand, to run from reality, but to face the issues that are before
us. When churches do not face the
issues, it creates a vacuum, and the cults multiply. And that's what has happened
in our generation. The fastest growing religious
organizations are the cults, and they are multiplying while
the Christian church in its various shades is diminishing and weakening. We don't even be able to seem
to reach the children of our day. That comes around as a very
sad thing. The days when churches gathered
in boys and girls and preached and taught the gospel is really
slim today. Now, the thing that Peter points
out here in this verse 3 is that the nations of the ungodly are
already under judgment of God. See the words judgment and damnation.
You need to link those two together to understand that this is not
just talking about discernment or wisdom. This is not just talking
about knowing the difference between right and wrong. This
is the difference between heaven and hell. This is God's wrath
upon nations that are blinded in their sin, and they're headed
for damnation. The reality is, God is going
to speedily and totally destroy. the nations that forget God,
and these false teachers. They are under God's wrath. I have three things I want to
say tonight. I know I had a long introduction. Forgive me. That
was necessary time just to impress on you where we are at in 2016. But the three things we need
to look at in this passage is judge not by the appearance of
things. Judged by the history of God's
judgments. That's number two. And the third
one, judged by the evidence of purity. Now we are called to
judge. And I tried to deal with that
last week. Do not fall into the trap where we are judged not
that you be not judged. That's talking to the hypocrite.
That's talking about the person who has a beam in his eye and
he's trying to pick a little speck out of someone else's eye. But
God's people are to judge. God's people are called to judge
righteously. We are to be fruit inspectors.
By their fruits ye shall know them. And we are to judge not
by the appearance of things. And we are told here in this
passage, not by popularity, because many will run after them, not
by money-making, because these people work by covetousness.
and not by their claims of God's blessing, or that they are allowed
to continue in their wicked ways. See? I've been doing this many
years. See the increase? See the following? See the popularity? See the money
that's coming in? And they make that their argument,
we therefore have God's blessing. Well, what's the richest church
in the world? Would you join it? Would you sign up to be a
member of the richest church in the world? With all its gold
and all its finery? No, that's not the way to judge. Now, we know that all men who
are not believers are condemned already. John 3.18 says that
he that believeth not is condemned already. But there's a special
category here for these false teachers. And God's mind is working
here of those who preach another gospel, and judgment for them
will be multiplied. Look at verse 13 in this chapter
2. They shall receive the reward
of unrighteousness. God works on a reward basis.
Now, He doesn't save you on a reward basis. We're saved by grace,
not by works. We're not saved on the basis
of what we do in our performance. But God judges men in their sin
according to their works, according to their deeds. And He bestows
upon men the rewards of their unrighteousness. Verse 14, they're
guilty of beguiling unstable souls. And in verse 20, their
latter end is worse with them than at the beginning." Now,
they mock because of their freedom to sin and resist against God,
and they mock because they feel that they don't come under the
immediate judgment of God. And they say, where is the appearance
of His coming? Where's the promise of His coming?
Look how long the world has continued There's coming a day when those
tables will be turned, and those who mock at God's long suffering
will weep and cry under the wrath of God's judgment. And so don't
be fooled into thinking that big religious leaders and organizations
have God's blessing. If they deny the Lord that bought
them, and that's what we read of here in this verse 1, damnable
heresies, even denying the Lord. If the ministry is denying the
Lord, that's the point of judgment. That's the point at which we
exercise discernment. Are you doing that? Are you a
discerning Christian in these times? Because if you don't exercise
good biblical judgment, you're going to be swept away. You're
going to fall. You're going to lose the ability to say no to
false ministry. You're going to walk into the
crowd and say, isn't this exciting? And you're going to get that
feel-good experience. And you'll say, this has to be
God. And all the while it can be a
delusion. if in that ministry they're denying
the Lord, the Lord that bought them. You'll want to be in a
safe place. Really, that's what Peter is
crying out for here. Walk safely. Use good judgment. God has given
you intelligence. He's given you His Word. He's
given you His Spirit to teach you. And you must exercise due
diligence. that you don't fall prey to some
false way. Then secondly, judge by God's
history of judgments. Someone has said—this comes from
psychology, by the way, but in this case it fits—the best predictor
of future behavior is past behavior. And of course, the psychologist
will take the child from childhood and say, well, behaving all that
way, don't expect a sudden change. You're going to continue on.
Well, let's apply that to the history of God's judgments. This
is the kind of God we know in the Bible. He is a God who does
judge and destroy the wicked. The modern man says, no, that's
foolish. God is love. The gospel's grace, not judgment
and damnation. It's not God intervening in this
world in a negative way to rip out ungodly men. That's contested. But look at the history of God
judging, and there are three grand examples in this passage. The angels that sinned, the people
in the days of Noah that sinned, and the people in the days of
Lot that sinned. And two times God uses what I
would call the strongest language possible. God spared not. He spared not the angels that
sinned, and He spared not the wicked in the day of Noah. Now,
why is it put that way? Because that's contested. It's
contested. God spares people. A good God
wouldn't damn someone. A good God wouldn't judge the
wicked. No, we read here, God spared
not the angels that sinned. Now, it's a very strange thing
that angels in heaven end up in rebellion to God. But that's
what happened to the devil, Lucifer. He raised up his ugly head, seeking
to be like the Most High. You can study that in Isaiah
14 sometime. And Lucifer and those who followed
him, those wicked angels that rebelled in heaven, they were
cast out. Let's look at what it says here
in verse 4. For if God spared not the angels that sinned, but
cast them down to hell, and delivered them into chains of darkness,
to be reserved unto judgment. They're still there! They're
incarcerated! They're in chains! And they're
still there waiting for the judgment day. The angels that sinned,
God spared them not. And Peter says that even those
angels higher than men, nearer to God, already in heaven, And
yet due to some manner of rebellion cast down to hell. Does God judge
his creatures? Is God a moral God? Does God
believe in right and wrong? Certainly did with the angels.
And then the second example is God spared not the old world
in Noah's day. Verse 5, and God spared not the
old world. Now the old world is the pre-flood
world. The world that existed in its
millions and perhaps billions of people who were corrupt—we
read that over in Genesis 6—the people became corrupt, filled
with violence, rebellious to God. Did God judge them? There was a line. that the sinners
of Noah's day crossed. God said this, My spirit shall
not always strive with man. There'll come an hour when judgment
will fall. Now, it wasn't the day that they
were born. It wasn't when they could read or write. It wasn't
their first sin. God immediately judged them.
It wasn't their first hearing of the gospel by Noah preaching
righteousness. It wasn't the day that Noah started
building the ark. And it wasn't the day that the
animals came into the ark. It wasn't the day that Noah and
his family went into the ark. It was on the seventh day after
all were in, and the hand of God moved. There was no pulley
system for man to operate the door. God shut them in. And in shutting the door of the
ark, Judgment fell upon the wicked. Does God judge the wicked? This
is His history. This is what He did in the past.
And then example number three is the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah,
right here in verse 6, turning the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah
into ashes. The bitumen, by the way, of Sodom
and Gomorrah can still be found at the south end of the Dead
Sea. That plain that God wiped off the map in a very sudden,
fiery furnace can still be visited today. It's a place of death,
and there's a sermon in the ashes. Sodom, those ashes can still
be seen, and God called out those cities because of their sexual
immorality. homosexuality, sodomy. I think Paul refers to it in
Romans 1. Talks about men lusting after men. Changed the glory
of the uncorruptible God into an image, and God gave them up
to uncleanness through the lusts of their own hearts. We could
read on. Does God judge sin and sinners? Come on now, answer
the question. Many people want to hide behind
the veil and say, no, evangelical is to be a nice religion. Don't
mention that. You'll offend people. The church
won't grow if you preach that aspect of God in His holiness
against sin. And so many in that way are shut
up to preach only half a message. Praise God, the gospel does save
people from sin. And the gospel does bring men
into purity, and is to be noted that they deny the knowledge
of God, that it leads to vile affections. When the true God
is denied, and men turn to deities of animals and so on, morality
goes right down, down, down. How long will God endure such
sin? We think of the great cities
on the west coast of this continent, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle,
Vancouver, and many other places where the sin of Sodom is now
on parade. I did my little homework on when
did this parade of sodomy begin in Canada and Vancouver. Well, they had what they call
a gay week in Toronto in 1973, and then it turned into Gay Pride
Day. What a wrongly misnamed event. How can anyone be proud of changing
the natural use of the body into perversion? And what I don't
comprehend is that husbands, wives, mothers, and fathers take
their little children to stand along the side of the street
to view the sordid, depraved event before their very eyes. It has brought this country,
I surely believe, under the judgment of God. And we need to be praying
for God's visitation. So we're to judge not by the
appearance of things, we're to judge by God's history of judgments,
we're also to judge by the evidence of purity. I want to go down
to verse 10. It says, But chiefly them that
walk after the flesh in the lusts of uncleanness, and despise government,
presumptuous are they, self-willed, they're not afraid to speak evil
of dignities, And it goes on right down there to verse 14,
"...having eyes full of adultery, and that cannot cease from sin."
How do we judge? We judge by the measure of purity. When God saves sinners, He saves
them with a new heart to walk with God in the light of His
Word and to do His will. This list doesn't sound like
a good character reference for a religious leader. And Peter
is saying, use your judgment. If they're following immorality,
if they're following sin, they're not of God. They don't have the
message of God. The gospel ministry is a high
and holy calling. And only deceived people would
follow after adulterers and flagrant sinners. And that's what we have
in so many religious quarters. It's time for us to realize,
to judge by purity. Next week, I want to preach on
Lot. The Bible gives an amazing testimony
for Lot. Lot was a fool to choose to pitch
his tent towards Sodom. He only saw the green grass.
He didn't see the wickedness of Sodom until he was in it and
couldn't drag himself out of it. We are told here in this
Scripture that Lot vexed his soul every day. He was a miserable
man. The sight, the sounds of sin
broke his heart. And when he saw his own children
following the ways of the wicked, he was a defeated man. And then
he lost his wife on the way out, when she looked back." These
are warnings to us. And we are called in this evil
day, this day when these sins are touted as good, touted as
liberty, freedom. We're called to live for righteousness.
It's a difficult day to live as a Christian. But God—look
what it says here, and I want to preach on this next week.
Next week are the following. Next week's Easter, so I may
not, but we're going to preach on this before too long. And
it says here in verse 9, the Lord knoweth how to deliver the
godly out of temptations. And He's the same today. He can
deliver us. He can deliver our children.
That's why we pray. That's why we seek to walk with
God. That's why we need a church that believes in God, and preaches
His Word, and warns the wicked, and calls God's people to holy
living. Because the Lord is able to deliver
us from temptation, even though we're in the midst of a Sodom
all around us. God is able to deliver us, and
it is His covenant promise that He's going to call out a people
for His own name, and He can keep us, kept by the power of
God through faith, ready to be reserved unto that day. That's
God's grace to us. I trust that you will be a man
or woman of prayer. Don't throw in the towel and
say, it's such an evil day, there's no point in serving God. Don't
say, it's too wicked, it's too evil, it's all over. Well, we
certainly see things go the wrong way around us. But we can be
a church where we have God's help and God's power within us. Will you pray for that? Will
you stand with us for that? We need God's people to rise
up and stand for the Lord Jesus. We need wisdom to do it. We need
unity to do it. We need the Holy Ghost to fill
us and fit us. Surely the Lord will use us to
deliver men, pulling them out of the fire, seeing souls saved
and our families led in the right path. May God help us in an evil
day and give us good wisdom, godly wisdom, godly judgment
to know the difference between good and evil, right and wrong,
and that we may so glorify him.
Are False Teachers Really Under God's Judgment
Series Standing Strong Series
Peter wrote that false teachers are under God's judgment and it will not fail to come upon them. Can this be true? What proofs did Peter give?
| Sermon ID | 321161430366 |
| Duration | 43:32 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - PM |
| Bible Text | 2 Peter 3:1-10 |
| Language | English |
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